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Updated over 9 years ago on . Most recent reply

User Stats

7
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16
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Richard McRae
  • Commercial Real Estate Broker
  • Washington, DC
16
Votes |
7
Posts

Long term investment yields

Richard McRae
  • Commercial Real Estate Broker
  • Washington, DC
Posted

Mixed Signals

Many of you are aware of Starwood Capital Group’s $5.4B purchase of 23,262 multifamily units owned by Equity Residential. This comes on the heals of the additional purchase of some 67,800 units during the past year and the merger with Colony America Homes, which will result in the addition of some 30,000 single family housing units. These purchases come at a time of historically high rent and valuation levels in the housing sector. What drives such purchase decisions?

According to a recent #BloombergBusiness article (Starwood Bets $5.4 Billion that Apartment Rents will keep Rising, Oshrat Carmiel, October 27, 2015), Starwood’s CEO, Barry Sternlicht, indicated that the purchase decision was made not on the presumption of strong rental growth, but on a rent growth that is projected to increase just marginally over inflation. Sternlicht appears to be betting his investor’s money on continued low inflation and the lack of increasing yields for many years to come.

However, #Starwood’s future growth projections appear to lie in direct opposition to those of Sam Zell’s Equity Residential. The #Equity Residential game plan appears to be based on the assumption that rent growth/valuations have topped out in a number of markets (this sale included 10 Washington DC properties along with 33 properties in South Florida, 18 in Denver, 8 in Seattle, and 3 in California). Equity Residential’s CEO, David Neithercut, indicated that there were no plans to replace the assets, but a $9-$11/share special dividend would be distributed to shareholders. His concern over tenant concessions and oversupply is likely to lead to the further sale of all of Equity’s Connecticut assets as well.

So how does one reconcile such differing business plans? Starwood’s Sternlicht indicated that holding period is the only difference between the two strategies. Is locking up your investments at all time highs a reasonable and responsible use of investor capital? Equity Residential’s Neithercut believes not as he indicated that the sale of their assets at historically high levels was the best capital-allocation decision he could make for his shareholders.

What is your take? Would you invest today with Starwood or Equity Residential?

#Richard McRae provides acquisition/disposition consulting and commercial brokerage services across the Mid Atlantic region

https://www.linkedin.com/pub/richard-mcrae/107/170...

Most Popular Reply

User Stats

500
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243
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Alex Chin
  • Seattle, WA
243
Votes |
500
Posts
Alex Chin
  • Seattle, WA
Replied

I, personally, favor Equity's model, although full disclosure: I am biased because my company does a good amount of business with their Seattle portfolio.

What they are doing currently, is shedding their outlying, sub-urban properties and concentrating on maintaining/upgrading their high-rise, urban core buildings. I like this method because for most of the large cities, demand for housing in the downtown, high-rise areas remains very strong, and they have now generated a massive influx of capital they can use to take advantage of a short-term blip or screaming deals that come their way.

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