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The role of multi-family properties in hedging pension liability risk: long-run evidence

Martin Hoesli (Geneva School of Economics and Management, University of Geneva, Geneva, Switzerland) (University of Aberdeen Business School, Aberdeen, UK)
Louis Johner (Geneva School of Economics and Management, University of Geneva, Geneva, Switzerland)
Jon Lekander (Department of Real Estate and Construction Management, KTH Royal Institute of Technology, Stockholm, Sweden)

Journal of Property Investment & Finance

ISSN: 1463-578X

Article publication date: 14 September 2023

Issue publication date: 6 February 2024

59

Abstract

Purpose

Using data spanning 145 years for Sweden, the authors investigate the benefits of holding multi-family properties for investors who aim to hedge wage growth.

Design/methodology/approach

The authors assess the risk-adjusted excess return that results from adding multi-family properties to a mixed-asset portfolio that aims to track wage growth. The authors also analyse the macroeconomic determinants of asset returns. Finally, the authors test whether a causal relationship exists between the growth rate of real wages and that of real net operating income.

Findings

The benefits from holding multi-family properties are the greatest for low-risk allocation approaches. For more risky strategies, the role of real estate is more muted, and it varies greatly over time. Holding real estate was most beneficial during the first two decades of the 21st century. Multi-family properties are found to be the only asset class to be positively related to wage growth. The authors show that the net operating income acts as the transmission channel between wages and property returns.

Practical implications

The paper assesses whether the growing interest of pension funds for multi-family properties is warranted in the context of a portfolio that aims to track wage growth.

Originality/value

Using long term data makes it possible to use a rolling windows approach and hence to consider multiple outcomes for an allocation strategy over a typical investment horizon. This permits to assess the dispersion of performance across several periods rather than just one as is commonly done in the literature. The results show that the conclusions that would be drawn from looking at the past two or three decades of data differ substantially from those for earlier time periods.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

The authors thank Daniel Waldenström, Dmitry Kuvshinov, and MSCI for providing data. The comments of Jan Bohlin, Stephen Lee, Zongyuan Li, Bryan MacGregor, Rainer Schulz as well as of two anonymous reviewers are gratefully acknowledged. The participants at the 28th annual European Real Estate Society (ERES) conference, the 14th ReCapNet conference, the 39th annual American Real Estate Society (ARES), the University of Aberdeen real estate research seminar and the Skye real estate conference also provided many valuable comments. Any errors are the authors'.

Citation

Hoesli, M., Johner, L. and Lekander, J. (2024), "The role of multi-family properties in hedging pension liability risk: long-run evidence", Journal of Property Investment & Finance, Vol. 42 No. 1, pp. 3-27. https://doi.org/10.1108/JPIF-04-2023-0035

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2023, Emerald Publishing Limited

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