The state pension fund is set to go on a billion-dollar commercial real estate buying spree and experts say now is a great time to buy.
About 10 percent — or $5 billion — of the state's $52 billion pension fund is currently invested in real estate, much of it in direct ownership of properties, including the fund's home at 84 State St. in downtown Boston.
State money managers recently decided to borrow against the pension fund's real estate portfolio, raising $1 billion at favorable terms, and hunt for more properties to purchase.
"Our appetite near-term for real estate has gone up. We have five real estate managers who are trying to identify real estate we can buy," Michael Trotsky, executive director and chief investment officer for the state pension fund, told the Herald. "We are looking mostly for 'core' real estate — the best buildings in the best locations, primarily in the United States, but we don't specifically target any city. It will be throughout the country."
David Begelfer, CEO of commercial real estate trade group NAIOP Massachusetts, said it's a superb time to buy for anyone who "does their homework."
"The market in Massachusetts, especially Eastern Massachusetts, has been extremely strong over the last couple of years and looks to be strong going forward," Begelfer said. "Many markets around the country are still recovering and so there are certainly some opportunities."
The pension fund already owns 87 commercial properties, plus several others through partnerships.
For example, in California, the fund owns the Market Street office and retail building in downtown San Francisco, a shopping center anchored by a Safeway in Mill Valley, and the Carmel Medical Office building in Rancho Bernardo.
The portfolio includes 2020 K St. in Washington, D.C. — the 11-story home to several Bingham McCutchen lawyers and the George Washington University Press — and the Sawgrass Lake Center, an office complex in Sunrise, Fla.
Last year, the pension fund returned 13.9 percent, much higher than its 8 percent target — and starting this year the state's target return has been increased to 8.5 percent. There are 522,800 members of the pension plan — 329,000 active and 199,000 retired, according to the state treasurer's office, which oversees the pension fund.
Trotsky said he expects the pension fund to invest the extra billion dollars within two years. The last time the pension fund went on a similar real estate buying spree in the 2000s, it netted $400 million extra.
"We're taking advantage of the low-interest rate environment and we expect it to generate $400 million in 'excess' profits over the next seven and a half years," he said. "It was considered very safe by outside investors. (The pension fund) is so big and so stable that it's not considered a big risk to issuers of this debt."
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