Analysts note a potential rebound in the U.S. real estate market, which has struggled due to elevated interest rates. With inflation rates easing, expectations of a possible rate cut create new investment opportunities. However, experts suggest that improvements in property valuations may vary significantly across different asset classes.
Shawn Lese, Chief Investment Officer (CIO) and Head of Funds Management for Nuveen Real Estate’s Americas platform emphasized at the 2024 Nuveen Global Real Assets Market Outlook Press Conference held on Monday at the FKI Building Conference Center in Yeouido, Seoul, that the global real estate valuation decline has eased as of the first quarter of this year.
Lese observed that commercial real estate prices appear to be at a turning point, showing early signs of recovery. He also noted a trend of increased investment interest in prime-location properties.
However, he cautioned that real estate comprises various sectors, not a single market. He noted that while logistics centers, retail, and medical offices maintain solid values and investments, office spaces tend to have relatively high vacancy rates. Lese also mentioned that it’s challenging to predict when office valuations, heavily invested in by Korean asset managers, will recover.
Nuveen Asset Management, a subsidiary of the Teachers Insurance and Annuity Association of America (TIAA), invests $146 billion in real estate and $31 billion in physical assets. Its investment targets include publicly traded real estate, equities, loans, commodities, natural capital farmlands, infrastructure, and forestry.
Abigail Dean, Global Head of Strategy Insights for Nuveen Real Assets, analyzed valuation trends in farmland and forestry—key investment areas for Nuveen. She found that losses in these sectors are generally subsiding. Dean also noted that demand for real assets, including real estate and infrastructure, is increasingly driven by structural megatrends rather than short-term economic fluctuations.
Dean identified key megatrends impacting investment decisions, including digitalization, shifting towards a low-carbon economy, social inequality, climate change, aging populations, and urbanization. She explained that this alignment suggests investment opportunities in data or logistics centers driven by digitalization, transportation, and accommodations tailored to seniors.
Biff Ourso, the Global Head of Infrastructure for Nuveen, predicts that the demand for clean power will increase due to advancements in artificial intelligence (AI). He explained that building data centers is essential for AI operations, and electricity will be the primary fuel source.
Ourso emphasized that data centers are expected to operate on renewable energy for the next 20 years and pointed out that leading American corporations like Microsoft, Apple, and Nvidia are all major electricity consumers.
Ourso also warned that investments in real assets should account for variables such as geopolitical risks, government regulations, market liquidity, and macroeconomic factors like interest rates and overall economic conditions.
Finally, Martin Davis, the Global Head of Natural Capital, Nuveen’s land-based asset management division, recommended investing in natural capital, such as farmland and forestry. He argued that these investments, which have a low correlation with stocks and bonds that are affected by external factors like interest rates, are essential for portfolio diversification and serve as effective inflation hedges.