REITs, Other Investors Scoop Up Net Lease Assets

Also, JLL reports that private capital captured a record 37.9% of the net-lease market in the first half of 2018, up by 9.4 percentage points since 2015.

W.P. Carey CEO Jason Fox

For the most part and for various reasons REITs have been net sellers this year. An exception has been net lease REITs. Companies such as  Realty Income, Spirit Realty, Store Capital and W.P. Carey all reported more acquisitions than dispositions for the third quarter and in many cases for the year to date. The one exception has been VEREIT, which sold more than it bought in the past three months.

Furthermore there are signs that other investors, such as pension funds and private equity are gravitating to these income-producing investments.

Net Lease REITs’ Acquisition Activity

SERS Ups Its Net Lease Mandate

At the same time competition is heating up from other investors. IPE Real Assets, for example, reports that the Pennsylvania State Employees’ Retirement System (SERS) is seeking to boost its exposure to net-lease real estate strategies. The pension fund told IPE Real Assets that it had made a $300 million commitment to Oak Street Real Estate Capital Net Lease Property Fund — one of the largest commitments ever made by a US public pension fund to a net-lease real estate strategy, the publication said, citing industry sources.

Private Buyers’ Rising Allocation

Not to be ignored are private buyers, which are stepping into the net lease space, according to JLL’s Investor.

It reports that private capital captured a record 37.9% of the net-lease market in the first half of 2018, up by 9.4 percentage points since 2015. In 2017, private investors accounted for 36.4% of all net lease acquisition volume.

“Compared to lower risk-reward yield investments in bond markets, private investors are finding stable, long-term income with net-leased real estate investments in strong locations with good credit tenants in place,” says Eric Suffoletto of JLL Capital Markets.