The broad
REITs market averaged a 6.5 % return during these rising rate cycles.
Not exact matches
«One of the things I love about
REITs is that pockets of
market inefficiency seem to spring up because they aren't as widely followed and understood by your
average investor.»
REITs are an easy way to get broad real estate exposure, and yields are typically higher than the
market average.
RIOCAN
REIT $ 30.05 (Toronto symbol REI.UN; Units outstanding: 315.8 million;
Market cap: $ 9.5 billion; TSINetwork Rating:
Average; Dividend yield: 4.7 %; www.riocan.com) continues to hit new all - time highs, even with the closure of the Future Shop chain.
You're sure to find business opportunities that are (on
average) comparable to that offered by the Irish property
market, and many are still investing opportunities that are priced at a 50 percentage point + discount vs. Green
REIT.
Lingering negativity Although returns for regional malls (9.11 percent as of July 31, 1997) and strip centers (9.30 percent) meet or exceed the
average REIT performance, public retail
REITs continue to suffer from
market generalization.
Health Care
REIT expects property - level net operating income to increase 4 percent to 5 percent per year on
average over the long term, assuming economic conditions consistent with the current
market.
Mortgage
REITs» total returns on
average continued to outpace the S&P 500's in April 2017 and doubled the performance of the broad
market index in the first four months of the year.
A separate report by RBC Capital
Markets claims that lodging REITs posted an average RevPar growth of 6.5 percent, with strong markets such as Seattle experiencing RevPar growth of more than 10 p
Markets claims that lodging
REITs posted an
average RevPar growth of 6.5 percent, with strong
markets such as Seattle experiencing RevPar growth of more than 10 p
markets such as Seattle experiencing RevPar growth of more than 10 percent.
At times when the yield spread was less than 80 basis points — when
REIT dividend yields were extraordinarily high, reflecting
REIT stock prices that were especially low relative to current distributions —
REIT performance over the next year tended to be especially strong, with total returns that
averaged 20.81 percent and outpaced the broad stock
market by 5.67 percentage points.
At times when the yield spread was greater than 180 basis points — that is, when
REIT dividend yields were extraordinarily low, reflecting
REIT stock prices that were especially high relative to their current distributions —
REIT performance over the next year tended to be weak, with total returns that
averaged 6.98 percent and underperformed the broad stock
market by 1.84 percentage points.
The regression predicted extraordinarily high returns for
REIT investors over the next 12 months at +29 percent — and indeed investors who bought in to
REITs at that time were rewarded with total returns
averaging +26.37 percent that outpaced the broad stock
market by 33.83 percentage points.
REITs are generally quite different from the small - cap value segment of the non-REIT stock
market: the long - term
average performance of the two categories is very similar, but
REITs have usually been less volatile and the correlation between them has typically been only about 70 percent.
To take the extreme case, it's very rare for the Baa - rated corporate bond yield to be less than the
average REIT dividend yield: that has happened only at times when investors were most dramatically avoiding
REITs, most recently in March 2009 at the lowest point of the Great Financial Crisis — and in the 12 months following that episode, those investors who bucked the
market and bought into
REITs were rewarded with total returns that exceeded 100 percent.
During those months,
REITs outperformed the broader stock
market index by 1.4 percentage points on
average, according to a recent study by AMB Rosen Real Estate Securities, Berkeley, Calif..
Over the past two years,
REITs have been working diligently to clean up their balance sheets and, as a result, the industry's
average debt to
market capitalization ratio now stands at approximately 39.9 percent, in line with the historical
average, according to Case.
It has been pretty «rough sledding» in the
REIT market, with major property sectors trading on
average today at a 15 percent discount to net asset value (NAV), he says.