The geopolitical conflict that started on February 28 is said to have weighed heavily on global markets throughout March. The primary transmission mechanism to real estate is through oil prices and their effect on inflation and interest rates.
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The geopolitical conflict that drove oil prices higher, weakened the rand and reignited inflation concerns across emerging markets, saw the South African real estate investment trusts (REITs) declining by a whopping 12.3%.
This meant that in March, the REITs gave back their early-year gains. The pullback left SA REITs down 4.3% for the first quarter of 2026.
“The pullback in March was a valuation reset driven by geopolitical risk, not a deterioration in underlying fundamentals,” says Ian Anderson, the head of listed property and portfolio manager at Merchant West Investments.
“Rolling 12-month distribution growth improved to 9.43%, and 12-month total returns remain strong across much of the sector. This looks more like a period of market de-risking than a reflection of weakening company performance.”
According to the latest SA REIT Association Chart Book for March 2026, compiled by Anderson, the decline was broad-based. Only Octodec (+4.4%), Oasis Crescent (+3.8%) and Fairvest A (+2.2%) ended the month in positive territory.
Equities and bonds also came under pressure, with the All Share Index down 10.5% and the All Bond Index down 6.8%.
The geopolitical conflict that started on February 28 is said to have weighed heavily on global markets throughout March. The primary transmission mechanism to real estate is through oil prices and their effect on inflation and interest rates.
Brent crude rose above $100 a barrel for the first time since 2022, peaking at around $119.50 a barrel on March 9.
The sector’s resilience should not be underestimated despite the turbulence, says Joanne Solomon, CEO of the SA REIT Association.
“The geopolitical conflict has introduced significant short-term uncertainty for all asset classes, not just real estate investment trusts. However, our sector enters this period of volatility from a position of strength, with improving distribution growth, healthier balance sheets and a broadening investable universe.
"The fundamentals that drove the sector’s remarkable recovery over the past two years remain firmly in place.”
Globally, real estate investment trust prices declined an average of 12.5% in March, according to data from Quoted Data.
However, historical analysis suggests that geopolitical events tend to produce short-term volatility rather than lasting damage. Across 40 major geopolitical events spanning 85 years, equity markets lost an average of 0.9% in the first month but recovered to gain 3.4% over the following six months.
LaSalle Investment Management noted that real estate should remain relatively resilient given the ability of the asset class to pass through inflation into cash flows.
For South Africa, the conflict has complicated the macroeconomic outlook. The rand weakened more than 5% over the month, while economists anticipate inflation will accelerate as higher oil prices filter through to fuel costs.
The South African Reserve Bank’s rate-cutting cycle has been paused, though the duration of the conflict will ultimately determine the extent of the fallout.
Solomon adds: “South Africa is a net energy importer and rising oil prices feed directly into our inflation basket. However, what differentiates real estate investment trusts is their ability to deliver income that grows over time.
"With distribution growth approaching 10%, the sector offers a meaningful hedge against the very inflation pressures that are causing concern.”
Despite the correction in share prices, March’s company announcements are said to have painted a constructive picture of the sector’s operating performance.
Growthpoint reported half-year distributable income per share growth of 2.3% and dividend per share growth of 8.5%, with South African vacancies improving to 7.2%. Hyprop delivered distributable income growth of 12.9% and reiterated guidance for the upper end of its full-year forecast.
Vukile announced that its subsidiary Castellana will acquire a 50% stake in Barcelona’s Splau Shopping Centre for EUR 175 million, while its pre-close update showed South African net operating income up 10%, vacancies at just 1.7% and positive rental reversions of 3.5%.
Burstone launched a pan-European light industrial joint venture with Hines, seeded with six assets acquired for more than R760 million.
Among the mid-cap counters, Fairvest indicated it is tracking toward the upper end of its 9% to 11% distributable earnings guidance, while Spear reported occupancy of approximately 97%, cash collections above 99% and R1.08 billion of acquisitions completed during the period.
Texton’s interim results pointed to a cleaner, more focused platform, with South African net operating income up 4% and continued expansion in self-storage.
“The results season has been broadly constructive,” Anderson notes. “Improving vacancies, better income growth, active capital recycling, and a widening opportunity set across both larger and smaller counters confirm that the weakness in March was market-driven rather than fundamental.”
One of the most significant structural developments in March was the inclusion of Dipula, Octodec and Spear in the FTSE/JSE All Property Index and the SA REIT Index, effective March 23.
The inclusion is a meaningful milestone for all three association members. “It reflects the growing depth of South Africa’s real estate investment trust universe.
In addition, it creates a more representative benchmark for investors across strategies, including index-tracking and specialist REIT funds,” says Solomon.
“Index inclusion generally improves visibility, strengthens institutional relevance and can support additional demand from benchmark-aware investors. It is a meaningful sign that the SA REIT market is deepening beyond its traditional large-cap core,” Anderson adds.
Looking ahead, the trajectory of the geopolitical conflict remains the key variable for near-term market sentiment. The duration of hostilities and whether the energy price increase passes through into core inflation will largely determine the pace of recovery.
Should the geopolitical conflict move toward a real resolution, normalising oil prices and renewed confidence in the interest rate outlook could provide meaningful upside for real estate investment trust valuations across both local and global markets.
“The next phase of returns is likely to be driven more by execution than by multiple expansion,” Anderson says.
“Funds with resilient retail and logistics exposure, disciplined leverage, and credible capital allocation are well-positioned. Distribution growth is improving, operating metrics are trending in the right direction, and lower finance costs should continue to support earnings.
"March was a reminder that sentiment can shift quickly, but the investment case for SA REITs over the medium term remains compelling.”
Recently, Maphefo Sipula, the head of research and impact at Property Point, told "Independent Media Property" that the recent South African Reserve Bank(SARB) decision to keep interest rates unchanged provided some stability, especially in listed property and REITs, but does little to materially shift return expectations in the short term.
She said the hold on capital allocation decisions will likely remain cautious until there is clearer evidence of an easing cycle. “At a broader level, the property sector remains in a constrained but stabilising phase, where downside risks are moderating, but a strong recovery is still dependent on lower interest rates and improved economic growth.”
Independent Media Property
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