Real Estate Return Volatilty and Systematic Risk


Book Description

This study empirically examines the dynamics of conditional returns, volatility and systematic risk in ten developing and developed real estate markets and two world market indexes (i.e. world real estate and world stock). We find clustering, predictability, strong persistence and asymmetry in country-specific and global market conditional volatility. Moreover, developing real estate markets display higher conditional volatility and persistence than developed markets. The world real estate market volatility has a statistically significant positive impact on time-varying real estate market betas for developing real estate markets of Asia-Pacific, Hong Kong, Singapore and Malaysia, and a statistically significant negative impact on systematic risk for mature real estate markets of Europe and the UK. Additionally, the extra country-specific market volatility and global market volatility during the Asian financial crisis period seem to impose a larger size influence than the volatility during total period in some markets. Based on comparisons of in-sample forecast errors, our findings appear to favor time-varying real estate betas relative to a world real estate index over a world stock index. Our findings have significant implications for understanding real estate market integration and global capital markets.




Alternative Ideas in Real Estate Investment


Book Description

Arthur L. Schwartz, Jr. and Steven D. Kapplin The focus of this volume of the ARES Monograph Series is new ideas in real estate investment. Within this volume, empiricial studies, literature reviews, and tutorials examine a broad range of important investment issues. Many new and innovative ideas are presented. This volume should be a rich source of real estate investment ideas for many years to come. Kapplin and Schwartz examine the returns of two types of REITs, as well as that of Master Limited Partnerships (MLP), over the 1987-1989 time period. Their sample consisted of 54 real estate securities; they conclude that these entities did not provide an effective inflation hedge. MLP returns exceeded that of the overall stock market, but the two REIT types did not provide rates-of-return in excess of the marked. An extensive review of the commercial real estate return literature is presented by Fletcher. He focuses upon studies that utilize commingled real estate fund (CREF) data. His detailed overview of the subject provides a much needed synthesis of the current literature. Roulac presents an extensive discussion of the differences in the per spectives of individual versus institutional investors. In his essay, he considers such factors as scale, diversification, and related issues. Addi tionally, he examines a wide range of literature from within academia, 1 INTRODUCTION 2 as well as the opinions of various real estate gurus. He concludes that behavioral factors override economic considerations.




Idiosyncratic Risk and Expected Returns


Book Description

This dissertation, "Idiosyncratic Risk and Expected Returns: an Investigation in the Context of Real Estate Investment in China" by Wei, Liu, 刘巍, was obtained from The University of Hong Kong (Pokfulam, Hong Kong) and is being sold pursuant to Creative Commons: Attribution 3.0 Hong Kong License. The content of this dissertation has not been altered in any way. We have altered the formatting in order to facilitate the ease of printing and reading of the dissertation. All rights not granted by the above license are retained by the author. Abstract: In the asset-pricing framework, idiosyncratic risk is the risk that is independent of systematic risk and peculiar to one specific asset or company, it is left with no role in expected returns according to the classic finance theory since it could be completely diversified away. However, in the case investors holding under-diversified portfolios, previous theoretical studies generally demonstrate a positive relationship between idiosyncratic risk and expected returns. However, negative empirical evidences regarding the idiosyncratic risk-return tradeoff have been reported recently in the stock market of the U.S. and China, as well as in several real estate literatures. To reconcile the conflict, this thesis is dedicated to investigate the role of idiosyncratic risk in the context of real estate investment. In the theoretical exploration, an asset-pricing model with short-sales restrictions in the market and heterogeneous beliefs among investors is established. Specifically, a simplified version with only three risky assets, in which two of them are direct and indirect real estate investments, demonstrates when investors endowed with incomplete information setting and under-diversified holdings, idiosyncratic risk would play an important role in the expected returns in equilibrium. Furthermore, the comparative static analysis reveals a positive cross-sectional relationship between idiosyncratic risk and expected returns. In the empirical study, this thesis employs the Fama and French (1992) three-factor model to estimate monthly idiosyncratic volatilities of the Listed Property Companies (LPCs) in the A-share market of China, based on the daily data from May 1999 to Aug 2011. Specifically, for each LPC in each month, its idiosyncratic risk is computed as the standard deviation of the three-factor model's daily residuals. The estimation outputs show that idiosyncratic volatility dominates the LPCs' overall volatility during the study period, and it is features with a distinct pattern when compared to that of the U.S. REITs: the LPCs' idiosyncratic volatilities are significantly higher and more persistent; they are less irrelevant to the firm's market capitalization and present an evident co-movement with the broad market. Hence, this scenario reveals a special interest to further study on the cross-sectional relationship between the LPCs' idiosyncratic risk and their expected returns. In the cross-sectional test, conditional idiosyncratic volatility forecasted by the EGARCH-GED model is employed as the proxy for expected idiosyncratic risk, as the LPCs' lagged idiosyncratic risk is shown to be not a good estimate. Over the study period, a firm positive cross-sectional relationship between idiosyncratic risk and expected returns is documented, after controlling for various pricing factors such as firm size and book-to-market equity ratio, indicators of liquidity and momentum as well as returns reversal effect. This evidence not only confirms the prediction of previous theoretical studies and the model in this thesis, it also suggests a profitable trading strategy based on the idiosyncratic risk of the LPCs. DOI: 10.5353/th_b5108639 Subjects: Real estate investment - China Real estate investment - Rate of return




Real Estate Risk in Equity Returns


Book Description

Gaston Michel investigates whether shocks to real estate markets constitute an important source of the risk that is priced in the cross section of equity returns. His results document that real estate risk explains a large part of the cross-sectional variation in equity returns. He shows that an alternative modeI which includes the real estate factor performs as well as or better than the Fama-French model in pricing equity returns.




Irreversible Investment, Real Options, and Competition


Book Description

We examine the extent to which uncertainty delays investment and the effect of competition on this relationship using a sample of 1,214 condominium developments in Vancouver, Canada built from 1979-1998. We find that increases in both idiosyncratic and systematic risk lead developers to delay new real estate investments. Empirically, a one-standard deviation increase in the return volatility reduces the probability of investment by 13 percent, equivalent to a 9 percent decline in real prices. Increases in the number of potential competitors located near a project negate the negative relationship between idiosyncratic risk and development. These results support models in which competition erodes option values and provide clear evidence for the real options framework over alternatives such as simple risk aversion.










Systematic Risk and Diversification in the Equity REIT Market


Book Description

This paper employs stock market-based data to examine the systematic risk and diversification properties of publicly traded equity real estate investment trusts (REITs). A unique data sample is created by combining firm return data with information on their property type holdings and the location of their investments. The systematic risk of equity REITs appears to vary by the type of property in which they invest, with beta being significantly higher for retail-oriented REITs than for REITs owning industrial and warehouse properties. In addition, the stock market data provides no evidence that REIT diversification across property types or broad geographic regions actually results in meaningful diversification as reflected in a standard market-based measure the R2 from a simple market model regression.




Risk-Based and Factor Investing


Book Description

This book is a compilation of recent articles written by leading academics and practitioners in the area of risk-based and factor investing (RBFI). The articles are intended to introduce readers to some of the latest, cutting edge research encountered by academics and professionals dealing with RBFI solutions. Together the authors detail both alternative non-return based portfolio construction techniques and investing style risk premia strategies. Each chapter deals with new methods of building strategic and tactical risk-based portfolios, constructing and combining systematic factor strategies and assessing the related rules-based investment performances. This book can assist portfolio managers, asset owners, consultants, academics and students who wish to further their understanding of the science and art of risk-based and factor investing. Contains up-to-date research from the areas of RBFI Features contributions from leading academics and practitioners in this field Features discussions of new methods of building strategic and tactical risk-based portfolios for practitioners, academics and students




Systematic Risk and Diversification in the Equity REIT Market


Book Description

This paper employs stock market-based data to examine the systematic risk and diversification properties of publicly traded equity real estate investment trusts (REITs). A unique sample is created by combining returns with property holdings by type and location. We find that: (1) the systematic risk of equity REITs varies by property type, with betas being significantly larger for retail-oriented REITs than for REITs owning industrial and warehouse properties; (2) we find no evidence that diversification across property types or broad geographic regions is reflected in a standard market-based diversification measure- -the R-squared from a simple market model regression; but (3) the number of properties owned by the REIT is positively correlated with the market model R-squared; a REIT's stock return variance of total return also is systematically lower the greater the number of properties owned by the firm.