"Mezzanine
Loans"
What
in 'Tarnation is a Mezzanine Loan Anyway?
Mezzanine
lenders and commercial construction lenders - over 500 of them
- await your application for a mezzanine loan, a multifamily
or apartment construction loan, a commercial construction loan,
a condo or residential subdivision construction loan, or a land
development loan. To apply to 100 mezzanine lenders and 500
construction lenders simply click
here.
Mezzanine
loans are similar to second mortgages, except a mezzanine loan
is secured by the stock of the company that owns the property,
as opposed to the real estate.
If
the company (usually a LLC) fails to make the payments, the
mezzanine lender can foreclose on the stock in a matter of a
few weeks, as opposed to the 18 months it often takes to foreclose
a mortgage in many states.
If you own the company that owns the property, you control the
property.
Our
own hard money company once had to foreclose a mortgage in New
York, and it took almost two years. Yikes! In contrast,
a mezzanine loan is secured by the stock of a company, which
is personal property and can be seized much faster.
Mezzanine
loans are also fairly big. It is hard too find a mezzanine
lender who will slug through all of the required paperwork for
a loan of less than $2 million. It is occasionally possible
to obtain mezzanine loans as small as $1 million.
In
addition, mezzanine lenders typically want big projects. If
the property you are trying to finance is not worth close to
$10 million, you may have a hard time attracting the interest
of any mezzanine lenders.
There
are three typical uses for a mezzanine loan. Suppose the
owner of a $10 million shopping center has a $5 million first
mortgage from a conduit. The owner wants to pull out
some equity, but he cannot simply refinance the shopping center
because the first mortgage has either a lock-out clause or
a huge defeasance prepayment penalty. In this instance,
he could probably obtain a $2.5 million mezzanine loan to free
up some cash.
Suppose
an experienced office building investor wanted to buy a partially-vacant
office building in a fine location. Once again, assume
that the purchase price is $10 million (when the office building
is still partially-vacant) and that the conduit first mortgage
is $5 million.
This
may surprise you, but the right mezzanine lender might be willing
to lend a whopping $4 million! But isn't that 90% loan-to-value?
Yes, but when the vacant space is rented - remember, our buyer
is a pro - the property will increase to $12 million in value.
Suddenly the mezzanine lender is back to 75% loan-to-value and
his rationale is obvious. This kind of deal is called a value-added deal.
The
third and final use of mezzanine loans is for new construction.
Suppose a developer wanted to build a 400 room hotel across the
street from Disneyland. Hotels today are out of favor, and
a commercial construction lender might only be willing to make
a loan of 60% loan-to-cost.
If the total cost was $20 million, the developer would
ordinarily have to come up with 40% of $20 million or $8 million. That's
a lot of dough.
A
$3 million mezzanine loan solves the developer's problem. The
commercial construction lender would advance $12 million, the
mezzanine lender would make a $3 million mezzanine loan, and
the developer would
"only" have to come up with $5 million.
There
are about 150 mezzanine lenders active in the country today,
and you can apply to most of them by just clicking here.
Mezzanine
lenders and commercial construction lenders - over 500 of them
- await your application for a mezzanine loan, a multifamily
or apartment construction loan, a commercial construction loan,
a condo or residential subdivision construction loan, or a land
development loan. To apply to 100 mezzanine lenders and 500
construction lenders simply click
here.
George
Blackburne, III is a real estate attorney,
the founder of Blackburne & Brown Mortgage Company,
Inc.
Real estate editors and webmasters: You are authorized to re-print
all or any part of this article, as long as you include the above
byline and link.