Today, The Weekly Buzzing Stocks by Billy Kawasaki and Andrew Moffs commented about whether DIR.UN.TO, FR, FCR.UN.TO, REI.UN.TO, MAA, SRU.UN.TO, SIA.TO, IIP.UN.TO, CAR.UN.TO, CRT.UN.TO, NWH.UN.TO, SMU.UN.TO, SUI, BEI.UN.TO, GRT.UN.TO, CSH.UN.TO, D.UN.TO, SGR.UN.TO, TCN.TO, ERE.UN.TO, MEQ.TO, BTB.UN.TO, DRR.UN.TO, BBBY, SQ, SVB.TO are stocks to buy or sell.
Canadian REITs are down 15-20% in the last 12 months, US REITs down 25%. Public real estate world has experienced quite a bit of volatility with the volatility in markets and interest rates. Reality is quite different in the private real estate markets in those sectors that have positive supply/demand fundamentals. He's more focused than ever on defensive sectors, those that have growth, and companies with great balance sheets. The sectors that make sense today include manufactured housing, single-family rental houses, industrial warehouse, and grocery-anchored shopping centres.
In 2022, private REITs were up by high single digits. In the publicly traded world, real estate was down 20% last year. Who's right, or are we somewhere in the middle? It all comes down to the asset class and the balance sheet. Today there's a wonderful opportunity in publicly traded real estate. Typically, public trades at a premium to NAV compared to private, but today the discount is 20-30% to NAV. Over time, that leads to increased M&A activity. That environment should come back once we have a bit more stability in financing.
In very different sectors. Both trade at wide discount to NAV. Neither has catalysts on horizon. CSH.UN at risk of cutting distribution, which is not being covered due to lower occupancy. CSH trustees see growth coming, but can it recover occupancy levels lost during Covid? He's watching that, as it's hard to invest in the face of a possible cut. D.UN is in an extremely tough sector. Office space, globally, has suffered with work from home. Office sector is not dead, but vacancy rates are in high teens and climbing. A good operator, Dream still owns good office buildings, especially in Toronto.
In very different sectors. Both trade at wide discount to NAV. Neither has catalysts on horizon. CSH.UN at risk of cutting distribution, which is not being covered due to lower occupancy. CSH trustees see growth coming, but can it recover occupancy levels lost during Covid? He's watching that, as it's hard to invest in the face of a possible cut. D.UN is in an extremely tough sector. Office space, globally, has suffered with work from home. Office sector is not dead, but vacancy rates are in high teens and climbing. A good operator, Dream still owns good office buildings, especially in Toronto.