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Real Estate 101

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Real Estate 101. Introduction to Basic Real Estate Terms and Concepts. Summary of Topics ... (think insurance: life, auto, flood, health, etc. law of large numbers) ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Real Estate 101


1
Real Estate 101
  • Introduction to Basic Real Estate Terms and
    Concepts

2
Summary of Topics
  • What is real estate value?
  • Property Types
  • Real Estate Terminology
  • Basic Legal Topics
  • Basic Finance, Investment Terms and Concepts

3
Summary of Topics (Contd)
  • Development Outline
  • Major Players/Sources of Capital
  • Size of Domestic Real Estate Markets
  • Career Opportunities

4
What is Real Estate Value?
  • Present Value of Cash Flows
  • Capital Structure Decisions
  • Definition of Market Value
  • Market Value vs. Price vs. Cost

5
Property Types
  • Office
  • Industrial
  • Retail
  • Multifamily
  • Hospitality
  • Institutional
  • Mixed use
  • Single Family

6
Real Estate Terminology - Leasing
  • In-Place vs. Market Rents
  • Expense structures
  • Triple Net (NNN)
  • Expense Stops
  • Full Service
  • Vacancy
  • Absorption
  • Sublease Space
  • Phantom Space

7
Leasing Terminology (Contd)
  • Tenant Improvements (TI allowance)
  • Leasing Commissions
  • Both in-house and external brokerage fees
  • Concessions
  • Free rent, excess TI over the building standard
    allowance moving expenses, etc.
  • Calculation of effective rent straight line,
    PV equivalent of the rental stream over the term
    of the lease

8
Per Unit Terminology
  • Real estate is measured, costed, and leased on a
    per unit basis
  • Construction cost per square foot
  • Land price per square foot of building area
  • Leases are quoted per unit as well
  • Unit definition depends on the property type
  • Retail, office, industrial per square root
  • Multifamily per apartment
  • Hospitality per key (ie, per room)

9
Office Terminology
  • Gross, rentable and usable area
  • Floor to ceiling heights
  • Floor Area Ratio FAR
  • Skin external curtain wall/façade materials
  • Property types
  • Low, mid and high rise CBD vs. suburban
  • Build to suit
  • Office leases quoted annually, all structures
    depending upon market convention
  • Parking ratio zoned as spaces per 1,000 sq.ft. of
    space

10
Industrial Terminology
  • Gross, rentable and useable area
  • Clear Height
  • Dock doors
  • Types
  • Warehouse/distribution, flex/RD, hybrid
  • Industrial leases quoted both monthly and
    annually, NNN

11
Terminology - Retail
  • Types of Shopping Centers
  • Strip, neighborhood, grocery-anchored, power
    centers, regional and super regional malls
  • Common Area Maintenance Charges
  • 1, 3, and 5 mile trade areas
  • Anchor Tenants
  • Anchors are the draw for the center
  • In-line Tenants
  • In line tenants subsidize the anchors
  • Leases quoted annually, hybrid with CAM
    charges

12
Terminology - Multifamily
  • Type
  • Garden, midrise, highrise
  • Condominium, coop
  • Base rent plus additional tenant charges
  • Repositioning
  • Unit Turnover

13
Hospitality Operating Business Using Real Estate
  • ADR
  • REVPAR
  • Departmental Profitability
  • Gross Operating Profit
  • Flagged vs. Independent
  • Type
  • Limited service, full service, luxury, resort
  • Other subsets exist as well

14
Basic Legal Concepts
  • Ownership Control over bundle of rights
  • Transfers of Ownership
  • Types of Legal Interests
  • Possessory vs. Non-Possessory
  • Fee Simple
  • Leasehold
  • Easements

15
Basic Legal Concepts (Contd)
  • Title
  • Purchase and Sale Agreements
  • Escrow
  • Go Firm
  • Closing
  • Types of deeds, importance of recording
  • Mortgages
  • Promissory Notes

16
Legal (Contd)
  • Deeds of Trust
  • 1st Lien Secured vs. Unsecured
  • Guarantees
  • Defaults Monetary vs. Technical
  • Foreclosures
  • Deed in Lieu
  • Deficiency Judgment

17
Finance and Investment TermsThe Operating
Statement
  • Revenue
  • Actual vs Gross Potential
  • Vacancy Allowance
  • Gross Effective Income
  • Operating Expenses
  • Replacement Reserves
  • Net Operating Income
  • Debt Service
  • Capital Expenditures
  • TI, Commissions, and other Capex
  • Before Tax Net Cash Flow to Equity

18
Finance and Investment Terms Debt Financing
  • Loan to Value (LTV)
  • DCR
  • Spread
  • Interest Rate
  • Amortization vs. Maturity
  • Discount Points
  • Prepayment Points
  • Types of Debt
  • Private vs. Public Debt Markets CMBS
  • Private vs. Public Equity Markets - REITs

19
Finance and Investment Terms Return Analysis
Three Critical Components
  • Initial Investment Amount
  • Cash Flow pro forma over the holding period
  • Exit or Terminal Value

20
Finance and Investment Terms Return Analysis
(Contd)
  • Leveraged vs. Unleveraged Returns
  • Yields
  • going-in yield
  • free and clear yield
  • cash on cash yield
  • in place vs. stabilized yield
  • Capitalization Rates
  • WACC
  • Real rate risk, inflation, and recapture
    premiums
  • Discount Rates

21
Finance and Investment TermsIRR
  • Use DCF analysis to calculate internal rate of
    return
  • Return to investment over a holding period
  • Also, use DCF to conduct sensitivity analysis
  • Test level of risk in your pro forma assumptions
  • Partitioning the IRR
  • How much of your return comes from cash flow
    versus residual value?
  • Helps assess the risk in achieving the IRR or,
    is your IRR requirement a good match with the
    level of risk in the property?

22
Finance and Investment TermsAssumptions
  • General Economic Conditions
  • Rental Rate Growth
  • Occupancy
  • Exit Cap Rates
  • Loan Underwriting Parameters
  • LTV and DCR ratio tests
  • Year of Exit

23
Finance and Investment TermsDeal Structure
  • Use of Tax Efficient Forms of Ownership
  • Partnerships
  • LLCs
  • Syndications
  • REITS and UPREITS
  • Preferred Returns
  • Promotes

24
Finance and Investment TermsAnalysis of Tax
Benefits
  • Interest Expense Deductibility
  • Depreciation
  • Loss Carryforwards
  • Must demonstrate substantial economic effect to
    use tax deductions

25
Development Issues
  • Supply and demand constraints
  • Urban economic analysis
  • Understanding when the market is ripe for new
    development
  • Understanding what the tenants want - and will
    pay for - is critical
  • Lag times for bringing property to completion
  • Zoning and Entitlements
  • Financing Issues and capital market constraints
  • Renovation and Repositioning

26
Major Equity Players and Capital Sources
  • Pension Funds
  • Direct Investments
  • Core Funds
  • Opportunity Funds
  • Separate Account Allocations
  • Advisors
  • Equity REITS
  • Life Companies
  • Foreign Investors
  • Individuals, Syndications and Partnerships

27
Major Player/Capital Sources Equity
28
Major Player/Capital SourcesDebt
29
Growth of MBS Market
30
Creation of MBS Fannie Mae MBS Creation
31
Mortgage Pass Through from Pooled Investment
Characteristics
  • Cash Flows
  • Interest
  • Principal
  • Unscheduled principal (PREPAYMENT)
  • Risks
  • Basic FI (bond) risk time value, reinvestment
  • Mitigate default and payment timing risk through
    pool insurance issued by Ginnie, Fannie, and
    Freddie
  • Prepayment easier to predict prepayment across
    a pool
  • (think insurance life, auto, flood, health, etc.
    law of large numbers)
  • Additionally, pooled creature now divisible
    into MBS securities

32
Mortgage Pass Through Securities Benefits
created
  • Default and payment timing risk (receiving both
    PI timely) mitigated by pool insurance supplied
    by Ginnie, Fannie, Freddie
  • Prepayment risk still exists (total prepayment
    risk unchanged) but becomes easier to predict
    across the entire pool
  • Adds liquidity to the investment through creation
    of small pieces
  • This is different from adding liquidity to
    primary mortgage market that weve been talking
    about

33
Ginnie Mae (GNMA)
  • Oldest started making MBS in 1970
  • Ginnie pools contain only government insured
    mortgages (primarily FHA and VA)
  • Ginnie pass-through securities are fully
    modified
  • Fully modified means security holder will receive
    full and timely payment of PI regardless of
    payment pattern on underlying mortgage
  • 2002 single family conforming limit up to
    300,700 from 203,000
  • Increased to match Fannie and Freddie

34
Fannie Mae (FNMA) General
  • Quasi-private
  • Not a government department or entity
  • Guarantee does not carry full faith and credit
    of U.S. Government
  • Freddie has ability to request emergency
    funding from the U.S. Treasury
  • Like Ginnie, Fannie guarantees timely payment of
    PI fro all securities it issues
  • Unlike Ginnie, Fannie securitizes conventional
    mortgages (mortgages that do not have government
    insurance) and seasoned (older) FHA/VA mortgages
  • On the web at fanniemae.com

35
Freddie Mac (FHLMC) General
  • Very similar to Fannie
  • Created to securitize conventional mortgages and
    seasoned non-conventionals
  • Wide variety of pool types
  • Bi-weekly mortgages
  • High LTV mortgages
  • On the web at freddiemac.com

36
Fannie Freddie loan limits Definition of
Conforming Loans
37
Private MBS issues NOT Ginnie, Fannie or
Freddie
  • Private MBS issues account for about 11 of total
    market
  • Private MBS market primarily for non-conforming
    loans, i.e., loans that Fannie, Freddie or Ginnie
    cannot accept
  • Jumbos (greater than 300,700 (2002))
  • No-docs or limited doc

38
MBS Pass-Through Wrap-up
  • Concept MBS pass-through is an ownership share
    of an underlying mortgage pool where each
    security receives a pro-rata share of both the
    PI paid by the underlying mortgages
  • Are there any questions on this?
  • Particulars modeling the cash flow is
    essentially modeling N mortgages with the
    prepayment option explicitly included in the cash
    flows
  • Are there any questions on the MBS cash flow
    spreadsheet everyone now has?

39
Problems with MBS Pass-Throughs
  • Unknown maturity
  • Difficult to hedge, difficult to include in a
    traditional FI portfolio
  • Negative Convexity
  • Convexity (as you know) is the curvature in the
    price/yield relationship for a FI instrument
  • Convexity means that a drop in rates leads to a
    more than linear increase in price, and an
    increase in rates leads to a less than linear
    decrease in price convexity is a good thing
  • Negative convexity is not a good thing for a FI
    instrument
  • Rate declines lead to PP and reinvestment
    problems, market knows this and value suffers on
    rate declines
  • Rate increases dont lead to PP, but they then
    hurt the FI component (fixed future cash flows)
  • Both problems stem mainly from prepayment

40
Source of MBS problems
  • Primarily Prepayment
  • Related issue is the fact that every pass-through
    share gets both principal and interest
  • Early prepayment
  • good thing in terms of getting money back sooner
    (good in terms of principal),
  • bad in that interest flow stops (bad in terms of
    interest)
  • Late prepayment
  • bad because you wait longer for money to return
    (bad in terms of principal)
  • good in that interest flow continues longer (good
    in terms of interest)

41
Financial Innovation in the MBS MarketLecture Map
  • IOs and POs (basic strips)
  • Break apart the payment stream into interest and
    principal increase predictability of price
    reaction to rate changes
  • CMOs
  • Increase maturity certainty (tranche creation)
  • Parcel out or concentrate prepayment risk and
    interest rate risk
  • Freddie Mac Multiclass Certificates, Series 2468

42
OAS Calculating PV for a Path
43
What is a REIT?
  • Owns, and in most cases operates,
    income-producing property (Equity REITs)
  • Office
  • Apartment
  • Retail (shopping centers)
  • Hotels
  • Warehouses (storage)
  • Some REITs also finance real estate (Mortgage
    REITs)
  • REIT shares trade on major exchanges
  • Debt (bonds) are also publicly traded

44
Where did REITs come from?
  • Created in 1960 (act of Congress) as a way to
    make property investment available to individual
    investors
  • Offer expert management and familiar corporate
    governance structures (BOD)
  • REIT trivia original REIT act was an amendment
    to an Act regarding excise taxes on cigars
  • REITs make equity interest in commercial
    property
  • Divisible into shares that can be purchased by
    small investors
  • LIQUID the shares trade on major exchanges

45
How Many REITs are there?
  • About 300, 2/3 of which are publicly traded
  • 149 on NYSE
  • 27 on American
  • 12 on NASDAQ
  • Total REIT assets 300 billion

46
Types of REITs
  • Equity REITs
  • Own and operate income-producing real estate
  • Perform leasing, development, and construction
    activities
  • 151 publicly traded equity REITs
  • Mortgage REITs
  • Hold mortgages on real property
  • Make mortgages (lend money), usually on existing
    property
  • Buy mortgages
  • 22 publicly traded mortgage REITs
  • Hybrid REITs
  • Both own properties and make loans
  • 9 publicly traded Hybrid REITs

47
Types of REITs more detail(source NAREIT)
48
REIT Structures UPREITs and Traditional REITs
  • UPREIT (Umbrella Partnership REIT)
  • First UPREIT was Taubman Realty IPO in 1992
  • UPREIT structure created to shield owners
    contributing real estate assets to the REIT from
    capital gains taxes on contributed property
  • Transfer is then partnership shares for
    partnership shares, and this is not a taxable
    event for the owners
  • UPREIT owns a controlling interest in a limited
    partnership that owns the real estate, as opposed
    to a traditional REIT structure in which the REIT
    owns the real estate
  • The Umbrella Partnership shares known as
    operating partnership units, or OP units are
    convertible into REIT shares and enjoy voting
    rights and dividends just like REIT shares
  • Convertibility allowed after one year, and
    triggers taxes

49
REITs and Taxes
  • REITs do not have to pay federal taxes at the
    corporate level
  • More specifically, REITs are allowed to deduct
    dividends paid to shareholders from taxable
    income, and thus have the ability to shield 100
    of taxable income through distributions to
    shareholders
  • No other firm in the economy can deduct
    dividends
  • REIT shareholders still have to pay taxes on
    dividends and capital gains
  • Most states honor the REIT status and dont
    require REITs to pay state taxes

50
Career Opportunities
  • Construction
  • Development
  • Property Management
  • Leasing Brokerage/Tenant Rep
  • Asset Management
  • Consulting
  • City Planning/Economic Community Dev.

51
Career Opportunities (Contd)
  • Investment Management (institutional and family
    office)
  • Equity Funds
  • Commercial Banking
  • Mortgage Brokerage and Placement
  • Institutional Brokerage
  • Investment Banking
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