Jon Cheigh
Analyst · Evercore ISI. Please go ahead. Your line is open
Thank you, Matt, and good morning. Today, I’d like to briefly cover three areas; first, our performance scorecard; second, how our major asset classes performed in the quarter; and finally, our 2023 investment outlook. In particular, I want to focus on real estate and topics such as how we expect public and private real estate to perform, our view on recent non-traded REIT redemptions and our initiative to be a market leader providing research and advice to clients across both public and private real estate. Turning to performance. In the fourth quarter, four of nine core strategies outperformed their benchmarks. Over the past 12 months, eight of nine strategies outperformed. While our batting average in the quarter was lower than normal, the magnitude of underperformance by strategy was generally modest and all related to strategies that ultimately outperformed in the year. Measured by AUM, 74% of our portfolios are outperforming their bank on a one-year basis, a decline from 81% last quarter. The biggest driver of the decline was the performance of our U.S. real estate focused strategy, which is more concentrated and has had greater weightings in small top real estate stocks, which lagged during the year and the fourth quarter bounce back. This strategy had a 25-plus year track record, a 400-plus basis points of annual alpha. And while underperformance has occasionally happens, rectifying our track record here is a key investment priority. On a three-year and five-year basis, 99% of our AUM is outperforming, which is slightly down from 100% last quarter. From a competitive perspective, 98% of our open-end fund AUM is rated four or five stars by Morningstar, up from 97% last quarter. For the quarter, risk assets broadly recovered with global equities up 9.9% and the Barclays Global Aggregate up 4.6%. Our asset classes were led by natural resource up 17.1%, international real estate up 10.3% and global listed infrastructure up 9%. Then by U.S. REITs up 4.1% and core preferred interest, excuse me, core preferred securities up 3.4%. Digging into the details, infrastructure continued to perform well, beating U.S. equities but modestly under deploying global revenues. This performance narrowed year-to-date performance to only down 4.9% in the year, handily beating very negative performing broader equity and fixed income indices. Subsector level performance started during the quarter was high, with cyclical subsectors such as railways and reopening plays such as airports and toll roads outperforming. Midstream energy or pipelines reversed its earlier trend, underperforming in the fourth quarter but still ending the year as the best performing subsector. For preferreds, the November CPI report and subsequent inflation readings supported the Central Bank Hike Deceleration occurred in December. Central Banks remain pause when markets priced in volume inflation. They likely also began to price in a better growth outlook based on falling energy prices, warm winter weather and the China reopening the COIVD policy change. Overall, the risk reward profile in fixed income markets included. For real estate, international REITs led the way of 10.3%, benefiting from their same dynamics, including a weakening U.S. dollar, while U.S. REITs were up only 4.1%. The U.S. saw significant sector dispersion with retail real estate up 17% to 33%, while sectors such as self-storage and residential were down 7% to 10% in the quarter. Global markets saw similar levels of performance dispersion with markets in Europe of 20% to 25% and Hong Kong and Australia up 12% and 18%, respectively. Phase COVID re-openings, combined with more divergent economic trajectories has strengthened the investment case for global real estate and the diversification it can provide. If we see this shift continue, I would expect investors to be can allocate more to global real estate, either incrementally or at the expense of U.S.-only REIT. So while the quarter was generally positive, where does that position us for 2023? At a high level, we believe inflation will continue to come down, but that it will stabilize at around the 3% level by year-end, which will prove to be the new rule. In order to get there, we think we will likely experience an average recession. Last, we think that over time, long-term interest rates should be a bit higher than where they are today. With that as our backdrop, we see the economy transitioning to early cycle by the end of the year and positive returns for all of our asset classes in 2023. For preferreds, we see very good asset value, coupled with the fundamentals of our issuers remain very strong, particularly balance sheets. Bank’s non-performing loans are moving up, but very gradually and from very low levels. Meanwhile, net interest margins have expanded into the higher rate environment. So from preferreds, we would expect potentially double-digit total returns in 2025. For infrastructure, we continue to expect the asset class to perform well, but in the early cycle phase it typically performs more in line with global equities. Despite that, we don’t count the table on infrastructure because of just 2023, our conviction in the asset class is in its long-term strategic role in the new regime where the criticality of infrastructure businesses means demand is less economically sensible, plus its pricing mechanisms tied to inflation will help even in a new normal inflationary environment. Those are multiyear benefits rather than for a single phase. In terms of how we see our biggest asset class real estate, in 2022, U.S. REITs were down roughly 25% as the listed asset class re-priced quickly to the chain macro environment. In contrast, reported private real estate values generally increased as they tend to be historically lagged as deal volume declines. For example, the NCREIF Odyssey Index, a measure of private real estate had a positive total return of 7.5% versus listed REITs of minus 25%. In 2023, we expect this trend to reverse with listed outperforming private real estate, consistent with what we normally see in a transition to early cycle. This forward shift of listed outperforming private has already started. In Q4, NCREIF was actually down 5%, while listed REITs were up 4%. Historically, listed REITs have performed remarkably well after recessions. Since 1990, REITs have returned on average 10.8% 12 months after a recession and a notable 20.4% on average 12 months after early cycle recovery periods. Because of these lags, private real estate specifically declined on average, 11.8% in the 12 months following a recession. By understanding the leading and lagging behaviors of listed and private markets, real estate investors can assemble a much more efficient portfolio and tactically allocate at different times across the two asset classes. We have always been the REIT experts, but we believe investors need integrated advice and research around both listed and private. And this is why we have committed over the last two years to build out our solutions and advice business. We strongly believe that our vantage point at this intersection of public and private real estate positions us to provide frameworks, models and guidance for investors to help them be better real estate allocators. As an example, we have recently been sharing our thoughts and views on the non-traded REIT redemptions, which have been in the news recently. First, these redemptions do not reflect broad economic or systemic risk. The redemption limits are designed to protect the funds from having to liquidate significant real estate holdings and discounted prices or materially boosting leverage in response to elevated redemption requests. We do not see a disorderly unwind or panic selling scenario for real estate funds to meet retentions. MTRs also only represent 1% of the $21 trillion commercial real estate market. The non-traded REIT story is not one of systemic risk or commercial real estate crashing. It is simply that the investors are rebalancing away from prices they believe are expensive and are seeking higher returns in other asset classes, including listed real estate. We believe the redemption activity underscores the potential rebalancing opportunity that exists for investors to pivot out of private and into listed real estate. With that, let me turn the call to Joe.