| Optimal Portfolio Allocations to Real
Estate Authors: Gerald R. Brown and Edward J. Schuck
Start Page: 63
End Page: 73
Volume: 2
Issue Number: 1
Year: 1996
Publication: Journal of Real Estate Portfolio Management
Abstract: The relatively low allocations to real estate in U.S. and U.K.
institutional portfolios continues to conflict with those suggested by academic studies.
Reasons put forward to explain the discrepancy have included the use of historic data,
instead of expectations for the future; the use of smoothed real estate return indices,
which underestimate the real estate risk/return relationship and differences in the amount
of leverage used to finance real estate. Although these factors may provide some
explanation for the allocation problem, they do not appear to fully explain the wide
variations between theory and practice.
This study adopts a bootstrapping approach to derive
ex-ante estimates of risk and correlations between common stocks and real estate for use
in a mean-variance analysis. A dynamic optimization approach is also undertaken by
allowing the inputs to the model to vary. The effects that this has on optimal allocations
to real estate in a two-asset portfolio are then explored. The impact of differences in
portfolio size is also examined. A simulation model is estimated that shows it is possible
to justify a wide range of allocations to real estate. The final choice of allocation
depends upon the forecasting skill of real estate investors. If, on average, forecasting
skill is poor, it can be shown that the low allocations observed in practice can be
justified within a traditional risk/return framework. Introducing the possibility of
investing in a riskless asset further justifies the current low allocations to real
estate.
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