Working for a REIT vs REPE

I've been working at a well-known institutional RE investment manager for the last 5 years. I am looking for new roles because I want to relocate cities, most of the roles I've found are at REITs. What are the major differences between working at a REIT vs REPE shop? Is one better regarded? 

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Based on the most helpful WSO content, here are the key differences between working at a REIT and a REPE shop:

1. Work Environment and Culture

  • REITs: Tend to have a more stable, nurturing, and accommodating environment. They are often described as having a "lifer" culture, where employees stay long-term. However, departments within REITs can be siloed, meaning you might get stuck in a specific role (e.g., research or construction) without much flexibility to move into other areas like acquisitions or development.
  • REPE: The culture is generally more aggressive and ambitious, attracting individuals who thrive on high-stakes deals and liquidity events. Compensation is often tied to these events, which can lead to significant payouts but also comes with higher pressure.

2. Compensation

  • REITs: Compensation is typically steady and tied to the public nature of the company. While lucrative, it may not match the upside potential of REPE, especially during liquidity events.
  • REPE: Compensation gravitates toward liquidity events, offering the potential for big payouts. Carried interest (a share of profits) is a significant component of compensation at REPE firms, which can lead to higher long-term earnings compared to REITs.

3. Investment Style

  • REITs: Use public equity to fund acquisitions and focus on maintaining a clean balance sheet, often avoiding complex structures like VIEs (Variable Interest Entities). Underwriting is more property-level focused.
  • REPE: Invests through private pools of capital, often using leverage to achieve above-average returns. The investment style is more opportunistic, with a focus on raising and deploying capital rather than managing individual properties.

4. Career Progression

  • REITs: Offer stability and internal opportunities for ambitious individuals, but the siloed nature of departments can limit exposure to other areas of the business.
  • REPE: Provides broader exposure to deal-making and capital markets, which can be more appealing for those looking to develop a private equity skill set. However, transitioning out of REPE into other asset classes can be challenging.

5. Industry Perception

  • REITs: Generally well-regarded, especially for those seeking a stable career in real estate. However, they may not carry the same prestige as top REPE firms.
  • REPE: Often seen as more prestigious, particularly at top firms like Blackstone Real Estate. The skill set developed in REPE is highly valued, though it may be more specialized to real estate.

Which is Better Regarded?

  • It depends on your career goals. REPE is typically more prestigious and offers higher earning potential, but REITs provide stability and a more balanced lifestyle. If you're looking for a high-pressure, high-reward environment, REPE might be the better choice. If you value stability and a nurturing work culture, a REIT could be a great fit.

Ultimately, the decision should align with your personal and professional priorities, especially considering your desire to relocate.

Sources: REIT career path to REPE, REPE vs REI, Differences between CRE vs REPE, Why do so few go into Real Estate?, Ask Me Anything: REPE Investment Professional

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I wrote this in 2017

I’ll take a shot because I have experience with both public REIT and REPE, business grad school, etc.

Public REIT things you prob already know but big picture and generally speaking:

  • you’ll see more lifers in REIT generally. It can be a great lifestyle, great somewhat nurturing and accommodating environment as you are eluding to. There can be options to rotate into other departments.
  • REIT departments tend to be silo’ed so you might be stuck in say research or Construction when you want to go to acquisitions or development. Still that is most work environments in CRE, but the stability of a REIT and lifer nature could open doors internally simply because you are ambitious.
  • underwriting for REIT deals tend to be more property level and less so waterfall, unless there are SPE or VIE (special purpose entities, variable interest entities) and third party JV partners. Many REITCFO’s take Wall Street analysts too seriously and attempt to keep a clean, non-VIE balance sheet. Too bad for you the analyst. Furthermore, because capital markets fund raising is normally via secondary stock raiseds, corporate line of credits, and bonds, your network with third party capital (JV equity and Construction lenders) will not be as robust through deal flow. So you can relax a bit and not have the constant battle scars of raising capital, keeping capital happy. Your CFO and treasury teams deal with that. Too bad though if you want to take a project cradle to grave, full cycle, since REITs seldom sell core assets. They will sell shittier assets in the name of recycling their capital. My other criticism is Wall Street (probably for good reason, and also REIT restrictions) tends to discourage a development pipeline more than 15-20% of enterprise value. So, you can analyze a ton of deals but because of the development pipeline size is “too big”, REITs must be very selective. Too bad for you analyst, who wants to build their deal sheet.
  • REITs can have great systems. If you were fortunate like me to see all the workings of every group, you pick up some excellent systems building skills. Helpful for growing companies. Maybe one day your own.
  • being in your own silo and “polishing the stone” and getting really good, can be very nice. I never got to that point of “I know everything” but at some point in your life, you might want to slow down a bit. Just do your craft and then go home.
  • so you might be lulled into a feeling of comfort, good learning, and happiness. Lunch time with cool people, co-workers who are older, normal folks (none of them heard of WSO). Nothing wrong with that. I have some REIT stock from work and so far, returns are excellent (knock on wood). But be wary of regional REITs that are takeover targets. The day of reckoning when your bubble bursts is always a possibily. Odog808 has warned you. M&A cuts redundencies. Don’t need two construction teams, SEC accounting, etc.
  • so you want to work for REPE, fancy developer and people who know what WSO is. Compensation on the private side tends to gravitate to liquidity events where you can make big money. That naturally attracts more aggressive and ambitious people, but also gives you a reality perspective at how real estate companies work outside the nurturing arms of a public company with access to public markets. You will still have reporting to do regardless of REPE or REIT (although less of you are in acquisitons; then it’s investment committee memos galore).
  • so getting back to your questions. A lot of the underwriting and investment thesis, analysis are similar. Go above and beyond and model investor level returns. Try to value deals as a REIT with your cost of capital and yield priorities, but also look at how competitors would model, ie private groups that are more IRR driven. Let’s not fall into Mogillani-Miller mode and accentuate price bubbles (its human nature).
  • on your own, via ULI and other events, get to know more private folks. Once you leave your bubble, you will have to play the real world private capital markets. Try to get exposure while you are willing to learn and others are willing to teach you.
  • I would consider business grad school. It’s becoming somewhat of a requirement for the top brand name companies in real estate for associate hiring. I would get really really good at presentations, and power point for pitching capital and deals. That’s my advice. B-school should help.
  • lastly, create your own investment philosophy. If you’ve only worked in one company your whole career, congrats, someone likes you. But if you’ve worked with multiple dealmakers, you’re going to be able to look back and say “how would ____ Approach this deal?” How would that differ from another senior exec?
  • Develop your own investment philosophy and learn good judgement. Working at multiple shops and seeing the highs and lows of the economy will give you experience, perspective, Judgement. You would never have known unless you’ve been there. Which is why a real estate career is the long game. Need to love it. I never want to retire. I want to create and impact Place; preserve the past by making it compatible with the future. You can do that. Sorry for the verbal diarrhea. Writing this on phone with one hand and holding sleeping baby in other.

    https://www.wallstreetoasis.com/forum/real-estate/reit-career-path-to-repe?customgpt=1

Have compassion as well as ambition and you’ll go far in life. I am interested in digital immortality. Check out my blog at digitalimmortality.com
 

How would you weigh the REIT vs. PE tradeoffs today given the continued challenges for CRE in this cycle (higher for longer, fundraising, etc.)? Very informed response above, appreciate that. 

 

fdfdfdfd

How would you weigh the REIT vs. PE tradeoffs today given the continued challenges for CRE in this cycle (higher for longer, fundraising, etc.)? Very informed response above, appreciate that. 

Thank you!  My 2017 self and me today are somewhat different people (I’m more risk adverse and have been out of traditional CRE since 2016).  

My overall thoughts are similar for REIT vs REPE.  I think REIT consolidations have made the survivors more REPE like culturally (but I have no first hand experience, just reading on WSO about  Welltower for example, more sweaty). 

A booming stock market helps REITs more with fundraising; I think they can be a hedge against inflation.  I think REPE can be exciting looking for value investments. 

I finally got excited about a deal recently.  That’s a new feeling for me.

I think the trade offs are more or less the same today. 

Have compassion as well as ambition and you’ll go far in life. I am interested in digital immortality. Check out my blog at digitalimmortality.com
 

I disagree with pretty much everything said above. Most PE firms will silo you. You will not have experience raising capital nor will you have the time. You hours will generally suck. You can get paid just as much at a reit and not have the illiquidity of a 7-10 year fund. You can sell shares as they vest. The REITs in NY are sweatshops (SL Green). Many also do heavy value add and development. My point being - it’s all the same. If I didn’t need to read JV docs and waterfalls my life would be infinitely simpler. 

 

patrick_bateman_

How does comp compare at a REIT to REPE or sponsors?

I don’t know.  It’s been too long ago since I worked at either REIT or REPE and those were times when I was at a lower level.  They both weren’t that high paying. 

Have compassion as well as ambition and you’ll go far in life. I am interested in digital immortality. Check out my blog at digitalimmortality.com
 

reits are a good place to be today. Many of them have huge balance sheets, are lowly levered. As long term holders they are all about collecting NOI, leasing well, being experts in individua fields. Put it this way, at higher end - VP/regional market guy/SVP - it will be easier to consistently make 500-800k a year for a very long time vs private friends at these levels who may have years where they make 200,200,5MM,300,2MM etc.....way more stressful. 

 

I love the idea of REIT life because REPE’s main draw is major liquidity events and my shop is never going to cut me in on those anyways. Wish I could find a good REIT job. I like the long term slow burn better than the idea of buying value add deals and targeting unrealistic 16%/2x metrics by putting in plank floors and backsplashes.


Don’t mind me, just a bitter multifamily value add guy here….

 

Yes but titles are not directly comparable fwiw. Those VPs at major REITs may have 10-15+ yrs experience. You won't see some hot shot 28 yr old making VP. Longer path but point stands on the stability. 

 

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