An important concept to understand is that public real estate investment trusts (REITs) transact at a market price that is usually above or below the value of the underlying investments.
In comparison, private real estate funds transact at value. Investors typically buy into and redeem out of the funds at net asset value (NAV), which is driven largely by the appraised value of the underlying assets of the funds.
Real estate interval funds, like the Versus Capital Multi-Manager Real Estate Income Fund (“VCMIX”, the “Fund”), which allow daily purchases and offer periodic repurchase offers, tend to sit in the middle. VCMIX typically targets an approximate 25% allocation to public real estate securities (including REITs) and 75% allocation to private real estate funds. Transactions occur at the Fund’s NAV, which is calculated daily1.
While there are myriad reasons to invest in public REITs or private real estate, there are less-understood frictional “costs” associated with each asset class. This blog will attempt to explain these costs which we believe are important to understand before investing in either public or private real estate.
There are typically periods during an economic cycle where real estate faces one headwind or another. Beginning around the start of 2022, REITs encountered a headwind in the form of higher interest rates which increased the cost of capital for real estate operations. Market perception of this change drove the price of REITs down more quickly than the actual impacts to real estate value. As a result, REITs traded at a discount for most of 2022.
The idea of buying REITs at a discount and waiting for the price to revert to the mean may seem like a tempting proposition since REITs have averaged a 3% premium to NAV over the long term, as shown on the chart above. However, investors in REIT-focused mutual funds and ETFs have not historically been good at taking advantage of discounted valuations, as illustrated by fund flows, below.
The blue bars in the above chart represent domestic REIT mutual fund and exchange-traded fund (ETF) flows. Rather than buying REITs when they are trading at a discount to NAV, investors instead tend to pile into the asset class when REITs have performed well and are trading at a premium, paying more for the security than the value of the investments it represents. The same can be seen on the downside – investors tend to exit REITs when they are trading at a discount to NAV.
If an investor sells a REIT when the security is trading at a 10% discount to NAV, he or she is effectively getting back 90 cents on the dollar relative to the underlying value of the real estate. This is a frictional “cost” of daily liquidity. In other words, REIT investors may (and often do, as seen by the flow data above) accept a price significantly less than the value of the real estate to receive immediate liquidity.
During periods of market uncertainty, managers of private real estate funds may need to restrict liquidity, also known as “prorating” redemptions, given the relatively illiquid nature of private commercial real estate. However, during these periods of proration when investors are only receiving a portion of their redemption request, they are still transacting at NAV rather than receiving a discounted price.
Funds in proration are essentially telling their investors the fund can only redeem a portion of fund shares at 100% of their value. So, the frictional “cost” of limited liquidity investing is investors may not receive all their requested liquidity during a redemption period, but they do receive full value for their shares.
We believe investors are well-served by understanding these frictional costs as well as volatility differences and their own behavioral tendencies when considering how to allocate to real estate. We believe the lower volatility of private core real estate buffers investors against the illiquidity risk and pitfalls of market timing while still providing the potential for attractive risk-adjusted returns.
Whether investing in public REITs or private real estate, we are strong advocates of holding for the long-term, ideally across multiple market cycles, in order to capture the strong upside that real estate investments (on average) have historically provided.
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DISCLOSURES:
1While VCMIX strikes a daily NAV, most of its underlying private funds publish a quarterly NAV. As such, VCMIX fair values these investments in the interim periods. For more information on the Fund and its valuation policies and procedures, please see the Fund’s prospectus.
INVESTORS SHOULD CAREFULLY CONSIDER THE FUND’S INVESTMENT OBJECTIVES, RISKS, CHARGES, AND EXPENSES BEFORE INVESTING. A PROSPECTUS WITH THIS AND OTHER INFORMATION ABOUT THE FUND MAY BE OBTAINED FROM THE VERSUS CAPITAL WEB SITE (versuscapital.com). INVESTORS SHOULD READ IT CAREFULLY BEFORE INVESTING. AN INVESTMENT IN THE FUND IS SUBJECT TO A HIGH DEGREE OF RISK. THESE RISKS INCLUDE, BUT ARE NOT LIMITED TO, THOSE OUTLINED BELOW.