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Placing commercial property in theAustralian capital market
RICS Research paper seriesVolume 7 Number 12 September 2007
www.rics.org
Corporate Professional Local
David M. HigginsUniversity of Technology Sydney
Australia
David M. Higgins, BSc, MComm, PhD, API (Land Econ), MRICS is asenior property investment lecturer at the School of the Built Environment,University of Technology Sydney, Australia. He has over 15 years ofindustry experience which provides the practical focus of his academicresearch on commercial property investment strategies and forecasting.His Ph.D thesis critically evaluated the determinants for modelling andforecasting long-term performance in office, industrial and retail propertymarkets and suggested ways to improve commercial property forecasting.He is active in the property industry, providing academics research forindustry partners and is a member of the key professional institutes,including the Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors, Australian PropertyInstitute and an inaugural steering committee member of the AustralianProperty Research Forum. David is the co-editor of the Australian andNew Zealand Property Journal and a referee panel member for the PacificRim Property Research Journal and the Australian and New ZealandProperty Journal.
RICS research papers
Volume 7 Number 1Property Risk Scoring: the reporting of investment risk to clients
Volume 7 Number 2The future of surveying education in universities
Volume 7 Number 3Transport accessibility and land values: a case study of Tyne and Wear
Volume 7 number 4Understanding construction alliances: their rationale and design
Volume 7 Number 5An analytical Anglo/French comparative study of construction procurement and management
Volume 7 Number 6A review of fiscal measures to benefit heritage conservation
Volume 7 Number 7Urban agriculture and eco-sanitation
Volume 7 Number 8Urban parks and property values
Volume 7 Number 9Property education in South Africa
Volume 7 Number 10House prices and bubbles: a comparison of New Zealand and the United Kingdom
Volume 7 Number 11An improved national house price index using Land Registry data
Volume 7 Number 12Positioning commercial property in the Australian investment market
Placing commercialproperty in theAustralian capitalmarket
Volume 7 Number 12
September 2007
Panel of referees
Kwame Addae-DapaahNational University of SingaporeSingapore
Akintola AkintoyaGlasgow Caledonian UniversityScotland
Saleh Al-HathloulAlhathloul lilumranKingdom of Saudi Arabia
Adarkwah AntwiUniversity of WolverhamptonEngland
Ghassan AouadUniversity of SalfordEngland
David BaldryUniversity of SalfordEngland
Malcolm BellLeeds Metropolitan UniversityEngland
Roderick BissetFaithful & GouldScotland
Alistair BlythUniversity of WestminsterEngland
Thomas BohnUniversity of LeipzigGermany
Paul BowenUniversity of Cape TownSouth Africa
Spike BoydellUniversity of Technology, SydneyAustralia
Jagjit ChadhaBNP Paribas UK Holdings LtdUnited Kingdom
Aditi Chatterji University of Calcutta India
S O CheungCity University of Hong KongHong Kong
Chris CloeteUniversity of PretoriaSouth Africa
Charles CowapHarper Adams University CollegeEngland
Hoffie CruywagenAssociation of Quantity Surveyorsin South AfricaSouth Africa
Julian Diaz IIIGeorgia State UniversityUnited States of America
Tim DixonOxford Brookes UniversityEngland
Keith DuffConsultantEngland
Richard FellowsUniversity of Hong KongHong Kong
Christopher FortuneUniversity of SalfordScotland
Karen GiblerGeorgia State UniversityUnited States of America
Andy HamiltonUniversity of SalfordEngland
Cliff HardcastleUniversity of TeessideEngland
Barbara HawardUniversity of PortsmouthEngland
John HenneberryUniversity of SheffieldEngland
Robert HomeAnglia Ruskin UniversityEngland
Aart HordijkROZ Real Estate CouncilThe Netherlands
Michael HoxleyNottingham Trent UniversityEngland
Will HughesUniversity of ReadingEngland
Eddie HuiHong Kong Polytechnic UniversityHong Kong
Norman HutchisonUniversity of AberdeenScotland
L Jide IwarereHoward UniversityUnited States of America
Ramin KeivaniOxford Brookes UniversityEngland
J M Lusugga KirondeUCLASTanzania
Andrew KnightNottingham Trent UniversityEngland
Richard LaingRobert Gordon’s UniversityScotland
Chris LeishmanUniversity of GlasgowScotland
David LewisRoyal Agricultural CollegeEngland
Colin LizieriUniversity of ReadingEngland
S M LoCity University of Hong KongHong Kong
Sim Loo LeeNational University of SingaporeSingapore
Sui Pheng LowNational Universoty of SingaporeSingapore
David LoweUniversity of ManchesterEngland
Ahmed M Saleh OufGovernment of SharjahUnited Arab Emirates
John MansfieldNottingham Trent UniversityEngland
Pat McAllisterUniversity of ReadingEngland
William McCluskeyUniversity of UlsterNorthern Ireland
James MeikleDavis LangdonEngland
Stuart MorleyGVA GrimleyEngland
Wordsworth Odame LarbiMinistry of Lands, Foresty & MinesGhana
Modupe OmirinUniversity of LagosNigeria
Jacob OpadeyiUniversity of the West IndiesTrinidad and Tobago
Allison OrrUniversity of GlasgowScotland
Ali ParsaUniversity of UlsterNorthern Ireland
Rob PickardUniversity of NorthumbriaEngland
Frances PlimmerKingston UniversityEngland
Gwilym PriceUniversity of GlasgowScotland
David ProverbsUniversity of WolverhamptonEngland
Les RuddockUniversity of SalfordEngland
Sarah SayceKingston UniversityEngland
Karl-Werner SchulteUniversity of RegensbergGermany
Rainer SchultzUniversity of AberdeenScotland
Martin SextonUniversity of SalfordEngland
Low Sui PhengNational University of SingaporeSingapore
Francois VirulyUniversity of WitwatersrandSouth Africa
Clive WarrrenUniversity of QueenslandAustralia
Christine WhiteheadLondon School of EconomicsEngland
Peter WyattUniversity of the West of EnglandEngland
Saad YahyaSaad Yahya AssociatesKenya
The aim of the RICS Research Paper Series isto provide an outlet for the results of research
relevant to the surveying profession. Papersrange from fundamental research work through
to innovative practical applications of new andinteresting ideas. Papers combine academic
rigour with an emphasis on the implications inpractice of the material presented. The Series is
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Placing commercial property in theAustralian capital market
David M. Higgins University of Technology Sydney, Australia
Abstract
Like other developed countries, commercial property in Australia is an important investment asset class. Onavailable data, the extent and composition of investment grade commercial property and associated propertyinvestment products can be measured and compared to the wider Australian investment market. As atDecember 2006, the estimated size of the Australian commercial property investment market is AU$449 billionof which Australian Institutions own approximately AU$178 billion (40%).
Due to illiquidity and high value thresholds there are several property investment products which allow investorsexposure to local and overseas commercial property. The largest is public equity with Real Estate InvestmentTrusts AU$136 billion representing close to 10% of the Australian Stockmarket. Next is private equitycomprising wholesale property trusts and property syndicates at a combined value of AU$ 69 billion. Debtsecurities offer an alterative return stream with the AU$71 billion whole commercial property mortgage sectorand the emerging AU$12 billion traded debt securities sector.
In separating the equity, commercial property and publicly traded debt components, the size of the Australianinvestment market for these asset classes can be compared to the global equivalent. The total value of theglobal investment market is AU$152 trillion, and is apportioned equities AU$59 trillion (39%), debt securitiesAU$84 trillion (55%) and commercial property AU$9 trillion (6%). The Australian market share is 2% of theglobal investment market, although the percentages range across the different investment sub-markets. TheAustralian commercial property market accounts for 2.4% of the global property market as there is a significantproportion of Australian investment grade property already owned by institutions.
ContactDavid M. HigginsUniversity of Technology SydneyPo Box 123Broadway, NSW 2007Australia
Tel: +61 (0) 2 9514 8733Email: [email protected]
Contents
1 Introduction 9
2 Literature review 12
3 Australian property investment market 15
4 Global property investment market 18
5 Australian property investment products 20
6 Conclusions 24
References 26
Appendix 28
RICS research paper series 30
8 � RICS Research
For investors, commercial propertyincreasingly offers a wide range of exciting investment opportunities.
Alongside a diverse range of propertytypes, sourced locally and from overseasbuilding stock, there are propertyinvestment instruments which even though linked long term to the security of the underlying property assets, canexhibit distinctively separate structuresand investment attributes.
The capital market places a value on the level of accessible information. Compared tocompeting asset classes, underlying property asan asset class is placed at a distinctdisadvantage due to:
• no central trading place • limited transactions • illiquid with a high value threshold• carries a significant concentration of risk• unique characteristics of individual buildings• low property related discloser/reporting
requirementsIn identifying the shortcomings, the underlyingproperty asset should not be considered as anisolated asset class in the capital market, asfinancial instruments exist which enable investorsto have an exposure to property in differentshapes and forms.
For the Australian commercial property market,the various investment options for investors areshown in Figure 1.
1 Introduction
Placing commercial property in the Australian capital market
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Figure 1 Australian property investment market
Wholesale Property TrustsProperty Syndicates
Commercial Mortgages
Real Estate Investment TrustsCommercial Mortgage Backed
SecuritiesProperty Trust Bonds
Property Securitised Funds
Small and largeinvestors
Large investors (wealthy investors, overseas, institutions)
Equity focussed Debt focussed
Physical property assets (e.g bricks and mortar)Underlying asset
Privateinvestmentproduct
Publicinvestmentproduct
Fund of Fundproduct
Investors: Retail,overseas and institutions
Investment characteristics
Future opportunites Adapted: Geltner and Miller 2001
Figure 1 depicts the structure of the Australianproperty investment market, with the lineslinking the underlying property assets at the topwith the options for the small and largeinvestors along the bottom. The key differencebetween small and large investors is thatunderlying property and debt focusedinvestments have large indivisible units ofinvestment, often above approximatelyAU$500,000. For the small investor, exposureto property can be across equity focusedintermediate investment products. The propertyinvestment choices are as follows:
Private Investment Products: representsilliquid property investments where there is nocentral trading place. The investment horizon isnormally long term.
• Wholesale Property Trusts: offers largeinvestors a share in direct ownershipmanaged by a third party. Generally majorinvestors are represented on a supervisory(decision-making) board.
• Property Syndicates: focused at smallinvestors offering low entry costs to amanaged trust ranging from a single propertyasset to a major diversified property portfolio.
• Commercial Mortgages: this is thetraditional debt financing arrangement andconsists of whole non-transferablecommercial mortgages held by a bank usuallyover a defined time period.
Public Investment Products: refers toinvestments that are easily traded over publicexchanges and so provide a range of short tolong term investment horizons.
• Real Estate Investment Trusts: (REITs): aretax transparent, open–ended propertyinvestment vehicles that primarily hold,manage and maintain properties forinvestment. REITs are liquid assets and arelisted and traded on the Australian stock
market. An alternative Australian name forREITs is Listed Property Trusts (LPTs).
• Commercial Mortgage Backed Securities(CMBS): are generally pass-thoughsecurities backed by a pool of first alignedmortgage loans secured over commercialproperties.
• Property Trust Bonds: represent anunsecured claim against the propertyinvestment vehicle, rather than a claim againstthe underlying properties. The issuance ofProperty Trust Bonds generally obliges theproperty investment vehicle to adhere tospecified covenants. These, like CMBS, arethinly traded on a secondary market.
In identifying the property investment products,they can be divided into four capital marketcategories according to whether they aretraded on the public or private markets and ifthey are either equity or debt assets.
Fund of Fund Products: accompanying themain property investment products, fund offunds products offer an efficient structure forinvestors to gain access to a wide range ofinvestment products. The investment horizondepends to an extent on the liquidity of theunderlying investments.
• Property Securitised Funds: are designedto provide investors with exposure to a rangeof public and private property investmentvehicles. Investment managers research andselect funds and have access to specialistproperty funds that might otherwise beunavailable to investors.
In detailing the property opportunities availableto investors, the sourcing of property andcapital market information, definitions and
10 � RICS Research
coverage do vary between data providers andin some instances samples are representativeof the total population. In acknowledging theselimitations, commercial property can becompared with other major components of thedomestic investment market. For the purpose ofthis research, the focus is on total stock andthe investment market which is available toinvestors as at December 2006.
As the research focus is on the Australianinvestment market, the main component of theequity and debt market, household residentialproperty has been separated and omitted asthere are limited opportunities for institutions toinvest in residential properties in the publicequity market.
This research is structured so to examine firstlythe size of the total Australian propertyinvestment market and that owned byinstitutions. Secondly, comparisons are thenmade with the global investment market(including property). On measuring the overallAustralian property market, the third sectionlooks at the value of the property investmentproducts with a comparison to the equivalentcapital market sectors. A conclusion details thekey points of this study.
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Investment decisions inherently impacton the allocation of resources (land,labour and capital), so it is therefore
critical as part of the decision makingprocess to have exceedingly good marketknowledge. More often, there is a contrastacross the asset classes as to the type andlevel of information; specifically welldocumented is risk, return and liquidityinformation to commonly less knownmarket size (Higgins 2005).
The size of the individual property investmentmarkets can be determined although, likealternative asset classes in the Australiancapital market, measuring the market size isdifficult due to the following:
• limited disclosure on corporate assets andprivate investment products.
• investment products can overlap and investin more the one investment product (for example: Fund of Funds).
• investment products can comprise differentlevels of equity and debt.
To overcome these issues, market size andopportunities for investors can be examined atthree distinct levels. This is best illustrated bystudying a specific asset class. For example,measures of the Australian investment gradecommercial property market can be consideredas follows: (Adapted: Key and Law 2005)
• Total stock: represents all institutional gradeproperty, whether owned by investors orowner occupiers and in the public or privatesectors. This includes corporate ownedproperty which forms part of anorganisation’s manufacturing operation.
2 Literature review
12 � RICS Research
• Investment market: consists of all investmentvehicles/assets that are available to investorsin the public or private sector that haveproperty as the core underlying constituent1.
• Investable universe: is the total value of allinstitutional grade assets with all overlapsremoved. Double counting can occur whenassets are included in more than oneinvestment asset class. For example: ListedProperty Trusts are part of the publicly tradedequity market, but the underlying propertiesare counted as part of the total commercialproperty stock.
1For the purposes of this research, managed funds, fund of funds (property securitised funds) and derivates, are omitted as their valuesimply captures the value of the equities or debt obligations they own or have the right to own in the future.
The three distinct measures can providecontrasting outcomes. For the purpose ofthis research, the focus is on the total stockand the investment market.
As investment opportunities become global,market depth is becoming an important partof the allocation process for majorinternational funds (Key and Law 2005, andHudson-Wilson 2000). This historicallyplaces the property investment community ata distinct disadvantage with their attentionon local property market knowledgecompared to the better informed and moretransparent alternative asset classes, like thepublic equity and debt markets.
In acknowledging that value can be addedfrom the unique physical attributes ofproperty (Ling and Archer 2005), the capitalmarket perspective is focused essentially on
pricing the future cash flow and associatedrisk levels. This then allows property assetsto be compared to and compete with otherforms of capital market assets, for example,public equity (shares).
Commonly, these capital market assetswhich include property can be divided intofour categories according to whether theyare traded on the public or private marketsand if they are either equity or debt assets(Geltner and Miller 2001).
The property investment products identifiedin Figure 1 operate within the fourcategories and can offer a different risk andreturn profile and so deliver diversificationbenefits. The four quadrant investmentmarket and leading property asset classesthat operate within each quadrant areillustrated in Figure 2.
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Figure 2 Four Quadrant investment market and associated property investment products
Public Markets Private Markets
Equity Assets Shares- Real Estate
Investment Trusts
Private Entities- Unlisted Property
(Wholesale Property Trusts and Property Syndicates)
Debt Assets Traded Debt Securities- Commercial Mortgage
Backed Securities - Property Trust Bonds
Bank Loans- Whole Commercial
Property Mortgages
Adapted: Geltner and Miller 2001
Property investment strategy based on the fourquadrants investment market can improve aportfolio’s risk and return profile (Hudson-Wilsonand Guenther 1995). In the Australian propertyinvestment market, this concept is untried as theprivate debt market appears to operateseparately to the other three markets and tradeddebt securities (Commercial Mortgage BackedSecurities and Property Trust Bonds) are still arelatively new property asset class.
In identifying a diagrammatic framework forthe Australian investment market, the totalvalue of the public portion is relativelystraightforward. As in most public tradedmarkets, the value of each security is known,as public trading provides constant pricinginformation and the number of shares (units)is a matter of public record.
On the other hand, as Miles and Tolleson(1997, p12) points out,
“…estimating the aggregated value of non-securitised or private market investment ismost difficult. This results from the fragmented,non-standardised and complex nature of tradingin these instruments. In addition, there is notmuch incentive to publicise transactions detailsas this can provide a competitive advantage tothe owners and their representatives.”
Consequently, the available estimates of thetotal value of many private market assetclasses come from market surveys carried outby service data providers where classificationand market coverage may vary.
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Property investment strategy based on the four quadrantsinvestment market can improve a portfolio's risk and return profile“ ”
Figure 3 Summary of the Australian Property Investment Market
2 Unlisted shares are sourced from the ABS quarterly survey of public unit trusts. As this is a survey of investment value,ABS advises that the information should be viewed with caution.
Various private markets form thedomestic investment market. The structure of these private
markets is considerably more complexthan the publicly traded markets althoughthe ABS (2007a) values unlisted shares
2
at AU$1,156 billion. This can represent anestimate measure of the private equitymarket and would appear to excludehousehold (residential property) interests.
Apart from the ABS (2007a) figure, the valueof individual classes of assets is estimatedusing methodology and data sourcesappropriate for that particular asset class. Forexample, investment grade commercialproperty is one of the largest components ofthe private investment market. Estimates ofthe commercial property investment universedepend on the approach, with a top-downanalysis based on a nation’s economic activity(see Liang and Gordon 2003) to a more
expensive in-depth bottom-up study (see Keyand Law 2005, for the UK property market)which comprised extensive information onownership structures and a value for a rangeof different building stock.
For Australia, Higgins (2005) selected threeseparate models that appeared to cometogether, based on overseas benchmarks, toprovide a robust estimate of the Australianproperty investment market. To arrive at avalue of institutionally owned property, theresearch itemised and omitted both theoverseas owned properties (AU$71 billion)and development/residential properties(AU$14 billion) recorded in the PIR (2007)Australian Property Fund Industry Survey. Inacknowledging data limitations, the findings inFigure 3 can highlight the Australian propertyownership structure and allow comparisons tothe total stock of Australian investment gradecommercial property.
3 Australian Property InvestmentMarket
Placing commercial property in the Australian capital market
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Property Investment
Market Size
Total Value AU$B
Institutionally
Owned Property
Total Value AU$B
Market Coverage
by Institutional
Investors
Core Property Sector
Office Investment Market 92 64 70%
Retail Investment Market 87 83 95%
Industrial Investment Market 52 20 39%
Sub Total 232 167 72%
Non Core Property Sector 217 11 5%
Totals 449 178 40%
Figure 3 outlines the size and the degree ofinstitutional ownership of the Australianproperty investment market. The institutionalAU$167 billion exposure to the core propertysector is apportioned; office 38%, retail 50%and industrial 12%. The proportion of the retailmarket owned by institutions is a high 95%and would suggest that growth opportunitiesmay centre more on redevelopmentopportunities or retail transactions betweeninstitutions. Alternatively, as institutionalinvestors own 39% of the industrial propertymarket, a major source of future industrialproperty investment would be from non-institutional investors, for example: corporateowned property.
Furthermore, institutionally owned Australianproperties are spread across propertyinvestment vehicles in the public and private
markets. This will offer investors a differentrisk/return profile, as publicly listed propertytrusts are affected more by the stockmarketthan the private market property vehicles, whichare driven by underlying property fundamentals.
Figure 4 shows the different propertyinvestment vehicles and the associated value of the underlying Australian properties. It illustrates the ownership profile of theAustralian investment grade property marketwith the well documented publicly tradedmarket (Real Estate Investment Trusts) owningAU$98 billion of Australian investment gradeproperty. This compares with the unlisted/private market which is formed by the lessdocumented, institutional based AU$59 billionDirect Property Funds and the retailinvestment focused AU$21 billion PropertySyndicate market.
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Institutionally Owned Property
Total Value AU$B
% of Total
Public Market
Listed Property Trusts 98 55%
Public Market 80 45%
Direct Property Funds3 59 33%
Property Syndicate 21 12%
Totals 178 100%
Source: PIR 2007 and author
3 Direct property funds include the PIR classification of unlisted property trusts and wholesale property funds.
Figure 4 Australian Commercial Property: Comparing Public versus Private Markets
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...institutionally owned Australian properties are spread acrossproperty investment vehicles in the public and private markets“ ”
In providing information on the global propertymarket, similar information can be sourced onthe global equity market and the key elementsthat form the global debt market (publiclytraded short and long term debt securities).These three components of equity, debt andproperty form the core portfolio allocation formanaged funds (Watkins and Hartzell 2004).
Figure 6 illustrates in Australian dollars theglobal investment markets across the equity,debt and institutionally owned commercialproperty market. The global investment marketsize in US dollars is shown in the Appendix.
The total value of the global investmentmarket is AU$151 trillion, and is apportionedequities AU$59 trillion (39%), debt securitiesAU$84 trillion (55%) and commercial propertyAU$9 trillion (6%). The allocation by regionsillustrates the role of the US in the globalinvestment market with approximately 40%overall market coverage. As a result, the USplays a unique role as the global capital huband as a conduit of capital.
4 Continents outside the three main global property markets have been omitted due to low levels of investment grade property.
Investors often look at the overseasmarkets to assess opportunities and tocompare market size. An estimate of
the investment grade global propertymarket can be based on a nation’seconomic activity (see Liang and Gordon2003). This can be compared with datacollected on property that is held forinvestment purposes by institutions. Figure5 measures the global property market, asin the North American, European andAsian continents as well as the Australian property market4.
Figure 5 shows the size of the globalcommercial property market and that held forinvestment purposes by institutions. Whencompared to overseas markets, institutionsown a significant proportion (49%) of theAustralian property market. This in part can beattributed to the developed Real EstateInvestment Trust market with sourced qualitycommercial properties and the impact fromthe introduction of compulsory superannuation.
4 Global Property InvestmentMarket
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Figure 5 Global Commercial Property Market
Commercial Property
Market (AU$ Trillion)
Institutionally
Owned Property
(AU$ Trillion)
% of Commercial
Property Held
for Investment
US and Canada 7.7 4.3 55%
Europe 8.6 3.0 35%
Asia 4.7 1.8 38%
- Australia 0.4 0.2* 49%
Totals 21.1 9.1 43%
* = RREEF 2007 figure Adapted: Author synthesis estimates of various sources
In accounting for 55% of the globalinvestment market, debt securities do varyboth geographically and on the role andcontribution of government and private debtfacilitators (McKinsey Global Institute 2005).Foremost, are the Japan and US domestic debtmarkets as, when combined, the AU$35 trillionrepresents 42% of the global debt market.
The Australian market share is AU$2.5 trillion,being just below 2% of the overall global
investment market, although the percentagesrange across the investment sub markets. Thecommercial property market accounts for2.4% of the global property market and isrelatively high due to the significant proportionof Australian investment grade propertyalready owned by institutions.
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Source: Standard and Poor’s 2007, BIS 2007, various (property)
Figure 6 Global Investment Market
The four quadrants of the Australiancapital market are defined to includepublic equity, public debt, private
equity and private debt. The followingdetails information on the structure andsize of these individual markets alongsidethe associated Australian commercialproperty products in each quadrant.
Public MarketsThe disclosure requirements in the publiclytraded markets lead to detailed information,although in some instances the line betweenan investment and the use for householdconsumption is unclear. For example, ABS(2007a) details currency transactions anddeposits, which could be in either group. Forthe purpose of this research, it is consideredto be the cash component in the publiclytraded market sector.
The components of the publicly tradedsegments of the domestic investment marketare exhibited in Figure 7.
Figure 7 shows that the publicly tradedmarkets are approximately AU$4 trillion withthe traded debt securities and equities marketbeing of similar size at just above AU$1.3trillion. For the last 2 years, the annualisedgrowth of these key publicly traded debtmarkets range from a healthy 13% to 20% peryear. The Real Estate Investment Trust marketdid better, at 33% annual growth. This in partwas driven by overseas property purchaseswhich now represents $65 billion (46%) ofcommercial properties owned by REITs.
5 Australian Property InvestmentProducts
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Figure 7 Australian Publicly Traded Markets
Source: ASX 2007, ABS 2007 and Standard and Poor’s 2007
Private Markets The structure of the private market isconsiderably more complex than the publiclytraded markets. The ABS (2007a) valuesunlisted shares at AU$1,156 billion. Theunlisted property sector is covered by privateproperty investment products represented byWholesale Property Trusts and PropertySyndicates. The size of theses markets aredetailed in Figure 8.
Figure 8 outlines the size of the unlistedproperty investment market. In part the growthin wholesale property trusts is due to majorREITs setting up wholesale property trustswith properties that they have undermanagement. Likewise property syndicategrowth has been affected by propertysyndicators restructuring their portfolio ofsyndicates into REITs.
Limited disclosure restricts information in theprivate debt market. The ABS (2007a) reportson loans and placements outstanding whichcan be detailed
5as the outstanding loan
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liability outside the publicly traded market. Asat December 2006, loans and placementsoutstanding are AU$1,730 billion withhousehold borrowing the largest proportion atAU$826 billion. To match the private equitymarket, household borrowings
6have been
deducted to record an outstanding amount ofAU$904 billion. This can be compared tosurvey data collected by APRA (2007) onoutstanding commercial property market debtheld by Australian banks (Figure 9).
Figure 8 Summary of the Private (Unlisted) Property Investment Market
Total Value AU$B % of Total
Wholesale Property Trusts 56 81
Property Syndicates 13 19
Totals 69 100%
Source: PIR 2007 and author
5ABS explanatory notes detail “loans” as borrowings which are not evidenced by the issue of debt securities, and are not usually traded.Also “placements” are customers’ account balances with entities not regarded as deposit-taking institutions.
6The major proportion of household borrowing (AU$639 billion) is for residential property purchases (ASB 2007b).
Figure 9 details Australian banks’ outstandingdebt across commercial property sectors. Thebanks’ AU$55 billion exposure to the coreproperty sector is apportioned as follows;office 45%, retail 35% and industrial 20%.This is different to the allocation by theinstitutions to the core property sector andwould suggest debt funding arrangementsvary across property sectors depending on theownership structure of the property investmentvehicles and the underlying performanceprofile of the building asset/ property portfolio.
The four quadrants of the public and private,debt and equity markets can be joinedtogether to provide an overview of theAustralian investment market. Likewise, thecommercial property component of eachquadrant can be shown as an amount andpercentage of the respective investmentquadrant. Figure 10 details the Australianinvestment market composition.
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Figure 9 Commercial Property Debt Market – Australian Banks
Total Value AU$B % of Total
Core Property Sector
Office 25 26%
Retail 19 19%
Industrial 11 11%
Sub Total 55
Land development/other residential 29 29%
Other (inc Tourism) 16 16%
Totals 99 100%
Source: APRA 2007
7 Commercial property debt included core property and other (tourism) sector.
Figure 10 illustrates the components of theAU$6.1 trillion Australian investment marketand the relative magnitude of commercial realestate assets in each section. The public debtmarket accounts for 44% of the Australianinvestment market with short and long termdebt securities comprising the major share. InAustralia, these are primarily issued by banksand other financial corporations (RBA 2007).
The total commercial property component ofAU$288 billion represents close to 5% of theAustralian investment market. The privatesector commercial property market comprisesapproximately 49% and is distributedapproximately between the debt - AU$71billion
7(25%) and equity - AU$69 billion
(24%) markets. The publicly traded market(Listed Property Trusts) represents the largestcomponent at AU$136 billion (47%).
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Figure 10 Australian Investment Market – AU$6.1 Trillion
Public Markets Private Markets
Equity Assets Shares (AU$1,390 billion)- Listed Property Trusts
(AU$136billion – 9.78%)
Private Entities (AU$1,156billion)- Unlisted Property
(AU$69billion – 5.96%)
Debt Assets Traded Debt Securities(AU$2,659billion)-Commercial Mortgage BackedSecurities and Property TrustBonds (AU$12billion – 0.45%)
Bank Loans (AU$904 billion)Loans (AU$904billion)- Whole Commercial
Property Mortgages(AU$71billion – 7.85%)
Adapted: Geltner and Miller 2001
There are major benefits in knowingthe extent and composition ofproperty within the Australian
investment market. Opportunities forinstitutional investment can be identifiedalongside market coverage which is a keycomponent in the allocation of capital in afully diversified portfolio.
Competing investment classes includingproperty can be examined in four categories,according to whether the assets are traded onthe public or private markets and if they areeither equity or debt assets. As at December2006, the estimated size of the Australianinvestment market is AU$6.1 trillion of whichAustralian commercial property componentrepresents AU$288 billion (approximately5%). The private equity and debt market forproperty comprises approximately 49%, beingnearly equally distributed with the publiclytraded market (Real Estate Investment Trusts)representing the largest component at 47%.
In separating the equity, property andsecuritised debt components, the size of theAustralian investment market for these assets
can be compared to the global equivalent. The total value of the global investmentmarket is AU$152 trillion, and is apportionedequities (39%), debt securities (55%) andcommercial property (6%). The comparableAustralian market share is AU$2.5 trillion andrepresents just below 2% of the globalinvestment market. The percentage rangesacross the different investment sub-marketswith the commercial property sectoraccounting for 2.4% of the global propertymarket. This is relatively high and is due to thesignificant proportion of Australian investmentgrade property owned by institutions.
In identifying the composition and size of thevarious Australian investment markets, furtherresearch is needed to explore the issue ofdouble counting between asset classes. Once overlaps are removed, the total value for the Australian investable universe can be determined. The more knowledge gainedabout the commercial property position andinvestment opportunities in the Australiancapital market, the more attractive property will be to prospective institutional investors.
6 Conclusion
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The more knowledge gained about the commercial propertyposition and investment opportunities in the Australian capitalmarket, the more attractive property will be to prospectiveinstitutional investors
“”
ABS, 2007a, Australian National Accounts:Financial Accounts: Cat. 5232.0, Australian
Bureau of Statistics, Canberra.
ABS, 2007b, Housing Finance: Cat. 5609.0,Australian Bureau of Statistics, Canberra.
APRA, 2007, APRA Insight, AustralianPrudential Regulation Authority, 2nd Quarter.
ASX, 2007, Media Release: 2006 ASX year-end Statistics, Australian Stock Exchange,Sydney.
BIS, 2007, BIS Quarterly Review, Bank of
International Settlement, September.
Geltner D and Miller N, 2001, CommercialReal Estate Analysis and Investments, PrenticeHall, New Jersey.
Higgins D, 2005, Sizing the AustralianProperty Investment Market, Australian
Property Journal, August, p530-534.
Hudson-Wilson S and Guenther D, 1995, TheFour Quadrants: Diversification Benefits forInvestors in Real Estate – A Second Look,
Real Estate Finance, Summer p82-99.
Hudson-Wilson S, 2000, Cross-Quadrant
Asset Allocation, in Modern Real EstatePortfolio Management, edited by Hudson-Wilson S, Frank J. Associates, Pennsylvania.
Key T and Law V, 2005, The Size and
Structure of the UK Property Market,
Investment Property Forum, London.
Liang Y and Gordon N, 2003, A Bird’s Eye
View of Global Real Estate Markets, PrudentialReal Estate Investors, New Jersey.
Ling D and Archer W, 2005, Real EstatePrinciples: A Value Approach, McGraw-Hill ,New York.
McKinsey Global Institute, 2005, $118 Trillion
and Counting: Taking Stock of the World’s
Capital Markets, McKinsey & Company, SanFrancisco.
Miles M and Tolleson N, 1997, A Revised Lookat how Real Estate Compares with OtherMajor Components of Domestic InvestmentUniverse, Real Estate Finance, Spring, p11-20.
PIR, 2007, Australian Property Fund Industry
Survey, Property Investment Research,
Melbourne.
RBA, 2007, Reserve Bank of AustralianBulletin, Reserve Bank of Australia, March, pS25-S40.
RREEF, 2007, Global Real Estate Investment
and Performance 2006 and 2007, RREEFResearch, London.
Standard & Poor’s, 2007, The World byNumbers: Global Stockmarket Review,December 2006, Standard & Poor’s, January.
Watkins D, and Hartzell D, 2004, A Frameworkfor Global Real Estate Investment from a USPerspective, European Real Estate Society
Conference, Milan.
References
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Source: Standard and Poor’s 2007, BIS 2007, various (property)
Appendix
28 � RICS Research
Global Investment Market in US Dollars
Placing commercial property in the Australian capital market
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