Within Real Estate Diversification and Investment strategies

The efficient portfolios for the period 1993 – 2010 based on IPD data have a major portfolio weight in residential properties in the three largest regions Stockholm, Gothenburg and Malmo. The portfolio with the highest risk adjusted return (measured as the highest Sharpe-ratio) combines a large port...

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Main Author: Lind, Anna-Viktoria
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: KTH, Fastigheter och byggande 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:kth:diva-102297
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spelling ndltd-UPSALLA1-oai-DiVA.org-kth-1022972013-01-08T13:52:50ZWithin Real Estate Diversification and Investment strategiesengLind, Anna-ViktoriaKTH, Fastigheter och byggande2012Diversificationreal estateinvestment strategyThe efficient portfolios for the period 1993 – 2010 based on IPD data have a major portfolio weight in residential properties in the three largest regions Stockholm, Gothenburg and Malmo. The portfolio with the highest risk adjusted return (measured as the highest Sharpe-ratio) combines a large portfolio weight in residential properties with a small weight in industrial properties. During the time period of 2005 – 2010 a majority of the listed real estate companies held a real estate portfolio far below the efficient frontier based on the corresponding IPD data. These companies can increase their total return without taking on any more risk by using the concept of diversification. When including all available diversification categories two out of seven companies can be said to have an efficient real estate portfolio. When we excluded the outperforming residential asset class, however, none of the companies’ portfolios were in fact efficient. The real estate market is inefficient and thus results in the IPD data being less useful as it is based on transactions occurring in this inefficient market. Investors can, in this market, easily find properties with another risk and return profile than what IPD indicates is the market risk and return for a particular property type in a certain region. The inefficiency of the market, together with the IPD data being less useful, thus makes it difficult for the companies to focus on diversification in their investment strategy. Moreover, there are several reasons that explain the discrepancy between the actually held listed real estate portfolios and the optimal portfolio based on IPD data. Since each property is heterogeneous and possesses unique risks, investors are not able to accurately quantify the risk of each investment and thus rely more on their gut feeling. This also results in investors focusing on single investment opportunities rather than looking at all investments from a portfolio perspective. Student thesisinfo:eu-repo/semantics/bachelorThesistexthttp://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:kth:diva-102297application/pdfinfo:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
collection NDLTD
language English
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Diversification
real estate
investment strategy
spellingShingle Diversification
real estate
investment strategy
Lind, Anna-Viktoria
Within Real Estate Diversification and Investment strategies
description The efficient portfolios for the period 1993 – 2010 based on IPD data have a major portfolio weight in residential properties in the three largest regions Stockholm, Gothenburg and Malmo. The portfolio with the highest risk adjusted return (measured as the highest Sharpe-ratio) combines a large portfolio weight in residential properties with a small weight in industrial properties. During the time period of 2005 – 2010 a majority of the listed real estate companies held a real estate portfolio far below the efficient frontier based on the corresponding IPD data. These companies can increase their total return without taking on any more risk by using the concept of diversification. When including all available diversification categories two out of seven companies can be said to have an efficient real estate portfolio. When we excluded the outperforming residential asset class, however, none of the companies’ portfolios were in fact efficient. The real estate market is inefficient and thus results in the IPD data being less useful as it is based on transactions occurring in this inefficient market. Investors can, in this market, easily find properties with another risk and return profile than what IPD indicates is the market risk and return for a particular property type in a certain region. The inefficiency of the market, together with the IPD data being less useful, thus makes it difficult for the companies to focus on diversification in their investment strategy. Moreover, there are several reasons that explain the discrepancy between the actually held listed real estate portfolios and the optimal portfolio based on IPD data. Since each property is heterogeneous and possesses unique risks, investors are not able to accurately quantify the risk of each investment and thus rely more on their gut feeling. This also results in investors focusing on single investment opportunities rather than looking at all investments from a portfolio perspective.
author Lind, Anna-Viktoria
author_facet Lind, Anna-Viktoria
author_sort Lind, Anna-Viktoria
title Within Real Estate Diversification and Investment strategies
title_short Within Real Estate Diversification and Investment strategies
title_full Within Real Estate Diversification and Investment strategies
title_fullStr Within Real Estate Diversification and Investment strategies
title_full_unstemmed Within Real Estate Diversification and Investment strategies
title_sort within real estate diversification and investment strategies
publisher KTH, Fastigheter och byggande
publishDate 2012
url http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:kth:diva-102297
work_keys_str_mv AT lindannaviktoria withinrealestatediversificationandinvestmentstrategies
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