Tag Archives: etf

REITs Provide A Surprisingly Big Head Start Over Real Estate Direct Investment

If you’ve decided you want to allocate some of your savings to real estate, you may want to compare the merits of publicly listed REITs, like BlackRock’s REIT ETF (NYSEARCA: IYR ), versus investing in buildings directly through private investment partnerships. 1 The many individual benefits of REITs add up to a surprisingly big head start over private investment vehicles. While discerning private investors should be able to identify individual properties with higher returns than the average REIT-owned property, they need to generate returns about 4% higher just to catch up with the efficiencies of REITs. As detailed in the table below, this 4% comes from four main sources: higher costs, higher taxes, less diversification and lower liquidity of private investments. This 4% hurdle translates into an 8% hurdle for return on equity when the property investment is 50% leveraged with debt. 2 A major worry of REIT investors is that it’s impractical to analyze all of the REIT’s individual holdings, resulting in the risk of buying real estate at a substantial premium to fair Net Asset Value [NAV]. Unfortunately, US REITs are not required to give an estimate of their NAV and so we have to rely on several specialist research companies to make those estimates. As you can see in the chart below, over the past 25 years, REITs have averaged a 4% premium to NAV, within a wide range of a 45% discount in 2009 to a 35% premium in 1997. Given the enormity of the task of valuing thousands of properties without specific, inside details about each property, we shouldn’t expect these third party NAV estimates to be very accurate. Indeed, it appears that the divergences may be exaggerated by the NAV estimates lagging public market price moves. Making a simple adjustment for this lag reduces the volatility of the divergence from NAV by about 40%, and brings the average to a 1% premium, as shown by the black bars. I didn’t list this as a cost or benefit of REITs vs. private holdings, because, depending on timing, this could reduce or enhance returns. To flesh out a plausible negative scenario, let’s assume an investor bought REITs at a 10% premium and sold them 15 years later a 10% discount. That would cut the REIT head start of 4% a year down by only about 15%, in terms of the required return on the underlying unleveraged property investment. The return reduction could turn out to be even less than that, because when REITs trade at a premium to NAV, it is possible for them to add to their property portfolios by issuing shares to private sellers, and thus the premium to NAV can come down without harming returns. I’d be remiss if I didn’t list any benefits of holding property directly. Some argue that illiquidity can be a blessing in disguise, forcing investors to hold for the long term. Ignorance of daily price fluctuations may make the private investing experience more blissful too. Indeed, it may be that many large fortunes have arisen from people feeling ‘locked’ in to the companies they built or the properties they bought. Property investors also derive comfort and psychic value from the tangibility of their property investments, and the ability to touch and see their investments may make their investments feel less risky than more abstract and indirect holdings through REIT ETFs. Finally, while REITs may be the dominant structure for delivering passive real estate exposure 3 , private capital may remain the preferred structure for certain activities such as development and aggregation, even if ultimately for sale to REITs. The benefits of REITs are already well known. Investors have been enthusiastically voting for REITs with their investment dollars for a long time, bringing the value of REITs close to $1 trillion. REITs currently own about 1/8 of commercial real estate in the US, up from less than 1% in 1990. 4 REITs are on track to own over 50% of all US commercial real estate by 2040 even if these trends slow down by half. I hope this note has been helpful in cataloguing and attempting to quantify the relative merits of REIT vs. private ownership, summing up to a 4% hurdle that privately owned properties need to exceed relative to REITs. At Elm Partners, we use REIT ETFs, particularly Vanguard’s (NYSEARCA: VNQ ), for property exposure in our globally diversified portfolios. In a future note, I’ll address the more fundamental question of the long-term expected return of real estate given today’s valuation levels. Table: Comparison of REIT vs. private real estate investing 0.7% Avoiding transactions costs . Typically, when buying a building, an investor will incur about 5% as brokerage, legal, transfer tax and other fees, and loan arrangement fees of 2%, which together equate to about 0.6% pa over the 15-year investment horizon we assume throughout this analysis. 5 When investing in a REIT, these costs have already been paid. 0.5% REITs typically have lower borrowing costs. I assume REITs can borrow about 1% more cheaply from banks than private borrowers on individual properties. 0.9% REITs generally benefit from lower management costs due to economies of scale, and lack of carried interest. This calculation assumes REITs have 0.5% lower management fees and no 15% carried interest. The cost savings can be much higher in the case of small properties managed by the investor, if the investor were to accurately bill himself for the value of his time. 0.6% Tax savings will vary depending on the characteristics of the investor and the site of the property. One benefit of ownership through a REIT is that income that is passed out as dividends are not subject to state (or city) tax, in most states. For high tax sites, like NY or CA, this can amount to a tax saving of 10% of income, assuming that the ultimate investor is in a low or no tax state. REITs allow for longer-term holding than private investments, as the manager usually has an incentive to realize gains to be paid his incentive fee. A further potential saving is that private ownership structures usually throw off miscellaneous itemized deductions which many high rate US taxpayers cannot deduct. 6 For non-US investors, the tax savings of REITs over direct investments might be 0.8% greater. 7 1.0% Substantial diversification is provided by REIT ETFs, such as SCHH and RWR , which hold over 100 individual equity REITs. These REITs in turn provide ownership in thousands of properties in different locations and of different types, many of them large properties in prime locations that would be hard for most investors to access through private ownership. I estimate this effect perhaps over-simplistically by assuming a private portfolio will be 25% riskier than a diversified REIT ETF, and so the investor would need to get 25% more return for bearing that risk. 0.5% Liquidity : REITs are liquid. Private property takes time to transact, and the decisions to buy or sell may depend on the desires and personal circumstances of the manager of the property or other investors in the private deal. REITs are easily marginable, which allows investors to efficiently raise temporary liquidity. Listed options markets that have developed around REITs give investors even greater flexibility. An overview of the academic literature on pricing illiquidity [link prompts PDF download; see page 27 especially] by A Damodaran of NYU suggests a number much higher than 0.5%, but I am sympathetic to the notion that liquidity is valuable but overpriced by the market. 4.2% Total Head Start of REITs vs. Private Ownership Click to enlarge Notes 1 In this note, I am using the term REIT to refer to publicly traded equity Real Estate Investment Trusts in the US. There are other types of REITs and also there is a large and growing non-US REIT market. 3 REITs are one of the most indexed of all market segments, with Vanguard, BlackRock and StateStreet owning about 30% of the large REITs, twice the ownership level in other large US equities, mostly for their index broad market and REIT index offerings. StateStreet recently created a new sector fund just for real estate, XLRE. Expense ratios for REIT ETFs range from 0.07% for Schwab’s to 0.43% for iShares. 4 Size of US commercial real estate market according to this study was $10T in 2009, which I assume has grown to $12T today. Size of REIT market cap and leverage ratio from reit.com . REIT market ownership from 1991 based on the rate of growth of market cap of REITs being 22% and the NAREIT REIT price index growing at 4.7% pa over the period. 5 Further assumptions are 5% initial property yield, growing 2% a year, and leverage of 50% at a rate of 4%. 6 For this calculation, I assumed 5% lower tax rates and that 33% of management expenses are non-deductible for the private investor. 7 Investing through a REIT ETF such as IDUP LN can eliminate capital gains tax, reduce the income tax rate by over half to 15% and eliminate the drag of non-deductible miscellaneous itemized deductions. This should not be taken as tax advice. Acknowledgments Thanks to Chip Parkhurst, who did much of the research for this note as a summer intern at Elm Partners; my friend Larry Hilibrand, for invaluable help from start to finish; and my colleagues at Elm Partners. Disclosure: I am/we are long VNQ, IYR, VNQI. I wrote this article myself, and it expresses my own opinions. I am not receiving compensation for it. I have no business relationship with any company whose stock is mentioned in this article.

5 Key Takeaways From Netflix’s Troubling Q1 Earnings Report

Netflix ( NFLX ) stock tumbled on Tuesday, a day after the Internet TV network posted mixed first-quarter results and gave disappointing guidance for the current quarter. Netflix shares were down 11%, below 97, in early afternoon trading on the stock market today . The stock fell below its 50-day moving average, a key technical support level. Late Monday, Netflix posted Q1 earnings per share that beat forecasts , but came up short on revenue. It earned six cents a share, up 20% year over year, on sales of $1.958 billion, up 24%. Analysts polled by Thomson Reuters were looking for three cents EPS on sales of $1.965 billion. For the second quarter, Netflix is targeting earnings per share of two cents. It did not give a revenue estimate. Wall Street had been modeling Netflix to earn five cents a share, down 17%, on sales of $2.117 billion, up 29%. IBD Take: Netflix has often been a highly rated stock, though now its ratings are mixed. The Los Gatos, Calif.-based company gained 6.74 million total streaming subscribers worldwide in Q1, topping its guidance for 6.1 million. It added 2.23 million streaming subscribers in the U.S. and 4.51 million in foreign markets. It ended the quarter with 81.5 million subscribers worldwide. What follows are five key takeaways from Netflix’s Q1 report. 1. Netflix Predicts Lowest Subscriber Gain In Two Years Netflix expects to add 2.5 million new subscribers in Q2, its seasonally weakest quarter. That would be its lowest new subscriber total in two years, even though Netflix has since rolled out its service worldwide, excluding China. Netflix projects that it will add 500,000 streaming subscribers in the U.S. and 2 million in international markets in Q2. Netflix faces increased subscriber churn in the U.S. as many longtime customers see a $2 increase in their monthly fee to $9.99 a month, starting next month. Over the last two years as Netflix adjusted its pricing, it grandfathered existing customers at the earlier rates. Meanwhile, Netflix’s international subscriber forecast for Q2 faces tough comparisons to the year-earlier quarter, when the company launched in Australia and New Zealand. 2. Netflix Will Roll Out U.S. Price Hike Gradually On a conference call with analysts to discuss Q1 earnings late Monday, Netflix CEO Reed Hastings said that the company plans to roll out price increases over the rest of the year to those U.S. customers given generous grace periods. Currently, more than half of Netflix’s U.S. subscribers pay only $7.99 or $8.99 for the company’s most popular plan, now priced at $9.99 a month. The plan provides HD video streams to two devices at a time. Netflix ended Q1 with nearly 47 million U.S. streaming subscribers. “We will phase out this grandfathering gradually over the remainder of 2016, with our longest-tenured members getting the longest benefit,” the company said in a statement. “We are rolling this out slowly over the year, rather than mostly in May, so we can learn as we go.” 3. New International Markets Will Take Time To Develop Well-heeled, better-educated consumers fueled Netflix’s early growth in overseas markets. The streaming video leader first grabbed the low-hanging fruit: consumers who enjoy English-language content and have international credit cards. Getting the next group of consumers to subscribe will take more work, the company said. Netflix needs to add more content in local languages and new payment options, Hastings said. “Over the next couple of years, as we further localize, we’ll be able to see more opportunity,” Hasting said. Netflix will premiere its first French original series, “Marseille,” a political drama starring Gerard Depardieu, globally on May 5, and a new Japanese original series, “Hibana,” globally in June. Netflix also is working on “3%” in Brazil, “Suburra” in Italy, “Dark” in Germany, an as-yet-untitled period series in Spain, a second season of “Club de Cuervos” from Mexico and another Mexican original series starring Kate del Castillo called “Ingobernable.” Plus, it is producing a Japanese anime series, “Perfect Bones.” 4. Netflix Has No Interest In Buying A Movie Studio Netflix executives on Monday’s conference call said that they had no interest in bidding on several movie studios reportedly in play, including Viacom ( VIAB ) subsidiary Paramount and Starz ( STRZA ). “It’s been 15 years we’ve been public and 20 years existing, and we’ve done no M&A,” Hastings said. “So I think that probably speaks for itself.” Netflix Chief Content Officer Ted Sarandos said Netflix is building its own production capabilities. Netflix has been successful growing its content production organically, so it doesn’t make sense to “juice it with M&A,” Hastings said. 5. Downloads Possible, But No Live Sports Or Virtual Reality Netflix is considering allowing customers in some markets with poor Internet infrastructure to download shows and movies for offline viewing. “We’ve been so focused on click-and-watch and the beauty and simplicity of streaming,” Hastings said. “But as we expand around the world, where we see an uneven set of networks, it’s something we should keep an open mind about.” But Netflix executives scoffed at the idea of offering live sports. They also said that virtual reality programming was not something the company is considering. VR for the consumer market likely will be focused on video game experiences for the foreseeable future, Hastings said. Bonus: Analysts React To Netflix Q1 Report At least 10 analysts cut their price targets on Netflix stock in response to the company’s Q1 report. Oppenheimer analyst Jason Helfstein lowered his price target on Netflix to 123 from 140 but reiterated his outperform rating on the stock. The company’s second-quarter guidance suggests slower-than-expected international subscriber growth, Helfstein said. “The magnitude of the global launch in Q1 (to 130 new countries) makes a hyperlocal content strategy impractical in the short term,” he said in a report. “As such, it appears near-term momentum will slow as Netflix decides which countries to focus on.” Pivotal Research Group analyst Jeffrey Wlodarczak cut his price target to 145 from 155 but kept his buy rating. Netflix’s Q2 international guidance was well below expectations, he said. Wall Street analysts on average were looking for 2.8 million new international subscribers, vs. the 2 million that Netflix forecast. “We had frankly anticipated more pent-up demand in these international markets (even with an initially less appealing focus on English-language programming and international payments), and now it appears that in these new markets Netflix will need to first invest in new localized content/improved payment mechanisms to accelerate growth, which will take time,” Wlodarczak said in a report. FBR analyst Barton Crockett raised his price target to 104 from 100 and maintained his market perform rating. But he called the company’s international subscriber guidance “jarring.”