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Real Estate

Are negative yields on $10 trillion of global bonds a sure sign of a bubble? The answer is no... and yes.

Special Report

While we expect both direct and indirect exposure to generate solid risk-adjusted returns, favor direct given its overall portfolio impact, lower correlation to financial assets and better inflation protection.

Hong Kong's growing political awareness and rising sensitivity to public policy underscores brewing social tensions brought about by decades of <i>Laissez-Faire</i> capitalism. Social policies will likely become progressively more redistributive, with potentially a longer-term negative impact on asset prices.

A common perception is that the euro has been a failure for Italy. We challenge this perception and explain why it is so important for investors, whether it is wrong or right.

REITs have been climbing a wall of worry in recent years, as the group has had to overcome chronic concerns about potential supply growth and low cap rates. To be sure, the group typically experiences a boom/bust cycle. However, outside multifamily dwellings, REIT supply growth has been subdued globally: our proxy for global construction growth has been remarkably subdued since the Great Recession. Low cap rates have been an issue for years, but the proliferation of negative interest rates around the world and persistently high economic uncertainty argues against expecting a sudden reversal. Instead, low interest rates are spurring strong commercial real estate demand (bottom panel), which has propelled commercial property prices to new highs. In the absence of a sudden and unanticipated surge in overall inflation, the forces that have supported the REIT bull market should remain intact. Stay overweight and please see yesterday's Special Report for more details. The ticker symbols for the stocks in this index are: BLBG: S5REITS-SPG, AMT, PSA, CCI, PLD, HCN, EQIX, VTR, AVB, EQR, WY, BXP, HCP, VNO, O, GGP, DLR, ESS, HST, KIM, SLG, FRT, MAC, EXR, VDR, IRM, AIV.
Special Report

Commercial real estate and REITs have benefited greatly from accommodative monetary policy. Though they are approaching a peak, our analysis shows that they remain in a "goldilocks" scenario and still offer plenty of upside.

A collection of 10 important charts to monitor closely through the summer months.

With Treasury yields backing up from extremely depressed levels, many clients are asking if an overweight allocation to the REIT space remains appropriate. While a sharp spike in yields would clearly be problematic in the short run, we have shown that REITs have often outperformed during periods of strong economic growth and Fed tightening cycles. The key is for REITs to generate above-market cash flow. At the moment, our composite REIT rental rate inflation is running comfortably above overall inflation, led by the CPI for homeowner's equivalent rent (top panel). New supply has been coming on stream for years, but so far has been absorbed with little adverse pricing power impact. Vacancy rates are still historically low. Consequently, operating performance should stay robust. Importantly, relative valuations are not overly demanding, and technical conditions are not overbought, and there have been no negative momentum divergences. We continue to recommend an overweight stance. BLBG: S5REITS

Post-Brexit uncertainty will continue for some time. But we were already cautiously positioned, and would not go any more defensive.

Special Report

In this <i>Special Report</i>, we revisit our list of signpost economic indicators introduced two years ago to identify if the U.S. and Euro Area were falling into a "Secular Stagnation".