Real Estate Investment Trusts (REITs)
A REIT is similar to a closed-end fund.
REITs invest in real estate or loans secured by real estate. Besides issuing shares, they raise
capital by borrowing from banks and issuing bonds or mortgages. Most of them are highly
leveraged, with a typical debt ratio of 70%.
There are two principal kinds of REITs. Equity trusts invest in real estate directly,
whereas mortgage trusts invest primarily in mortgage and construction loans. REITs gen-
erally are established by banks, insurance companies, or mortgage companies, which then
serve as investment managers to earn a fee.
1
Jeffrey Pontiff, “Costly Arbitrage: Evidence from Closed-End Funds,” Quarterly Journal of Economics 111
(November 1996), pp. 1135–51.
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