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Commercial Investing: Complicated, You
Bet!
According to a recent study in The Economist, residential
property investment in developed countries amounted to $48
trillion, while commercial real estate investment (CREI) was
'only' $14 trillion. Though the number may be smaller, CREI is
much more complex.
Real estate, unlike stocks or other investments, is always
local — property is always somewhere, somewhere specific. The
investor may be far away, but the property has a location that
forms part of its local market.
That affects how it's appraised, bought, used and sold. Unlike
residential property — even though one in four homes are bought
by investors — commercial property is usually intended to be
used for a business purpose.
It may be a multi-dwelling apartment complex used as residences
by others, but to the investor it's a commercial enterprise. As
often, the commercial property is a multi-tenant commercial
building on land zoned for that purpose. That introduces
different considerations for valuing, financing, leasing,
maintaining and a host of other tasks.
The commercial investor has, usually, to invest a larger amount
— requiring superior credit and incurring greater risk — and to
estimate capitalization rate (cap rate) and Gross Rent
Multiplier (GRM).
The cap rate is calculated by dividing a property's annual net
operating income by its purchase price. Historically, good
investments had a 10% cap rate, but the last few years has seen
that decline to 8% corresponding to a greater risk and lower
expected return. The GRM is arrived at by dividing the purchase
price by the property's monthly gross operating income. These,
along with consideration of assessed vs appraised value, and
comparables, total income and replacement costs form the
hard-fact base for estimating the worth of a deal.
Commercial properties are at greater risk of unpredictable
changes in general economic conditions. A building that enjoyed
a 100% occupancy rate can quickly become only half full because
of factors far outside the local market. Events in Asia or
elsewhere around the globe can turn business conditions for
some upside down overnight, whether the tenants are located in
California or Barcelona.
Commercial property investment requires increased knowledge of
law, maintenance and finance. Zoning, leasing regulations, and
other legal issues are more complex than for residential
property. Where properties are rented, rather than just bought
and sold — often the case with CREI — owners usually have to
consider large electrical, air-conditioning and security
systems, along with fire suppression, telephone and Internet
facilities. Even plumbing is more complicated in commercial
structures. Mortgages are more complicated and insurance is
more costly.
The exception is the triple-net lease. In this arrangement the
tenant is responsible for all the expense and arrangements for
maintenance and repair as well as insurance.
But not to be gloomy, there are great potential rewards from
CREI. The risks are greater, but often the return is as well —
especially during good economic times. And the satisfaction of
being part of sustaining and helping grow the dreams of other
entrepreneurs is a great bonus for the commercial real estate
investor.
And, after all, sometimes, more complicated means more
interesting.
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