(Bloomberg) — It’s been a challenging couple of years for real estate stocks since the Federal Reserve started raising interest rates in 2022, as borrowing costs soared and the property market collapsed. And despite a healthy rebound in the middle of 2024, the outlook for 2025 isn’t particularly encouraging.
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But that doesn’t mean investors should expect a sea of red in real estate shares next year. Rather, it will likely be a stock-picker’s market, where some rise, some fall, and the group doesn’t move in unison, according to Adam White, senior equity analyst at Truist Advisory Services.
That isn’t great news for the residential market, which is expected to face challenges from stubbornly high mortgage rates and limited supply in 2025, particularly after Fed Chair Jerome Powell’s comments on Wednesday indicating fewer rate cuts are coming. Just this week, the average 30-year fixed mortgage rate rose for the first time in a month, Freddie Mac said in a statement Thursday.
But there’s growing optimism in one of the most beaten-down corners of the market: office real estate investment trusts.
“Where REITs can really compete is their cost and availability of capital, and that’s probably truest for office,” said Uma Moriarity, senior investment strategist at CenterSquare Investment Management. “When you think about a trophy asset in any given market, more likely than not, it is owned by one of the REITs.”
The group has been hit hard since the start of 2022, with the S&P Composite 1500 Office REITs Index plunging more than 30% while the S&P 500 Index gained 24%.
The divergence isn’t entirely shocking considering the headwinds facing the real estate industry over that stretch. The cost of borrowing soared as the Fed raised interest rates 11 times between March 2022 and July 2023, the regional banking crisis in March 2023 crippled local lenders, and employers struggled to get workers to return to offices after the Covid lockdowns.
Office Rebound
Those pressures have driven down real estate stocks across the board. US REITs have only been this cheap or cheaper relative to the S&P 500 11% of the time over the past 20 years, according to Todd Kellenberger, REIT client portfolio manager at Principal Asset Management. And office REITs are still down roughly 60% from pre-Covid levels compared to the rest of the REIT market, making them a decent target for growth, according to Moriarity.