Australian securitised property funds: an examination of their risk‐adjusted performance
David Higgins and
Boon Ng
Journal of Property Investment & Finance, 2009, vol. 27, issue 4, 404-412
Abstract:
Purpose - This paper aims to gain exposure to Australian real estate investment trusts (A‐REITs). Many institutional investors make use of securitised property funds as they employ experienced property professionals with specialist knowledge of underlying property fundamentals, direct property markets and the 30‐plus A‐REITs. As securitised property funds operate in a competitive environment, investment performance benchmarks are important. Design/methodology/approach - To add to the familiar risk and return benchmarks, the risk adjusted performance (RAP) measure first outlined by Modigliani and Modigliani provides an additional and valuable return measure to a definite level of risk. This research selected 16 wholesale securitised property funds each with seven years of continuous quarterly total return data. Findings - Overall a large proportion of the selected funds (14 out of 16), on average, outperformed the market benchmark return (14.53 per cent) with the worst fund marginally under‐performing the index by 0.54 per cent. In contrast, the annualised RAP measure highlighted the differences in the securitised property fund returns for a given level of risk, with a wide 12.90‐16.66 per cent range. To achieve this uniform level of risk, five securities property funds had to replace up to 21 per cent of their property portfolio with a risk‐free asset (90 day bank bills). The RAP measure also decomposes the excess returns above the benchmark. In this instance, the securitised property funds outperformance was from a mixture of active portfolio selection and simply taking on additional risk exposure. Originality/value - The research demonstrated the benefits of analysing securitised property funds beyond the standard return and risk measures. The RAP approach provides a measure of return for a definite level of risk with the benchmark excess attributed to portfolio selection and additional risk. This performance information can provide valuable additional information for an astute investor.
Keywords: Property finance; Investment appraisal; Real estate (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2009
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:eme:jpifpp:v:27:y:2009:i:4:p:404-412
DOI: 10.1108/14635780910972305
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