Top 5 Mistakes of Beginning Commercial Real Estate Investors
November 26, 2012
We’ve all done it.
Anyone who invests in San Diego investment real estate is bound to make a clunker deal sooner or
later. I’ve been in this business for over 25 years and have made plenty of
mistakes, and I am always reminded that experience is what you get right after
you needed it.
The popularity of
commercial real estate has exploded in the last few years, and the media is
full of war stories from new investors who find themselves in deals with
problems.
In almost every case the
cause is traceable to a lack of knowledge about a few simple precepts that form
the ground rules of successful commercial investments. These are the basic
practices that when used correctly will eliminate the most common causes of a
bad deal.
My top 5 list of rookie
mistakes:
1. Ignoring local
market conditions
There are two levels of
due diligence required to evaluate an investment in San Diego investment real estate –the market and the property. And of the two,
local market conditions trump everything else.
A great property in a
bad market can be a big loser. A poor property in a great market can be a gold
mine. How do you know the difference?
Every market is
different, and a deal technique or property type that is profitable in one
market it does not mean the same holds true anywhere else.
Analyzing the
demographic trends of population growth, income, and employment in the local
market will tell you where opportunity lies, or not. It will also show which
property types are in demand, or oversupply. Those conditions will make or
break your investment.
Investing in an area
with declining demographic trends is destined for trouble. So learn your
market. Then listen as it tells you how, when, and where to invest.
2. Inadequate property
due diligence
The second level of due
diligence is the property condition, including physical items such as building
systems, environmental matters and structural components. Just as important are
the intangible items, such as title, survey, and zoning and land-use
regulations.
Knowledge of contract
law, insurance, finance, accounting, and tax law is also critical to doing
things right at the beginning to insure success at the end.
If you’ve never done it
before, this is not a DIY project. The money you think you’ll save by doing it
yourself can cost twice as much to fix, and may jeopardize the entire
investment.
Red Adair, the famous
oil and gas field firefighter, said, “If you think it’s expensive to hire a
professional to do the job, wait until you hire an amateur.”
Admit what you don’t
know. Approach the property like an open book test. If you don’t know the
answer to a question, find an expert who does know to give it to you.
Get accurate estimates
from professionals of what it will cost to fix what is wrong. The time spent
inspecting the components is minimal and can save thousands of dollars in
unexpected repairs.
3. Botching the math
This is not rocket
science, but San Diego investment real estate is a numbers game. Value is dependent on net
operating income?gross revenue minus operating expenses.
That’s why it is so
important to get the real operating numbers, not a projection of potential
gross income and estimated expenses.
Confirm and verify every
element of income and expense. Value the property based only on present income,
not projected income you have to produce.
Your profit is dependent
on net income. Net income is the net operating income minus debt service. If
you’ve overestimated revenue, underestimated expense, or have too much debt
service, your profit will suffer or turn into a loss.
Understand that risk
increases with every assumption made. Do not assume you can save expenses by
cutting corners or that you can raise rents the day after you take possession.
Anyone who has ever
prepared a projection of operations has realized that by tweaking the
assumptions, the bottom line can be manipulated into whatever will make the
deal work.
The problem comes when
it’s time to make the numbers happen. It’s real cash then?your cash?and when
the rents don’t go up or the expenses don’t come down as much as the projection
called for, you take the hit.
You might tweak the
numbers to make it work on paper, but paper won’t pay the bills, and hope is
not a plan.
4. Over-leverage
Borrowing too much money
in this business is fatal. Highly leveraged deals do happen, but unless it’s
backed up by a solid plan with sufficient capital, it can be disastrous.
Using 100% financing for
entry level deals is like believing gravity doesn’t exist as you jump off a
building. You can argue all you want, but you’re going to hit the ground. The
only question is how hard.
The proper use of
leverage is a function of deal structure and investment strategy. Every
investment property should be evaluated in light of the break-even ratio.
The break-even ratio is
equal to the Operating Expenses plus the Debt Service, divided by the Gross
Potential Income. [(OpEx + DS)/ GPI = BE]. When break-even exceeds 80%, the structure
depends on perfection, and that’s dangerous territory.
5. Failure to have
multiple exit strategies
An investment plan
incorporates all of the due diligence findings and outlines all the possible
outcomes of San Diego investment real estate, best case to worst case.
Ask yourself why you
think you can do a better job running this property than the seller did. If you
can’t answer that with specifics, you won’t do better, and probably not as well.
Your plan should answer
the questions of how the property will be managed; what improvements are needed
and their cost; how much money might be made (or lost); how long it will take;
how to get out if things go wrong; and how to access the profits when it goes
right.
The answers will reveal
a realistic plan to maximize value in the shortest possible time with the least
possible downside. I rarely have less than three exit strategies, and usually a
half dozen or more. I’ve learned that if I don’t have a plan to get my money
out of a deal, I will soon be out of money.
Learn from those who
have paid the price
I just read an article
on Wall Street Journal Online about a young Colorado investor who made
almost every mistake mentioned above that you can make in San Diego investment real estate. In 2005 he paid $269,000 for a four-plex, used
100% financing in a market dependent on the presence of military personnel in
the middle of a war with extended deployments.
He had no management
experience and didn’t screen new tenants, who turned into evictions. He planned
(hoped?) to hold the property for cash flow, but over-leverage and inexperience
produced average cash flow of only $100 per month.
Now he wants to move to
another city and put the property on the market for $285,000. With no takers
he’s reduced the price to $265,000, offering a 3% commission, but not using a
listing broker because he thinks he can’t afford it. This is not an isolated case.
The dangers of these errors are real and painful.
Roy Williams, the Wizard
of Ads? from Buda, Texas said, “Are you smart or are you wise? A smart person
makes a mistake, learns from it, and never makes that mistake again. A wise
person finds a smart person, learns from his mistakes and never makes them in
the first place.”
Source: Ray Alcorn –
CREOnline
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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