After a challenging couple of years for real estate, will 2024 prove to be the turning point for battered and bruised investors?

The answer is subjective, as challenges for some present opportunities for others.

While a lot of the pain is now behind us, the skies are not yet clear for this asset class. There are several cyclical and structural challenges to overcome before we can signal the all-clear. Yet, in a less crowded marketplace, we believe there is a compelling opportunity for investors in 2024 to selectively acquire high-quality assets at substantial discounts.

Refinancing pressures persist, but relative value re-emerges

Market corrections of the scale experienced by real estate typically create lasting shockwaves. Investors using debt face a particularly challenging time. Low fixed-rate loans are gradually rolling over to today’s higher rates, but banks are tightening lending requirements and reducing their exposure to the commercial property sector.

There is around €284 billion (US$312 billion) of real estate debt in the UK and Europe that needs to be refinanced in 2024, a 7% increase on 2023 (Chart 1). Unfortunately, a growing proportion of these loans are for more than their underlying collateral are worth as property values drift lower. This places loan-to-value covenants at risk.

Chart 1. Outstanding European and UK debt by year of maturity (€bn)

Source: abrdn, September 2023. Listed REITs/PropCos under Green Street coverage. AEW, Bayes Business School CRE Lending Report, Company disclosures, Green Street.

Many investor groups will need to sell assets in 2024 to reduce debt, repay redeeming investors and rebuild balance sheets. According to data from MSCI Real Capital Analytics, distressed real estate sales peaked five years after the 2007/2008 global financial crisis, as bad loans and fund liquidations took time to clear through the system. However, market corrections also mean core real estate prices moving back to good value on a relative basis. Yield spreads between fixed-income assets and real estate are starting to widen back towards their long-term average, albeit more slowly than previously expected (see Chart 2).

Chart 2. Yield spreads between government bonds and prime offices (%)

Source: abrdn, September 2023. LSEG government bond yields, Savills, Cushman & Wakefield, CBRE prime office yields.

In Europe, the 'prime all property' real estate yield has increased by one percentage point since June 2022 to 5.3%, compared to the weighted-average Eurozone bond yield of 3.5% in November. This leaves a yield premium of 1.8% percentage points.1 While this is well below the sizeable pre-pandemic spread of more than 4%, further real estate yield expansion and the likelihood of fixed-income yields dropping alongside interest rates in 2024, means real estate is set to find its way back onto institutional investor ‘buy’ lists once more.

Key performance drivers will be sector allocation, asset quality

Sector allocation will continue to affect relative performance across portfolios. Thematic drivers and an economic recovery support the outlook for some sectors more than others. Distinct segments of the market are likely to behave differently over the next few years from both a cyclical and thematic perspective (Figure 1).

Figure 1. Long-term thematic pressures and cyclical timing

Source: abrdn, November 2023. This visual is not based on specific data and only represents our views on sector trends from a thematic perspective. It should not constitute specific allocation advice in isolation.

Rental growth prospects heating up for high-quality sustainable buildings

There is a growing deficit of high-quality sustainable space. Since the global financial crisis, the real estate market has experienced an interrupted development cycle. The Eurozone crisis, Brexit, the pandemic, the war in Ukraine, and now the current interest-rate spike, have limited new supply for a decade. With some 30%-higher construction costs, labor shortages and expensive development financing today, the outlook for new supply is worsening rapidly.

A two-speed market between so-called ‘future-fit’ buildings and ‘the rest’ has emerged. The preference amongst tenants to gather in ‘best in class’ sustainable buildings, means competition for a finite amount of space is pushing prime rents higher. On the other hand, building-efficiency regulations mean investors need to invest more money into older assets that’s not been budgeted for, suggesting a faster pace of obsolescence for older buildings. This polarization in quality will be an important performance differentiator in 2024 and beyond (Chart 3). The chart shows the difference between the performance of higher-quality offices in London last year compared to those of lower quality.

Chart 3. Polarization in office returns by quality, 12-months to Q3 2023 (%)

Source: MSCI, abrdn September 2023. Lower-quartile equivalent yield is a proxy for prime, upper-quartile is a proxy for weakest quality.

Compelling opportunities across direct, indirect, and real estate lending

While we have focused on the outlook for the performance of physical assets, investors have more choice when looking for opportunities to tap a recovering asset class. This includes direct and indirect vehicles and private credit (debt funds). We believe these three areas offer different, but equally compelling, opportunities in 2024:

Direct real estate

We think direct real estate valuations will bottom out in 2024. Opportunities for investors to pick up high-quality sustainable assets at discounted prices will increase through this phase, prior to a broader market recovery. Both ‘core’ and ‘value add’ strategies should increase in appeal, while price dislocation could also lead to interesting mergers and acquisition opportunities (Charts 4 and 5).

Chart 4. Global real estate total return forecast (% p.a.)

Chart 5. Global real estate sector total returns (% p.a.)

Source: abrdn, September 2023.

Listed real estate investment trusts (REITs) and other indirect vehicles

Since 2022, share prices for global REITs have underperformed global equities by over 20%, positioning REITs for a strong recovery. On a relative basis, REITs tend to perform better than other listed equities after a rate-hiking cycle. For instance, in the 12 months after the global financial crisis, the global listed real estate sector soared 74%, compared with 49% for equities. A similar trend was seen in the wake of the Fed pivot in December 1974. Other non-listed indirect investment vehicles also offer opportunities for investors to enter the market at discounts to underlying asset values. Some investors are willing to find an exit through a secondary trade more quickly than the liquidation of underlying assets would permit. In exchange for this liquidity, units are often available at a discount for new investors.

Real estate lending

Real estate debt funds are continuing to offer investors interesting cash flows, backed by high-quality commercial real estate. From the non-bank lenders' perspective, lending at lower leverage levels against an asset that has already reduced significantly in value presents an attractive opportunity from a risk perspective. Increased safety margins and significantly higher base rates combine to support an elevated interest rate that is well in excess of the long-term average. Given the debt funding gap in the market today, as banks focus on existing loans, non-bank lenders can be highly selective and source strong lending opportunities.

Final thoughts

While we are cautious about the challenges still confronting the market today, we believe that 2024 will present interesting opportunities and prove to be a good vintage for new allocations into real estate. Sector positioning will remain a key driver of relative performance, while a clear focus on quality, environmental, social and governance (ESG) credentials and location will also have a growing impact. Although market risks remain elevated, investors should also begin to explore the opportunities ahead as the cycle shifts onto a stronger footing, crucially underpinned by a structural deficit of sustainable space.

1 London Stock Exchange Datastream, November 2023.

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