How to Purchase Commercial Real Estate
November 2, 2012
If you’re thinking about
purchasing commercial real estate in San Diego, this guide will help you evaluate the pros and
cons of leasing vs. buying, assemble a real estate search team, choose a
location, and make the purchase.
Every few years, the
real estate market suffers through a crash or a correction and underscores a
perpetual dilemma for small and mid-sized businesses: Is it better to rent or
own commercial property?
Buying commercial real estate in San Diego is a complex undertaking that is difficult even
for experts to time right to maximize their investment value, let alone
entrepreneurs or business executives whose areas of expertise are in different
industries. It’s also a venture rife with risk, as buyers, sellers, agents, and
renters alike can suffer the consequences of a dip or spike in demand. At the
same time, for a business, on the upside the potential rewards can be
substantial.
Why should a business
buy? “To get a greater control over the cost of the real estate component of
overhead, as opposed to leasing, where you can be victimized by the market if
the lease rolls over when the market is tight and, as a result, you have higher
rental costs,” says William Martin, chair of the real estate group in the
Denver office at Kutak Rock LLP, a law firm with 400 attorneys and offices
around the country. “The other benefit would be investment benefits, including
depreciation of the property for tax purposes and, over the longer term, asset
appreciation.”
There is no
one-size-fits-all strategy for purchasing commercial real estate in San Diego. That decision must be weighed by each
business. The following guide will help a small business assemble a real estate
search team, choose a location, and purchase property.
Deciding to Buy Versus
Lease
When deciding whether to
buy commercial real estate, it’s important to understand the potential risks.
The last thing you want is to buy property and realize a year or two later that
you would have been better off renting. Here are some of the potential risks a
business faces when buying:
• Location
may backfire. Today’s “hot” neighborhood can become tomorrow’s “not”
neighborhood. Locations are trendy. Gentrification may stall. The market may go
bust. The area you choose one day may become undesirable the next. Of course,
the reverse can be true, as well.
• Loss of
liquidity. Businesses may tie up much of their liquidity buying real
estate. It’s not always easy to sell real estate, particularly in a slump. At
the same time, businesses that own real estate at least have something to sell
if they need a cash influx to revive a lagging business.
• Tenuous
cash flow. Tenants in San Diego commercial real estate leasing sometimes stop paying their rent. Other times,
buildings are in need of unexpected — and expensive — repairs. Your cash flow
can become compromised, especially if you are forced to simultaneously pay
repairs and attorney fees to handle a tenant situation.
In order to be aware of
risks, do your homework. Undertake extensive due diligence before signing any
contract. You also need to be hands-on with your commercial property by overseeing
every level of operation and making frequent on-site visits — otherwise, you
may learn about problems after it’s too late to do anything to fix them.
The decision ultimately
comes down to the economics. You may want to have a real estate expert help you
undertake a rent versus own analysis, taking into account growth forecasts for
your business and real estate market trends. It’s really beneficial to sit down
with an expert that can lay out options for you and discuss scenarios, such as
in three years this is where business will be in terms of revenue, size, or
people. This is how many locations we will have. This is what our space needs
will be. A real estate expert can also help you figure out the costs of renting
versus buying, factoring tax benefits such as depreciation.
Assembling a Team of
Experts
As a small business
owner, you’re most likely not a San Diego commercial real estate leasing expert. That’s why it’s important to surround
yourself with the right team of experts. They can help you determine the right
time to buy or sell, the right locations to consider, and the nuts and bolts of
closing the deal. Here are some of the experts you may consider contacting:
• Accountant.
An accountant can help you figure out what your business can afford and analyze
the tax and operating budget benefits.
• Lawyer.
A lawyer can help you complete the transaction, negotiating with the seller and
lender on your behalf.
• Commercial
broker. A real estate broker can help you identify potential properties and
what you can afford.
• Mortgage
broker. A lender or mortgage broker will help you sort through financing
options, from bank loans to those guaranteed by the U.S. Small Business
Administration, such as the Certified Development Company (CDC) 504 Program,
used to finance primarily real estate or equipment.
Identify the Right
Property
There are a number of
factors to consider when looking for suitable commercial real estate in San Diego to purchase. The old adage “location, location,
location” is true for commercial properties just as much as it is for
residential. But there are other issues at play, as well. Here are some things
to consider:
• Location.
This is still the No. 1 issue. You want to be close to your customers, your
workers, and your vendors or suppliers. “You want to be convenient to customers
to the extent that you have a business where the customer comes to you,” Martin
says. “But depending on the type of business, access to rail and highway and
shipping lanes may be important, too.”
• Physical
condition. After identifying the general location, consider how the
property was used, the wear-and-tear, whether there are any environmental
issues or potential liability issues, such as asbestos or lead paint.
• Allowable
uses. If your business is an accounting firm, you likely need commercial
office space. If you are a manufacturer, you need an industrial space. Either
way, you need to make sure the zoning allows you to do what you need to do on
the property.
• Limitations
on exterior and interior. Whether due to zoning laws or building codes or
covenants, there may be limits to changes or alterations you can make to the
property. A good example is a building that is in an historic area and subject
to restrictions on changes that can be made to the façade.
• Adequacy
of access and parking. You need to make sure your customers in San Diego commercial real estate leasing can park and take into consideration whether
access is compliant with laws such as the Americans With Disabilities Act.
• Opportunity
for expansion or leasing. Entrepreneurs often have a rosy outlook about
growth and so the potential to expand is a consideration as is the flipside –
if you don’t grow as much as planned, can you lease out extra space?
Do Due Diligence and
Evaluate the Property
After you locate the right
property, you go to contract and commence a one- or two-month period during
which you need to do your homework. Now is the time to revisit your objectives,
and ask yourself if the property you have identified helps you meet or further
your stated objectives.
Beyond that, this is
where your team of trusted advisors plays an important role. A broker will
often help bring in third parties — engineers, appraisers, environmental
analysts — to help verify the condition of the property, its prior use, and any
potential liability issues, whether structural soundness or necessary upgrades
of electrical wiring. You should also be involved to make sure that there isn’t
any potential for changes in adjacent properties that could negatively impact
your business or property value, such as development, road or infrastructure
construction, etc. A title company can also make sure there are no prior or
existing litigation and/or insurance claims affecting the property.
If you find any
problems, you may have the opportunity to renegotiate with the seller or
sometimes to walk away from the deal.
Taking the Plunge and
Making the Purchase
Once you’ve found the
right property for San Diego commercial real estate leasing and worked with the owner on the right price,
the next big step is to secure financing and come up with the right mix of how
much cash you’re putting down and how much you need to finance.
During good economic
times, there are a host of attractive financing options available to small and
mid-sized businesses. After the global economic meltdown, starting in 2008,
banks tightened up credit and limited many of these options. In order to get a
loan during a tough economy, it’s doubly important to make sure your business
has sufficient cash reserves, has a good credit rating, and is profitable.
Your attorney and
accountant play key roles here to ensure contracts are sufficiently detailed,
and structured to your maximum advantage. You need to envision every possible
contingency, and make sure it is covered — clearly and unambiguously — in the
contract. Everything from air rights and other zoning laws to the nuances of
existing tenant leases and tax requirements must be understood here. You also need
to verify — and re-verify — the financial terms associated with this purchase,
to confirm you are ready to pull the trigger.
At this step, you should
also update or add to your original business plan, to cover the specifics of
this acquisition; this is when your plan comes to life. Once the purchase takes
place, it is imperative that you implement and execute on the plan without
procrastination. The cliché “time is money” is never truer than when you are
building or renovating a commercial real estate property.
Before buying commercial real estate in San Diego, it’s important to make sure that buying is
right for your business for the long-term. The most important thing is to think
carefully about what could happen in the first 12 to 24 months after buying a
building that would make you look back and say, I made a mistake. If you’re
very aggressive with revenue growth projections or overshoot how much space you
need to occupy or buy and then the business doesn’t grow fast enough into that,
you may have a problem.
SOURCE: Inc.com
DISCLAIMER: This blog
has been curated from an alternate source and is designed for informational
purposes to highlight the commercial real estate market. It solely
represents the opinion of the specific blogger and does not necessarily
represent the opinion of Pacific Coast Commercial.
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