| A Fundamental Examination of Securitized
and Unsecuritized Real Estate Author:
Joseph L. Pagliari, Jr. and James R. Webb
Start Page: 381
End Page: 426
Volume: 10
Issue Number: 4
Year: 1995
Publication: Journal of Real Estate Research
Abstract: Most studies
(including this one) have found a weak statistical relationship between total returns for
securitized and unsecuritized real estate equities. Some studies argue that REIT shares
behave more like the stock market, than real estate. In an attempt to focus this
discussion, this study examines the fundamental underlying return-generating components:
dividends, investment values, and dividend yields using NAREIT and NCREIF data from 1978
through 1994. While dividends have been part of the REIT pricing calculus for some time,
relatively few studies have focused upon the "dividends" paid by NCREIF
properties. The short-run relationships between these fundamental components are weak and
many of their distributions display significant non-normal tendencies. Even when quarterly
lags of up to two years are examined, these distributions also tend to be weakly
correlated with one another. Of the three fundamental components, the long-run path of
prices exhibited the strongest relationship. Interestingly, the volatility of the NCREIF
dividend series is approximately 150% of the NAREIT volatility, while the volatility of
the NCREIF asset values is roughly 25% of the NAREIT volatility. This is contradictory: in
a simplified setting, greater dividend volatility should be accompanied by greater price
volatility, not less, as observed here. Nevertheless, such comparisons suffer due to the
incompatibility of the data sources and, accordingly, this study should be viewed as a
preliminary examination of securitized and unsecuritized real estate returns.
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