Advantages of direct RE
Advantages
Competitive Returns: Over multi-year horizons, property’s total returns (rental income + capital growth) often exceed bond returns.
Example: IPF data from the 1990s onwards showed real estate yields outpacing gilts in stable periods.
Low Correlation: Property correlates less with equities than gilts, improving diversification.
Supported by Norges Bank (2015), which found property boosted Sharpe ratios.
Steady Income: About 50% of property returns are from contractual rental income, providing stability compared to the fixed coupon from gilts.
Inflation Hedge: Over the long term, property rents and asset values tend to rise with inflation, offering partial protection (IPF 2011).
Control: Direct ownership allows active decisions like refurbishments and tenant mix, unlike passive equity or bond holdings.
Disadvantages of direct RE
Disadvantages:
High Transaction Costs: Stamp duty, legal fees, and brokerage erode net returns, particularly with short holding periods.
Illiquidity: Property sales take months; unlike tradable bonds or equities.
Example: Commercial real estate market froze during the 2008 GFC.
High Management Time: Active management demands significant time (“95/5 rule”: most effort goes to the worst-performing assets).
Specific Asset Risk: Tenant defaults and location risks require diversification across sectors/regions, needing large capital.
Appraisal Bias: Appraisal-based valuations smooth real volatility, potentially misrepresenting risk. (Highlighted by Garay & Lee.)
Large Lot Size: Real estate is lumpy; significant capital is needed to achieve diversification, unlike easily scalable bond investments.
Conclusion: In the long run, direct property often outperforms gilts due to stable income and capital growth, but investors must account for illiquidity, management complexity, and high costs.
Is Direct Real Estate a Hedge Against Inflation?
Definition:
Hedge if:
(1) Real returns > inflation
(2) Returns respond to inflation period-by-period
Reasons for Conflicting Evidence:
Data Issues
Hard to separate expected/unexpected inflation → under/overstate hedging ability
Total return = income + capital gains
Capital values: Appraisal smoothing hides short-run response
Lease structures:
Upward-only reviews delay inflation pass-through
Step rents/fixed increases disconnect from current inflation
CPI indexation common in EU (e.g. Germany’s 3–5% thresholds)
IPF (2011): Long-run alignment (rents & capital) with inflation, short-run weak
Different Periods
Strong hedge in 1970s, weak in 2010s
Sector/country/decade matter
CBRE/NCREIF: Prime assets (e.g. Central London retail, industrial) better than secondary sectors
Methodology Matters
Correlation: Historically high (~0.7), but weaker since 2000s
Regression: Measures inflation’s explanatory power
VaR: Assesses downside in inflationary episodes
Co-integration: Long-run alignment despite short-term noise
IPF (2011): Key comparative study across methods
Missing Variables
Inflation alone ≠ full driver of returns
GDP growth, interest rates, and RE cycles crucial
Hoesli (2008): Inflation link exists, but GDP stronger
High inflation + low growth = weak RE returns
Empirical Summary:
Short-term: Weak/unreliable hedge
Long-term (5–10 yrs): Partial protection via income & capital
By sector: Prime retail & industrials > offices/secondary retail
Conclusion: RE is an imperfect but reasonable long-term hedge; not a pure inflation shield — depends on leases, GDP, and occupancy
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