Equity Investment

27
Equity Investment & The Investment Decision

Transcript of Equity Investment

Page 1: Equity Investment

Equity Investment&

The Investment Decision

Page 2: Equity Investment

Real Estate Investment Advantages

Pride in Ownership Personal control Self-use & Occupancy Estate Building Security of Capital Operating Cash Flows Leverage Tax Shelter factors Capital Appreciation & Inflation Protection

Page 3: Equity Investment

Real Estate Disadvantages

Illiquidity Required equity capital Management burden Depreciation of value Government controls Real estate cycles Legal complexity Lack of information & education

Page 4: Equity Investment

Trade-Offs:Risk/Return

Page 5: Equity Investment

Risks Legal: Zoning, public opinion,

public services, etc.

Market risks: Marketability study

Will it rent? Will it sell?

Market study: S&D, Competition

Absorption rates: How fast is space being utilized

Page 6: Equity Investment

Risks Cost risks: Interest rates Estimates poor Labor Weather

Possible Solutions: Guaranteed price contracts

Watch out for cushion

General contractors: Reputable & bonded Completion bond (Lenders may require)

Guarantees price

Cost plus contracts: Developer pays costs + fee

Page 7: Equity Investment

Return Measures Cash Flow (Net Spendable) Pro Forma:

Equity: $ 20,000.00

Loan: (DP=$10,000) $ 100,000.00

Gross Possible Income: $ 60,000.00

Less E(Vacancy): $ (9,000.00)

Gross Effective Income: $ 51,000.00

Less Operating Expenses: $ (37,000.00)

Net Operating Income: $ 14,000.00

Less Debt Service (P&I): $ (12,900.00)

Cash Flow Before Tax: $ 1,100.00

Cash on Cash= Net Spendable/Down payment =1100/10000=11%

Page 8: Equity Investment

Return Measures Rate of return on total capital: = NOI/Total Capital

= 14/120 = 11.7% Return on Equity (ROE) = CF Before Tax/Equity

= 1.1/20 = 5.5% Favorable leverage: If ROE > ROR

If unfavorable leverage: Don't buyReduce PriceTry to lower APR or increase termRaise NOI or lower expensesRestructure (ie., more equity)

Page 9: Equity Investment

Return Measures

Equity cap rate: = CF before Tax/Equity(ie., required ROE)

For example: Your desired cap rate is 14%CF before tax is $1,100Equity value = 1.1/.14 = $7,857Plus loan of $100KTherefore property value = $107,857

Risk measures: BEP & Debt Coverage Ratio

Page 10: Equity Investment

Discounted CF Analysis Income Cap Rate:

NOI/Market ValueCompare to other opportunities

Do Cash Flow Spread sheet: Ratio Analysis Sensitivity Analysis:

What if we change the value of a variable? Scenario Analysis: Worst versus Best? Monte Carlo Analysis:

Randomly assign values & check bottom line

Page 11: Equity Investment

Investment Analysis Process Strategy: Determine First!!

Return/Risk Objectives

Ownership Form

Market Analysis

Screening Criteria

Location/Property Analysis

Generate Alternatives: Those that pass screen

Use Basic Financial Feasibility Model Develop Finance Screens (APRs, CapRates, NOI)

Examine Finance Alternatives (Loans, Equity, etc)

Page 12: Equity Investment

Investment Analysis Process Negotiate Basic Terms with Seller

Price Financing Covenants Escape Clause

Do Detailed Feasibility Research Market:

Supply & Demand, Competition, Absorption, Vacancy Marketability: Property Condition Legal, Political, Environmental Management & Operations

Page 13: Equity Investment

Investment Analysis Process Structure Tax Benefits

Cost Recovery Useful Life Passive Loss Limitations

Discounted CF Analysis After-Tax CF, DCF, Adjust for Risk

Final Negotiations & Closing Management of Property Termination

Sell, merger, IPO

Page 14: Equity Investment

Control

Purchase Price & Terms Form of Ownership Financing amounts, rates, terms Tax structure & Planning Property management Property location Tenants & Lease rates & terms

Page 15: Equity Investment

Negotiation

Maximize knowledge position First! Set your initial demands far from final objective

Probe for bottom line

Raise your aspiration level/deflate your opponent's Buyer:

Start with lower price than seller wants Lukewarm attitude Point out defects Mention competitive offers

Seller: Mention other offers you have rejected Price is probably going up Negotiate most critical items first and

Page 16: Equity Investment

Negotiation (Cont) Concentrate on items that effect profits

Down payment, price, contract period

Employ conservative concession policy Don't give in or reciprocate/ No sportsmanship/ Never concede first Never accept a radical counteroffer without analysis

Use intermediaries when to your advantage With agent, more time to analyze Advisor: Openly discuss concerns

Try for better deal for both parties: Place proof burden & satisfaction on them

Prove to you that it is an attractive opportunity

Page 17: Equity Investment

Negotiation (Tactics)

Standard Practice: Terms are "standard practice"

Bogey: “I only can afford $7,500 in cash"

Good guy/Bad guy: One makes strong demands ...

Opponent is more susceptible to good guy's weaker demands

Deadline: Always use them!

Nibbling: Get additional minor concessions after

major agreement

The tie-up: Get the property off the market while you're

making decision

Page 18: Equity Investment

Property Types

Land Most Risky Low income Interest, taxes, insurance Interest deduct income only No depreciation 20-30% ROR for risk Consider

Access/Slope Zoning Public services & Utilities

Return=capital appreciation

Page 19: Equity Investment

Property Types

Residential Rental (Houses,Apts,MHs) Management Intensive Good financing Tax shelter High appreciation Know location & physical condition Check neighborhood & proximity to services Good first step for real estate Some income -- mostly capital appreciation

Page 20: Equity Investment

Property Types Office Buildings

More income/less appreciation Appreciation can be improved w/ maintenance

Needs more knowledge for leasing & Property management

Types: Downtown vs Suburban

Medium vs HiRise vs Garden (Low) Locations: Highways / Shopping Centers Better construction Low tenant turnover ratios Prestigious clients

Page 21: Equity Investment

Property Types : Shopping Centers

Most sophisticated Investment & Management Expertise Much more income than appreciation/Few Foreclosed! Owned by wealthy investors (TIAA/CREF=Mall of Amer) Types:

Neighborhood center: (Strip): Food, drugs, etc, Built around supermarket/drugstore: 50K Gross leaseable area

Community center: + Clothing, furniture, bank, prof: 150K GLA Regional center: Full-line Dept store (Anchor):

Reit & Insur=Ownership; 400K GLA Super Regional Centers: Major metro area: 2 anchors,

100-200 stores, Usually % of profits

Page 22: Equity Investment

Property Types : Industrial & Special

Industrial Warehouses, factories, indust parks Almost all income Not easily converted … increases risk Low risk overall if you have a client Near highways

Special Use Need expertise: RE + the application Risky: Be ready to substitute Loans are hard to get … banks ?? Requires time commitment

Page 23: Equity Investment

Overview

Combine land, labor, capital &

Entrepreneurial ability

Good developers can “visualize” good uses of space

Creation of space for play, living & working

LT Motive=Income, Mgt, Community/

ST Motive=Cap Gain

Redevelopment: Restoration of older structure

Development

Page 24: Equity Investment

Development

Types: Land Prep: Lots of all kinds

Sell land to other developers

Erect improvements on land

Who Develops? Part-time

Proprietorship

Corporation, etc.

Joint ventures (ie., 2 developers)

Page 25: Equity Investment

Development Process:Be ready to bail outStages may be done simultaneously

Idea: Can develop over life of project

Preliminary Feasibility: Rough cut analysis

Are computer programs: Go if profit looks good

GainControl: Ground lease(ties you up), option, seller fin

Feasibility Analysis & Design: Detailed analysis, Check site, market, legal, financial

Finance: Need cash ASAP, should have already talked

Construction: Problems: cost overruns & contractor fails

Marketing: Lease (don’t lease too early rates change)

vs Sale: When … remember trade-offs

Page 26: Equity Investment

Redevelopment: Costs are high, structures - obsolete ITCs, grants Popular trend

Trends: Mixed use development: One structure Planned unit development (PUD) New towns/Village concept: Integrated

approach: work, shop, play, live

Redevelopment & trends

Page 27: Equity Investment

Professional Help Real Estate Brokers:

Get a specialist! Has access to information Appraisers & consultants: Can do DCF Property managers:

Has rental & vacancy rates, op. expenses, etc Morgage bankers:

Arrange deals & financing alternatives Tax advisers and attorneys Others:

Comm banks, Engineers, Architects, Contractors