1 / 17

Chapter 21 Institutional Investment and REITs

Chapter 21 Institutional Investment and REITs. Major Topics. What is Institutional Investment? The Players in the Institutional Investment Industry What are REITs? REIT regulation and earnings measures Measures of Risk Modern Portfolio Theory and the Role of Real Estate Equity.

morgan
Download Presentation

Chapter 21 Institutional Investment and REITs

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Chapter 21Institutional Investment and REITs “Real Estate Principles for the New Economy”: Norman G. Miller and David M. Geltner

  2. Major Topics • What is Institutional Investment? • The Players in the Institutional Investment Industry • What are REITs? • REIT regulation and earnings measures • Measures of Risk • Modern Portfolio Theory and the Role of Real Estate Equity “Real Estate Principles for the New Economy”: Norman G. Miller and David M. Geltner

  3. Institutional Real Estate Investment • The total value of pension fund assets grew from around $500 Billion in 1980 to over $4.3 Trillion by 2001 • Substantial growth of pension fund capital is expected to continue into the 21st century as the 75 million-strong "baby boom" generation hits its peak earning years and prepares for retirement “Real Estate Principles for the New Economy”: Norman G. Miller and David M. Geltner

  4. Investing in Real Estate vs. Stocks and Bonds • Large lump sums are required to purchase a single real property asset • Property management and real estate asset management services are needed • Real Estate is Illiquid, and takes longer, and is more expensive (per dollar invested), to sell real property assets than to sell the financial securities “Real Estate Principles for the New Economy”: Norman G. Miller and David M. Geltner

  5. Public and Private Asset Markets • Public asset markets refers to public exchanges such as the New York Stock Exchange, which provide easy and inexpensive access to all investors, large and small • Private asset markets refers to markets in which the individual capital assets are traded privately in "deals" negotiated between individual buyers and sellers “Real Estate Principles for the New Economy”: Norman G. Miller and David M. Geltner

  6. Modes of Investing in Real Estate “Real Estate Principles for the New Economy”: Norman G. Miller and David M. Geltner

  7. Industry Associations • PREA: The Pension Real Estate Association • NCREIF: The National Association of Real Estate Investment Fiduciaries • AIMR: The Association for Investment Management and Research • NAREIT: The National Association of Real Estate Investment Trusts • RERI: The Real Estate Research Institute “Real Estate Principles for the New Economy”: Norman G. Miller and David M. Geltner

  8. REITs • Real Estate Investment Trusts were created by Congress in 1960 • a REIT is a company dedicated to owning and, in most cases, operating income-producing real estate, such as apartments, shopping centers, offices and warehouses • The main benefit of being a REIT: one level of taxation similar to a partnership • Main limitation of being a REIT: a restriction on earnings retained by the company “Real Estate Principles for the New Economy”: Norman G. Miller and David M. Geltner

  9. REIT Growth “Real Estate Principles for the New Economy”: Norman G. Miller and David M. Geltner

  10. REIT Ownership “Real Estate Principles for the New Economy”: Norman G. Miller and David M. Geltner

  11. How Do Institutional Investors View Risk in a Portfolio Context? • Total Risk • Systematic Risk • Beta Measures of Risk-Adjusted Returns “Real Estate Principles for the New Economy”: Norman G. Miller and David M. Geltner

  12. Measures (Contd.) “Real Estate Principles for the New Economy”: Norman G. Miller and David M. Geltner

  13. Portfolio Theory and the Role of Real Estate Equity • MPT is the modern, quantitative version of more traditional diversification rules of thumb • MPT suggests that real estate equity ought generally to be one of the major asset classes in the portfolio, along with stocks and bonds • MPT is also applied to institutional real estate investment “Real Estate Principles for the New Economy”: Norman G. Miller and David M. Geltner

  14. Modern Portfolio Theory • The essential idea in MPT is to find combinations of investments (i.e., "portfolios") which will minimize the amount of portfolio risk (i.e., volatility across time) for a given target total return, or (equivalently) maximize the expected portfolio return for a given target maximum portfolio risk “Real Estate Principles for the New Economy”: Norman G. Miller and David M. Geltner

  15. MPT (Contd.) • The required informational inputs to solve this portfolio problem are, for each asset or class of assets to be considered in the portfolio: • Expected return • Volatility (standard deviation of return across time) • Correlation’s coefficients of the returns between each pair of assets (or asset classes) “Real Estate Principles for the New Economy”: Norman G. Miller and David M. Geltner

  16. MPT (Contd.) • Example: using a quadratic programming optimization technique • The portfolio mean is just the weighted average of the individual asset means: • The portfolio volatility is the square root of the portfolio variance “Real Estate Principles for the New Economy”: Norman G. Miller and David M. Geltner

  17. END “Real Estate Principles for the New Economy”: Norman G. Miller and David M. Geltner

More Related