“Pick and Shovel” Plays On The Social Distancing Economy

 | Apr 22, 2020 05:48AM ET

Landlords and lenders have taken it on the chin since the world shut down. And until this place is actually open for business once again, many REIT (real estate investment trust) investors are unfortunately rolling the dice on the next rent payment coming in, the next commercial mortgage payment being made.

To be fair, however, select REITs are going to be OK, and many of them are selling at bargain prices right now. In the short run, REIT prices can move together (for example, drop when the 10-year Treasury yield rises). However, as weeks turn into months and years, we usually see a great variation in the performance of REIT stocks.

The REIT sector varies widely because, well, it really isn’t a sector at all. It’s a corporate vehicle that lets firms get a pass on taxes provided they pay most of their profits to their shareholders as dividends.

A cell tower landlord like Hidden Yields holding American Tower (NYSE:AMT) and a shopping mall owner like Simon Property Group (NYSE:SPG) may both be REITs, but their cash flows are completely different. And their year-to-date returns reflect the diverging outlooks for cell phone usage and mall traffic:

Same Sector, Wildly Different YTD Returns