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How to invest in REITs

Market News, Real Estate
22 April 2024 04:00 (EST)
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With analysts predicting that the Bank of Canada will cut its policy interest rate sometime this summer, 26 per cent of potential homebuyers sitting on the sidelines in anticipation, and more than 85 per cent of renters and home owners finding housing costs to be more expensive year-over-year, Canadian property values are positioned for a near-term upside surprise, making it a prospective time to learn how to invest in real estate investment trusts (REITs).

How to invest in REITs

1. What are REITs and how do they work?

A real estate investment trust owns, operates or finances real estate properties that generate income for their investors, who benefit from buying shares in the company while sidestepping the hassles of buying, managing and financing individual properties.

REITs are popularly sought after for their high distributions, a feature tied to their legal obligation to pay out 100 per cent of their taxable income in Canada and 90 per cent in the United States, which might come from rent, asset sales or management services.

The TSX REIT Index generated an average annual return of 9.7 per cent from 1997 to 2013, well ahead of the TSX’s approximately 7 per cent, while U.S. REITs achieved an 11.4 per cent return over the past 25 years, outperforming the S&P 500’s 7.6 per cent effort, with outperformance positioned to continue if borrowing conditions fall back in line with the post-Great Financial Crisis average.

2. What kind of REITs can you buy?

Most REITs can be classified as equity REITs, which operate as large-scale landlords, collecting rent in exchange for accommodations, customer service, and long-term property maintenance and upkeep. The nature of property portfolios is as diverse as there are passions to pursue, spanning retail (malls, self-storage, businesses), residential (single and multi-family, hotels), infrastructure (fibre cables, telecom towers, energy pipelines), healthcare, offices, or a diversified focus across multiple sectors.

You can buy equity REITs on major securities exchanges like you would a single stock, with the tickers being distinguishable by their .REIT or .UN endings. According to Edward Jones, 43 REITs were listed on the TSX as of December 2019.

If a budding real estate entrepreneur isn’t interested in property management, he or she can found a mortgage REIT instead, which lends money to facilitate acquisitions and holds a loan portfolio either directly or through mortgage-backed securities. Hybrid REITs, for their part, practice a strategy that borrows from their mortgage and equity counterparts.

Investors can also buy ownership stakes in private REITs, which aren’t registered with securities authorities, and can therefore have more lax governance standards compared with publicly listed companies. Private opportunities, often limited to institutional and accredited investors, aren’t attractive investments for most people, unless they have specialized real estate knowledge and are prepared to make a substantial allocation.

Investors can allocate into these four varieties of REITs through individual companies, or through funds, such as mutual funds or exchanged-traded funds (ETFs), that build and own portfolios based on mandates that will differ in terms of investment style, geographical reach and sector-specific focus.

3. What are the risks and benefits of investing in REITs?

Like any investment, the particular mechanics of REITs will only apply to certain investors based on their financial goals, risk tolerance and time horizon. We can broadly characterize these investors as:

With this ideal REIT investor framework in mind, let’s turn our attention to the benefits you could enjoy and the risks you must take by holding REITs in your portfolio.

Benefits

Risks

Now that we’ve covered the basics about how REITs work and what they offer to investors, we can carry on to explaining how to pick the best REITs for your portfolio.

4. How should you evaluate REITs to invest in?

From a bird’s eye-view, putting your hard-earned money to work in a REIT depends on the probability of its business plan working out over your time horizon. This probability must be expressed as a percentage range, because investment research is by nature part art and part science and can be delineated by considering the following factors:

If individual company research isn’t a rabbit hole you’re prepared to dive into, you can invest in REIT funds that offer exposure to broader portfolios with dozens or hundreds of holdings. Here are key factors to consider when choosing a REIT fund:

Despite there being ample evidence in support of index investing’s superior long-term returns compared with active stock pickers, a disciplined approach with a strong tolerance for volatility, as RIT demonstrates, can outperform the broader REIT market over time.

5. How do you buy shares in a REIT?

Once you have a list of REITs you’d like to own, simply head over to your online investment platform and place your orders. Remember to chose a limit order and to set a per-share price one or two cents above the ask price to make sure your orders are filled. Market orders, more appropriate for traders, will buy or sell at the quickest available price, which might be well above or below the current bid or ask price, and should be avoided by long-term investors.

If you haven’t opened an investment account yet, check out Questrade or Wealthsimple for low-fee options with seamless user experiences. These are the main accounts you can open in Canada depending on your circumstances:

Having made your purchases, and positioned yourself to benefit from exposure to the universal need to have a roof over our heads, all that’s left to do is manage your investments according to your needs. This means not letting your REIT allocation grow beyond a balance between your risk tolerance and financial goals – whether that entails trimming your holdings or buying during periods of undervaluation – and transitioning to safer instruments such as cash and bonds once your investments grow enough to fund your original purpose for investing.

Now that you’re a property owner, you might want to expand your real estate knowledge to other sub-sectors poised for value creation. To this end, you can check out last month’s How to invest in home-building stocks and A near-term catalyst for Canadian real estate stocks.

Join the discussion: Find out what everybody’s saying about how to invest in REITs on Stockhouse’s stock forums and message boards.

The material provided in this article is for information only and should not be treated as investment advice. For full disclaimer information, please click here.


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