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CPF Multiplier Seminar. “IS PROPERTY A GOOD HEDGE AGAINST INFLATION?. Sing Tien Foo Centre for Real Estate Studies National University of Singapore 3 August 2002. Outline of Presentation. Investing in Property Market Why invest in Property?
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CPF Multiplier Seminar “IS PROPERTY A GOOD HEDGE AGAINST INFLATION? Sing Tien Foo Centre for Real Estate Studies National University of Singapore 3 August 2002
Outline of Presentation • Investing in Property Market • Why invest in Property? • Historical performance of property vs. financial assets • Is Property a good hedge against inflation? • Evidence in overseas markets • Research Methodology • Types of inflation • Empirical Results • Implications for investors – Diversification Strategies • Conclusion
Investing in Property Market • Direct Investment • Residential Property, Office, Shop, Industrial Property, Hotels • Lands with development potential (institutional investors/ collective sale sites) • Indirect Investment • Property stocks, eg. CDL, CapitaLand, etc. • Asset backed bonds, eg. Raffles City, Robinson Point, 6 Battery Road, Century Square, NOL, etc. • Real Estate Investment Trusts, eg. CapitaMall Property Trusts
Other Secondary Property Market Instruments • Hedging instrument • Single Property Future • New mortgage instruments (Potential) • Mortgage REITs • Mortgage Backed Securities • Commercial Mortgage Backed Obligations
Operation of Secondary Mortgage Markets • Direct Sale Programs • Mortgage Pools • Originators sell to FNMA. • FNMA creates large pools of mortgages • FNMA sells securities from pool. Mortgage Originator Investors Create Pool Issue Securities
Why invest in Property? For a wealth maximizing investor: • Pride of ownership • Desired rate of return • Capital appreciation • Risk diversification • Hedge against inflation
Overview of Historical Inflation Rates • Inflation is defined as an increase in general price level in the economy • Measured by CPI, GDP deflator, RPI • Inflation rate in Singapore has been relatively stable, especially over the last 10 years • Average 0.62% per quarter (or 2.48% annualized) 1978-1998
Inflation Rate (1978 – 1998) Second oil price shock Inflation Rate(%) Asian Crisis Mid-80s Recession Year-Qtr
Is real estate a good hedge against inflation? • Real estate has been widely regarded as a good hedge against inflation vis-à-vis other financial assets • The study aims to empirically test the inflation hedging characteristics of the returns of real estate and other financial assets • Related research questions: • Real Estate by sectors: residential, shop, industry, and office • Type of inflation: actual, expected and unexpected • Over different sample periods • Different inflation regimes • Compared with different financial assets
Country-studies on Inflation Hedging • Mainly in US and other countries • Comparing real estate and other assets • In the US, REITs is used as proxy of real estate • Using the classical Fama and Schwert (1977) framework • Serial-correlation is taken care of in the model • In general, findings show that real estate is good inflation hedge
Overseas Evidence (1) – Real Estate • In the US, real estate has positive hedge against expected inflation, but office and industrial property offer no significant hedge against unexpected inflation • In the UK, real estate offer good protection against inflation, and office and shop did not hedge against unexpected inflation • Capital returns hedge against unexpected inflation • Results of studies in Switzerland, Canada, New Zealand an dHong Kong are consistent
Overseas Evidence (2) - Stocks • In the US & UK, studies showed that stocks offer no significant hedge against inflation • In the UK, when returns were decomposed into capital and income returns, income did significantly hedge against inflation • Swiss stock market also offers no hedge against inflation • In New Zealand and Hong Kong, stocks offer negative hedge against inflation • REITs in the US, UK and Australia show no hedge against inflation
Overseas Evidence (3) – Bonds • Bonds offer no hedge against inflation in the US, UK, New Zealand and Australia • In summary, real estate offer good hedge against expected inflation, but not against unexpected inflation • Stock, real estate stocks (REITs), and bonds offer poor hedge against inflation in most of the countries under studies
Inflation & Inflation Hedging • CPI is compiled by the Dept of Statistics (DOS) • Laspeye Index – a fixed basket of goods and services in CPI • 7 broad categories of goods & services in CPI basket: food, housing, transport & communications, clothing, health, education and miscellaneous • Inflation hedging – the real return of an asset is independent of the rate of inflation • An asset is a complete hedge against inflation, if and only if the nominal return of the asset changes in a one-to-one relationship with both expected & unexpected inflation
Definition of terms • Nominal return: • Rjt = Log (Pjt/ Pjt-1) • Inflation rate • t = [CPIt – CPIt-1]/CPIt-1 • Expected Inflation • E(t|t-1) = Quarterly lagged T-bill rate • Unexpected Inflation = actual inflation – Expected Inflation: • Ujt = t - E(t|t-1)
Data Source • Sample period 1978 Q3– 1998 Q4 • URA all property price index and related sub-indices • SES all-share index • Consumer Price Index (CPI) • Treasury bill rate • Nominal return • Rjt = Log (Pjt/ Pjt-1)
Theoretical/ Conceptual Framework • Nominal return of asset = real rate of return + expected inflation + unexpected inflation • Regression model • Positive inflation hedge not rejected: • If and only if the nominal return of the asset moves in a one-to-one relationship with both expected and unexpected inflation
Empirical Models • Test against expected & unexpected inflations • Test against actual inflation • Rjt = j + jΔt + jt • Five-yearly sub-period analysis • I: 1978 – 1982 • II: 1983 -1988 • III: 1989 - 1992 • IV: 1993 -1998 • High vs Low Inflation Periods Analysis
Expected Inflation Asset Type Actual Inflation Entire Sample Period Sub-period+ Low Vs. High Inflation# Real Estate IV Residential IV Office I Shop Industrial I High Stocks IV Real Estate Stocks IV Empirical Results (1)
Unexpected Inflation Asset Type Entire Sample Period Sub-period+ Low Vs. High Inflation# Real Estate IV Residential IV Low Office II Shop Industrial I High Stocks IV Real Estate Stocks IV Empirical Results (2)
Analysis of Results (1) • See tables • Real estate assets (industrial & shop) are better hedges against inflation compared to financial assets • Industry show significant hedges against expected and unexpected inflations & shop hedge effectively against expected inflation • Residential property offers good hedge against expected and unexpected inflations for sub-period IV (1993-1998)
Analysis of Results (2) • Stock and property stocks also provide good hedge against expected and unexpected inflation in sub-period IV • Office and industrial property perform better in sub-period I (1978-1982) • In high inflation period, industrial is good asset for inflation hedging, whereas residential is more suitable during inflation period.
Implications for investors’ Strategies • It is strategic to improve hedging capability of institutional portfolio by increasing the asset weight of industrial and retail properties • However, in Singapore, investment in industrial property is limited and dominated by public agency like Ascendas and JTC • Strict restrictions on industrial land uses limit the upside potential • For retail properties, majority of prime shopping centers are developed and managed by institutional investors for long term investment purposes
Implications for Investors’ Strategies • Economies of scale for single ownership for shopping centers – resources could be optimized for implementing crowd-pulling tenant mix strategies • New investment vehicles, new launched retail REITs and the proposed industrial REITs • For residential property, good news for investors/owners of CPF financed private residential property, their property value will be preserved in low inflation period • Residential property has performed well in 1993-1998 period • Stock and property stocks have also performed well against expected and unexpected inflation
Diversification Strategy • How much investment should be allocated to property and non-property assets? • Diversification benefits – not putting all your eggs in one basket • Using empirical returns data from 4Q1993 to 4Q 2000 • Using Markowitz’s risk-return optimization framework • Minimizing portfolio risks for a given portfolio return • No short-selling and no borrowing in the portfolio
Conclusion • Do not reject the null hypothesis that real estate is a good hedge against inflation • Real estate assets are better hedges against inflation vis-à-vis financial assets • Industrial & shop are good assets for inflation hedging purposes • Industrial and retail REITs offer alternative channels for increasing asset weights in portfolio • Residential property value will be preserved in low inflation regime • Real Estate composition in institutional portfolio is important for risk diversification purposes