Returns on equity REITs vs. the S&P 500
Total Returns on Equity REITs through Time (Annualized) Total Returns on the S&P 500 (Annualized)
Is 2021 a good year to invest in REITs?
So far in 2021, real estate investment trusts (REITs) have performed admirably. The real estate sector’s almost 30% total return (price plus dividends) until the end of August handily outperformed the S&P 500 Index’s 21%+ return.
Even better, several variables indicate that REITs will continue to outperform other assets in the remaining months of 2021.
The first is a lack of high-yielding crops. Both the 10-year Treasury note and the S&P 500 are currently yielding a pitiful 1.3 percent. REITs, on the other hand, pay out more than double that, with an average yield of 2.7 percent, making real estate equities one of the best-paying sectors in the market.
How are REITs doing in 2021?
So far in 2021, the REIT sector has posted increases in every month, including a +1.77 percent average total return in May. In May, 58.24% of REIT securities had a positive total return. In May, hotels and student housing REITs outperformed all other property types, while corrections and health care REITs saw the biggest drops.
Will REITs recover 2021?
In 2021, commercial real estate and REITs are expected to begin to recover, with the speed of recovery being determined by the availability and efficacy of a vaccine.
Why are REITs a bad investment?
Real estate investment trusts (REITs) are not for everyone. This is the section for you if you’re wondering why REITs are a bad investment for you.
The major disadvantage of REITs is that they don’t provide much in the way of capital appreciation. This is because REITs must return 90 percent of their taxable income to investors, limiting their capacity to reinvest in properties to increase their value or acquire new holdings.
Another disadvantage is that REITs have very expensive management and transaction costs due to their structure.
REITs have also become increasingly connected with the larger stock market over time. As a result, one of the previous advantages has faded in value as your portfolio becomes more vulnerable to market fluctuations.
Which REITs pay the highest dividend?
For income investors, the beauty of REITs is that they are obligated to release 90% of their taxable income to shareholders in the form of dividends each year. REITs often do not pay corporate taxes in exchange.
As a result, several of the 171 dividend-paying REITs we follow have dividend yields of 5% or more.
Bonus: Watch the video below to hear our chat with Brad Thomas on The Sure Investing Podcast about sensible REIT investing.
However, not all high-yielding stocks are a sure bet. To ensure that the high yields are sustainable, investors should carefully examine the fundamentals. This post will go through ten of the highest-yielding REITs on the market with market capitalizations over $1 billion.
While the securities discussed in this article have exceptionally high yields, a high yield on its own does not guarantee a good investment. Dividend security, valuation, management, balance sheet health, and growth are all critical considerations.
We advise investors to take the research below as a guide, but to conduct extensive due diligence before investing in any security, particularly high-yield securities. Many (but not all) high yield securities are at risk of having their dividends cut and/or their business outcomes deteriorate.
High-Yield REIT No. 10: Omega Healthcare Investors (OHI)
Omega Healthcare Investors is one of the most well-known healthcare REITs that focuses on skilled nursing. Senior home complexes account for around 20% of the company’s annual income. The company’s financial, portfolio, and management strength are its three primary selling factors. Omega is the market leader in skilled nursing facilities.
High-Yield REIT No. 9: Apollo Commercial Real Estate Finance (ARI)
In 2009, Apollo Commercial Real Estate Finance, Inc. was established. It’s a debt-oriented real estate investment trust (REIT) that invests in senior mortgages, mezzanine loans, and other commercial real estate-related debt. The underlying real estate properties of Apollo’s investments in the United States and Europe serve as collateral.
Hotels, Office Properties, Urban Pre-development, Residential-for-sale inventory, and Residential-for-sale construction make up Apollo Commercial Real Estate Finance’s multibillion-dollar commercial real estate portfolio. Manhattan, New York, the United Kingdom, and the rest of the United States make up the company’s portfolio.
High-Yield REIT No. 8: PennyMac Mortgage Investment Trust (PMT)
PennyMac Mortgage Investment Trust is a real estate investment trust (REIT) that invests in residential mortgage loans and related assets. PMT
What are the safest REITs?
These three REITs are unlikely to appeal to investors with a value inclination. When things are uncertain, though, it is generally wise to stick with the biggest and most powerful names. Within the REIT industry, Realty Income, AvalonBay, and Prologis all fall more generally into that category, as well as within their specific property specialties.
These REITs are likely to have the capital access they need to outperform at the company level in both good and bad times. This capacity should help them expand their leadership positions and back consistent profits over time. That’s the kind of investment that will allow you to sleep comfortably at night, which is probably a cost worth paying for conservative sorts.
Are REITs a good buy now?
- No corporation tax: A company must meet certain criteria in order to be classed as a REIT. It must, for example, invest at least three-quarters of its assets in real estate and pay shareholders at least 90% of its taxable income. If a REIT fits these criteria, it receives a significant tax benefit because it pays no corporate tax, regardless of how profitable it is. Profits from most dividend stocks are effectively taxed twice: once at the corporate level and then again at the individual level when dividends are paid.
- High dividend yields: REITs offer above-average dividend yields because they must pay at least 90% of taxable revenue to shareholders. It could, for example, offer a secure dividend yield of 5% or more, but the typical S&P 500 company yields less than 2%. If you need income or wish to reinvest your dividends and compound your gains over time, a REIT can be a good solution.
- Total return potential: As the value of its underlying assets rises, a REIT’s total return potential rises as well. Real estate values rise over time, and a REIT can grow its worth by employing a variety of tactics. It might either build properties from the ground up or sell valued assets and reinvest the proceeds. A REIT can be a good total return investment when this is combined with substantial dividends.
- REITs were designed to provide average investors with access to commercial real estate assets that would otherwise be out of reach. Most people can’t afford to buy an office tower outright, but there are REITs that can.
- Diversification of your financial portfolio: Most experts think that diversifying your investment portfolio is a smart idea. Despite the fact that REITs are technically stocks, real estate is a distinct asset class from stocks. During difficult economic times, REITs tend to keep their value better than equities, and they’re a terrific way to add stable, predictable income. These are only two examples of how an all-stock portfolio’s inherent risk can be mitigated.
- Real estate transactions might take a long time to buy and sell, but REITs are a very liquid investment. A REIT can be bought or sold at any time. Because traded REITs can be purchased and sold like stocks, it’s simple to receive money when you need it.
- Direct ownership and management of a property is a business that demands time and effort. REIT shareholders do not own the properties or mortgages in its portfolio, thus they do not have to deal with property maintenance or development, landlord services, or rent collection as a property owner or management would.
Why are REITs going down 2021?
Short-term concerns from workers’ delayed return to work, as well as longer-term structural issues from permanent shifts in demand for office space owing to work from home, are affecting office markets (WFH). Many workplaces aim to resume gradually in the next months, depending on how quickly COVID-19 infections are contained locally. Office occupancy and rents are expected to stabilize later this year or early next year, and then begin to recover.
The longer-term effects of WFH on office space demand are more uncertain, given none of the previous office market downturns saw such a substantial shift in how and where employees got their work done. On the one hand, offices are highly productive work settings that encourage collaboration, training, and mentoring, and are essential for tasks such as contract negotiations or hiring new employees. For sessions like this, an online meeting is a poor alternative for face-to-face contact.
For some businesses, the previous 15 months have proved that many jobs can be completed from home—or nearly anywhere else—without sacrificing quality or efficiency. This experience suggests that WFH may have permanently changed the office work environment, thereby reducing long-term demand for office space.
There are a variety of office work environment models to consider. At one extreme, most businesses would require all employees to return to work full time. On the other hand, a huge portion of the office staff would continue to work from home for all but the most important meetings. A hybrid approach that allows for flexibility based on the work activities being accomplished, with most workers in the office on a regular basis but not necessarily full time, could be a feasible intermediate conclusion. This hybrid model would allow businesses and employees to get the maximum benefits of in-person cooperation while also allowing employees to work from home part or full days one or more days per week for certain jobs that can be handled independently.
The tensions between the forces that drive return-to-work against work-from-home will not be resolved anytime soon. Several significant corporations have stated that they will return to work by the summer, September, or later this year, while others have chosen a more flexible, hybrid arrangement. It will be difficult to assess the degree of any longer-term effects of WFH on office demand until the immediate return to office has passed, implying that the office market will remain unclear at least until the end of this year.
According to the Nareit T-Tracker, WFH-related uncertainty has impacted office occupancy and rent growth, resulting to a 12.5 percent drop in FFO for office REITs in the first quarter. In the fifteen months leading up to May 21, 2021, total returns for office REITs were negative 11.7 percent.
Other sectors of the commercial real estate industry are recovering more quickly. In 2020, apartment markets slowed, particularly in major metro regions with higher rents. There is some indication of a net migration from more expensive urban centres to farther-flung suburbs and smaller regional cities, particularly among employees in jobs and industries that are more amenable to WFH. With a high concentration of IT employees, San Francisco and San Jose saw higher rises in vacancy rates than most other metros.
Apartment demand immediately recovered in the first quarter of 2021, with vacancy rates decreasing and rent increases accelerating in most metro areas. During the downturn, landlords provided rent cuts to attract tenants, particularly in San Francisco and other high-priced Gateway towns (chart 1.3). In the third quarter of 2020, these concessions were the most significant, but by early 2021, they had narrowed or vanished. Anecdotal evidence suggests that demand has bolstered even more during the second quarter, the customary spring leasing season, which often sees the highest demand growth and rent increases of the year. The spring leasing season frequently sets the tone for the entire year, and the growing momentum in markets across the country points to a robust rebound this year.
Should I have REITs in my 401k?
REITs are a great option for investing in a retirement account. The existing tax-advantaged nature of REITs can be amplified by the tax-advantaged structure of retirement funds, resulting in some tremendous long-term return potential.
Can you get rich off REITs?
There is no such thing as a guaranteed get-rich-quick strategy when it comes to real estate equities (or pretty much any other sort of investment). Sure, some real estate investment trusts (REITs) could double in value by 2021, but they could also swing in the opposite direction.
However, there is a proven way to earn rich slowly by investing in REITs. Purchase REITs that are meant to grow and compound your money over time, then sit back and let them handle the heavy lifting. Realty Income (NYSE: O), Digital Realty Trust (NYSE: DLR), and Vanguard Real Estate ETF are three REIT stocks in particular that are about the closest things you’ll find to guaranteed ways to make rich over time (NYSEMKT: VNQ).
How do I get my money out of a REIT?
Thousands of people who invested billions of dollars in non-traded real estate investment trusts are now learning that getting their money out is a little more difficult.
According to the Wall Street Journal, several fund managers are limiting the amount of cash clients can withdraw from their funds, or sometimes refusing withdrawals altogether.
Small individual investors were drawn to non-traded REITs since many only only a few thousand dollars as a minimum investment, while providing access to a relatively stable real estate asset class.
According to the Journal, these funds have received $70 billion in investments since 2013. Blackstone and Starwood Capital Group, two of the industry’s biggest players, have developed massive non-traded REITs, and both are still enabling investors to withdraw from their funds.
The only method to get money out of a REIT is to redeem shares because they aren’t publicly traded. As the economy has been decimated by the coronavirus, resulting in millions of layoffs, many smaller investors are feeling the pinch and looking for alternative sources of income.
Meanwhile, fund managers are attempting to maintain some liquidity. Some claim they have no method of assessing the assets in the fund portfolios or the fund’s shares in the face of pandemic-induced economic uncertainty.
In late March, commercial REIT InPoint halted the sale of new shares and stopped paying dividends. According to the Journal, CEO Mitchell Sabshon stated that redeeming shares that value the REIT’s assets beyond their real value would be unfair.
Withdrawal request caps are built into some funds, and the rush to get money has triggered them. If share redemption requests surpass a specific threshold, alternative asset manager FS Investment places a limit on them.
According to FS Investment’s Matt Malone, this was “intended to safeguard all investors by striking a balance between providing liquidity and being forced to sell illiquid assets in a way that would be damaging to shareholders.”
Dennis Lynch is a writer.