Authors: Bond S.A.1; Karolyi G.A.2; Sanders A.B.2
Source: Real Estate Economics, Volume 31, Number 3, September 2003 , pp. 481-500(20)
Publisher: Blackwell Publishing
Abstract:We examine the risk and return characteristics of publicly traded real estate companies from 14 countries over the period 1990 to 2001. Our data are monthly country-level commercial real estate indexes constructed by the European Public Real Estate Association (EPRA). We find substantial variation in mean real estate returns and standard deviations across countries. Using various global- and country-level factor models, we find that there is evidence of a strong global market risk component, measured relative to the Morgan Stanley Capital International world index, in most countries. However, even after controlling for the effects of global market risk, an orthogonalized country-specific market risk factor is highly significant, especially for real estate indexes in Asia–Pacific markets. We find that a country-specific value risk factor has some explanatory power in addition to the country-specific market factor, but U.S.-based market, value and size risk factors do not provide any additional explanatory power. These findings imply that the international diversification opportunities with real estate companies are more complex than previously thought.
Document Type: Research article
DOI: 10.1111/1540-6229.00074
Affiliations: 1: Cambridge University, UK 2: The Ohio State University, Columbus