Commercial
Real Estate Loans > Commercial Financing and the Commercial Finance Term "Standing Property"
Commercial Financing and the Commercial Finance Term "Standing Property"
A
Standing Property is the Opposite of a To-Be-Built Project
I
was training one of my loan officers today and he asked, "When
do I use a loan-to-value ratio and when do I use a loan-to-cost ratio?"
The
answer is that it depends on whether this is a construction loan
or a loan on a standing property. A standing property is obviously
one that has already been built.
The
loan-to-cost ratio is only used for development projects. Perhaps
the borrower is a developer who wants to build an office building
or a residential subdivision (housing tract). In this case the commercial
mortgage underwriter would want to look at the cost of the project
and make sure that the developer is contributing at least 20% of
the total cost of the project. Put another way, the underwriter would
want to make sure that the loan-to-cost ratio does not exceed 80%.
In
contrast, if you are financing a standing property, then the only
applicable ratio is the loan-to-value ratio.
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