Five years is a long time when thinking about where we’ve been since 2018. But over a lifetime, time flies. Because in our minds, we’re always about 30 or so, even when our bodies beg to differ. With all our living, we don’t know what next year will bring. Yes, I know; there are plenty of predictions out there. Here’s a reminder of how those making them are “often wrong, but never in doubt.”
Roll the footage (WSJ article Nov. 2018):
U.S. public pension funds are taking on more real estate, and at times some of the riskiest types of property investments, as they try to close their funding gaps.
American public plans with more than 20,000 members had an average 7% of their assets in real-estate investments at the end of 2017, according to a Wall Street Journal analysis of Boston College’s Public Plans Data, which contains the most recent numbers available. That is up from 4% in 2006, representing more than $120 billion in additional pension money flowing into real estate.
Some of this increase is due to the construction of new properties designed to be sold later for a profit. These so-called opportunistic investments by pensions grew nearly sixfold between 2006 and 2016 even as allocations to “core” existing properties remained flat, according to an analysis by CEM Benchmarking.
As I wrote to you in 2020:
One pension consultant advised an increase in “core” (read commercial) real estate, probably because it was going up in value, and more than likely, assets that are going up are an easy sell to the pension board.
Imagine the 30-foot conference table, the business suits, the presentations, the hubris, and you get the picture.
Pension boards are all about protecting jobs: their own, that is.
If some fancy consulting team advises real estate and then the pension fund follows their advice, then there’s no one to blame. Perfect.
Here’s what our billion-dollar soothsayer said:
“In a core property, you have a known source of income on day one and, depending on the lease structure, you have a pretty good understanding of future rents. Versus something you’re going to build today, which you’re not even sure if you’re going to have a tenant.”
Action Line: When you’re looking for a fiduciary to talk about Y-O-U and not making predictions, I’m here.
E.J. Smith - Your Survival Guy
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