FidelityConnects: Real estate investing in 2026

Join Don Newman, Fidelity Alternative Real Estate Trust Portfolio Manager, as he explores the dynamics of real estate investing and highlights key considerations as we head into 2026. From portfolio strategy to an update on the current market landscape, gain grounded insights into market factors that matter now and in the coming year.

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Hello, and welcome to Fidelity Connects.

 

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I'm Rory Poole. For the past few years artificial intelligence,

 

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or AI, has undoubtedly been the dominant conversation amongst

 

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investors globally. And while adoption and investment in this area may

 

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continue to dictate overall sentiment in the short term it's

 

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important that investors don't lose sight of some of the less loved pockets

 

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of the market. One area that certainly fits that description is

 

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real estate. As central banks globally continue to

 

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lower interest rates investors may find opportunities,

 

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attractive entry points and diversification in an asset class that is

 

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less sensitive to what's been dominating the recent news.

 

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Here to talk about real estate markets, where he's finding opportunities

 

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and a new strategy that combines both private and public real estate is

 

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portfolio manager, Don Newman.

 

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Before I introduce Don, just a reminder that today's webcasts

 

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will have live French interpretation.

 

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Don, with that, welcome. Thanks for being a breath of fresh air today.

 

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Yeah, thanks Rory, glad to be here.

 

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Okay, as I mentioned, let's start with talking about real estate markets at

 

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a higher level, I guess, and probably any discussion around fundamentals

 

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within real estate probably starts with painting a bit of a picture around

 

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supply and demand. What does that look like to you right now?

 

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Let's start with sort of a background and a little bit of

 

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a history lesson. If we go back a number of years, we

 

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go back to 2021, sector did

 

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fantastically well.

 

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REITs were up something like, at least in the U.S.

 

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the REIT index was up 40%.

 

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Perfect situation for real estate.

 

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We had demand which was actually pretty good and we

 

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had rates that were pinned at zero.

 

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People were really hunting for yield and valuation expanded on the sector.

 

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Now, while that was happening it set

 

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the stage for a couple of years that have been a little bit tough now.

 

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We know after 2021 we hit 2022 and 2023.

 

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Rates went from zero to 5%.

 

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Obviously, real estate is an interest rate sensitive sector and has to compete

 

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with other yield bearing assets.

 

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That put the sector under pressure for a couple of years.

 

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When you're in 2020, '21 when rates are pinned at zero it

 

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was really easy to get financing.

 

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A lot of construction projects started in 2000,

 

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sort of '21-ish, '22, '23 and have been coming

 

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on in 2024 and '25.

 

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We had a couple years where you had increased supply and you're

 

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battling through higher interest rates.

 

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Then, of course, we got the tariff shock at the start of the year.

 

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What's nice now is we're sitting on a sector where

 

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things really haven't moved in the last six years.

 

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The rest of the market has moved a lot.

 

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There's kind of a line of sight now to supply, interest rates

 

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are higher, the cost of producing any kind of building that you're making has

 

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gone up a ton. Supply is actually shrinking, interest

 

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rates look like they've kind of peaked down, or at least being cut and have

 

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certainly been cut a lot in Canada on the short end and the short end looks

 

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like they're coming down in the U.S.

 

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You now have a case of just broad brush where supply

 

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is moderating, demand is actually pretty good and interest

 

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rates are becoming a little more of a tailwind than a headwind now.

 

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It's an interesting time to actually start to look at the sector.

 

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That sounds like a pretty good setup, all things considered relative to, as you

 

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mentioned, a couple years ago.

 

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Looking forward, some optimism to be had in that sense.

 

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Now, what about the other piece? What about if we talk about valuation

 

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broadly speaking. Supply and demand is one

 

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thing in terms of, again, painting that fundamental picture

 

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but where's real estate kind of trading nowadays?

 

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Again, recognizing, and we'll talk about the fact that you can't paint it all

 

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with one brush but interested to hear your thoughts.

 

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We'll get into the fact that real estate's very heterogeneous.

 

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There's a whole bunch of different sectors we can look at, and we'll talk about

 

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that a little bit.

 

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From the broad brush valuation, you look at the entire market

 

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right now and we've had a number of years of really good runs.

 

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Valuations certainly are fair to a little bit on the expensive side.

 

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Real estate's different. As I said, because of the headwinds

 

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you've actually had, valuations, you can look at it almost across the board and

 

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a lot of the companies are actually trading at pretty steep discounts to NAVs,

 

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which we say net asset values. Just like other stocks, when

 

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fundamentals are not extremely robust what ends up happening is multiples

 

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compress. If you look at different sectors across, and I'll use U.S.

 

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multi-family as an example, the

 

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particular sector, because there's been headwinds are trading at multiples

 

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that you probably haven't seen ...

 

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or on the low side excluding the financial crisis and COVID,

 

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about the lower multiples you've seen in the last

 

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20 years. What's nice is if fundamentals do start to inflect

 

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sometime over the next year or two what you end up seeing is

 

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you get the chance for not only earnings to improve,

 

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which they should as supply and demand tightens up, but you also get the chance

 

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for multiples to expand.

 

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That's a really powerful sort of tool.

 

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You get a combination of you win on the earnings improving and you win on

 

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multiples expanding. It's a little bit different than probably where the rest

 

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of the market is right now.

 

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You mentioned, or you kind of hinted at the fact that

 

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real estate, you've used the term before, it's a very heterogeneous

 

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area of the market, if you will.

 

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Certainly I think in 2025 we've seen that divergence.

 

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We've got certain areas

 

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of the listed REIT market, whether it's health care, industrials

 

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in some instances, that are really led and then you have some of these areas

 

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that are still kind of shaking off that pandemic hangover,

 

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if you will, the offices of the world that maybe have trailed a little

 

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bit. Can you maybe just talk at large about what

 

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is the kind of opportunity set within real estate?

 

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Often we sort of get the questions, and living in Canada,

 

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as a Canadian you're very focused.

 

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Real estate means the Canadian housing market or the Canadian apartment market.

 

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There's a little extra supply, certainly, in condos right now and

 

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it's sort of a tough market.

 

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That is not broad brush the entire market, and certainly not the market

 

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I'm dealing with, which I find sort of fascinating.

 

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There's a whole bunch of subsectors in the real estate market for

 

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publicly traded REITs that don't share the same fundamentals

 

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They're all driven on a higher level a little bit by interest

 

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rates but supply and demand fundamentals are quite different between the

 

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different sectors. We'll sort of lift them off and I can go through them a

 

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little bit. You've got health care, you've got retail, you've got industrial,

 

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you've got multi-family, you've got single family, you've got data centre,

 

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you've got storage, you've got hotels.

 

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There are a large number of different subsectors

 

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that actually have very different characteristics.

 

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Right now, like, strength, health care,  the baby boom generation

 

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is getting to a point where ...

 

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I think the average person is now in their 70s.

 

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That is a huge age wave that is hitting a point where they need

 

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extra care.

 

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In some cases you have your parents go into

 

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some senior care or assisted living type things.

 

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What's interesting is during the pandemic no one would put their parents in

 

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there, you just wouldn't do it, so there was no supply, extra supply that was

 

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created. At the same time you could see this age wave coming and hitting

 

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and demand is exploding and there's no supply.

 

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Pricing power has been absolutely terrific on top of occupancy

 

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going up and the sector's been an absolute winner this year.

 

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Industrial has started to perform a little bit better.

 

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We've seen companies say, listen, we've got this tariff thing but

 

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at some point we actually gotta run our company, we've gotta make decisions

 

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again, and you're starting to see leasing

 

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kind of pick up. Companies, the whole idea of reshoring

 

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into the U.S. and companies need more distribution throughout

 

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the economy, those companies are talking about leasing

 

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picking up, occupancy picking up and things becoming

 

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stronger. At the same time there are sectors that

 

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have been impacted by supply, and the U.S. is a little bit ahead of Canada in

 

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terms of multi-family or what we think of apartments,

 

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huge amount of supply coming on in '24 and some in '25 but that

 

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supply has really started to dwindle now.

 

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You can kind of see, you got this line of sight into, well, in some cases

 

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you go to different regions and well, supply's down 60% this year, or

 

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new apartments brought to market

 

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look to be down another 35 next year.

 

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You can see the market's tightening up and the supply and demand, when

 

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it tightens up you'll get pricing power back and the companies are trading

 

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really cheaply.

 

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There's, I think, a lot of different opportunities that are outside of what

 

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people look at every day in the newspaper.

 

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Data centre, sort of really strong.

 

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The stocks haven't performed as well maybe as they should this year because

 

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they're having to put more CapEx in but that CapEx eventually turns into

 

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growth and cash flow, and that should work.

 

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A lot of opportunities out there, you just don't want to

 

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broad brush the whole sector when there's, in fact, multiple different sectors

 

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in there in the broad universe to look at.

 

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Correct me if I'm wrong but I think that there's upwards of 250 listed

 

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REITs in North America.

 

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Maybe I'm being a little optimistic about that but it's pretty big.

 

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No, no, no. It would be around 250. I probably look at and skim through 150 to

 

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200. It's not actually

 

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a small space. People just assume it's a couple REITs in Canada,

 

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a couple in the U.S. There is actually a very large constituency

 

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of real estate companies and public real estate companies to

 

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go through that all have different characteristics and potentially make

 

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for really interesting investments.

 

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I think the interesting thing for investors out there, if you look at the

 

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composition of the S&P 500 REITs are 2%

 

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or something like that.

 

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We'll get to more of this in terms of our conversation but if you want to make

 

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a kind of play towards diversification within

 

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a particular sector in addition to what you mentioned where there's so

 

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many different areas and pockets of the real estate market.

 

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Another thing, I'm just thinking of this now too, if I

 

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look at the composition of the REIT market I think a lot of investors

 

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would be surprised that it's not just all these dividend-paying,

 

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large-cap stocks. There's actually a lot of opportunities,

 

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let's call it down-cap or mid-cap, within that market which

 

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from an active management standpoint is probably appealing as

 

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a manager but also means there's potentially

 

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some inefficiencies.

 

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Well, a lot of things get overlooked.

 

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We're not talking about the $100 billion or $200 billion companies.

 

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We're talking about a few billion here and there.

 

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There are companies that are around and have been around for a long time.

 

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Fundamentals are actually good but they're probably overlooked.

 

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It's a nice combination of ... I run the Dividend fund here and it's a

 

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nice combination of yield plus growth.

 

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You can still get 4 or 5% yields, in some cases you've got 5% growth

 

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but in some cases, some of the health care guys are growing 10%, 15%, 20%.

 

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One of the examples I like to use is

 

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you look at retail. People think retail's sort of kind of a

 

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tough sector. Consumer's a little

 

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bit tough right now, maybe there's not as much to spend.

 

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But then you gotta go dig and look at supply.

 

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There's been almost no retail put onto the market in the last decade.

 

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If you talk to some of the CEOs, what they'll tell you is, well, we

 

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can't because if we wanted to actually build something at

 

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current interest rates and current costs we'd need 30 to 40% uplift

 

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in rents just to make this viable and to get a reasonable return.

 

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At the same time retail's fine but there's no supply.

 

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No supply means, oh, geez, all these companies people

 

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were worried about, e-commerce and that sort of moving

 

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away from retail, there's been almost no addition to actual physical

 

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retail, and at the same time e-commerce companies are realizing, wait a sec,

 

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we should actually have a physical presence here so people can come in and see

 

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the products.

 

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Multi-strategy has become much more prevalent than

 

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just online. People actually want to see the products, go into a store, and

 

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then also have distribution from that store where you can maybe return and

 

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actually get product.

 

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Especially like grocery anchor retail where people need food, we

 

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need to go to a grocery store and then they go to whole bunch of other needs

 

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based things. It's actually sort of an interesting area that kind of

 

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flies under the radar.

 

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That's changed so quickly.

 

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A couple years ago it was bricks and mortar's dead and now we're back to it,

 

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which probably just highlights the cyclicality that can exist within

 

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the real estate sector.

 

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Hello, investors. We'll be back to the show in just a moment.

 

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I wanted to share that here at Fidelity, we value your opinion.

 

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And don't forget to listen to Fidelity Connects, the Upside, and French

 

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DialoguesFidelity podcasts available on Apple, Spotify, YouTube, or wherever

 

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else you get your podcasts. Now back to today's show.

 

14:57.229 --> 15:01.533

Let's talk about the new fund, Fidelity Alternative Real Estate Trust.

 

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This is a product that we launched for accredited investors in

 

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March of this year. You are the portfolio manager.

 

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It brings something a little different than I think some of your other mandates

 

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that you manage on behalf of Canadian investors.

 

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Why don't you talk a little bit about that and kind of your role as the PM.

 

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I serve kind of a dual role.

 

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One is kind of the asset allocator.

 

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What we tried to do is put together a fund

 

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where you've got kind of the best of both worlds.

 

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The baseline is going to be about 70% private to give

 

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people access to, and it's Canadian, so

 

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Brookfield. We've been lucky enough to partner up with the best in the business

 

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on the private side in Brookfield and we're buying private

 

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Canadian assets.

 

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On the public side, which is the

 

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area I run, we're gonna do about 30% in REITs.

 

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The idea there is sort of a combination of

 

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good risk-reward, sort of steady growth and income

 

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but also have a section of the fund that sort of has liquidity.

 

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I think under the baseline scenario you'll probably see 70/30 be about where

 

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the fund sits but I also do have the ability to flex it a little bit if

 

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one of the particular sides, the public or public,

 

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there's unusual opportunities

 

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and value there and we can shift more to the private or more to the

 

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public.

 

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Good stuff.

 

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I guess, Rory,

 

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for people out there, Rory's actually been on the product a lot longer than I

 

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have from product development standpoint.

 

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Maybe you spend a minute or two just talking about why Fidelity

 

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decided to sort of incubate this

 

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product and take us through the genesis of

 

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it.

 

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For sure, Don.

 

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Switch roles for a second.

 

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I think that where I'd start with that is just the fact that Fidelity

 

17:17.436 --> 17:21.640

is so great at managing many different asset

 

17:21.640 --> 17:23.942

classes that exist out there.

 

17:23.942 --> 17:27.913

You can see that by our line of funds, our offerings

 

17:27.913 --> 17:30.582

in Canada and really abroad.

 

17:30.582 --> 17:35.621

We don't do everything, however, we don't everything in-house, I should say.

 

17:35.621 --> 17:39.658

Private real estate or direct real estate investing, particularly within

 

17:39.658 --> 17:41.827

Canada, is one of those things.

 

17:41.827 --> 17:46.331

To your point, we saw some potential

 

17:46.331 --> 17:51.637

long term benefits of adding private real state as an asset class

 

17:51.637 --> 17:55.574

to our various capabilities that we have on our

 

17:55.574 --> 17:58.377

shelf here in Canada.

 

17:58.377 --> 18:02.181

Why is that the case? I think you mentioned a few of the attractive attributes

 

18:02.181 --> 18:06.718

of real estate generally speaking but in particular within private real estate

 

18:06.718 --> 18:11.623

lower volatility, has fairly

 

18:11.623 --> 18:15.594

predictable, I think, cash flow generation over time, can be a great

 

18:15.594 --> 18:21.266

diversification piece to other areas of investors' portfolios.

 

18:21.266 --> 18:25.838

What we really wanted to do was partner with Brookfield

 

18:25.838 --> 18:30.042

and kind of bring the biggest and the best, I would

 

18:30.042 --> 18:35.481

say, within the real estate space, particularly in Canada, that

 

18:35.481 --> 18:39.718

can leverage their entire platform to not just buy assets but actually

 

18:39.718 --> 18:43.922

operate those assets as well and have that

 

18:43.922 --> 18:47.993

at the ready for where we think it's of use within our

 

18:47.993 --> 18:52.030

broader lineup. There's a few different places where it already is

 

18:52.030 --> 18:56.068

of use and is becoming of more use, as is the case

 

18:56.068 --> 19:00.072

within your fund. We actually committed initially about

 

19:00.072 --> 19:03.909

a billion dollars' worth of capital for Brookfield to start investing on our

 

19:03.909 --> 19:06.845

behalf in various Canadian real estate assets.

 

19:06.845 --> 19:11.283

We've deployed about half of that thus far and we'll continue to do so.

 

19:11.283 --> 19:15.254

You can see evidence of this within some of the funds

 

19:15.254 --> 19:19.291

that David Wolf and David Tulk manage, in particular the private

 

19:19.291 --> 19:21.160

investment portfolios.

 

19:21.160 --> 19:25.230

We're also thinking of new ways and vehicles where investors can get more

 

19:25.230 --> 19:29.201

of a concentrated access to this capability, which is

 

19:29.201 --> 19:33.472

obviously the case within the Fidelity Alternative Real Estate Trust.

 

19:33.472 --> 19:37.209

I guess maybe just sticking on this kind of tangent we're on right now with

 

19:37.209 --> 19:41.346

respect to maybe Brookfield and Fidelity and this kind of strategic agreement

 

19:41.346 --> 19:45.317

we have, what do you think some of

 

19:45.317 --> 19:49.454

the benefits are of not only working with

 

19:49.454 --> 19:53.392

Brookfield but this product in particular to make it unique?

 

19:53.392 --> 19:55.127

That's a great question.

 

19:55.127 --> 19:59.164

I guess the first one is just, obviously, I talked a little bit about

 

19:59.164 --> 20:02.000

it, I think the timing is pretty good on this.

 

20:02.000 --> 20:04.136

You're not buying something at the top of the market.

 

20:04.136 --> 20:08.240

This is a brand-new fund, we're just starting this.

 

20:08.240 --> 20:12.244

It's a really good time to be Brookfield and

 

20:12.244 --> 20:16.281

going out and being the first call on assets that come to

 

20:16.281 --> 20:21.220

market. We went through a couple years of valuations compressing.

 

20:21.220 --> 20:25.190

Brookfield is seeing more opportunities out

 

20:25.190 --> 20:30.662

there at attractive prices to go and pick up assets that are good, whether

 

20:30.662 --> 20:32.497

it be logistics, multi-family.

 

20:32.497 --> 20:34.499

We bought some student housing.

 

20:34.499 --> 20:38.503

That should be really great assets for the next 10 to 20

 

20:38.503 --> 20:41.373

years. Timing is one.

 

20:41.373 --> 20:45.544

Number two, this is something for

 

20:45.544 --> 20:49.915

an investor or advisors that I think is really cool because

 

20:49.915 --> 20:53.952

you just can't do this at home Brookfield

 

20:53.952 --> 20:57.889

has just this global capability and

 

20:57.889 --> 21:01.927

the capability in Canada. They've been around and sort of dominating

 

21:01.927 --> 21:05.530

the Canadian real estate landscape for 50 years.

 

21:05.530 --> 21:09.434

If you're going to be selling an asset or doing a transaction in Canada

 

21:09.434 --> 21:13.171

Brookfield is your first call.

 

21:13.171 --> 21:17.309

They have the transacting capability, they have

 

21:17.309 --> 21:22.180

the cash, partially, for loss.

 

21:22.180 --> 21:27.052

Our investors, because we believe in the product,

 

21:27.052 --> 21:30.889

sourcing capability, financing capability but it's just also sort of like the

 

21:30.889 --> 21:36.928

on the ground. If you're a logistics facility and there's

 

21:36.928 --> 21:41.700

some vacancy there, they've got the global network to go and find and boost

 

21:41.700 --> 21:46.338

up that vacancy. Maybe we can find something that's

 

21:46.338 --> 21:50.976

not perfectly 100% leased but they can go out and already

 

21:50.976 --> 21:52.411

have people leased up.

 

21:52.411 --> 21:56.581

It's the ability to buy an operating

 

21:56.581 --> 22:01.586

platform and to do things, to go and buy a 500,000

 

22:01.586 --> 22:06.024

square foot industrial building, to go in and buy

 

22:06.024 --> 22:10.128

800 units of apartments that, hopefully,

 

22:10.128 --> 22:14.466

now valuations are a little more attractive and

 

22:14.466 --> 22:18.503

to be able to run that, fix up the roofs

 

22:18.503 --> 22:22.708

and do all the operating things that you can't do on your own

 

22:22.708 --> 22:26.144

in a single product.

 

22:26.144 --> 22:30.415

First call in real estate, best platform, they run the operating platform for

 

22:30.415 --> 22:34.653

you, and then on top of that

 

22:34.653 --> 22:38.623

we put the Fidelity turn over more rocks, do more work, the

 

22:38.623 --> 22:43.328

equity research capabilities that most people will know us for

 

22:43.328 --> 22:45.497

in Canada and around the world on the public side.

 

22:45.497 --> 22:49.568

It's a wonderful marriage of the two

 

22:49.568 --> 22:53.572

and you, hopefully, get a decent return at lower volatility

 

22:53.572 --> 22:57.376

than the overall Market.

 

22:57.376 --> 22:59.978

Putting together I think it's served ...

 

22:59.978 --> 23:04.182

good timing, product you can't do for yourself

 

23:04.182 --> 23:08.153

and a really good combination of income and growth over time.

 

23:08.153 --> 23:12.457

That's a great summary. I think just adding on to the point that you had

 

23:12.457 --> 23:16.361

with respect to why Brookfield.

 

23:16.361 --> 23:20.432

The question that you even had for me was simply it's

 

23:20.432 --> 23:25.804

developing a private real estate business and one that is kind of

 

23:25.804 --> 23:30.375

best in class, if you will, and developing scale within that area, that's

 

23:30.375 --> 23:31.109

tough.

 

23:31.109 --> 23:31.510

It takes decades.

 

23:31.510 --> 23:33.712

That involves a lot of investment time.

 

23:33.712 --> 23:37.883

As a result of that

 

23:37.883 --> 23:41.953

I think for our purposes within this product the stars kind of

 

23:41.953 --> 23:47.225

aligned to utilize a great partner like Brookfield.

 

23:47.225 --> 23:51.430

You talked a lot about the private portion of the new fund here, I actually

 

23:51.430 --> 23:56.268

wanna quickly just ask you more so about the sleeve that you run in

 

23:56.268 --> 23:58.236

listed REITs.

 

23:58.236 --> 24:02.407

You have an investment universe, broadly speaking

 

24:02.407 --> 24:07.546

it's like a cap-weighted North American REIT kind of index.

 

24:07.546 --> 24:10.449

Maybe our viewers would be curious to know a little bit, given the fact that

 

24:10.449 --> 24:14.586

you can purchase those REITs in Canada or the U.S.,

 

24:14.586 --> 24:18.290

maybe a two-part question.

 

24:18.290 --> 24:22.894

One is, are there specific differences

 

24:22.894 --> 24:26.898

between REITS that are north of the border versus those that are

 

24:26.898 --> 24:28.600

south of the border?

 

24:28.600 --> 24:32.671

Two, if we get there, is

 

24:32.671 --> 24:36.741

how do you look at a REIT differently than you would look at a normal

 

24:36.741 --> 24:40.345

dividend paying stock. I say normal but you know what I mean.

 

24:40.345 --> 24:45.116

The answer is the business models are converging a little bit.

 

24:45.116 --> 24:48.487

Canada very much used to be an income market.

 

24:48.487 --> 24:51.823

That sort of view, I think, has changed.

 

24:51.823 --> 24:54.759

Certainly, as valuations have come down people don't like ...

 

24:54.759 --> 24:57.762

or management teams can't go to the equity markets because you're not going to

 

24:57.762 --> 25:01.733

raise money at a 20% discount to NEV because it's just dilutive

 

25:01.733 --> 25:04.102

to shareholders.

 

25:04.102 --> 25:08.106

The U.S. market has been a little more of a growth

 

25:08.106 --> 25:12.043

plus income market. They run with lower

 

25:12.043 --> 25:17.182

payout ratios so you have cash left over to kind of reinvest, do acquisitions

 

25:17.182 --> 25:21.253

and run with more leverage. That seems to be the business model that has

 

25:21.253 --> 25:25.257

kind of won out. The Canadian firms are kind

 

25:25.257 --> 25:32.731

of more gravitating towards what

 

25:32.731 --> 25:34.432

the U.S. model looks like.

 

25:34.432 --> 25:36.201

I'm sorry, the second part?

 

25:36.201 --> 25:40.505

Just high level how you approach a REIT versus a [crosstalk].

 

25:40.505 --> 25:44.843

It's actually fairly similar. The metrics are all different, FFO,

 

25:44.843 --> 25:48.980

fund from operations, AFFO which is basically cash flow, subtract

 

25:48.980 --> 25:53.018

CapEx, you're looking at kind of like NOIs

 

25:53.018 --> 25:57.188

and cap rates. Anyway, there's a whole bunch of different lingo that goes into

 

25:57.188 --> 26:01.126

it. At the end of the day what I'm kind of doing is very similar to what I do

 

26:01.126 --> 26:04.229

in Dividend fund, because I've actually done it in Dividend and Dividend Plus

 

26:04.229 --> 26:08.233

for the last 20 years in the REIT portion, it's going and looking at

 

26:08.233 --> 26:10.835

a sub-sector of the market, finding sort of the sub-industry.

 

26:10.835 --> 26:14.973

Where are we finding the best supply

 

26:14.973 --> 26:17.175

and demand? Where are the fundamentals the best?

 

26:17.175 --> 26:19.711

What's gonna grow? What can grow cash flow the most?

 

26:19.711 --> 26:23.949

And then diving in and saying, okay, that sort of industry, or sub-industry,

 

26:23.949 --> 26:27.452

then going and looking at the company.

 

26:27.452 --> 26:29.287

What's the best company in the industry?

 

26:29.287 --> 26:32.223

Who's the management team?

 

26:32.223 --> 26:36.728

Who actually has the best assets that I wanna ride for a long

 

26:36.728 --> 26:38.930

period of time?

 

26:38.930 --> 26:43.001

It's industry, find the best company in it and then marry

 

26:43.001 --> 26:44.202

that with valuation.

 

26:44.202 --> 26:48.440

Okay, well, I found the best sub-section

 

26:48.440 --> 26:52.544

industry, I found the best company, can I buy it at a reasonable valuation?

 

26:52.544 --> 26:56.715

If I can put the three together and then I get a reasonable

 

26:56.715 --> 27:00.352

yield plus growth on it, and I always think of things as yield plus growth plus

 

27:00.352 --> 27:04.556

valuation, same as I would in Dividend, I just do it in the real estate world.

 

27:04.556 --> 27:08.627

We find a sort of an attractive opportunity and if they

 

27:08.627 --> 27:12.597

kind of meet the hurdle of good yield, good growth

 

27:12.597 --> 27:14.733

and reasonable valuation they go in the fund.

 

27:14.733 --> 27:18.670

Good stuff. Well, it sounds like with your overview of how you're seeing the

 

27:18.670 --> 27:22.674

market right now, that approach, and then, obviously, all

 

27:22.674 --> 27:26.645

the resources you have as it relates to this fund and otherwise, hopefully,

 

27:26.645 --> 27:30.582

should be a good next couple of years in that sense.

 

27:30.582 --> 27:34.519

Thanks, Rory. I'm excited, I'm excited about what sort

 

27:34.519 --> 27:36.655

of the prospects for the next couple of years.

 

27:36.655 --> 27:40.959

Yeah, we are too. And I guess just on that note, a bit of

 

27:40.959 --> 27:44.929

a service announcement, if you will, for those that are watching just in the

 

27:44.929 --> 27:48.900

sense that these offering memorandum accredited investor

 

27:48.900 --> 27:52.937

vehicles, as many, I think, advisors know, they take a

 

27:52.937 --> 27:56.808

little bit more time to get approved on various dealer shelves so I would

 

27:56.808 --> 28:00.745

encourage you that if you are interested in the Fidelity

 

28:00.745 --> 28:04.449

Alternative Real Estate Trust please talk to your Fidelity sales representative

 

28:04.449 --> 28:08.453

or anyone really who works in manager research at the

 

28:08.453 --> 28:12.590

dealer. We have many resources here at Fidelity that can help with

 

28:12.590 --> 28:16.561

that process but it's a little bit

 

28:16.561 --> 28:20.198

different than punching in the ticker like you would typically do on a mutual

 

28:20.198 --> 28:22.000

fund or an ETF.

 

28:22.000 --> 28:25.837

With that said, Don, thanks so much for joining us today.

 

28:25.837 --> 28:29.774

Thanks for watching or listening to the Fidelity Connects

 

28:29.774 --> 28:33.912

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We'll end today's show with a short disclaimer.

 

29:03.441 --> 29:07.278

The views and opinions expressed on this podcast are those of the participants,

 

29:07.278 --> 29:11.216

and do not necessarily reflect those of Fidelity Investments Canada ULC or

 

29:11.216 --> 29:15.220

its affiliates. This podcast is for informational purposes only, and should not

 

29:15.220 --> 29:17.756

be construed as investment, tax, or legal advice.

 

29:17.756 --> 29:20.058

It is not an offer to sell or buy.

 

29:20.058 --> 29:24.395

Or an endorsement, recommendation, or sponsorship of any entity or securities

 

29:24.395 --> 29:29.200

cited. Read a fund's prospectus before investing, funds are not guaranteed.

 

29:29.200 --> 29:32.771

Their values change frequently, and past performance may not be repeated.

 

29:32.771 --> 29:36.608

Fees, expenses, and commissions are all associated with fund investments.

 

29:36.608 --> 29:38.910

Thanks again. We'll see you next time.

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