From the Wall Street Journal: Commercial Property Meltdown Clobbers Pension Funds
Pensions, like sovereign-wealth funds, university endowments and family offices, generally either buy properties outright or invest through private fund managers. Some analysts and pension advisers suspect those managers are themselves slow to report losses. Share prices of publicly traded real-estate investment trusts have generally fallen much further than private marks.
But pension funds to date have reported even less strain than private managers. Privately managed funds tracked by the National Council of Real Estate Investment Fiduciaries reported a negative 12% return in 2023, double the loss pension funds booked. The tracked funds hold a mix of apartment, industrial, retail and office properties. Pension officials often factor in private fund marks on a one-quarter lag because they take longer to arrive than stock and bond valuations.
The board overseeing Canada’s $461 billion national pension plan is shifting the focus of new real-estate investment away from bricks-and-mortar buildings and toward infrastructure such as highways and energy, according to its annual report published in May.