Posts belonging to Category Nontraded REITs



Nontraded REITs Leave Investors with Big Losses

 

Nontraded REITs are both illiquid and unsafe. Investors are encouraged to be extremely wary of these investments. Recent developments have shown that nontraded REITs haven’t performed as represented.

Research Firm: ‘Avoid Nontraded REITs’

 

Green Street Advisors ? the “industry leader in REITs research” ?recommends against investing in nontraded REITs. Investors who want exposure to the real estate market would be better off investing in publicly traded REITs, according to a report issued by the firm. (“Nontraded REITs should be a nonstarter for clients: Green Street,” InvestmentNews).

KBS REIT I Wreaks Havoc on Retirees and Other Investors

 

Much to their dismay, investors in KBS Real Estate Investment Trust I (“KBS REIT I”) recently learned that shares which they purchased for $10 per share now have an “estimated” value of only $5.16. In his March 26, 2012 letter to shareholders, chief executive Charles Schreiber, Jr. also told them that they would no longer […]

Another Non-Traded REIT Collapses

 

Investors in the Cornerstone Core Properties REIT Inc. were recently told by the company that the shares, once valued at $8, are now worth $2.25 (see article in InvestmentNews by Bruce Kelly). The article references a letter from the REIT’s chairman and chief executive Terry Roussel, as saying “The estimated per-share value has been adversely […]

Chasing Higher Yields Involves Taking Greater Risk

 

The prospect of several more years of extremely low interest rates is causing people who depend on interest income to accept Wall Street’s recommendations to purchase relatively illiquid and opaque alternative investments like structured products, non-traded REITs, hedge funds and variable annuities. (“Itchy Investors Ramp Up the Risk,” Wall Street Journal). Regulators worry that the […]

Wall Street Compensation Systems are the Roots of Many Evils

 

Could Wall Street’s role in creating the recent financial crisis boil down to something as simple as a conditioned reflex? Apparently so, according to William D. Cohan, a former investment banker. Cohen writes: Wall Street “rewards bankers and traders for the revenue they generate by constantly selling whatever comes across their desks, regardless of its […]

Junk Bonds – Higher Yield/Higher Risk

 

There has been a marked uptick in purchases of high-yield or junk bonds by retail investors. Junk bonds pay a higher interest rate to compensate investors for the increased risks of default, among other risks. So far this year, retail investors are have put $11.8 billion into junk bond mutual funds, $9.9 billion into investment […]

Securities Regulators Set High Standards for Firms Selling Complex Investments

 

The Financial Industry Regulatory Authority has issued a Regulatory Notice (12-03, Jan. 2012) to “remind” its member firms of their sales practice obligations with regard to complex products, and to provide them “guidance” in exercising heightened scrutiny and supervision over marketing and sales of complex products. Complex products are not defined in the Notice, but […]

Securities Regulator Alerts the Public About Dangerous Investments and Investment Strategies

 

The Financial Industry Regulatory Authority (FINRA) recently issued a report outlining is its regulatory and examination priorities for 2012. The securities industry regulator is focusing on conduct and products meant to beat the market that are unsuitable investments for many investors.

Most Financial Advisers Don’t Understand Alternative Investments According To John Hancock Survey

 

Given the array of exotic alternative investments being sold to the public, it’s logical that many investors often don’t understand what they are buying. What is even scarier is that it is likely their professional investment adviser doesn’t understand the alternative investment either. Investment advisers ? 75 percent of them ? admit they do not […]