REITS pool investor money to allow average individual investors to invest in a portfolio of
- commercial,
- residential, or
- specialized real estate properties.
Certain REIT characteristics make them attractive to the value investor.
- Like closed-ended funds, REITS trade on the exchanges, often at a discount to NAV.
- It is possible to focus on certain types of real estate or certain regions of the country.
- And, typically, they pay healthy yields, often in excess of 5%, while providing some downside protection.
In the US, there are about 190 publicly traded REITs with some $400 billion of assets.
- REITs performed very well during the 2000-2002 market correction, and continued to perform well as real estate prices boomed in the middle of the decade, with a gain of 35% as a group in 2006.
- But as the real estate market soured in 2007, REITs and particularly those in the mortgage business or with highly leveraged portfolios, tended to suffer.
Investors like REITs for:
- their yield,
- their ownership with hard physical assets,
- their stability, and
- for their long-term performance, estimated at over 13% annually during 1975-2005, which is better than most stock investments.
Many investors pick REITs for their negative correlation with stocks - when stocks are doing poorly, REITs are doing well or are holding their own.
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