Insights
The Intersection of Virtual and Reality: Real Assets Benefit from Advancements in Artificial Intelligence
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Insight Article
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August 02, 2023
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August 02, 2023
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The Intersection of Virtual and Reality: Real Assets Benefit from Advancements in Artificial Intelligence |
Data centers have benefitted significantly over the past two decades given the exponential growth in data, which has been supercharged by cloud computing and workloads being shifted into the cloud.
ENTERPRISES: Enterprise data centers are facilities that are typically owned or leased by a single company that can be housed on-premise of a corporate building.
COLOCATION COMPANIES: Colocation providers lease space to multiple tenants within a single data center asset that typically includes network capacity, power, cooling, and backup redundancy, while tenants will bring their own server equipment. Colocation data centers are highly interconnected with telecommunications, cloud computing providers, and other service providers.
HYPERSCALERS: Hyperscalers operate massive-scale data centers that provide cloud service infrastructure including storage and compute.
More recently, we're seeing the infancy of demand drivers stemming from the more widespread adoption of and advancements in technology surrounding artificial intelligence ("AI"). Notably, this is a new wave of demand for data centers. Simplistically, AI requires more intense computing, and a more intense server with higher power requirements. Traditional data centers are filled with Central Processing Units ("CPUs"), but given compute and processing requirements of AI, Graphics Processing Units ("GPUs") are needed. GPUs allow for parallel processing and computing, and run thousands of jobs simultaneously. This intensity necessitates a higher power draw—so the power density of data centers housing artificial intelligence and GPUs will need upwards of 2x more power density than a traditional data center, with some estimates indicating 4x more power will be required!
These changes will not only require more power sourced from local utilities, but also slight modifications to the internal infrastructure of the data center as it relates to cooling the facility to enable optimal performance. All of this means new data center development is needed. Given the specialized nature of data center development and operations, and the unique challenges the broader adoption of AI may present with regard to power accessibility and data center design, we believe long tenured platforms and companies with expertise in data center design, evolution and construction are best suited to tackle the opportunity.
The AI data center will not be a substitute for the traditional CPU based data center, and instead will likely be incremental and additive. Traditional workloads will continue to grow, alongside growth in workloads related to AI, the Internet of Things, virtual reality, and autonomous driving. While this demand won’t manifest itself overnight, it will fuel robust growth over the next decade. Ultimately, data centers will become increasingly valuable and in-demand.
Within the U.S. listed REIT market, Digital Realty Trust (DLR) and Equinix (EQIX) are examples of how we can gain exposure to preeminent owners and operators of long tenured data center platforms who possess expertise in data center design, evolution and construction.
As shown in Display 2, U.S. data center REITs have experienced dramatic growth in terms of weight and market capitalization within the FTSE Nareit All Equity REITs Index and we expect this growth to continue. This growth has taken place alongside significant M&A activity as shown in Display 3, as the data center space has consolidated with four publicly traded data center REITs taken private or the subject of public to public REIT mergers since 2017.
While U.S. Data Center REITs have performed well as shown in Display 4, current valuations remain compelling (see Display 5) in light of forecasted growth.
Conclusion
The sectoral composition and differentiation among different REIT sectors is very important when thinking about and analyzing the underlying risk/reward profile and performance of real estate securities, and helps create opportunities for active managers within listed real estate investing. We believe data center REITs provide a compelling investment opportunity for investors not only over the short term, but potentially for the next decade, as the sector is likely to benefit from the strongest long-term secular growth drivers within the REIT universe. At Morgan Stanley Investment Management, we seek to take advantage of secular trends, such as those benefitting data centers, in addition to cyclical trends, as we ultimately seek to identify the real estate securities with the best forward total returns.
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Head of Global Listed Real Assets
Global Listed Real Assets Team
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