From the New York website: And then, global stock and bond markets proved all who
predicted a Trump victory would lead to immediate financial turmoil wrong.
The S&P 500 stock
index and 10-year treasury yields both rose over the course of Wednesday,
indicating that markets weren’t too spooked about a future Trump
administration. Among real estate firms, however, the reaction was mixed.
Office REITs with a
heavy New York focus did well after an initial dip in the morning. SL Green’s
stock was up 1.3 percent for the day. Vornado, whose CEO Steve Roth is visited as one of Trump’s economic advisers, saw its
stock rise 1.19 percent.
“I’d say overall it’s
positive for real estate just because you have someone in office who is in the
industry,” said Sandler O’Neill analyst Alexendar Goldfarb, adding that a Trump
victory likely means the 1031 tax exchange is no longer likely to be scrapped.
Hotel REITs also
rose Wednesday, while private-prison REITs saw their share prices shoot
up. In August, the U.S. Justice Department announced that it would end the use
of private prisons, sending shares into a dive. Investors evidently believe
Trump will be more open to continuing the experiment. GEO Group, a
Florida-based public company specializing in private-prison facilities, saw its
stock price rise 21.27 percent Wednesday.
The two largest public
real estate brokerage and services firms also saw their stocks rise slightly,
with CBRE climbing 0.85 percent and JLL rising 0.64 percent.
Vector Group, the
holding company run by Trump confidante Howard
Lorber, saw its stock inch up by 0.33 percent.
But not all REITs did
well. “Anything that’s got global in it was probably hurt today” because of
concerns about the future of global trade under a Trump administration,
Goldfarb said. The stock of global industrial REIT Prologis fell 4.84 percent,
while Brookfield Asset Management’s stock fell fell 1.02 percent. Somewhat
puzzling is the lackluster performance of major apartment REITs: Equity
Residential fell 2.03 percent and AvalonBay fell 1.92 percent.
Another piece of bad
news for the real estate industry was the yield on 10-year Treasury bonds,
which saw their biggest one-day jump in three years by 20 basis point
to 2.07 percent. Although generally a bullish sign for the economy, higher
treasury yields tend to push up the cost of debt and put downward pressure on
cap rates and real estate prices.
The fallout from
Trump’s election on Israel’s market was negligible, which should be reassuring
for American real estate companies
with Israeli investors.
The Tel Aviv market
opened down by 2 percent as news of Trump’s election victory became apparent,
but ended the day with a 1 percent increase. The rally was largely due to
Israel’s pharmaceutical sector, which had been threatened by Hillary’s campaign
promises of increased regulation; several of the largest pharmaceutical
companies saw their share prices spike throughout the day. — Chava
Gourarie contributed reporting.
Original Content The Real Deal
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