Subscribe

REITs fall hard as investors fear rising interest rates

Real estate investment trusts fell the most since September after a strong employment report renewed speculation that the Federal Reserve will boost interest rates in the first half of this year.

U.S. real estate investment trusts fell the most since September after a strong employment report renewed speculation that the Federal Reserve will boost interest rates in the first half of this year.
The 166-company Bloomberg REIT index fell 2.8% Friday, the biggest drop since Sept. 12. Owners of single-tenant buildings and health-care real estate led the decline.
A Labor Department report showing the biggest job gains in 17 years sent Treasury yields surging Friday on expectations of higher interest rates. Rising rates make it more expensive for REITs to borrow money, which may hurt their ability to buy property and develop real estate. Higher Treasury yields also reduce the appeal of the stocks’ dividend yields.
“As the spread narrows, REITs look a little less attractive than Treasuries,” said David Auerbach, an institutional REIT trader at Esposito Securities in Dallas.
The 10-year Treasury yield rose to 1.96% from 1.82% Friday. The dividend yield on the Bloomberg REIT index is about 3.4%.
The Bloomberg single-tenant REIT index sank 4.2% Friday, while the health-care REIT gauge fell 4.1%. Those types of landlords tend to be viewed as bond-like investments because they typically have tenants with long leases.

Learn more about reprints and licensing for this article.

Recent Articles by Author

Berkshire Hathaway earnings grow to $11B, cash hoard at $189B

Warren Buffett says cash will only be spent on low-risk, high-return deals.

Stocks gain ahead of central bank speeches

Stocks gain ahead of central bank speeches.

Former bulls’ EMs outlook sours

Higher-for-longer US rates and geopolitics are among the fears.

Hedge fund options bets may predict green equities performance

New academic study found industry predictions outperform.

Spurs co-owner Sixth Street laying ground for debut sports fund

The San Francisco-based investment firm and NBA team stakeholder is reportedly in talks to raise its first vehicle for sports teams and leagues.

X

Subscribe and Save 60%

Premium Access
Print + Digital

Learn more
Subscribe to Print