1 / 33

Real Estate Investment Trusts (REITs)

Real Estate Investment Trusts (REITs). What is it?. Securitized real estate investment Ownership form created by IRS code. Requirements. Assets 75% of assets must be real estate, cash, and govt. securities other REIT shares are considered real estate assets

jaxon
Download Presentation

Real Estate Investment Trusts (REITs)

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Real Estate Investment Trusts (REITs)

  2. What is it? • Securitized real estate investment • Ownership form created by IRS code

  3. Requirements • Assets • 75% of assets must be real estate, cash, and govt. securities • other REIT shares are considered real estate assets • not more than 5% of assets can be from 1 issuer if not covered under above test • may not have more than 10% of voting securities of 1 issuer if not covered under 1st test

  4. Requirements • Income • 95% of gross income must be from dividends, interest, rents, or gains from sale of certain assets (real estate, cash, or govt securities). • 75% of gross income must be derived from rents, interest on mortgages, gains from sale of certain assets, or income from other REITs

  5. Requirements • Income • No more than 30% of gross income can be derived from • sale or disposition of securities held less than 6 months • sale or disposition of real estate held for less than 4 years, except those involving foreclosures. • properties held for sale in the normal course of business (anti-dealer provision)

  6. Requirements • REIT Modernization Act of 1999 (effective 2001) • REITs allowed to own 100% of a Taxable REIT Subsidiary (TRS). TRS can provide services to REIT tenants and others (previously, this was not allowed). Debt and rental payments from TRS to REIT are limited to ensure that the TRS actually pays income taxes.

  7. Requirements • Distribution • must distribute 90% of all taxable income to investors • mandates fairly low retained earnings policy • has important implications for firm size

  8. Requirements • Management • REIT managers must be passive • REIT trustees, directors or employees may not actively engage in managing or operating REIT properties (includes providing service and collecting rents from tenants). • Managers may set policy: rental terms, choose tenants, sign leases, make decisions about properties.

  9. Requirements • Anti-concentration rule • 5 or fewer entities may not own 50% or more of the outstanding shares • Exceptions: • ‘look-through’ provision for US pension funds • UPREIT structure (umbrella partnership)

  10. Tax Treatment • Accelerated depreciation is allowed for determining taxable income • 40 year asset life required for calculating income available for distribution to investors

  11. REIT Types • Equity • Mortgage • Hybrid

  12. Equity REITs • Blank Check • does not disclose investments to shareholders prior to acquisition. • Specified Trusts • purchase a specific property (Rockerfeller Center Properties) • Mixed Trusts • invests in both blank check and specific properties

  13. Equity REITs • Leveraged v. Unleveraged • Finite-life v. Nonfinite-life • finite-life is self-liquidating

  14. Equity REITs • Closed-End v. Open-End • closed-end protect shareholders from future dilution • Exchange Trusts • tax-free exchange of property for shares in the REIT

  15. Equity REITs • Developmental-Joint Venture • funds construction costs • lower cost of capital for developer

  16. Mortgage REITs • Invests in mortgages • earn the spread between costs of funds and mortgage loan rates

  17. UPREIT • REIT formed by consolidating limited-partnerships • partnerships allocated REIT shares based on appraised value of partnership property

  18. Taubman UPREIT

  19. REIT Benefits • invest in a diversified RE portfolio managed by professionals • higher liquidity

  20. REIT Disadvantages • possible conflicts of interests between sponsor and REIT shareholders

  21. Structural Changes Influencing the REIT Market • 1986 Tax Reform Act • Reduced incentives to hold real estate in private/partnership form (leveled playing field) • Still, no move to public market financing until late 1992 • TRA was necessary, but not sufficient condition for the rise of equity REITs

  22. Structural Changes • End of High LTV Nonrecourse Financing • By early 1990s, commercial banks and insurance companies had reduced exposure to real estate • Regulatory pressure on banks • Regulatory pressure and changing business conditions on insurance companies

  23. Structural Changes • With high LTV nonrecourse loans, real estate owners had no need to raise equity • made them abnormal compared to other capital intensive businesses in the US

  24. Structural Changes • Debt Rollover Timing • Industry refinanced with 5-7 year miniperms following bond market rally of 1986

  25. Structural Changes • End of high LTV financing and debt rollovers created a capital squeeze in 1992 that forced many real estate owners to consider raising equity in the public markets for the first time • UPREITs created • allowed original owners to maintain effective control of assets

  26. Size of Equity REIT Market • In the third quarter of 1995, 119 firms included in the Wilshire Real Estate Securities Index • $42 billion in equity market capitalization • With roughly 40% average leverage level, the value of real estate owned by equity REITs is about $100 billion • compares to the $120-$150 billion owned by tax-exempt institutions acting as fiduciaries for beneficiaries

  27. EPS v. FFO • earnings per share (EPS) is a fictional accounting number • REIT must distribute at least 95% of EPS • funds from operations (FFO) is REIT cash flow (no depreciation)

  28. Funds From Operations (FFO) • FFO means net income (computed in accordance with GAAP), excluding gains (or losses) from debt restructuring and sales of property, plus depreciation and amortization of assets uniquely significant to the real estate industry, and after adjustments for unconsolidated entities in which the REIT holds an interest. Adjustments for these entities are to be calculated to reflect FFO on the same basis. Moreover, NAREIT believes that items classified by GAAP as extraordinary or unusual are not meant to either increase or decrease reported FFO.

  29. How to Calculate FFO Revenues minus: • Operating expenses • Depreciation & amortization • Interest expense • General & Administrative expense = NET INCOME (GAAP)

  30. Reported FFO? Net Income minus: • Profit from real estate sales plus: • Real Estate Depreciation = FFO

  31. Analyst FFO? FFO minus: • Recurring capital expenditures • Amortization of tenant improvements • Amortization of leasing commissions • Adjustment for rent straight-lining = Adjusted FFO (AFFO)

  32. Payout Ratio = Dividend / FFO

More Related