Don't Overload REIT ETF Allocations | ETF Trends

Income investors should not go overboard with overweighting their real estate investment trust exchange traded fund exposure as valuations have grown expensive.

“That big, unexpected fall in interest rates – is there any other kind than an unexpected fall or an unexpected rise? – has really inflated (and I think that’s the right word, ‘inflated’) the value of most real estate investment trusts that are out there,” Josh Peters, director of equity-income strategy at Morningstar, said.

Peters points out that there are no longer many REITs trading below fair value as most options are trading at big premiums to fair value estimates. The strategist also warned that the rush into REITs has significantly depressed yields in the space to the point where returns may no longer justify potential risks. Consequently, he argues that there is no margin of safety to commit new money to the space.

“To look at the whole group of REITs that are members of the S&P 500 Index and having that dividend yield down around 3%, that’s the kind of number that I’d choke on,” Peters added. “I have been in this game a long time; I can remember when you had high-quality, ‘money good’-type REITs paying 6%, 7%, or 8%.”

For instance, popular REIT ETFs are trading at higher valuations and lower yields after falling rates pushed investors to alternative income-generating assets. The Vanguard REIT ETF (NYSEArca: VNQ) has a 3.37% 12-month yield and trades at a 39.4 price-to-earnings ratio, iShares Dow Jones US Real Estate Index Fund (NYSEArca: IYR) has a 3.47% 12-month yield and a 34.8 P/E ratio, and SPDR Dow Jones REIT ETF (NYSEArca: RWR) has a 2.87% 12-month yield and a 46.1 P/E.