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Thursday, June 11th, 2009...6:10 am

Real Estate Investment (Dis)Trusts

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Laguna Beach, California

  • REITs in big trouble – two stocks for your short shortlist,
  • A bull market in delinquencies, a closer look at that “stress test,”
  • Plus, green shoots or premature celebration? Have your say below…

Eric Fry, reporting from Laguna Beach, California…

“Success is never final. But failure can be,” Bill Parcels, the former NFL coach, once observed. Investors in real estate investment rusts (REITs) might want to pay particular attention to this truism.

REITs, as the name suggests, invest in real estate of various types. But what the name does not suggest is that REITs usually utilize leverage in their pursuit of investment returns. Leverage, as many investors learned during the last 12 months, is fun on the way up, but potentially fatal on the way down (unless you happen to be one of America’s 19 largest financial institutions).

At the moment, the REIT industry finds itself squarely in the middle of the “way down” phase – both because asset values are plummeting and because interest rates are climbing. Just yesterday, the yield on 10-year Treasury notes kissed 4%, which means that the 10-year yield has nearly doubled since the start of this year!

When long-term interest rates rise this dramatically and rapidly, many different industries suffer. But few industries suffer as much as the commercial real estate industry. Even in the best of times, rising interest rates increases the cost of capital, while also undermining the value of commercial real estate assets. In the worst of times – or even in less-good times – rising rates can produce catastrophic consequences.

Today’s commercial real estate market was distressed, even before rates starting rising. The problem, in a nutshell, was excess capacity. During the last several years, America constructed shopping malls and office buildings to satisfy the excess, phony demand that easy credit produced. But now that home equity loans and other readily available forms of credit have disappeared, so has the phony demand.

The unfortunate result: a glut of shopping malls, office buildings and hotel/motel properties.

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“Vacancies are definitely rising across the commercial real estate market,” observed hedge fund manager, Jason Stock, at last month’s Value Investing Congress in Pasadena, California. “You’ve got office vacancies well over 15%. We think those are going to approach 25% before this is over.”

Stock and his partner, Will Waller, oversee the M3 Fund, a hedge fund that invests solely in the banking sector. Stock and Waller claim they are finding a number of attractive stocks to buy. Nevertheless, they remain very anxious about the health of the overall banking sector. In particular, they fear that commercial loan defaults will skyrocket from current levels, causing a large number of banks to fail during the next two years.

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“So far this year there’s been just over 30 bank failures,” Stock reported in early May. “We expect they’ll be roughly 150 bank failures by the end of the year. And we would actually expect that number should be significantly higher.

Stock continued:

“Every Friday night (we jokingly call it ‘death watch,’ because that’s when you get the notices of the banks that have failed [from the FDIC]), when we look at the banks that are coming across as failures, we’ll say to ourselves, ‘Geez, that bank is a lot better off than 20, 30, 40 banks that we can think of. The regulators right now are completely overwhelmed. You have to have people to close down banks. And it’s not a very quick and easy process. It takes a fair bit of manpower. So if the regulators had the staffing to do it, there are definitely 50 to 100 banks that you could say, ‘This Friday we are going to go in and close all these banks down.’ So it’ll just be a matter of time before that pace picks up.”

In last month’s letter to their investors, Stock and Waller reiterated their skeptical outlook:

“The Government’s release of the ‘stress test’ results on May 7th was a key driver of the rally in large bank stocks. The results indicated that nine of the 19 firms have adequate capital under the test’s most adverse scenario…In our opinion, this ‘stress test’ was in no way stressful and could more accurately be compared to a beach vacation in Hawaii where the weather forecast had a 10% chance of afternoon showers.

“The ‘worst case’ scenarios that the Government utilized in this test included unemployment reaching 8.9% in 2009 and 10.3% in 2010 (as of May 31, 2009 the unemployment rate was 9.4%), and GDP growth of .50% in 2010. We believe unemployment could easily exceed 10.3% and that it is absurd to use a positive number as a worst case scenario for GDP in 2010. This ‘stress test’ created a false sense of stability in the banking sector and created a historic opportunity for banks to raise capital at significantly inflated valuations…While extremely beneficial to the banks, we believe the investors who participated in these offerings will be choking on these investments over the upcoming months.”

Contradicting the sanguine conclusions of the stress tests, Stock and Waller point out, “The Federal Reserve chimed in with an alarming report on first quarter loan delinquency rates at commercial banks. Total loan and lease delinquencies increased by 96 basis points, a 20.7% increase in only one quarter (from 4.6% to 5.6%)…We maintain our bearish outlook…we believe this bear market rally is unsustainable and that fundamental trends for banks are negative…”

Your California editor concurs, which is why he does not hesitate to say that most bank stocks are better sold than bought at their new and improved “recovery prices.” Similarly, most REITs are better sold than bought. Dan Amoss, editor of the Strategic Short Report provides a bit of color (mostly red) in today’s edition of the Rude Awakening…

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Real Estate Investment (Dis)Trusts
By Dan Amoss

I’m confident that the trend for REITs will be down through the end of 2009. That’s why I suggest buying the UltaShort Real Estate ProShares ETF (NYSE: SRS. Current price $18.52) as a way to profit from weakness in the REIT sector. But fasten your seatbelt! SRS will be volatile!

REITs may appear cheap, but they are very dangerous to hold right now. A basic tenet of corporate finance is that a company or a sector is only creating value for shareholders if its return on invested capital (ROIC) exceeds its weighted average cost of capital (WACC). If its WACC exceeds its ROIC, it is destroying value. This describes the situation facing the REIT sector for the next few years.

Most REITs cannot float unsecured debt at anything less than 10% or 12%, so their cost of capital is high and rising. At the same time, due to the glut of supply in commercial real estate supply, and waning demand from stressed tenants, the returns on incremental investment in new capacity are very low — possibly negative.

Summing it all up: REITs will be destroying shareholder value until supply and demand for commercial real estate reaches equilibrium. The free market is screaming as loudly as it can that millions of square feet of capacity need to be absorbed or eliminated over the next several years in order for the surviving REITs to have a chance at generating respectable returns on capital.

This process has barely even begun, after the biggest lending binge in the history of commercial real estate. It will last a long time. The lending binge ensured that a large swathe of REITs will not make it to see the next commercial real estate up-cycle, which is still several years away at minimum. The title to many properties will go back to creditors in bankruptcy, and auctions will bring down asset values across the sector until they are cheap enough to earn respectable returns in a weak rental environment.

Another example of stress surfaced earlier this week. The auction to settle credit default swaps related to the General Growth Properties bankruptcy indicates serious pain to come for mall REIT owners: GGP’s senior loans effectively liquidated for 44 cents on the dollar! This means that lenders are demanding extreme discounts and high yields to hold debts secured by mall collateral. This isn’t good news for peers like Kimco (NYSE: KIM) and Simon Property Group (NYSE: SPG).

Another argument I’ve seen lately is that REITs will be a good inflation hedge if you buy them at these prices. This is an overly simplistic view of Fed-created inflation and its ultimate symptoms.

Fed Chairman Bernanke can debase the dollar all he wants, but most of the new dollars will act to push up the prices of goods and services in sectors with relatively tight capacity. Mostly, this translates into lower living standards for the average American — an echo of the 1970s, only without the real estate appreciation.

The Fed’s inflation will find its way into tangible assets like gold and silver, oil and gas, uranium ore, farmland, potash mines, and any other commodity China needs to import. Conversely, the fed’s inflation will NOT find its way into the pricing of American shopping malls, which arre in a condition of extreme oversupply.

Over time, the capacity to supply light, sweet oil to the global economy will be far tighter than the capacity to supply American retailers with real estate in malls. Demand for oil will be far more resilient than the U.S.-centric consensus expects, while demand for discretionary items — like “Color Fiend Neon Green Hair Spray” at Hot Topic (this product actually exists) — will fluctuate up and down, but generally head lower. Rising prices for several necessary goods and services will crowd out discretionary spending in many family budgets.

Inflation does not re-inflate old bubbles — especially in the case of residential and commercial real estate. It will only slow the previously violent deleveraging process.

On a related note, it was a breath of fresh air to hear Howard Davidowitz of Davidowitz & Associates interviewed on Bloomberg Radio recently. (You can find a link to download an mp3 of the 17-minute interview here). Davidowitz has decades of in-the-trenches experience in retail consulting and analysis. Rarely do you find an industry analyst express an informed opinion so forcefully in the mainstream financial media. I highly recommend listening to the interview for an overview of how the retail and commercial real estate business will evolve in the coming quarters.

A preview: It ain’t good.

[Joel’s Note: Faithful readers may remember Dan for being way out front on calling the implosion of Lehman Bros. last year. That play handed his Strategic Short Report readers a chance at bagging over 400%…and that was in the face of everyone who said “the worst is over” after Bear Stearns’ collapse a few months earlier.

Now, those same people are shouting “green shoots” and telling you that the worst is over (again). Meanwhile, the guy who actually got it right is warning of more trouble to come. Hmm…what’s an investor to do?

Well, you can catch the other guys on television every night…or, you can grab a risk-free, 90-day trial of Dan’s Strategic Short Report Right Here.

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[Rude Endnote: Finally today, we’d like to know your thoughts on the whole green shoots vs. premature celebration debate. Specifically, how do things look from where you sit? Is the property market in your neighborhood booming or busting? Are they building new strip malls, or tearing old ones down?

How about the job market? Are more or less of your friends employed…taking pay cuts…out on their behinds?

And what’s your outlook for the days and months ahead? Are stocks going to add or subtract a thousand points…gold go to $2,000 or $200…oil at $100 or back to $40?

Okay, you get the drift. We’ll publish your boots-on-ground analysis and anecdotes in upcoming editions. Just send them to the address below and stay tuned.

Until next time…

Cheers,

Joel Bowman

The Rude Awakening
aussiejoel@the-rude-awakening.com

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