You Can't Control the REIT Bear Market, but You Can Control What You Do About It | The Motley Fool (2024)

The average REIT is down roughly 30% from peak levels in early 2022, but don't give up on well-run landlords.

The Vanguard Real Estate Index ETF, a broad proxy for how real estate investment trusts (REITs) are doing, is down nearly 30% from its high-water mark in 2022. That's a massive drawdown that will likely elicit worries among conservative investors. But don't panic. If you stick with high-performing, industry-leading REITs, you should come through this pullback just fine, and with your dividend checks intact.

What's gone wrong?

There are company-specific problems that have hurt specific REITs. For example, Americold Realty Trust has suffered because of supply chain problems in the food space it serves even as other industrial REITs thrived. There are also property niche problems that have hurt specific property sectors. Office REITs like SL Green have cut their dividends as the work-from-home trend has lingered as the coronavirus pandemic has waned. But from a REIT-wide perspective, one of the biggest problems has been rising interest rates.

You Can't Control the REIT Bear Market, but You Can Control What You Do About It | The Motley Fool (1)

VNQ data by YCharts

Rising interest rates impact REITs in a number of ways. Directly, interest expenses can go up as the interest rates on variable-coupon debt increase and as fixed-rate debt rolls over. There's also an impact on the translation environment, as sellers are generally slow to lower asking prices to accommodate higher borrowing costs. Many won't until there is financial distress, effectively forcing them to sell. These are dislocations that can linger over a long period, but they aren't new or unusual, and financially strong REITs with good management teams can navigate them (for example, by pushing through higher rental rates).

The other big problem with interest rates is that REITs are income vehicles that compete for investor attention with other income options. With rates notably higher, investors have other options, including safe, government-backed CDs. The drop in REIT prices is, to some degree, increasing dividend yields to better compete. This isn't new either, though there is little that a REIT can do about what amounts to investor sentiment.

Don't give up

While REITs are lower as a group, investors shouldn't react too fearfully here. The best-run landlords haven't suddenly lost their mojo. Realty Income (NYSE: O) is still the largest net-lease REIT, with a solid financial core, and management continues to invest in the business. Prologis is still an industry-leading industrial REIT with solid financials, and management just agreed to buy 14 million square feet of warehouse space from Blackstone. You could add a lot of REITs to this "still the largest/industry-leading" list, including names like strip mall REIT Federal Realty, apartment landlord Avalonbay, and data center owner Digital Realty.

Yes, the share prices of these REITs are lower, but their dividends remain intact, and are likely to head higher over time. That's important when you compare a REIT to alternative income options like CDs or bonds, where the income you generate is basically static. That means that inflation eats away at the purchasing power of your income stream. With REITs, dividend increases can help defend your buying power. So even with the REIT pullback, there's a reason to favor REITs.

Then there's the growth angle. As noted, Prologis just agreed to buy more properties, effectively growing its business and increasing its ability to support dividend growth. Avalonbay is currently doing the same internally, with nearly $1 billion of planned development starts in 2023. Those investments will benefit the apartment landlord for years to come. When a CD matures or bond comes due, you have to hope you can find a new one at a comparable rate. And your initial capital is all you get back, there's no underlying growth.

The broad pullback in REIT shares, meanwhile, could actually have a hidden benefit for long-term investors that reinvest their dividends. By doing so, you are buying more shares at a lower price (and higher yield) with each dividend payment. So you are increasing your position and lowering your average cost. If REIT values start to recover, which seems likely at some point, you will end up with greater capital appreciation and more dividend income than you would have had if REITs hadn't declined.

For investors with spare cash, this could be the opportunity to add to existing positions at attractive prices, or to buy a REIT you have liked but that seemed too expensive. While we can't know for certain if the REIT sector will stabilize, fall more, or recover, don't let fear of the unknown stop you from picking up a bargain if Wall Street has offered one. Just make sure to stick with financially strong and well-run REITs. Now is not the right time to take on risky investment choices, but it also isn't the right time to hide your head in the sand.

Stick out the pain

Even if buying more REIT shares isn't right for you right now, don't rush to sell well-run REITs. There are unique situations in the broad sector, like offices, that have notable problems. But overall, REITs are not in a bad place. It is really just investor sentiment that has changed. And since Mr. Market is notoriously fickle, it is probably better to view the drop as an opportunity than a signal that REITs are forever tarnished.

Reuben Gregg Brewer has positions in Federal Realty Investment Trust and Realty Income. The Motley Fool has positions in and recommends Digital Realty Trust, Prologis, and Vanguard Specialized Funds-Vanguard Real Estate ETF. The Motley Fool recommends AvalonBay Communities and Realty Income. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.

You Can't Control the REIT Bear Market, but You Can Control What You Do About It | The Motley Fool (2024)

FAQs

Why are REITs doing so poorly? ›

Here's an explanation for how we make money . More than a year of interest rate hikes by the Federal Reserve pushed down returns on real estate investment trusts, or REITs. While higher rates negatively impacted nearly every sector of the economy in 2022 and most of 2023, real estate was hit especially hard.

Will REITs ever recover? ›

Right now, REITs (VNQ) are at an inflection point and time is running out for investors. But now as we head into 2024, we expect the polar opposite and this should lead to an epic recovery across the REIT sector. The Fed expects at least 3 interest rate cuts in 2024 and the market is predicting even more.

Will REITs recover in 2024? ›

But despite that, most REITs have kept growing their dividend. Most of them hiked in 2022, 2023, and will hike again in 2024. This is the ultimate proof that REITs are doing better than what the market appears to believe.

Do REITs beat the market? ›

REITs are also attractive thanks to their market-beating returns. During the past 25 years, REITs have delivered an 11.4% annual return, crushing the S&P 500's 7.6% annualized total return in the same period.

Can REITs go to zero? ›

By law, 75% of a REITs asset must be invested in real estate. The market value of the property owned by the REIT offers a bit of protection, as long as the value of the property doesn't go to zero. That's not to say that REIT values can't go down, though.

Do REITs do well in a recession? ›

REITs historically perform well during and after recessions | Pensions & Investments.

Why I don t invest in REITs? ›

Non-traded REITs have little liquidity, meaning it's difficult for investors to sell them. Publicly traded REITs have the risk of losing value as interest rates rise, which typically sends investment capital into bonds.

How are REITs expected to perform in 2024? ›

With healthy property fundamentals and a favorable interest rate environment, REIT fund managers expect the sector to deliver double digit returns this year.

Why don t more people invest in REITs? ›

In most cases, REITs utilize a combination of debt and equity to purchase a property. As such, they are more sensitive than other asset classes to changes in interest rates., particularly those that use variable rate debt. When interest rates rise, REITs share prices can be prone to volatility.

What is the 90% rule for REITs? ›

How to Qualify as a REIT? To qualify as a REIT, a company must have the bulk of its assets and income connected to real estate investment and must distribute at least 90 percent of its taxable income to shareholders annually in the form of dividends.

What is better than REITs? ›

Over the long term, a basket of top dividend stocks can outperform a basket of REITs for three simple reasons: REITs dilute their own shares to raise more cash, they're designed to generate steady income instead of capital appreciation, and they're more sensitive to interest rates than more diversified companies.

Can REITs lose value? ›

Because REITs use debt to purchase investments, rising interest rates could mean these companies would have to pay more interest on future loans. This could in turn reduce their return on investment. Because of this, REITs could potentially lose value when interest rates rise.

Why are REITs dropping? ›

The overall business performance of the S-REIT sector has been lacklustre and some segments of the industry have not been able to recover to pre-COVID levels, either due to a change in business dynamics or due to an inflationary environment. Office REITs have faced challenges due to the new work-from-home (WFH) trends.

Will REIT stocks rebound? ›

The growing demand for retail space will drive the performance of retail REITs. In this article, we have handpicked four REITs that have outpaced the real estate market's growth on a year-to-date basis and are poised to continue their winning streaks in 2024.

What is the long term outlook for REITs? ›

After lagging equities the past two years, REITs offer an attractive investment opportunity in 2024. The headwind of higher bond yields and central bank rate hikes is likely to abate and may turn into a tailwind if our view about an impending economic slowdown and decelerating inflation trends is correct.

What is the future of REITs? ›

On average we see the REIT sector positioned to deliver approximately 3-4% earnings growth in 2024, ranging from over 10% for US healthcare and logistics REITs, to -10% for office REITs and Hong Kong residential developers.

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