Searching For Value In The REIT Rubble

 | Dec 07, 2016 12:55PM ET

Leave it to the stock market to do the exact opposite of what you expect it to do. Following Donald Trump’s surprise win, stocks have spent the past three weeks pushing higher.

Ironically, given that the President-elect is a world-renown real estate developer, real estate investment trusts (REITS) have gotten clobbered. REITs as a sector peaked in July, but the selling has continued well past the presidential election.

As I write, the sector is down nearly 20%… ouch!

h3 Long-Term Problem Or Overreaction?/h3

Whenever I see a sector flirting with bear-market territory at a time when the rest of the market is hitting new all-time highs, I sit up and take notice. Sometimes it can be the sign of a sector facing deep, long-term problems with no easy solutions. But just as often, it’s a classic market overreaction.

So, as we look at the REIT carnage, which is it?

Is the market correctly forecasting real estate doom or is Mr. Market working himself into a stomach ulcer over nothing?

Let’s take a look.

The narrative right now is that the Fed’s pending rate hike is bad news for REITs, as it potentially raises their cost of capital. Adding to this anxiety is the spike in longer-term bond yields.

To start, it raises their borrowing costs. REITs, as with most real estate investors, tend to borrow a lot of money and every additional dollar paid in interest is a dollar not kept as profit. But perhaps worse, REITs tend to be priced relative to bonds. So rising bond yields (and falling bond prices) mean rising REIT yields (and falling REIT prices).

This latter point has been a particular worry since investors have come to view REITs as bond substitutes over the past few years. With bond yields too low to be worth considering, investors have been chasing the higher yields of other income sectors, particularly REITs.

Again, that’s the narrative. But is it actually true?

Well, let’s see. The following chart shows the performance of REIT stocks during periods of rising bond yields. The shaded areas represent periods in which 10-year bond yields were rising.