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Commercial short sale opportunities are being presented to investors all around the country. The pressure on business from the high residential foreclosure rates and mortgage woes have put weaker business properties into distressed situations.

Properties that are mis-managed or suffering from previous poor decisions in better times are missing their mortgage payments and approaching foreclosure.

Far from an indication that they are not good properties for investment, it’s related more often to management or expenditures made in better times that are now coming back to haunt their owners.

Basic Short Sale Concepts

Commercial short sales are similar in the basics to residential short sale situations. The owner of an income-producing commercial property is having trouble making their mortgage payments, and the lender is threatening further action.

It isn’t a foreclosure yet, and a buyer may create a great purchase opportunity by stepping in and relieving the bank or lender of the costs and hassles of foreclosure.

A buyer in a residential short sale provides the lender with comparable sale data, current comparable property listings, and other data to support an offer significantly lower than the current mortgage balance.

The homeowner/borrower helps by providing documentation of their distressed financial status and eminent foreclosure or bankruptcy. The goal is to get a deep discount deal from a bank or lender wanting to avoid the foreclosure process.

Commercial Short Sale Specifics

In commercial rental properties, whether office complexes, shopping malls, or other property types, the cash flow is the primary valuation factor and lending decision component. It could be assumed that the property wouldn’t be in a short sale position if the cash flow was as it should be.

This could be the case, but it needn’t be because of factors outside the owners’ control. Poor management or decisions on major expenditures could create drains on otherwise good rental income flows.

There is also the strong possibility that the property in mortgage trouble has been subsidizing other losing investments of the owners. As these other property situations deteriorate, an otherwise very desirable property is unable to stay afloat because its cash flow is being drained to fund other poorly performing investments.

When an investor can uncover an opportunity like this and negotiate a successful short sale with the lender, an excellent investment is the result.

Commercial short sale opportunities do require a high level of due diligence, but it can be very well worth it.

I’ll share more with you soon…

Warm Regards,

Karen Hanover, CCIM Candidate
Apartment Education Institute, President



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One of the reasons that apartment & multifamily investing is available to a great many real estate investors is that cash flow is the primary consideration in loaning money on a purchase.

It isn’t about the credit score of the buyer, and it’s less about the standard residential concept of “loan-to-value.” Though appraised value is important, cash flow is critical. There are two ways in which lenders look at the cash flow.

These ratios indicate the ability of the property to generate enough cash to pay the monthly mortgage, as well as leave a profit for ownership.

Cash Flow Analysis, Stability and Future Risk

First, it’s very important to get the income and expense numbers “right.” Are all of the rents at market rates? If some tenants have been given special deals, or just generally the rents are all below market, then income could be better if rents are increased at expiration of leases.

Expenses should be appropriate, reflecting efficient management, reasonable repair costs, good turnover rehab practices, and no “sweetheart deals.”

Any expense categories that are out of line should be addressed, or a plan put in place to deal with them after purchase. When approaching a lender for an apartment or multifamily mortgage, documentation of the ability to raise rents and/or cut expenses quickly could result in a better mortgage deal, as cash flows can be expected to improve.

The next consideration is the expected stability of rents and cash flow into the future. Lenders hate risk, so a marketing plan, budgets, and projections of future vacancy and credit losses is critical. Once the current and projected cash flow is determined, two common ratios can be applied to see how lenders will look at the property for a mortgage.

DSCR – Debt Service Coverage Ratio

This ratio takes the net income from operations, or cash flow, and compares it to the expected mortgage payment. Most lenders want to see a ratio of at least 1.25-to-1 of cash flow over the mortgage payment. In other words, if the mortgage payment is to be $8000/month, then cash flow should be at least $10,000/month to yield this 1.25 DSCR.

Break-even Ratio

Here, the lender takes the annual operating expenses, adds the annual debt payments, and divides the total by the Gross Operating Income (GOI). What they’re going is seeing at what point the income overtakes the expenses, or the break-even. If the annual expenses are $35,000, and the debt payments total $72,000/year, a GOI, gross operating income of $150,000 would look like this:

($35,000 + $72,000) / $150,000 = 0.71, or 71%, the Break-even Ratio

Generally, lenders want a Break-even ratio lower than 80%.

I’ll share more with you soon…

Warm Regards,

Karen Hanover, CCIM Candidate
Apartment Education Institute, President



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