From TRD
New York: When the Federal
Reserve raised interest rates in March for the second time in three months, it
signaled that the nine-year stimulus campaign launched during the financial
crisis was nearing an end. Overseas, however, “lower for longer” remains the
reality, with low or even negative interest rates expected to continue in
countries like Germany and Japan.
Even amidst uncertainty
created by the Trump administration’s foreign policy, with yields in their own
countries low, some foreign investors are gearing up to spend more on U.S. real
estate — a welcome influx of cash. That’s especially true as tighter currency
restrictions are forcing Chinese buyers to pull back.
U.S. interest rates
have remained at near zero for almost a decade — a monetary policy that
provided cheap money, fueling real estate investment as the economy recovered
from the recession. But while the Fed is moving to gradually raise rates — most
recently from .75 to 1 percent — overseas governments are standing pat with low
ones.
Last year, the
European Central Bank and the Bank of Japan even ventured into the realm of
negative interest rates. The European Central bank’s deposit rate has been at
negative .4 percent since early 2016. And the Bank of Japan’s policy board last
month said it would continue to apply a negative interest rate of minus .1
percent.
Spencer Levy, head of
research in the Americas for CBRE, speculated that investment from Germany and
Japan could help offset China’s impending drop.
“Negative interest
rates are driving capital out of those countries,” he said.
Japan Post Bank, the
country’s largest financial institution, is shifting trillions of yen from
Japanese government bonds, which are yielding less than eight basis points.
While the bulk of that is going to foreign credit and equities, the bank is
moving up to 3 percent of its $1.8 trillion portfolio — or $55 billion — into
alternative assets like private equity, hedge funds and real estate.
Meanwhile, its sister
company, Japan Post Insurance Co. Ltd., is preparing to shift away from
domestic bonds and diversify its $700 billion portfolio by investing in
alternative assets.
“There’s a tremendous
amount of pent-up savings looking for yield,” Levy said. “They’re overcoming
the hangover of the late 1980s and early 1990s spending binge.”
In February, Japanese
trading conglomerate Mitsui & Co. made its first foray into the U.S. real
estate asset management market, acquiring
a 20 percent stake in the Los
Angeles-based real estate investment firm CIM Group.
The announcement came
shortly after Japanese conglomerate ASO Group’s splashy West Coast purchase in
December. ASO paid somewhere north of $300 million to buy the Spruce
Goose Hanger in Playa Vista, which is net
leased to Google.
In Manhattan,
meanwhile, Tokyo-based Unizo Holdings has spent nearly $770 million since late
2013 buying up small office buildings.
Will Silverman, head
of the investment sales group at Hodges Ward Elliott, said he expects Japanese
buyers to follow the strategy set by such foreign investors as Chinese
insurance giant Fosun International, which paid a whopping $725
million to buy 1 Chase Manhattan Plaza before branching
out to condo development.
“Somebody plants the
flag with a blockbuster trophy purchase and then begins creating a broader
exposure for themselves,” Silverman said.
Woody Heller, head of
the capital markets group at Savills Studley, said these kinds of buyers want
stable assets that resemble the safety of government bonds. “They’re looking
for something that has the closest profile to fixed-income investments,” he
said.
Still, it is unlikely
that Japan will unseat China as the most active foreign buyer of U.S. real
estate. The $15.9 billion Chinese investors spent captured 24 percent of the
foreign-buyer market last year, according to CBRE. In second place was Canada,
which made up 19 percent.
Germany — the
fourth-most active foreign buyer last year with 9 percent of the market — may
well advance, however.
Last year, Germany’s
Union Investment Real Estate spent $1.4 billion — or 35 percent of its deal
volume — on U.S. real estate. The Frankfurt-based company, which had focused on
office properties, is now diversifying into the hotel sector. It spent $203
million last year to buy the Courtyard Marriott Hotel in the Financial
District.
Meanwhile, last July,
Frankfurt’s DekaBank launched an open-ended, dollar-denominated real estate
fund for high-net-worth private investors. A few weeks later, it worked with
Landesbank Baden-Württemberg and Minneapolis-based U.S. Bank to provide a $580
million loan to refinance Vornado Realty Trust’s Manhattan Mall at 100 West
33rd Street.
The bottom line,
emphasized Studley’s Heller, is that negative interest rates will have
institutions looking for better yield, because they “can’t stick hundreds of
millions of dollars under a mattress.”
“It’s not hard to beat
negative,” he said.
Original Content The Real Deal
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