Cell Phone Towers Log Solid Returns as an Alternative Real Estate Investment

 

After three months of bidding, the Federal Communications Commission’s sale of wireless licenses has fetched more than $69.8 billion. By comparison, in 2015 by an earlier sale of midrange cellular licenses hit $44.9 billion. These cellular companies are now investing billions of dollars in the next wave of fifth-generation coverage, which should speed the flow of data to phones and other wireless devices.

NAI Global Wireless says the bids “have blown past Wall Street’s highest forecasts, suggesting that several companies are fighting over the most valuable wireless rights.” For commercial real estate owners, this frenzy for 5G rights is an opportunity as commercial properties are a natural venue for the placement of towers and other forms of communication infrastructure. 

To learn more about how NAI can help you make money off your land through a wireless lease, reach out and let us know!


While the core commercial real estate sectors including industrial and multifamily have garnered the attention of many investors, smaller asset types, such as, cell phone towers have flown under the radar screen despite logging a solid track record in their own right. Fewer real estate investors play in this space, but sellers of cell phone towers and antenna arrays still have no shortage of buyers for these assets.

“They may just have five entities lining up to buy rather than 10,” says Jason Lund, leader of technology infrastructure for JLL, working in the firm’s office in Charlotte, N.C. “There is still a lot of investor money chasing too few assets.”

The long list of potential buyers ranges from infrastructure REITs to private equity funds to telecommunications companies themselves.

Committed investors have built up strong relationships pools of dedicated capital to create portfolios. “Fluctuations in U.S. and global lending rates won’t necessarily affect a wide swath of telecommunications and infrastructure investors,” says Lund.

REITs focused on cell phone towers controlled nearly 75 percent of the wireless communication infrastructure in the U.S. in the third quarter of 2022, according to data from Hoya Capital. American Tower owned 35 percent, Crown Castle 30 percent and SBA 10 percent. Private investors and others owned just 22 percent of these assets.

These infrastructure REITs spent more than $557 million to buy assets in the first half of 2022, according to the Nareit. That’s a fraction of the huge total of more than $10.2 billion purchased in the first half of 2021, including many portfolio deals. But the investment in the first half of 2022 was still about twice the volume of deals in the same period of 2019 and 2020.

The four infrastructure REITs had total returns down 27.19 percent through September—performance inline with the REIT sector as whole. In 2021, infrastructure REITs posted total returns of 34.41 percent.

Private buyers including infrastructure private equity funds also continue to bid for assets.

“Investors see the benefit of towers as representing a cornerstone of a private market portfolios,” says Noi Spyratos, managing director and head of private infrastructure portfolio management for CBRE Investment Management.

It helps that the three largest telecommunications companies that use cell phone antennas – Verizon, T-Mobile and AT&T—are still growing their 5G networks. In addition, additional companies like Dish and Google are building out new telecommunications networks.

“The telecommunications and technology ecosystems are still in a growth cycle,” says Lund. “Demand for cell phone towers and antenna arrays is as strong as it was a year ago from the buyer’s side—with so few assets available, perceived pricing is still relatively stable.”

As higher interest rates and growing investment yields spread through the world economy, fewer new investors feel the need to break into a complicated niche business to earn a little extra investment yield.

“The kind of investors that might leave the infrastructure markets are ones that have capital that was not raised specifically for investment in this type of product,” says Lund.

Enough committed investors still bid on the limited number of assets and portfolios available to buy to support high prices. Cap rates are still close to lows reached early in 2022, averaging around 5 percent according to dealmakers, though individual deals vary widely.

“We expect cap rates on towers to remain relatively well-insulated in the long-term due to asset scarcity,” says Spyratos. “We believe there will continue to be strong investor appetite for the long-term, stable and protected cashflows.”

Infrastructure Investors Build Relationships to Build Portfolios

Deals to buy these infrastructure assets tend to negotiated directly between buyers and sellers. “Large, third-party facilitators don’t exist,” says Lund. “Without facilitation the market tends to be very opaque and difficult to enter.”

Some investors have negotiated longstanding relationships with both landowners and antenna operators. For example, CBRE Investment Management has created a partnership with CitySwitch, a developer and operator of built-to-suit cell phone towers, and CSX Transportation, Inc., a railroad company and a landowner with sites across the country.

Over the last four years, CitySwitch has built and leased over 200 new cell phone towers and is actively developing a pipeline of another 300—including many along the CSX right of ways. These projects provide consistent opportunities to invest for CBRE Investment Management, a global real assets investment management firm with $146.9 billion in assets under management as of June 30, 2022.

“The challenge for investors now is to find the right team with a strong track record, an established operating portfolio and an attractive pipeline to execute over time and grow to scale,” says CBRE’s Spyratos.

Original article posted HERE.


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