Nonlisted REITs Fight to Shake Misconceptions
November 7, 2012
Public nonlisted REITs
are the subject of persistent questions and scrutiny. And misconceptions abound
about the track records of operators and how nonlisted REITs function on a
day-to-day basis.
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If you listen to the
critics, nonlisted REITs are unattractive products. They aren’t transparent
enough. There is limited liquidity, meaning once investors in commercial real estate in San Diego have forked over their cash they can’t get it
back until the REIT’s liquidity event takes place seven to 10 years later. The
firms are suspect because they don’t have enough cash flow to cover dividend
payments. Instead, they use debt and cash from new investors to make up for
shortfalls. They charge high front-end load and ongoing fees. And the sector
has a spotty record when it comes to liquidity events.
To top it off, some
broker-dealers have been subject to lawsuits from investors who felt cheated
after being steered into nonlisted REITs that didn’t perform as well as
advertised. The Financial Industry Regulatory Authority (FINRA) in August even
went so far as to reissue an alert cautioning investors to be careful before
investing in the sector.
But backers of nonlisted
REITs say this is an inaccurate picture. They’re looking to set the record
straight. And when you compare the claims with the reality, there’s some merit
to the idea that nonlisted REITs have gotten a bad rap, including in
relationship to investments in commercial real estate in San Diego.
The truth is that
nonlisted REITs aren’t as opaque as detractors claim. The lack of liquidity is
a feature—not a bug. Fees associated with nonlisted REITs have fallen and are
comparable with other financial products. And the majority of nonlisted REITs
that have gone full cycle have performed on par with publicly traded REITs and
other real estate investments.
Despite the questions,
the industry continues to perform and raise funds. In the first half of 2012,
nonlisted REITs raised $5.1 billion, a $500 million rise over the first half of
2011, according to BlueVault Partners, an Austin, Texas–based research firm
that specializes in non-traded REITs. Nonlisted REITs acquired $5.8 billion in
properties in the first half of the year. That was down from $7.5 billion in
the first six months of 2011.
Nonlisted REITs
generally have a life cycle of about 10 years—although that is now shortening.
Here’s a look at
some of the claims against the sector and some of the leading sponsors’ and
analysts’ responses.
Lack of transparency
Nonlisted REITs have
come under fire of late for how they report valuations. After the 2008
financial crisis, publicly traded REITs saw their stock prices plummet. But
nonlisted REITs reported relatively stable valuations. That practice has come
under scrutiny.
Inland Western REIT,
which went public this year under the name Retail Properties of America, told
investors last fall that its shares were worth $6.95 each. But when it went
public, its shares were valued at just $3.20 before a reverse stock split.
But backers say the
issue with the REIT had nothing to do with transparency. It was more about
market timing. Moreover, nonlisted REITs are held to high standards in terms of
documentation. And state regulators also have to sign off on any unlisted REITs
based within their boundaries.
“I’ve probably never
been involved with a more regulated part of the industry than this one,” says
Kevin Hogan, president of the Investment Program Association (IPA), an industry
group that advocates for direct investments.
Both FINRA and the
Securities Exchange Commission (SEC) already have rules in place outlining in
detail the information nonlisted REITs need to provide in disclosures to
broker-dealers and investors.
In fact, there’s even
some information nonlisted REITs are prevented from reporting that some think
would add even greater transparency.
“With
institutional investors, we can give a forecast and then quarter-to-quarter and
year-to-year we can track our performance versus the forecast,” says Charles
Schreiber, CEO and co-founder of KBS Realty Advisors. KBS sponsors nonlisted
REITs but also has a track record of working directly with institutions and
pension funds. “We can’t do that with nonlisted REITs. It’s a little bit
frustrating because we could give the investor a way to track our performance.
But agencies like the SEC and FINRA view that as promissory.”
In addition, to improve
transparency going forward and help broker-dealers in commercial real estate in San Diego when selling nonlisted REITs, the IPA is
developing a designation for financial advisors. It has developed two courses
to date and wants to have seven or eight in total in order to create a full
designation. Hogan estimates it will take several years to fully build out the
courses.
Lack of liquidity
Related to transparency
is the question of liquidity. With nonlisted REITs, investors put their money
in for the life of the vehicle. Traditionally, nonlisted REITs have had life
spans of about a decade. That’s beginning to shorten to four to six years with
some newer issues. Regardless, there is a secondary market for nonlisted REIT
shares, but it remains small. And cashing out before the end of the life span
comes with penalties. So, by and large, once you’re in, you’re in.
But proponents say that
this is precisely the point of nonlisted REITs. Nonlisted REITs were designed
specifically to be nonliquid assets to help balance investor portfolios. And
the assets, such as commercial real estate in San Diego, are meant to be long-term holds so that
emotion is taken out of the equation for investors in times of market euphoria
or despair.
“Liquidity is an
important component of some investments, but it comes at the price of market
volatility,” says Jason Mattox, CEO of nonlisted REIT sponsor Behringer
Harvard. “Because direct real estate investments are not correlated to the same
forces as those that impact the equity markets, they can effectively reduce a
portfolio’s exposure to market volatility.”
And the lack of
liquidity comes with a reward: higher dividends.
“Nonlisted REITs pay
higher dividends than traded REITs and yield much higher returns than bank
deposits,” says Daniel Goodwin, chairman and CEO of the Inland Real Estate
Group. “So you experience a trade-off. With nonlisted REITs, you’re trading
higher yields for liquidity.”
Still, some nonlisted
REIT sponsors have taken steps to address liquidity concerns as relates to commercial real estate in San Diego. ARC and Cole Real Estate Investments have
launched so-called daily NAV REITs that provide more frequent valuations of the
properties within portfolios and the share price of the REIT. And the REITs
will retain a percentage of its overall portfolio in liquid assets to allow for
investors the option to sell their shares in advance of the REIT’s liquidity
event.
So far, demand for the
daily NAV REITs has been muted. But other nonlisted REIT sponsors are keeping
an eye on how the two REITs perform.
Dividend coverage
When it comes to
dividends, detractors often point out that in the early stages of a nonlisted
REIT’s life span the entities often pay out dividends not from cash flow but
from capital raised by new investors and/or debt.
This is generally true.
But it’s also part of the life cycle of the vehicles. Nonlisted REITs generally
have four phases—raising capital, acquisitions, operating, liquidation. In the early
phases nonlisted REITs own few assets. But after they’ve finished raising
capital and completed their acquisitions, the entities generally are paying out
dividends off from income, such as income generated from the sale of commercial real estate in San Diego.
“At that point, the
ratios start coming into line,” says David Steinwedell, a managing partner with
BlueVault Partners. “Because of the way they’re designed they first operate in
a deficit, but then they overcome it.”
Liquidity events
What happens at the end
of a nonlisted REIT’s life span also has raised some red flags.
Liquidity events
include: · liquidation through an outright portfolio sale to a third party ·
listing on a public exchange · merger with an existing public company.
The example of the IPO
for Retail Properties of America that occurred earlier this year was widely
pointed to by detractors as an example of how dangerous nonlisted REITs can be.
In this case, the REIT
originally projected an initial share price of between $10 and $12. By the time
the IPO occurred, the target had dropped to $8. But even that was only achieved
by a reverse stock split. That put the true value of the investment at between
$2.90 and $3.20 per share, according to various estimates.
Investors in the REIT
had received dividends in the years prior to the IPO. But at the end of the
day, investors in commercial real estate in San Diego were only returned about 80 cents on every
dollar they had invested, according to some estimates.
But while the Retail
Properties case played out badly, it has been the exception, according to a
study conducted by Blue Vault Partners in conjunction with the Real Estate
Finance and Investment Center at the University of Texas at Austin McCombs
School of Business.
The research analyzed 17
nonlisted REITs that have experienced “full cycle” liquidity events and found
that as a group, they offered “respectable” total returns with an average
internal rate of return of 10.3 percent. (Another five non-traded REITs are in
the midst of executing liquidity events.) In comparison, the NCREIF index (a
proxy for pension investments in real estate) delivered 11.7 percent in total
returns and the NAREIT total return index for publicly traded REITs also showed
an 11.7 percent return.
“The level of return was
pretty close to what the benchmarks produced,” Steinwedell says.
The first non-traded
REIT full-cycle liquidity event took place in 1997 when Cornerstone Realty
Income Trust listed its shares on a national stock exchange. Of the 17
non-traded REITs that have gone full cycle, five were acquired by a third
party, five listed on an exchange and seven merged with other companies.
Part of what’s affecting
liquidity events today is the product of commercial real estate values still
being down from their 2007 peaks. And that’s something that’s affecting all
commercial real estate investors, including investors in commercial real estate in San Diego, not just nonlisted REITs.
“Market conditions have
the overwhelming impact on liquidity events,” says Keith Allaire, a managing
director with Robert A. Stanger & Co., a Shrewsbury, N.J.–based investment
banking firm that focuses on real estate. “For example, in this economic
environment, a non-traded REIT might have underperforming assets because of the
recession—the fundamentals might be suffering—lower occupancy and lower rental
rates. As a board member, you’re going to say that now is not the time to
harvest the value of the portfolio.”
Other beefs
Nonlisted REITs have
also been criticized for having high fees, reportedly 15 percent front loads
and then additional fees for operating expenses and other items.
But the days of 15
percent fees are over, according to various sponsors.
According to BlueVault,
for the 11 non-traded REITs that were launched in 2011, fees dropped 23 percent
from the previous average.
Some fees, for example
internalization fees, are being eliminated entirely. An internalization fee was
charged when a contract between a REIT and its outside adviser expired and the
REIT acquired the outside advisor. But several nonlisted REIT sponsors have now
eliminated this fee.
At the end of the day,
many nonlisted REIT sponsors argue that the industry has been hurt because commercial real estate in San Diego and real estate as a whole has suffered. But,
ultimately, the track record for nonlisted REITs is not that different from
other commercial real estate investment vehicles.
Goodwin points out that
publicly traded REITs are valued at about 70 percent of pre-recession levels.
And the figure is the same for nonlisted REITs.
“So, yes, on average
values are down,” he says. “But values are down for all of real estate. So
there really isn’t a major distinction in performance.”
Source: National Real Estate Investor
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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