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Listed Property in 2010: Consider This Listed property has already notched up decent returns in 2010.
Listed property has already notched up decent returns in 2010. In the first two months of the year, the South Africa Listed Property index returned 5.5%, outperforming the FTSE/JSE All Share index by 8.6%. Property has also produced higher returns than cash and bonds. During this period the BESA ALL Bond Index returned 2.3% while cash returned 1.2%. If you consider adding listed property to your investment portfolio, you may wonder if it will yield enough gains to warrant the shift from a ‘direct investment in property.' You may even be unsure about what listed property is. Listed property refers to the securitised interest in underlying physical property, in other words, you can invest along with other investors in a vehicle such as a unit trust, and have exposure to the property investments that underpin this. This interest is listed on stock exchanges, which makes it easy to trade. In South Africa, the underlying assets of listed property are largely commercial rather than residential properties. These assets include industrial warehouses, shopping malls, and both high and low rise offices. Albert Arntz, Portfolio Manager of the Prudential Enhanced SA Property Tracker Fund says that there are several key drivers of listed property returns. These include the inflation expectations embedded in long bond yields, GDP growth - particularly growth in consumer spending as retail property makes up the bulk of listed fund portfolios - building activity and building cost inflation, and corporate credit spreads. To help you weigh up the pro's and con's of investing in listed property Arntz suggests considering the following for 2010: Positive factors | Negative factors | Attractive pricing relative to cash and bonds. Projected income yields on listed property exceed that from cash and government bonds. The income from listed property is also likely to grow through time. This is not the case for cash and bonds. The combination of a higher yield and growth prospects suggest property is attractively priced relative to these asset classes. | Market rentals in key property nodes have declined over the past year e.g. according to property economists A grade office property asking gross rentals in Sandton have declined from levels above R120/sqm to around R110/sqm over the past year. | Although the rate of earnings growth from listed property is slowing, analysts still expect decent growth in 2010 (i.e. around 6%, after adjusting for outlier funds, which is above our expected long run average of 3-5%). | Vacancy factors have increased rapidly over the past 18 months. This suggests demand for commercial property space has deteriorated. |
Positive factors | Negative factors | Interest rate sensitive stocks (listed property, banks and retailers) often perform well when short rates are low. | Sharp increases in electricity tariffs and municipal rates. Although property funds recover the bulk of municipal and electricity costs from tenants, these costs undermine the affordability of base rentals. | Relatively low levels of commercial property building activity, which suggests new supply will be limited. | Although economic activity has improved, commercial property fundamentals (letting demand and rental growth) tend to the lag economic recovery by 9 to 12 months. | Improved banking liquidity compared to 2009. That said, credit spreads are still re-pricing higher on renewal of bank facilities or signing of new facilities. | Downward pressure on trading densities has increased occupancy costs relative to revenue for many retailers. In other words, certain retailers are making less money relative to their rentals due to the downturn. This trend may cap potential retail property rental growth. | Little evidence of distressed selling of commercial property, however as more properties are being offered for sale we may see moderate increases in cap rates. Cap rates are the rental yields that are often quoted for physical property valuations. | Declining building cost inflation. In the long-run, rental growth appears to be linked to building cost inflation. This inflation has declined as a result of the slump in public and private sector funded construction projects. Lower building cost inflation may cap rental growth. |
Regarding market rental declines, Arntz explains that this decrease does not mean that listed property earnings will decline in the short-term. "Property funds are only exposed to market rental declines on the portion of leases that expire annually. For a typical listed property fund, on average, only around 20% of leases expire annually. The remaining 80% of leases have rentals that escalate contractually by 8-9% per annum. " "In our view it is unlikely that we will suffer the same level of overbuild of commercial property in the current cycle that we experienced in the late 1990s and early 2000s. This is largely due to lack of credit from banks. In many cases market rentals are also still below feasibility rentals for new developments. Although national vacancy factors have risen, they are now only approaching long-run averages. This suggests simplistically that the commercial property market has not reached a position of oversupply yet. There are exceptions to this within individual property nodes. For example, excessive office property development appears to have occurred in Century City in Cape Town. " says Arntz. So what could happen in the year ahead? According to Arntz, "One positive scenario for listed property in 2010 is that the SARB keeps interest rates on hold or even reduces them. The economic outlook continues improving and analysts expect vacancy factors to stabilise or decline. Listed property re-rates to distribution yields below, or in other words, more expensive than long-run averages. In this scenario property may deliver a total return higher than 15%." "In a negative scenario the SARB raises interest rates. Listed property sold off more than 20% at the time of the first rate hike in the 2006 tightening cycle. Such a severe sell off is, in our view, less likely now because valuations are cheaper than 2006. In 2006, property yields were low making it expensive and hence vulnerable to a sell off as we entered the tightening cycle. Despite lower current valuation risk, interest rate hikes may lead to a decline in listed property capital values in 2010." Source: Realestateweb, 15 March 2010
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