Thursday, June 20, 2013

Just Sayin'

Day-to-day market moves are unpredictable, but Cole Real Estate Investments couldn't have picked a worse day to list its shares.  Today, the Dow, S&P 500 and NASDAQ were each off more than 2.0%, and the yield on the ten-year Treasury jumped eleven basis points.

Update:  Here is a Bloomberg article on COLE's listing.

Update UpdateHere is a video of COLE CEO Marc Nemer on CNBC's Squawk Box

7 comments:

Anonymous said...

Chris Cole should call Nick and ask him if that offer is still good. Shareholders in this REIT got screwed. Also, Marc Nemer shouldn't brag too much about contractual rent increases. The average contractual rent growth of the portfolio is nil thanks to all the flat leases they buy from the likes of Walgreens and CVS. These guys are a bunch of smarmy, arrogant you-know-whats out to screw the naive retail investor.

Rational Realist said...

Thanks for the comment. I don't believe Cole is out to screw investors, and naive retail investors should not be in a non-traded product. Interesting point on the rent growth.

Anonymous said...

I sure the press release from "Dewey,Cheatum and Howe" will be out any minute.

Anonymous said...

Anyone judging off of one day (especially in a sell-off) should not be trading in any sector. If this is the price in a month, these comments are warranted.

Rational Realist said...

Anon 3, that was the point of the post, one day trading is just noise, just a bad day to start trading.

Anonymous said...

I hope now that these guys are public someone will start taking Nemer's comments to task. That "someone" being equity analysts who cover this stock. To go on CNBC and claim their balance sheet is insulated from higher interest rates because of contractual rent bumps in the portfolio is AT BEST disingenuous. Anyone with half a brain knows that, for years, retailers have been cramming down disadvantageous lease terms on yield hungry investors. Many of the tenants in Cole's portfolio have leases flatter than a pancake, including the option periods. Those tenants that agreed to rental increases in their leases did so for a reasons that should be obvious to all...their balance sheets are weak and/or the real estate is weak. A net lease portfolio with a "flattish" NOI profile like Cole's will not perform well in a rising rate environment.

Anonymous said...

Coming up on 1 month. Not very impressive.