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Where Are CRE Values?
by David Bodamer December 21st, 2010
Corrected at 6:46 PM
Update 1 on Dec. 22, 9:18 AM
Update 2 on Dec. 22, 2:43 PM
Click for full-size image.
Indexes designed to gauge commercial real estate values have been around for a few years now. The original intention was that creators of various indexes were competing to create the benchmarks around which commercial real estate derivatives could be created. Pros had a vision that it would give investors an alternative to buying and selling actual real estate and REIT stocks in playing in the commercial real estate space.
The 2008 financial collapse and the subsequent leeriness about derivatives pretty much killed that idea (at least for now), but the desire to design the best commercial real estate index remained. The original players in the market were Standard & Poors, the Chicago Mercantile Exchange and Global Real Analytics; Real Capital Analytics and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology Center for Real Estate; and the Rexx Real Estate Property Index, which includes backing from Cushman & Wakefield and Newmark Knight Frank.
But the landscape has changed. Today, the first
and thirdventures areis now defunct. Correction: The Rexx index still exists. It has been renamed the REBOR Index.Moody’s now works with MIT and Real Capital and that index has become a popular reference point. In addition, Green Street Advisors and CoStar have entered the fray and begun producing their own indexes.
The question: Which one of these is the best? Moody’s, as the most established, continues to get the most exposure. But the other indexes are getting mentioned more often and both CoStar and Green Street claim there are key differences in how they’re measuring prices compared with the Moody’s/RCA index. Bloomberg’s monthly report on prices now often cites all three.
What’s often lacking, however, is a look at how the three compare.
According to Green Street, “Green Street Advisors’ Commercial Property Price Index (GSA CPPI) is a real-time series of unleveraged U.S. commercial property values. The key feature differentiating this index from others is its timeliness. The GSA CPPI captures the prices at which commercial real estate transactions are currently being negotiated and put under contract.” Meanwhile, CoStar says its numbers are different from Moody’s because “Moody’s pricing index uses the data that DOES NOT include sales under $2.5M. CoStar Group’s monthly index is the only repeat sales index that covers sales transactions from $100,000 and above. And Moody’s chooses deals by a sale price while CoStar uses property class, size etc. so the two indexes won’t have the exact same deals in the datasets.”
Update 1: Chris Macke, senior real estate strategist for CoStar got in contact with us and provided some more information on what distinguishes the indexes.
He wrote:
Update 2: David Geltner, professor of real estate fnance at the MIT Department of Urban Studies & Planning and author of the Professor’s Corner commentaries on the Moody’s/REAL index, also contacted me with some further comments.
Here is what he wrote:
(Editor’s note: Thanks to both Chris and David for writing in with those clarifications.)
If you want to pore more deeply into the differences you can download the methodologies for CoStar, Moody’s/RCA and Green Street Advisors.
I’ve gone ahead and attempted to chart the three indexes against each other. CoStar and Moody’s both use December 2000 as the baseline for their indexes. (For CoStar, the data is its investment grade index.) Green Street Advisors, however, uses August 2007 as its base. I attempted to reindex it by creating a new index where December 2000 = 100 and then had it match the month-by-month percentage changes of the original index. The result is the chart above.
What does it tell us?
Most broadly, the indexes appear pretty similar on the way up and the way down, but have begun to show some more interesting divergences of late. In general, Moody’s and CoStar’s indexes show similar magnitudes of price appreciation during the industry’s good years. Green Street’s peak is a tad lower. The peaks on all three indexes come in 2007, but Green Street and CoStar measure the peak several months earlier than Moody’s does.
In the decline phase, Green Street’s index fell earlier and bottomed earlier. Its bottom is also not as for the CoStar or Moody’s indexes. Green Street’s index hit bottom all the way back in May 2009. In contrast, CoStar’s bottomed in February 2010 and Moody’s in August 2010. The difference stems from Green Street’s attempt to capture the prices at which commercial real estate transactions are currently being negotiated and put under contract rather than closed.
More remarkably, Green Street’s index shows commercial real estate prices rebounding much more dramatically than the other two indexes. According to Green Street, commercial real estate values have gained a lot of ground. CoStar and Moody’s indexes are off their bottoms, but seem to be bouncing along a trough.
So which index do you think is right?
Highlights:
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