Safe bet? Sovereign funds rethink once-reliable real
estate
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[August 24, 2020] By
Tom Arnold
LONDON (Reuters) - The COVID-19 pandemic
has forced sovereign wealth funds to think the previously unthinkable.
With prime office blocks lying empty around the world, hotels
half-vacant and retailers struggling to stay afloat, the funds are
retreating from many of the real estate investments that have long been
a mainstay of their strategies.
Sovereign wealth funds (SWFs) invested $4.4 billion in the sector in the
first seven months of 2020, 65% down from the same period a year ago,
according to previously unpublished data provided to Reuters by Global
SWF, an industry data specialist.
The nature of property investments is also shifting, with funds
increasingly investing in logistics space, such as warehousing, amid a
boom in online commerce during the pandemic, while cutting back on deals
for offices and retail buildings.
Such shifts in behaviour can have seismic effects on the global real
estate market, given such funds are among the largest investors in
property and have interests worth hundreds of billions of dollars in
total. Three sovereign funds sit within the top 10 largest real estate
investors, according to market specialists IPE Real Assets.

A big question is whether the changes are structural for the funds, for
which property is an asset-class staple at about 8% of their total
portfolios on average, or a temporary response to a huge, unexpected and
unfamiliar global event.
"Real estate is still a big part of sovereign wealth fund portfolios and
will continue to be so," said Diego López, managing director of Global
SWF and a former sovereign wealth fund adviser at PwC.
"What COVID has accelerated is the sophistication of SWFs trying to
build diversification and resilience into their portfolio - and hence
looking for other asset classes and industries."
Sovereign funds have been more bearish on property than public pension
funds, another big investor in the sector, Global SWF found. While they
have outstripped the pension funds in overall investment across most
industries and assets this year, by two to one, that ratio is reversed
for real estate.
For a graphic on Sovereign wealth fund property holdings:
https://graphics.reuters.com/SWF-REALESTATE/dgkpllmyopb/chart.png
FUTURE OF THE OFFICE
Funds are nursing hits to their existing property portfolios stemming
from the introduction of lockdowns and social-distancing restrictions.
While other parts of their portfolio, such as stocks and bonds, have
rebounded from March's trough, a real-estate recovery is less assured.
Property capital value globally is expected to drop by 14% in 2020
before rising by 3.4% in 2021, according to commercial real estate
services group CBRE. Analysts and academics question whether the
pandemic's impact may prove long-lasting, with more people working from
home and shopping online.
"I think there's a real threat to some commercial business districts in
the big cities as I can't see us all return to the 9-to-5 schlep in,
schlep out," said Yolande Barnes, a real-estate specialist at London
university UCL.
The value of property assets of some funds has fallen in 2020, with
those experiencing the biggest drops including Singapore's Temasek
Holdings and GIC, Abu Dhabi Investment Authority (ADIA) and Qatar
Investment Authority (QIA), according to data compiled for Reuters by
industry tracker Preqin.
Those four funds have collectively seen the value of such assets drop by
$18.1 billion to $132.9 billion, the data showed.
Reuters was unable to confirm whether the fall was due to lower
valuations or asset sales. The funds either declined to comment or did
not respond.
Many sovereign funds do not publicly disclose data on property
investments, with Norway's one of the exceptions.
The Norwegian fund, which has around $49 billion invested in real
estate, up from $47 billion at the end of 2019, said last week its
unlisted property portfolio returned minus 1.6% in the first half of
2020.
Sovereign funds have also largely steered clear in 2020 of new direct
investments in London or Los Angeles, hotspots in normal times,
according to property services firm Jones Lang LaSalle (JLL), which said
SWFs were "on the defensive".
LOGISTICS AND BIOTECH
The funds' advance in logistics properties, such as warehousing and
goods distribution centres, comes at a time of high demand as people
have bought everything from toilet paper to trainers from home during
lockdowns.
[to top of second column] |

A largely empty shopping center is seen during the coronavirus
disease (COVID-19) outbreak in Singapore August 17, 2020.
REUTERS/Edgar Su

So far this year, logistics have accounted for about 22% of funds' real-estate
investments by value, compared with 15% in 2019 as a whole, the Global SWF data
shows.
Meanwhile, investments in offices have fallen to 36% from 49% last year, and in
retail property to zero versus 15%.
Marcus Frampton, chief investment officer at the Alaska Permanent Fund
Corporation (APFC), told Reuters that real-estate deal volumes had "slowed down
substantially" in general, but that, anecdotally, he saw activity in industrial
facilities like logistics and "multi-family" apartment blocks.
The wealth fund's holdings have risen to $4.7 billion, up from $4 billion at the
end of June, after the purchase of multi-family and industrial REIT stocks on
July 1, Frampton said.
"Commercial warehouse activity is strong," he added.
In a sign of the times, Temasek participated in a $500 million investment in
Indonesia-based e-commerce firm Tokopedia in June.
In contrast, physical retail, a significant part of many funds' holdings, has
been hit hard. QIA-owned luxury retailer Harrods in London has reportedly
forecast a 45% plunge in annual sales, as visitor numbers plummet. Many other
retailers have sought to renegotiate rents.
The outlook appears brighter for some fledgling sectors such as biotech, which
has come to the fore during the pandemic.
"We have seen significant demand for life sciences space. That's ranged from
office to specialist lab and warehouse space," said Alistair Meadows, JLL's head
of UK capital markets.
For a graphic on Sovereign wealth fund real estate deals:
https://graphics.reuters.com/SWF-REALESTATE/oakpeogkmpr/chart.png
DISTRESSED OPPORTUNITIES
The U.S. office market is expected to face its first year since 2009 of more
space becoming vacant than leased, according to CBRE.

Still, investors are betting on a rebound of sorts in some quarters. For
example, Canary Wharf Group, partly owned by the QIA, unveiled plans last month
for a large new mixed-use development, including business space, in London's
financial district.
And while hotels face huge challenges, occupancy rates are expected to rebound
near to pre-COVID levels - but not until the end of 2021.
The Libyan Investment Authority has experienced problems with the operating
expenses of some of its properties, including some hotels in Africa owned by its
subsidiary, Chairman Ali Mahmoud Hassan Mohamed told Reuters.
But it remains committed to its real-estate portfolio, estimated at $6.6 billion
in its latest valuation in 2012, as it was able to restore its value, he said.
Crises can also present opportunities, however.
In the aftermath of the pandemic, some funds may look for bargains as distressed
properties emerge.
The Hong Kong Monetary Authority, which operates a fund, told Reuters it would
"closely monitor market conditions with a view to capturing appropriate
opportunities".
And in an uncertain world, some academics argue that property remains a solid
bet for savvy investors.
Barnes of UCL said sovereign funds could be "lighter on their feet" than some
other institutional funds and more able to adjust their behaviour to suit
changing circumstances.
"Real estate is one of the better sectors to be in, in a world of turmoil," she
added. "But it's very much about picking the right real estate."
(Reporting by Tom Arnold in London; Additional reporting by Alun John in Hong
Kong, Gwladys Fouche in Oslo, Saeed Azhar in Dubai and Anshuman Daga in
Singapore; Editing by Pravin Char)
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