Property Values & Pensions
Discussion
This thought keeps occurring to me and it is not doing my anxiety any good at all…
Lots of, if not all, pension funds have a significant investment in property, mostly commercial property as I understand it.
In my head the value of the fund is therefore dependent on the value of the property.
Surely the value of the property is based on its usefulness and how much business need that property.
Given how many town centres are verging on derelict waste grounds, with so much of it empty and unwanted, surely this has a knock on effect to the value of the property and in turn the pension funds?
Have I missed something?
I know for a fact I am over thinking it
Lots of, if not all, pension funds have a significant investment in property, mostly commercial property as I understand it.
In my head the value of the fund is therefore dependent on the value of the property.
Surely the value of the property is based on its usefulness and how much business need that property.
Given how many town centres are verging on derelict waste grounds, with so much of it empty and unwanted, surely this has a knock on effect to the value of the property and in turn the pension funds?
Have I missed something?
I know for a fact I am over thinking it
Megaflow said:
This thought keeps occurring to me and it is not doing my anxiety any good at all…
Lots of, if not all, pension funds have a significant investment in property, mostly commercial property as I understand it.
In my head the value of the fund is therefore dependent on the value of the property.
Surely the value of the property is based on its usefulness and how much business need that property.
Given how many town centres are verging on derelict waste grounds, with so much of it empty and unwanted, surely this has a knock on effect to the value of the property and in turn the pension funds?
Have I missed something?
I know for a fact I am over thinking it
Many pension funds invest in long leases on quality retail such as big offices or out of town shopping centres etc. they go for the fixed monthly income so the underlying value of the property doesn’t affect the income the pension funds receives or pays out.Lots of, if not all, pension funds have a significant investment in property, mostly commercial property as I understand it.
In my head the value of the fund is therefore dependent on the value of the property.
Surely the value of the property is based on its usefulness and how much business need that property.
Given how many town centres are verging on derelict waste grounds, with so much of it empty and unwanted, surely this has a knock on effect to the value of the property and in turn the pension funds?
Have I missed something?
I know for a fact I am over thinking it
Eh?
If the underlying becomes worth less, the rental yield is likely to be lower too.
And if the ROI falls and the asset price has fallen, then you suffer a capital loss to move on.
I know there is lots in the news now about pensions invested into usurious rents on leasehold property portfolios…
The system really does stink and amazingly, despite ESG and a decade+ of ‘ethical’ talk, while rafts of money end up in these ‘investments’, no doubt through blind index/ETF/tracker type funds, or actively too.
If the underlying becomes worth less, the rental yield is likely to be lower too.
And if the ROI falls and the asset price has fallen, then you suffer a capital loss to move on.
I know there is lots in the news now about pensions invested into usurious rents on leasehold property portfolios…
The system really does stink and amazingly, despite ESG and a decade+ of ‘ethical’ talk, while rafts of money end up in these ‘investments’, no doubt through blind index/ETF/tracker type funds, or actively too.
Mr Whippy said:
Eh?
If the underlying becomes worth less, the rental yield is likely to be lower too.
And if the ROI falls and the asset price has fallen, then you suffer a capital loss to move on.
I know there is lots in the news now about pensions invested into usurious rents on leasehold property portfolios…
The system really does stink and amazingly, despite ESG and a decade+ of ‘ethical’ talk, while rafts of money end up in these ‘investments’, no doubt through blind index/ETF/tracker type funds, or actively too.
Not if the tenant has signed a 15 yr contract to pay that rent. The property value is not relevant.If the underlying becomes worth less, the rental yield is likely to be lower too.
And if the ROI falls and the asset price has fallen, then you suffer a capital loss to move on.
I know there is lots in the news now about pensions invested into usurious rents on leasehold property portfolios…
The system really does stink and amazingly, despite ESG and a decade+ of ‘ethical’ talk, while rafts of money end up in these ‘investments’, no doubt through blind index/ETF/tracker type funds, or actively too.
Caddyshack said:
Mr Whippy said:
Eh?
If the underlying becomes worth less, the rental yield is likely to be lower too.
And if the ROI falls and the asset price has fallen, then you suffer a capital loss to move on.
I know there is lots in the news now about pensions invested into usurious rents on leasehold property portfolios…
The system really does stink and amazingly, despite ESG and a decade+ of ‘ethical’ talk, while rafts of money end up in these ‘investments’, no doubt through blind index/ETF/tracker type funds, or actively too.
Not if the tenant has signed a 15 yr contract to pay that rent. The property value is not relevant.If the underlying becomes worth less, the rental yield is likely to be lower too.
And if the ROI falls and the asset price has fallen, then you suffer a capital loss to move on.
I know there is lots in the news now about pensions invested into usurious rents on leasehold property portfolios…
The system really does stink and amazingly, despite ESG and a decade+ of ‘ethical’ talk, while rafts of money end up in these ‘investments’, no doubt through blind index/ETF/tracker type funds, or actively too.
Puzzles said:
You’d hope the pension funds have a mix of investments and commercial property is only one part, and that’s further broken down into different property types, offices, warehouses, central, out of town etc
They do. Our company DB scheme is diversified across equities, bonds, infrastructure and property. Property is a relatively small proportion of the overall portfolio, the biggest chunk is in equities, and the biggest part of that is a tracker fund.Mr Whippy said:
Caddyshack said:
Mr Whippy said:
Eh?
If the underlying becomes worth less, the rental yield is likely to be lower too.
And if the ROI falls and the asset price has fallen, then you suffer a capital loss to move on.
I know there is lots in the news now about pensions invested into usurious rents on leasehold property portfolios…
The system really does stink and amazingly, despite ESG and a decade+ of ‘ethical’ talk, while rafts of money end up in these ‘investments’, no doubt through blind index/ETF/tracker type funds, or actively too.
Not if the tenant has signed a 15 yr contract to pay that rent. The property value is not relevant.If the underlying becomes worth less, the rental yield is likely to be lower too.
And if the ROI falls and the asset price has fallen, then you suffer a capital loss to move on.
I know there is lots in the news now about pensions invested into usurious rents on leasehold property portfolios…
The system really does stink and amazingly, despite ESG and a decade+ of ‘ethical’ talk, while rafts of money end up in these ‘investments’, no doubt through blind index/ETF/tracker type funds, or actively too.
Mr Whippy said:
What if the tenant, you know, goes bankrupt/out of business?
Or goes down the CVA route and agrees a rent reduction. Not unusual.Appreciate there are actuaries looking at this as well as cash reserves, but commercial property income does feel less certain now compared to 5 years ago. Will probably come back, but may be a few years. The big commercial property companies, eg Hammerson, are stabilising and resuming a gentle rise back to pre-Covid valuations.
https://publications.parliament.uk/pa/cm5804/cmpub...
Doesn’t seem like pensions are as well insulated as they suggest if they’re wanting to have a soft touch on this from government.
I’m amazed why people think actuaries and investment experts have all this wrapped up when clearly they don’t.
They react to the prevailing conditions as best they see them. But the prevailing conditions aren’t stable.
Doesn’t seem like pensions are as well insulated as they suggest if they’re wanting to have a soft touch on this from government.
I’m amazed why people think actuaries and investment experts have all this wrapped up when clearly they don’t.
They react to the prevailing conditions as best they see them. But the prevailing conditions aren’t stable.
Caddyshack said:
Mr Whippy said:
I do appreciate there are actuaries working out all this stuff.
Weren’t there also lots of actuaries working out the LDI pension stuff.
Or the shuttered Woodford property reit?
I think that was more a fund manager with too much autonomy? Weren’t there also lots of actuaries working out the LDI pension stuff.
Or the shuttered Woodford property reit?
The point is an actuary can’t see every risk. Plenty is just probabilistic based on historical data (with lots filtered out to make it usable).
Thus, Russia invading Ukraine, and Covid19 pandemic, and Brexit, weren’t even represented as risks in the risk assessments.
MarcelM6 said:
Mr Whippy said:
What if the tenant, you know, goes bankrupt/out of business?
Or goes down the CVA route and agrees a rent reduction. Not unusual.Appreciate there are actuaries looking at this as well as cash reserves, but commercial property income does feel less certain now compared to 5 years ago. Will probably come back, but may be a few years. The big commercial property companies, eg Hammerson, are stabilising and resuming a gentle rise back to pre-Covid valuations.
Ie, Debenhams Harrogate has sat empty for years, and will no longer be a commercial concern, because ‘internets’
https://www.yorkshirepost.co.uk/heritage-and-retro...
Ultimately anything can go tits up for any reason at any point.
Just interesting to look at some of the current risks/going’s on in uk property.
Mr Whippy said:
MarcelM6 said:
Mr Whippy said:
What if the tenant, you know, goes bankrupt/out of business?
Or goes down the CVA route and agrees a rent reduction. Not unusual.Appreciate there are actuaries looking at this as well as cash reserves, but commercial property income does feel less certain now compared to 5 years ago. Will probably come back, but may be a few years. The big commercial property companies, eg Hammerson, are stabilising and resuming a gentle rise back to pre-Covid valuations.
Ie, Debenhams Harrogate has sat empty for years, and will no longer be a commercial concern, because ‘internets’
https://www.yorkshirepost.co.uk/heritage-and-retro...
Ultimately anything can go tits up for any reason at any point.
Just interesting to look at some of the current risks/going’s on in uk property.
Caddyshack said:
Mr Whippy said:
MarcelM6 said:
Mr Whippy said:
What if the tenant, you know, goes bankrupt/out of business?
Or goes down the CVA route and agrees a rent reduction. Not unusual.Appreciate there are actuaries looking at this as well as cash reserves, but commercial property income does feel less certain now compared to 5 years ago. Will probably come back, but may be a few years. The big commercial property companies, eg Hammerson, are stabilising and resuming a gentle rise back to pre-Covid valuations.
Ie, Debenhams Harrogate has sat empty for years, and will no longer be a commercial concern, because ‘internets’
https://www.yorkshirepost.co.uk/heritage-and-retro...
Ultimately anything can go tits up for any reason at any point.
Just interesting to look at some of the current risks/going’s on in uk property.
No issues here move on. Close the thread.
Ooor. Back in the real world, no one will want it (Debenhams) because it’ll cost too much. Plus social housing. Plus heritage. Plus s107.
GDV won’t be good enough.
The idea that everything is worth a ton of money and everyone is hedged/covered/back stopped/optioned is a dream isn’t it?
If no one can lose then why are pensions worrying about gov v regulation killing their yielding ground rents?
They’ll either kill the return or kill the value to sell it on.
But they’re all covered/optioned/hedged, so why worrying about a few % at most?
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t either.