Wednesday, October 21, 2009

Reits likely to see more drops in asset values

Prices of retail and industrial Reits have yet to reflect risks, says Nomura

REAL estate investment trusts (Reits) are likely to experience more drops in asset values and negative rental reversions, a

Furthermore, the research house believes that prices of retail and industrial Reits have yet to reflect these risks.

‘With asset values likely to see further downward adjustments, the fact that retail and industrial Reits are now trading near to or at premiums to book value appears somewhat inconsistent with property market trends,’ wrote analysts Tony Darwell and Sai Min Chow in an Oct 16 report.

Investor interest has returned to Reits in the last few months as the sector largely managed to refinance its loans. The FTSE Real Estate Investment Trust Index has risen by more than 50 per cent since the start of the year.

But Nomura believes that downside risks remain. It estimates that capitalisation rates – a rough measure of properties’ rates of return – have softened by around 25-75 basis points and could drop by another 25-50 basis points.

The outlook for rents also remains weak, Nomura said. And while prices of office Reits reflect the various risks, the same cannot be said of retail and industrial Reits.

‘We see risks being priced into the office sector, though we retain our view that the market has been too complacent in its assessment of the retail and industrial Reit sectors,’ its analysts wrote.

The research house is particularly bearish on CapitaMall Trust (CMT) and Ascendas Reit (A-Reit). CMT gained four cents to close at $1.80 yesterday, while A-Reit lost eight cents to close at $1.86.

DMG & Partners Securities expressed different views in a separate Oct 16 report. It is more pessimistic about the office sector’s prospects, because of the large amount of space coming on-stream.

Landlords in the Raffles Place district ‘will almost certainly be scrambling to put forward highly competitive rates, a scenario that could further dampen the already fragile rental market,’ wrote analyst Jonathan Ng. ‘We believe CapitaCommercial Trust could feel the biggest impact.’

DMG was more sanguine about the hospitality sector’s performance – the integrated resorts could draw more visitors, driving hotel occupancies and pricing powers up.

The house has a ‘buy’ call on CDL Hospitality Trust (CDLHT), and believes that the counter is the ‘best proxy to a multi-year tourism resurgence that will take place next year’.

CDLHT ended trading at $1.56 yesterday, one cent up.

Source: Business Times, 21 Oct 2009

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