Market Commentary

Investing in Real Assets Today



Foreword



Oaktree recently hosted an investment professional panel to discuss investing in real assets today. John Frank, Oaktree’s Vice Chairman, moderated the discussion and was joined by Emmett McCann (Co-Portfolio Manager, Infrastructure Investing), Keith Gollenberg (Managing Director, Real Estate), and Hermann Dambach (Managing Director, European Principal Group). What follows is based on that conversation.


John Frank: Keith, let me pose the first question to you. We’ve had an eight-year economic expansion in the U.S. The majority of your investments are in U.S. real estate debt and equity. Is this a good time to invest in real estate? Hasn’t the recovery already occurred?


Keith Gollenberg, Managing Director, Real Estate: After the recent financial crisis, we primarily focused on opportunistic real estate investments that we could buy, fix and then sell for a profit. These were largely “broken” assets in need of redevelopment, but in good locations across secondary real estate markets. While this side of the business has slowed down for core markets, we continue to find attractive opportunities in those secondary markets, though it’s important to proceed with caution and discipline. In addition to opportunistic real estate, we also invest in performing real estate-related debt, and this side of our business has been growing tremendously, given the amount of outstanding real estate debt that needs to be refinanced. Traditional lenders such as banks, CMBS issuers and insurance companies won’t lend at the leverage levels that real estate owners require. Before the crisis, banks were providing loans at 75% loan- to-value ratios (“LTV”), or greater. Today, however, more stringent regulatory standards have forced banks to require more borrower equity, meaning they are now only able to lend at 50-55% LTV. This has left a lending gap that is providing us with attractive opportunities to lend against performing real estate at up to 75% LTV.


John Frank: Hermann, how does this compare to the markets you cover?


Hermann Dambach, Managing Director, European Principal Group: We see opportunities for similar reasons. German banks, for example, insist on 30% equity (that is, no greater than 70% LTV) and debt reduction via amortization. As a result, we are seeing attractive opportunities to lend to high-quality borrowers at LTV ratios closer to 85-90%.


John Frank: Emmett, there has been a lot of money raised for infrastructure over the years and returns haven’t been [as high] as expected. What is your view on this?


Emmett McCann, Co-Portfolio Manager, Infrastructure Investing: When I started investing in U.S. infrastructure 15 years ago, the mantra was “Infrastructure is like a bond: buy a toll road, throw it in your portfolio, let it throw off income, and don’t worry about it.” I remember an Australian investor who bought a toll road for 60 times EBITDA and levered it a further 40x; that didn’t end well. The early infrastructure market left some scars. On a relative basis, infrastructure as an asset class has typically provided downside protection because of the predictable nature of its cash flows, but you are still investing in living, breathing businesses like airports and power plants. These are complicated businesses, with a lot of inefficiencies that can impact those cash flows. We take an operationally focused, value-add approach to our infrastructure investing. This means that in addition to having a team of individuals focused on spreadsheets, financial performance and capital structure, we also have a team of operators who have run these asset-heavy infrastructure businesses before and know how to improve operational efficiency and operating leverage. Our team looks for businesses with an essential purpose – such as power plants that sell electricity to big cities and waste management businesses – through multiple economic cycles. Then we take a private equity approach to improving businesses by, for example, building what we believe are best-in-class management teams. Like Oaktree’s real estate team, we also like to “buy it, fix it and sell it profitably,” to borrow Keith’s expression, and we avoid highly levered investments like that toll road I mentioned because it’s hard to reduce costs in a downside scenario with that kind of leverage in place.


John Frank: Keith, Emmett, I know local operators are important to your business. Can you please elaborate further on this?


Keith Gollenberg: We like to team up with local operating partners who specialize in the types of U.S. real estate we target: office, industrial, multifamily, hotel and residential. We think these partners can help us mitigate risks and enhance the value of these assets. A foreign owner doesn’t have the relationship with the local leasing broker who is helping a local tenant look for space.   These local relationships are important because they help us get increases in operating efficiencies and in rent.


Emmett McCann: Our deals require effective management of local dynamics and effective communication and coordination with local stakeholders. We feel this is best achieved by partnering with former industry executives who have the expertise and longstanding relationships that help facilitate this communication and coordination. For example, we have partnered with a former senior executive of Continental Airlines. Safety is his first, second and third priority, followed by operational excellence.    He has a passion for transportation, so he is really drawn to the business and is able to work with important stakeholders. We also have a partner for our railroad investments who has worked on improving a number of small railroads (and I’d note that there are over 500 privately held railroads in the U.S.). Given their years of relevant industry experience, these operating partners have developed the regional expertise we need to succeed in acquiring and operating these infrastructure projects. We don’t think success is possible without that kind of localized knowledge.


John Frank: Oaktree in general believes in specialization within our investment groups. I’ll segue to Hermann, who represents that specialization in a particular way as head of our German office. His expertise has helped the managers of multiple Oaktree strategies avail themselves of opportunities in Germany and across Europe. Hermann, you are Oaktree’s “local partner” for our strategies that target investments in certain jurisdictions such as Germany and the Netherlands. How do you work with operating partners?


Hermann Dambach: We have successfully employed operating partners across residential and commercial real estate and also in rail assets, whereby the asset value has been protected thanks to careful management by these operators. The common theme among these investments involves identifying an operating partner that we believe has a differentiated business model with the potential to add value and manage the assets better than their competitors. For example, we identified a locomotive-leasing business that, in addition to state-of-the-art equipment, provides a lot of services that add value for their customers. Lessees can lease these locomotives for the term of the freight contract (rather than having to buy them outright and incur significantly more acquisition and maintenance costs) and avail themselves of the company’s support services. These services, in turn, allow the company to charge premium pricing for its locomotive leases, while enabling our smaller customers to compete with their larger, publicly traded peers. This leasing company has more than doubled its fleet and has begun to add more customers, including the big incumbents.


John Frank: I’m not sure there are industries that are more cyclical than real estate. Keith, how are you positioning your equity and debt activities based on our place in the cycle, particularly given our focus on protecting the downside?


Keith Gollenberg: Our job is to make sure we protect against the impact of the cycle going the wrong way. We don’t bet on the upside case but instead focus on what could go wrong. So our first  step is to underwrite what we can charge by renting or leasing the asset. Most of the real estate we look at for our Real Estate Opportunities strategy is privately owned and less liquid than a bond, so how you finance those investments is also important. I’ve been in the business for 30 years and have seen three major and three minor real estate cycles. Many foreclosed assets that we’ve purchased have turned into our best equity investments, enabling us to participate in the recovery. The key is not to sell – or be forced to sell – at the trough.


John Frank: Emmett, cycles don’t seem as important for infrastructure. Do you agree?


Emmett McCann: We think primarily about secular   themes that run through the assets we invest in over a long period of time and that are not impacted by short-term events. In energy, there is a massive amount of hydrocarbons that needs to be transferred to areas where people live. On the transportation side, American infrastructure is in terrible shape. It’s embarrassing to travel through our airports and on our roadways. We now get a D+ up from a D-. The gravity of the situation has given rise to attractive investment opportunities. In the past, the U.S. has paid for infrastructure in three ways. First, we issue tax- exempt bonds, but we are hitting structural liquidity limits because states and cities can’t issue debt forever. We also charge user fees like taxes, tolls and charges, but it’s hard to increase these, given the anti-tax sentiment. Finally, we’ve paid for our infrastructure with federal dollars, but this was reduced under Obama and I’m fairly certain it won’t increase under Trump. Sources of funds are dwindling and needs are increasing. PPP (the public-private partnership structure, which is one of the ways in which we invest) has become an entrenched part of the political vernacular. People still need to be educated on the concept, but it’s becoming more familiar.


John Frank: We hear infrastructure spending is going to explode under Trump.


Emmett McCann: Infrastructure is more of a state and local game in the U.S. That’s where decision making authority resides. It’s helpful when the President of the United States speaks of infrastructure spending, and he can prime the market and allocate federal tax dollars to the sector. But you need political will at the local level to enable the project to happen. The federal government can help – but not drive – an infrastructure project. For example, the La Guardia airport project in New York would not have happened if the local governor hadn’t given his approval.


John Frank: Hermann, is there a “cycle” that you can identify in your activities, and how do you think about investing at this stage of the cycle in Europe?


Hermann Dambach: I’ll go back to the rail example since, like other aspects of transportation, rail assets are cyclical. Recently, European economies have started to expand again, and this is beneficial for demand. However, pricing is also cyclical, and we need to determine where we are in the cycle in order to assess the attractiveness of a particular investment. Pricing is primarily driven by supply and demand, and so far, new supply has not created overcapacity, which would potentially deflate secondary market values. Manufacturers have been disciplined on the production side, and low interest rates have not lifted values either. We think this is a good time to invest in rail assets. In addition, a few years ago the ownership  of most locomotive leasing companies was transferred to private equity investors. Given their eventual need to exit, we expect to see – and perhaps participate in – a consolidation of these leasing companies in the next phase of the cycle.


John Frank: What should we do with shopping malls in the U.S.? Since Oaktree’s approach to real estate is to buy, fix and sell, what’s our approach to this asset class?


Keith Gollenberg: Since the financial crisis, we have invested approximately $18 billion of equity into real estate, and only a small number of these investments have been in the retail sector. The best-performing regional malls in the U.S. are owned by public REITS. They are “fortress” malls in great locations with great tenants for the local demographics. Other malls are showing significant signs of distress, and these could eventually be repurposed for higher and better uses such as parking lots in more urban locations, or even farmland outside the cities.


Hermann Dambach: Amazon is eroding the revenue base of malls in Germany. During the financial crisis, one of the first things that real estate investors bought was shopping malls. But the way forward for that theme is not as clear anymore


Emmett McCann: What Keith and Hermann are alluding to could present some interesting transportation and infrastructure opportunities: there’s a revolution going on in the way we as consumers get our goods, and those goods have to be transported. Whereas we used to go out and buy them, more and more they’re being delivered to our doorstep. Amazon is buying its own planes and ships, and now logistics players are reacting. Real estate and infrastructure are intertwined, and so you may have a waning real estate asset class that results in an uptick in infrastructure spending.


Keith Gollenberg: And who knows? Farmland could be a target asset class for us one of these days.


Notes and Disclaimers


This document and the information contained herein are for educational and informational purposes only and do not constitute, and should not be construed as, an offer to sell, or a solicitation of an offer to buy, any securities or related financial instruments. Responses to any inquiry that may involve the rendering of personalized investment advice or effecting or attempting to effect transactions in securities will not be made absent compliance with applicable laws or regulations (including broker dealer, investment adviser or applicable agent or representative registration requirements), or applicable exemptions or exclusions therefrom.


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An investment in any fund or the establishment of an account within Oaktree’s investment strategies is speculative and involves a high degree of risk. Such risks include, but are not limited to, those described below. There can be no assurance that investments targeted by any strategy will increase in value, that significant losses will not be incurred or that the objectives of the strategy will be achieved. Moreover, a portfolio within a strategy may not be diversified among a wide range of issuers, industries and countries, making the portfolio subject to more rapid changes in value than would be the case if the portfolio was more diversified.


The value of real estate and real estate-related securities and investments can be seriously affected by the supply of and demand for such investments, interest rate fluctuations, bank liquidity, the availability of financing, environmental and other regulations and natural disasters. Income from income-producing real estate may be adversely affected by general economic conditions, local conditions such as oversupply or reduction in demand for space in the area, competition from other available properties, inadequate maintenance and inadequate coverage by insurance.


Similarly, infrastructure investments expose investors to numerous risks, usually without recourse to the general credit of a project sponsor, including (without limitation): construction; environmental; regulatory; permitting; commissioning; start-up; operating; economic; commercial; contractual; political; innovation; and financial risks. In addition, early developmental stage projects involve risks of failure to obtain or substantial delays in obtaining: regulatory, environmental or other approvals or permits; financing; and suitable equipment supply, operating and offtake contracts. In addition, the infrastructure sector subjects investors to risks relating to (i) ineffective or inefficient use of technology, (ii) equipment failures, fuel interruptions, loss of sale and supply contracts, changes in power or fuel contract prices, (iii) bankruptcy of or defaults by key customers, suppliers or other counterparties; (iv) tort liability; (v) employment of personnel and unionized labor, and (vi) political and regulatory considerations and popular sentiments that could affect the ability to buy or sell investments on favorable terms.


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