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Chapter 14 The Role of Real Assets

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Though wisdom cannot be gotten for gold, still les can it be gotten without it. ... and gold ... fix is the price of gold that reflects the relative buy and ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Chapter 14 The Role of Real Assets


1
Chapter 14The Role of Real Assets
2
  • Though wisdom cannot be gotten for gold, still
    les can it be gotten without it.
  • - Samuel Butler

3
Outline
  • Introduction
  • Real estate in general
  • Timberland in particular
  • Gold

4
Introduction
  • Most portfolio investments are financial assets,
    such as
  • Common stock
  • Corporate bonds
  • Bank CDs

5
Introduction (contd)
  • Real assets
  • Are assuming an increased role in some of the
    countrys largest pension funds and in private
    investor portfolios
  • Include timberland and gold
  • Do not have a corresponding liability unless one
    is created to finance the purchase of the real
    asset

6
Real Estate in General
  • Investment characteristics
  • Developed and undeveloped property
  • Pension fund investment in real estate

7
Investment Characteristics
  • Characteristics of land
  • Immobile
  • Land cannot be moved
  • Indestructible
  • Land cannot be destroyed
  • Nonfungible
  • Ever plot of land is unique

8
Investment Characteristics (contd)
  • Characteristics of land (contd)
  • Land is typically a long-term investment
  • Especially for institutional timberland owners
  • Land can be a short-term investment
  • E.g., timberland may be used for development or
    the extraction of minerals

9
Real Estate Categories
10
Developed and Undeveloped Property
  • Developed property is land with improvements on
    it
  • E.g., shopping malls and apartment complexes
  • Purchased by investors for
  • Income-producing characteristics
  • The tax advantage from depreciation of buildings

11
Developed and Undeveloped Property (contd)
  • Undeveloped (raw) property has no improvements
  • E.g., undeveloped lots
  • Investors purchase undeveloped property
  • To speculate
  • For the production of subdivided lots for resale
    or development

12
Pension Fund Investment in Real Estate
  • U.S. pension funds have nearly 100 billion
    invested in real estate
  • In 2000, the average pension fund had about 20
    percent of assets invested in real estate
  • Real estate investment can be convenient through
    a real estate investment trust (REIT)

13
Timberland in Particular
  • Introduction
  • Institutional interest in timberland
  • A timberland investment primer

14
Introduction
  • Timberland is a very viable investment form of
    real estate for large portfolios
  • The U.S. encompasses about 468 million acres of
    timberland

15
Institutional Interest in Timberland
  • Innovative forms of ownership in timberland have
    been developed
  • Public limited partnerships
  • Closed-end investment companies in timberland
  • Securitized units of timberlands of forest
    product companies

16
Institutional Interest in Timberland (contd)
  • Examples of institutional interest
  • Timberland investment management organizations
    (TIMOs) managed about 9 billion in timberland
    near the end of 2001
  • In 2001, Harvard Management put 6 percent of its
    18.3 billion portfolio into timberland

17
A Timberland Investment Primer
  • Timberland as an asset
  • Timberland investors
  • Timberland returns
  • Timberland risks
  • Problem of lack of information
  • Timberland as a portfolio component
  • Future prospects

18
Timberland as An Asset
  • Timberland as collateral
  • Timberland as a strategic investment
  • Timberland as a pure investment

19
Timberland as Collateral
  • Loans are routinely secured with timberland by
  • Life insurance companies
  • The Federal Land Bank

20
Timberland as A Strategic Investment
  • Timberland serves as a strategic investment when
    owning it
  • Helps ensure the long-term viability of a company
    or
  • Reduces the volatility of a companys cash flows

21
Timberland as A Pure Investment
  • Portfolio managers hold timberland as a pure
    investment
  • The property is held for its own investment
    merits
  • The property is not held as part of a strategic
    plan or to assist in project financing

22
Timberland Investors
  • The largest current owners of timberland for pure
    investment purposes are
  • CALPERS
  • John Hancock Financial Services
  • New Hampshire State Employees Retirement System

23
Timberland Investors (contd)
24
Timberland Returns
  • Timber grows on the land and is sold and renewed
  • Growing timber is stumpage
  • The value of a stand of timber depends on
  • The volume of wood on the acreage
  • The size and quality of the trees
  • The market price of the species of forest products

25
Timberland Returns (contd)
  • A timberland investors return is a function of
  • The acquisition cost and selling price
  • Site productivity
  • The ability of a site to grow timber, depends on
    weather, soil conditions, etc.
  • Management competence
  • Silvicultural practices and management strategies
    can affect return

26
Timberland Returns (contd)
  • A timberland investors return is a function of
    (contd)
  • Market price
  • Investors have substantial discretion in regard
    to time of harvest
  • Price is influenced by the relative size of trees
    on the land

27
Timberland Risks
  • Biological risks
  • Economic risks

28
Biological Risks
  • Biological risk is the risk of loss due to
    natural events
  • Fire
  • Insects
  • Disease
  • Productivity
  • Wind

29
Biological Risks (contd)
  • Productivity risk refers to the possibility that
    a stand of timber will not produce the
    anticipated volume of wood due to
  • Species competition
  • Drought
  • Disease

30
Economic Risks
  • Economic risks include
  • Quality
  • Liquidity
  • Demand
  • Price
  • Management practices
  • Changes in the regulatory environment

31
Economic Risks (contd)
  • Management risk means that poor management
    practices can erode the value of timberland
  • Liquidity risk exists because there is a
    relatively limited market for timber and
    timberland
  • Regulatory risk stems from statutes and
    ordinances that limit forest management and land
    use options

32
Problem of Lack of Information
  • Problems with constructing a standard timber
    index
  • Must consider the growth in timber volume
  • Must consider the low volatility associated with
    land
  • Focusing on timber prices alone biases the return
    downward and biases volatility upward
  • Timberland is nonfungible

33
Problem of Lack of Information (contd)
  • Examples of timber indexes
  • Wachovias Timberland Performance Index (TPI)
  • The Warnell Schools Timber Mart South and Timber
    Mart North
  • Log Lines
  • National Council of Real Estate Investment
    Fiduciaries

34
Timberland as A Portfolio Component
  • Virtually all studies of timberland find very low
    or negative correlation between timberland and
    other investment alternatives
  • Allows for substantial diversification benefits

35
Timberland Correlation
Coefficients (1960-2000)
36
Risk and Return (1981-2000)
37
Future Prospects
  • Introduction
  • Index problems
  • Social risk

38
Introduction
  • An increasing number of portfolio managers may
    discover timberland as an investment
  • Asset allocation strategies are in vogue
  • Timberland allows for substantial portfolio
    diversification
  • Pension funds will probably continue to be the
    principal private investors

39
Index Problems
  • The lack of a consistent timberland index is the
    single biggest barrier to increased investment by
    pension funds
  • Continuous pricing by the market is difficult due
    to
  • Lack of liquidity
  • Timberland is not an exchange-traded product
  • Regional variations
  • The appraisal-based nature of timberland

40
Social Risk
  • The timber industry considers forestland to be a
    renewable resource
  • Many environmentalists do not consider forestland
    to be a renewable resource
  • The length of reforestation depends on the species

41
Gold
  • Motivation for gold investment
  • Determinants of the price of gold
  • The London fix
  • Investing in gold

42
Motivation for Gold Investment
  • People often buy gold because of the security it
    is expected to provide during times of trouble
  • An insurance policy against inflation
  • Particularly pronounced in Europe
  • A currency without a country

43
Motivation for Gold Investment (contd)
  • Gold can be an attractive investment because
  • Gold has demonstrated returns that are unrelated
    or even opposite to those of the stock market
  • The correlation between the Philadelphia Stock
    Exchanges gold and silver index and the SP 500
    index since 1986 has been 0.14
  • The relationship is tenuous

44
Determinants of the Price of Gold
  • Strength of the U.S. dollar
  • Influenced by trade balances and protectionism
    concerns
  • The strength of foreign currencies
  • Stronger foreign currencies decrease the value of
    gold measured in the home currency for foreign
    investors

45
Determinants of the Price of Gold (contd)
  • Inflation and rising oil prices
  • An increase in the price of oil raises fears of
    inflation and an increased price for gold
  • International finance uncertainty
  • Investors turn to gold as a result of mounting
    debt, third-world loans, etc.

46
The London Fix
  • The London fix is the price of gold that reflects
    the relative buy and sell orders that have been
    placed with member firms of the London Gold
    Market
  • The fix is determined twice each day at 1030
    a.m. and 300 p.m. London time

47
The London Fix (contd)
  • Gold prices also change in response to
  • Continuous exchange trading
  • Economic news
  • Political news

48
Investing in Gold
  • Bullion
  • Gold certificates
  • Shares in mining companies
  • Coins

49
Bullion
  • Gold bars are bullion
  • There are different sizes of gold bars (see next
    slide)
  • Investors can acquire smaller quantities of gold
  • 1-ounce bars
  • Nuggets
  • Gold dust

50
Bullion (contd)
51
Bullion (contd)
  • Shortcomings of bullion
  • Subject to theft
  • No income productivity
  • Lack marketability

52
Gold Certificates
  • Gold certificates are
  • Obligations of the issuer to deliver gold upon
    demand
  • Issued by banks
  • Registered in your name
  • Readily sold back to the dealer
  • Gold certificates have the risk that there is no
    gold backing them

53
Shares in Mining Companies
  • Purchasing shares in mining companies is the most
    popular form of gold ownership in the U.S.
  • E.g., Homestake Mining is the largest U.S.
    gold-mining company
  • Some mutual funds specialize in gold or other
    precious metals

54
Shares in Mining Companies (contd)
  • Owning shares in mining companies or mutual funds
    has advantages
  • Shares are instantly marketable
  • Shares can generate some income through dividends

55
Coins
  • Gold coins are popular with investors and
    speculators
  • A coins intrinsic value is the higher of
  • Its bullion value
  • Its fiat value
  • The value assigned by the issuing government

56
Popular Coins for Investment
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