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July 08 – July 14, 2016

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AR Global REITs paying out more than they make by a wide margin. Commercial property prices vulnerable to bank regulatory pressures. 

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*Note: bold emphasis is mine, italic sections are from the articles.

Dividend cuts possible at AR Global REITs, analysts say. Bruce Kelly. Investment News. 11 Jul. 2016.

Nicholas Schorsch again…

“Investors in a number of AR Global-sponsored real estate investment trusts face the potential danger of a cut in distributions, according to industry analysts and consultants.”

“The culprit is a REIT cash flow metric known as MFFO – or modified funds from operations, or cash flow – at seven AR Global REITs that in the first quarter of 2016 failed to match or exceed their distributions by wide margins.”

Exsqueeze me… what did you say?

Basically “it is typical for nontraded REITs to overpay distributions to investors in their initial stages while the companies buy properties, find tenants and negotiate leases. Over time, however, REITs cash flow and distributions – or dividends – should match up, or investors will see the value of the REIT erode.”

Nontraded REITs also use the lure of 6% to 7% initial annual distribution rates as a marketing tool for advisers to hook clients.”

“This is what I call sucker yield. It’s the chase for yield that leads investors to impulsively react to dividend quantity over dividend quality. When a company is paying dividends beyond its earning power, it is eroding capital.” – Brad Thomas, editor of Forbes Real Estate Investor newsletter.

Fishy.

“Meanwhile, the AR Global REITs, which control more than $10 billion in real estate assets, are continuing the process of seeking to merge with each other under the roofs of two AR Global REITs that have unusual 20-year management contracts, according to REIT executives.”

Doesn’t seem to be in the best interest of the investors…

“Five of the AR Global REITs in the quarter that ended in March had dividends that far exceed cash flow, while two REITs, American Realty Capital Global Trust II Inc. and American Realty Capital New York City REIT Inc., had negative cash flow.”

“American Finance Trust has $2.2 billion in total assets, and its “payout ratio,” or dividend divided by its MFFO, was 149.4% during the first quarter of the year, according to Robert A. Stanger & Co. Inc., an investment bank that focuses on nontraded REITs.”

“According to Stanger, other AR Global REITs with high payout ratios are: the $2.4 billion, American Realty Capital Hospitality Trust Inc., at 280.8%; the $2.3 billion Healthcare Trust Inc., at 185.9%; Realty Finance Trust Inc., a mortgage REIT with $1.3 billion in assets, at 176.5%; and American Realty Capital Healthcare Trust III, Inc., with just $144 million in assets, at 183.5%.”

“The AR Global REITs are ‘paying out a lot more than they’re earning,’ said Kevin Gannon, managing director at Stanger. ‘At the end of the day you have to address what those companies are going to do dividend wise, relative to what they’re earning. At present, the payout ratios are not sustainable. The REITs have to acquire more assets with decent yields or cut the distributions.'”

Regulator sounds new alert on banks’ property lending. Alistair Gray. Financial Times. 11 Jul. 2016.

“A top US regulator (Thomas Curry, comptroller of the currency) has sounded a new alert over banks’ commercial real estate lending, adding to concerns that bubbles may be forming in parts of the country’s property market.”

“CRE (commercial real estate) loans originated by banks in the first quarter leapt by 44% from the same period in 2015, according to Morgan Stanley. Banks’ share of CRE originations has risen from just over a third in 2014 to more than half in the first quarter of 2016 – a record.”

“Mr. Curry suggested CRE was of even greater concern to regulators than both car loans – an area into which some banks have expanded aggressively – and lending to already-indebted companies.”

“Our exams found looser underwriting standards with less-restrictive covenants, extended maturities, longer interest-only periods, limited guarantor requirements, and deficient-stress testing practices.” – Thomas Curry

Mr. Curry “singled out small banks. More than 180 institutions, he added, had more than doubled their CRE portfolios within the past three years.”

“While two-fifths of banks with more than $20bn in assets said lending standards for apartment blocks had ‘tightened somewhat,’ for instance, only one-fifth of smaller banks said they had.”

“Banks have pushed into CRE as other lenders – notably capital market investors – have retreated from the market. Issuance of commercial mortgage-backed securities has dropped to four-year lows.”

“In a report published separately on Monday, Morgan Stanley warned of the risk that commercial property prices would decline if regulatory pressures caused banks to pull back from CRE.

“A withdrawal by banks would have a knock-on impact on commercial mortgage-backed securities, more of which could default, Morgan Stanley added.”

“The report said the retail sector was especially vulnerable. ‘We are already seeing increased defaults on loans secured by shopping malls, which is a trend we expect to continue.'”

Other Interesting Articles

Bloomberg Businessweek

The Economist

Bloomberg – Global Cloud Coverage Shifting in Ominous Sign of Climate Change 7/11

Bloomberg – Pimco Loads Up on Treasuries; Gundlach, Gross Voice Caution 7/12

Bloomberg – The Housing Market Is Waving a Red Flag 7/14

FT – Negative interest rates: a remarkable financial moment 7/7

FT – Rare governance and takeover battle breaks out in China 7/10

FT – Strong performance of real estate suggests top for the sector 7/12

FT – Bank of Tokyo quits as primary dealer for Japanese government bonds 7/13

Miami Herald – Many boomers in denial over problems they face growing old in suburbs 7/11

NYT – What the Seesaw Jobs Numbers Are Really Telling Us 7/8

NYT – Can We Ignore the Alarm Bells the Bond Market Is Ringing 7/11

NYT – China Pledged to Curb Coal Plants. Greenpeace Says It’s Still Adding Them 7/13

Project Syndicate – The Promise of Regrexit (George Soros) 7/8

Reuters – China’s Wanda shows interest in Viacom’s Paramount 7/13

Vanity Fair – Trouble is Brewing on Billionaires’ Row 7/13

WSJ – China’s Outlfows Aren’t Over 7/7

WSJ – Coming to Terms with Low Bond Yields 7/7

WSJ – The Most Hated Bull Market Keeps Chugging Along 7/11

WSJ – Buybacks Pump Up Stock Rally 7/12

 

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