Banking crisis scars struggling U.S. real estate stocks
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[April 19, 2023] By
Lewis Krauskopf
NEW YORK (Reuters) - U.S. real estate stocks are struggling this year
after a rough 2022, as fears that banks will tighten lending standards
pile pressure on a sector already hit by higher interest rates.
After slumping 28% last year, the S&P 500 real estate sector has gained
about 1% in 2023, lagging an 8% rise for the overall S&P 500. Real
estate is the only one of the 11 S&P 500 sectors to underperform the
benchmark index in both 2022 and so far in 2023.
Driving this year’s struggles are fears that tumult in the banking
sector following the collapse of Silicon Valley Bank in March will make
it more difficult for real estate companies to access debt, as banks
become more stringent on lending. The real estate sector has slumped 2%
since SVB's troubles came to light on March 8, compared to a 4% rise for
the S&P 500.
“There is nothing about the current banking situation ... that made life
easier for real estate companies,” said Peter Tuz, president of Chase
Investment Counsel. Because banks have lost deposits, “they will be just
more careful who they lend money to,” he said.
With the S&P 500 real estate sector off nearly 30% from its all-time
high at the end of 2021, investors are looking to upcoming earnings to
determine the sector's near-term trajectory. S&P 500 real estate company
earnings are expected to fall 0.3% this year after rising almost 11% in
2022, according to Refinitiv IBES.
The companies must deliver on their earnings forecasts if they want to
reassure investors, said Wes Golladay, an equity analyst at R.W. Baird.
“They just recently provided guidance with their fourth quarter earnings
and they have to deliver that,” he said.
Investors are also closely watching office demand, as some of the
largest U.S. banks single out commercial real estate as an area of
growing concern, partly due to a surge in remote working since the
COVID-19 pandemic.
The S&P 1500 office REITs index is down 16% over since March 8 and some
individual stocks have seen sharper declines, with shares of SL Green
Realty down 26% and Vornado Realty off 19%.
“While the market has clearly priced in a lot of negativity for office
REITs, rising delinquency rates and the upward trajectory of vacancy
rates implies there could be more downside risk ahead,” wrote LPL
Financial’s Adam Turnquist in a note earlier this week.
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A home stands behind a real estate sign
in a new development in York County, South Carolina, U.S., February
29, 2020. REUTERS/Lucas Jackson/File Photo
Another key factor is likely to be the future path of interest
rates, investors said. Steady future cash flows from commercial
buildings become less attractive as rates rise, and real estate
stocks were among the worst hit by the Fed’s aggressive rate
increases of 2022.
Valuation for a group of over 130 real estate stocks -- comparing
stock prices to funds from operations, a common industry metric --
fell from 25.5 times earnings at the start of 2022 to 17 times by
year end, according to R.W. Baird.
Investors are pricing in another rate increase at the Fed's monetary
policy meeting next month, with rates then starting to fall after
the summer. The Fed, on the other hand, has projected rates will
remain around current levels for the rest of 2023.
Still, some investors believe the selloff may have created
opportunities to buy on the cheap.
Greg Kuhl, portfolio manager on the global property equities team at
Janus Henderson, said most publicly traded real estate companies
still have sufficient access to capital if they require it, despite
last month's banking issues.
Kuhn's portfolio is overweight industrial real estate companies,
including shares of warehouse company Prologis, an area of the
market where he says occupancy rates are comparatively high.
"We think the fundamentals are really strong there,” he said.
Indeed, while vacancy rates have gone up in office space compared to
before the coronavirus pandemic hit in 2020, they have fallen over
that time in areas such as retail and industrial real estate,
according to Glenmede.
The firm currently maintains its weighting in the real estate sector
at a level that it has held in previous years, said Michael
Reynolds, vice president of investment strategy at Glenmede.
"People have been blindly divesting from REITs because of fears on
offices, thinking that what is going on in offices is indicative of
the overall space," Reynolds said. "We tend to think that that’s not
the case."
(Reporting by Lewis Krauskopf; Editing by Ira Iosebashvili and Deepa
Babington)
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