Defined Contribution Real Estate AUM Rapidly Increases

Defined Contribution Real Estate

Image credit: © Andrii Yalanskyi | Dreamstime.com

Appetite for real estate among Defined Contribution (DC) investors is increasing, with the median assets under management of an investment manager managing DC real estate capital increasing more than 50% over the past five years.

That’s one of the key findings from the first edition of the DCREC-NAREIM-Ferguson Partners Defined Contribution Survey, released Tuesday.

DC investors are also increasingly sophisticated and have grown more so in their knowledge of the real estate asset class and many are looking closer at asset-level and manager performance, in addition to product structure.

Additionally, product choice continues to expand. A growing number of real estate managers have launched daily-valued DC investment products over the past several years, and several expect to bring additional offerings to the market in the near to medium term.

“A growing number of real estate managers have launched daily-valued DC investment products”

Last year was significant, and one key trend that was already underway by the start of 2020 was the growth in capital inflows for real estate strategies from DC investors. Between 2016 and 2020, there was a 50% increase in the median firm AUM.

However, in 2020, just 16% of responding firms saw an increase in year-over-year AUM given market volatility and rebalancing activity driven by the pandemic

The survey also tracked investor appetite for real estate as well as portfolio construction strategies and allocation intentions.

Key investor highlights include:

The DC Survey 2021 builds on six years of reporting by DCREC (the Defined Contribution Real Estate Council) on daily-valued private real estate strategies in the DC market. In 2021, DCREC partnered with NAREIM and Ferguson Partners to help expand the metrics being tracked to provide a benchmark of DC capital flows and structuring considerations, as well as organizational and staffing best practices among DC real estate investment managers.

Exit mobile version