Unlisted property funds dip in June quarter


Annualised returns of unlisted core wholesale property funds have dipped 45 basis points from around 9.2 per cent in March to 8.8 per cent in June, according to the latest Mercer/IPD Australian Pooled Property Fund Index - Core Wholesale.
The index represents a basket of 17 pooled property funds for nine managers, with a gross asset value of $50 billion, according to IPD.
The decline in returns (net of gearing and management fees) was due to a decline in capital returns as income remained steady over the quarter, IPD stated. Returns over the previous year were a full percentage higher at 9.8 per cent, after peaking at around 10 per cent in mid 2011.
Managing Director of IPD in Australia and New Zealand Dr Anthony De Francesco said the results show the market is softening.
"The moderation in investment returns reflects weakness in demand-side factors for underlying space market fundamentals," he said.
"Given the ongoing sluggish nature of demand to persist over the next 12 months, we expect investment returns for core property to continue softening. This suggests that over the short-term greater opportunities may lie within the non-core risk-reward investment spectrum," De Francesco said.
Over the year to June 2012, diversified funds again outperformed sector specific funds, posting an annual total return of 9.1 per cent.
This was compared to an 8.7 per cent return for retail funds, 8.5 per cent for office funds and 8.0 per cent for industrial funds.
Recommended for you
A Fidelity portfolio manager has announced he will be departing the business after almost a decade.
While fund managers are eager to launch active ETFs to appeal to advisers, EY has found two-thirds of ETF flows are going into extremely cheap passive offerings with an expense ratio of less than 25 basis points.
Three fund managers have been added as underlying managers for the Third Link Growth Fund, an Australian equity fund donating its fee to charity.
Colonial First State has chosen Franklin Templeton specialist investment manager, Martin Currie Australia, to manage a mandate on its FirstChoice platform.