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Financing and Preparing Pro Forma Operating Statements on Commercial Property
Commercial
Financing and Preparing Pro Forma Operating Statements on Commercial
Property
How
to Get Commercial Financing on a Newly Purchased Commercial Property
Your
client buys a commercial property at a foreclosure sale and moves
his own company into the building. The building is run down, so your
client fixes it up very nicely. Then he wants to pull out his cash
by refinancing the commercial building and obtaining a larger commercial
mortgage loan.
The
commercial bank to whom you have taken his commercial mortgage loan
request asks for a pro forma operating statement, but you have a problem.
Because your client has owned the property for just four months, you
have no operating expense history on the building. What do you do?
The
answer is to simply assume the commercial building is leased on a triple
net basis. Just assume the tenant pays all of the expenses, except
for reserves and management.
You
can simply pull a figure out of the air and declare it to be the fair
market triple net rent for the property. (The appraiser hired by the
bank will eventually determine if your guess was accurate.) Take off
5% for Vacancy and Collection Loss to arrive at the Effective Gross
Income. Then deduct, say, 4% of the Effective Gross Income for management
and another 3% for Reserves for Replacements.
Voila!
You have just produced a Pro Forma Operating Statement on a commercial
property with no operating expense history. Sneaky and cool, huh?
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