The New Non-traded REIT’s
May 25, 2012
A controversial
real-estate investment is getting a makeover—and while the critics still aren’t
sold, some advisers say it is worth considering for investors comfortable with
the risks.
The
vehicles, known as “nontraded real-estate investment trusts” because they
aren’t traded on exchanges, have faced increasing regulatory scrutiny after
investors complained of high fees, poor disclosure, frozen redemptions and
erratic valuations during the property boom.
In response, many
companies that specialize in nontraded REITs are creating new versions with
lower fee structures, more redemption opportunities and shares that re-price
daily.
In the past nine months,
four such REITs have been launched and five more have registered with the
Securities and Exchange Commission, according to Robert A. Stanger & Co., a
real-estate investment bank in Shrewsbury, N.J. The companies behind these
REITs hope to raise $18.3 billion.
Two already have started
buying commercial property in San Diego. American
Realty Capital Daily Net Asset Value Trust, which has raised $7 million, has
purchased five properties, including three Family Dollar stores. Cole Real
Estate Income Strategy (Daily NAV) has purchased nine properties—mostly housing
free-standing Walgreens and CVS stores—for nearly $30 million.
Industry executives say
these new nontraded REITs will do a better job of giving investors a way to
invest in real estate without the volatility of exchange-traded REITs, which
have assets of roughly $500 billion. Like existing nontraded REITs, the new
ones are offering attractive initial dividends, such as American Realty
Capital’s nearly 7% distribution and Cole Real Estate’s 5.5% distribution.
But these new structures
haven’t completely silenced critics, who point out that some fees for commercial property in San Diego remain high and investors might still face redemption problems.
Jim Sullivan, a managing
director at REIT research firm Green Street Advisors, says investors are still
better off investing in a publicly traded REIT. “They are more liquid, they are
more transparent and the market tells you every day what they’re worth,” he
says.
Traded
REITs, like nontraded ones, are required to pay at least 90% of their taxable
income in the form of dividends. But unlike nontraded REITs, traded REITs’
values are set throughout the trading day, giving investors instant
transparency.
Nontraded REITs first
became popular a decade ago. The pitch: Long-term investors would hold them for
seven to 10 years, during which time they would collect attractive dividends.
Then the REITs would sell their commercial property in San Diego or go public, returning to investors their principal plus any
gains. The trade-off was that redemptions would be limited during the lives of
the REITs.
But fees were high—as
much as 11% in initial sales charges. And only 19 of about 90 have returned
investors’ principal over the years.
More recently, the
vehicles have come under fire for the quarterly valuations they reported.
During the downturn, when public REITs reported sharp declines in their share
prices, some brokers told investors their nontraded REIT shares had barely
changed from their original price.
Critics didn’t think
this was possible and, as regulatory scrutiny of the products’ valuation
methods increased, it turned out the critics were often right. For example, one
nontraded REIT that specialized in shopping centers, Retail Properties of
America, told investors last fall their shares were worth $6.95 each.
Last month, when the
company converted to a traded company, the shares were valued at $3.20 before a
reverse stock split. Retail Properties declined to comment.
In the new crop of
nontraded REITs, the fee structure has been changed. For example, in the
American Realty vehicle, investors have a choice: If they buy shares from a
broker, they pay a 7% upfront sales fee. If they buy from an investment
adviser, they pay no upfront commission. Rather, the REIT pays an annual fee of
0.7%, which goes toward paying investment advisers in commercial property in San Diego.
All the new REITs value
their shares daily. And redemptions will likely be easier. Some will be setting
aside some of the capital they raise for this purpose. For example, Cole will
allocate 10% of the first $1 billion raised for redemptions and 5% thereafter.
American Realty will set aside up to 20% of the capital they raise for this
purpose.
The changes show that
the industry is ridding itself of “bad habits and poorly structured products,”
says Nicholas Schorsch, chief executive of American Realty Capital. “Sponsors
who didn’t adapt to change will fade away or close down.”
Source: The Wall Street
Journal – A.D. PRUITT
DISCLAIMER: This blog has been curated from an
alternate source and is designed for informational purposes to highlight the
commercial real estate market. It solely represents the opinion of the specific
blogger and does not necessarily represent the opinion of Pacific Coast
Commercial.
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