Commercial Real Estate’s Status, $10MM is the New $100M, Part 2


In continuing our discussion from Commercial Real Estate’s Status, $10MM is the New $100M, Part 1:

Regarding Institutional Investors

  • Most of them were out of the market for the past 3-4 years because there was an excessive amount of capital in play, driving terms below what was considered reasonable.
  • There were only willing to consider Credit Tenant transactions – true Investment Grade Tenants, signed to a lease of 15 years or greater, on an Absolute Net basis, with pricing based on the spreads displayed in the corporate bond market.
  • While corporate credit is key, real estate fundamentals must be present:  Market rents, market pricing for $/sf of building, etc.  Mentioned that they were very inactive and stressed that credit is everything in their underwriting.
  • There is a large amount of uncertainty over the implied pricing of a large transaction in today’s market, thus funding a deal over $50MM requires an “act of god.

Comments on the Private Market

  • An investor’s decision-making process focuses on underwriting real estate as the primary driver, including an understanding of market rental rates, reasonable building and land costs, and reasonable re-tenanting for alternative use.
  • The large premium for purchasing a real estate asset that includes an income stream has been largely eroded.
  • The days of purchasing retail bank branches paying $80/sf in rent when market is $20/sf are over.
  • Private market players generally have a depository relationship with a local lender that is still providing relatively aggressive loan terms, although it is full recourse.

What are the New Realities of Debt Financing?

  • The Commercial Mortgage Backed Securities (CMBS) market is flawed.
  • The world as a whole is over-leveraged
  • A borrower will have to pay a significant premium over an “A” product to get non-recourse.
  • Current rates vary between 5% to mid 6% for recourse money but some lenders will do non-recourse at low leverage at roughly 7%+.
  • If the CMBS market comes back, the syndicating bank will have to remain in the deal  potentially holding as much as 20-30% of the paper.
  • As an alternative to the CMBS market, lenders and capital sources are actively working on a solution but it will take some time to form a new and proven product.

What Deal Criteria Would Financial Institutions Presently Pursue?

  • A $60MM deal for an “A” rated tenant will require 4 separate lenders to fund the transaction.
  • A True Credit Tenant Lease deal on a Sale-Leaseback or Build-to-Suit terms.
  • The building would need a true Credit Tenant, with 15+ year NNN lease through either a Build-to-suit or Sale-leaseback transaction.
  • Alternatively, a strong credit-tenant with strong real estate fundamentals on a basic 70% LTV transaction.

Part 3 will cover  Net Leases, Medical Office, underwriting credit, tenant retention strategies, and will summarize the status of the commercial real estate.  Stay tuned!

Please remember to leave a comment!

WANT TO USE THIS ARTICLE IN YOUR E-ZINE OR WEB SITE?  You can, as long as you include this complete statement with it: ‘ “The Investment Property Insider” is published by Craig S. Higdon, a veteran commercial mortgage banker. He publishes the e-zine and blog, www.InvestmentPropertyInsider.com, for commercial real estate investors, developers, and industry professionals. Visit the blog and get this free report: “The 7 Biggest Loan Mistakes Real Estate Investors Make And How To Avoid Them.” ’

Craig Higdon, “The Insider”

www.ExcelsionMortgage.com, www.InvestmentPropertyInsider.com, www.CommercialLoanCoach.com

Craig Higdon has over 16 years experience in financing commercial loans, small business loans, construction loans, and land loans.  He owns Excelsion Mortgage, a commercial mortgage direct lender offering a wide range of commercial lending resources to investors and commercial real estate service providers.

The © Copyright to all audio, video, images, and text are held by Craig S. Higdon and licensed under a Creative Commons License

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