| A Survey of Pension Fund Real Estate
Portfolio Risk Management Practices Author: Marc A. Louargand
Start Page: 361
End Page: 374
Volume: 7
Issue Number: 4
Year: 1992
Publication: Journal of Real Estate Research
Abstract: Institutional real
estate investment?primarily pension reserve assets?grew rapidly in the 1980s. The
fiduciary demands of a growing asset pool coupled with disappointing results in the latter
half of the decade led to an increasing interest in the application of Modern Portfolio
Theory (MPT) to the management of large-scale real estate portfolios. This paper reports
the results of a study conducted in mid-1990 that surveyed the 426 largest institutional
portfolios on portfolio management practices relating to diversification strategies, risk
measurement, and evaluation of investment returns. The survey replicated several measures
gathered by Webb in a 1983 survey to assess the rate of acceptance or utilization of ideas
and techniques in the portfolio management community. Results indicate that change is
perhaps slower than might be expected. Real estate performance measures have become more
sophisticated in the past seven years with a shift away from accounting type measures
toward fully discounted measures, including several variations on the Internal Rate of
Return (IRR). Risk-adjustment techniques have changed to the extent that portfolio
managers have a greater likelihood of using sensitivity analysis, but few other
innovations are widespread. Only a small percentage of respondents use traditional tools
of MPT-based analysis, but the majority are cognizant of the recent developments in the
literature that attempt to show alternative methodologies for achieving true
diversification within real estate portfolios. The results indicate that change is gradual
and that some practices that have been discredited in the academic literature for many
years may still be evident in the institutional community.
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