By: Omar Khattaly Researcher & Consultant on MENA Political Economy and Sovereign Wealth Funds
March 2014
Despite the focus on stocks and bonds, real estate is still a major part of the institutional investment portfolio. Investing in the real estate market is achieved by either direct (physical) and indirect (securitized). Direct real estate investment involves the acquisition and management of actual physical properties. Indirect investment involves buying shares of real estate investment companies such as REITs.
Direct real estate investment has a desirable risk and return, but is costly and can involve a lengthy and complex process.
Indirect REIT real estate investment can be broken into three subcategories: equity, mortgage and hybrid. (Francis and Ibbotson, 2001).
- Equity REITs hold portfolios with more than 75% invested in equity positions in real estate, which they manage. Shareholders receive rental income and capital gains when properties sold.
- Mortgage REITs hold portfolios with more than 75% invested in mortgages. They lend money to developers and collect on the loans. Investors receive interest income and capital appreciation on the loans.
- Hybrid REITs combine equity REIT and mortgage REIT investment strategies.
- To reduce the overall risk of the portfolio by combing asset classes that respond differently to expected events. Most funds made up of a mix of stocks and bonds. Real estate can be is a great risk reducer to add to an investment portfolio. Real Estate is ideal for investors interested in capital preservation while making a good rate of return over a long or short period. Conversely, investments 100% allocated to inflation-indexed bonds would earn low return.
- To achieve an absolute return competitive with other asset classes. A second reason to include real estate in an investment portfolio is to bring high absolute or risk adjusted returns to the portfolio. Although the study seems to favor stocks and bonds with higher returns than real estate in absolute terms over the past 23 years from 2003, but in terms of total return per unit of risk, real estate outperforms both stocks and bonds and on risk adjusted basis. In my opinion for a government, owned SWF a moderate level of risk-adjusted return would be much favorable if we were to accept the finding that stocks and bonds bring in higher yields.
- to hedge against unexpected inflation. Can real estate as an asset class protect a fund from unexpected inflation? The answer is yes and no. I have looked very closely at this by examining a few papers on this issue, and the findings are quite interesting. Real estate is not homogenous; therefore, the inflation effect is different for different real estate sectors. For example, it is possible to have a negative effect on the apartment and hotel sector while having a positive effect on retail, office and industrial sectors. A strong effect on commodities can affect construction and real estate development. A rise in building material will affect the real estate development industry.
- To constitute a part of a portfolio that is a reasonable reflection of the overall investment universe (an indexed or market-neutral portfolio). Real estate is a natural addition to any investment portfolio, and should be a part of any investment vehicle and strategy for reasons that have been justified and explained for the past 20 years in numerous research studies. Real estate is an excellent cash flow producer and risk reducer in a low-to moderate-risk portfolio.
- To deliver strong cash flows to the portfolio. If regular distributions of cash are not important, then real estate is a winner. In a comparison study of income return of stocks, bonds, and real estate for the period between 1987-2004Q4 (Hudson-Wilson, Fabozzi, and Gordon), real estate is a superior steady producer of income to stocks and bonds. Real estate’s ability to produce realized income versus unrealized capital appreciation makes it a preferred choice for institutional investors.
- Macroeconomic cycles occur at the regional, national and international level. These include the general business cycle, inflation and currency cycles, technological cycles and demographic and employment cycles.
- Microeconomic cycles work on metropolitan, location and property levels. Urban and neighborhood cycles, physical life cycles, rent rate and occupancy cycles.
- According to the authors, supply and demand can be either macro-or-micro depending on the focus.

- By region Europe (25 Countries) had the most real estate by volume with $9.4 trillion, followed by US/Canada at $7.5 trillion, Asia-Pacific at $7.2 trillion, Latin America at $1.8 trillion and the Gulf Cooperation Council or GCC at $677 billion.
- Commercial real estate volume is concentrated in a small number of key countries. The US contains slightly more than one-quarter of all CRE (commercial real estate) globally (25.4%), followed by Japan (10%), China (7%), Germany (6.1%) and the United Kingdom (5.2%).
- 8% of all commercial real estate by value is dominated by developed nations. Europe encompasses 30.4% of all CRE, followed by the US/Canada (28.4%) and Asia at (17%).
- Growth in the next decade will be mainly in the developed areas of the world. By 2021, the report forecasts that developed countries will encompass 42.8% of the CRE market, up from 24.2% in 2011. The majority of this growth will mainly come from China and the US markets with a growth of over 51.5%.
- Globally, real estate growth will show Europe’s CRE market to increase to $13.3 trillion in 2021, up 42% from 2011. With these figures, Europe will fall to second in size behind Asia-pacific.



