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You are here: Home / Archives for 2012

Archives for 2012

January 30, 2012 by Peter Maclennan Leave a Comment

Commercial Lease Types

Most business owners and entrepreneurs want to find the best location for their business. This could be an office, a warehouse, or a storefront depending on the type of business. The language and terminology related to real estate leases can be confusing and overwhelming. Below is a list of the various commercial lease types and what they mean to both the landlord and tenant.

Triple Net Lease or NNN Lease

A triple net lease can also be referenced as a net, net, net (NNN) lease. This lease type is often found in leases for large office buildings, large industrial buildings, and in retail or storefront buildings.

In this lease structure the tenant pays a base rental rate. The base rent will be clearly delineated over the life of the lease. Often times the base rent will escalate at an agreed upon percentage rate or based upon inflation and linked to the Consumer Price Index (CPI).

As well as the base rental rate the tenant will pay the net expenses. The net expenses are taxes, insurance, and maintenance costs. These fees can be included in common area maintenance fees or CAM charges. These expenses are in addition to the base rental rate.

Landlord

A landlord generally likes this lease structure because it places some of the future price risk on the tenant. Taxes, insurance, and utility costs are, generally, going to increase over time. The expenses that could potentially damage a landlord’s income, are passed on to the tenant and help the landlord to plan future income.

Tenant

The tenant is taking on the additional risk of taxes, insurance, and maintenance with a triple net lease. In exchange for this risk, they will often be given a lower base rental rate. A commercial tenant may not be able to avoid this type of commercial lease. When comparing a triple net lease to a gross lease all triple net expenses need to be included.

Gross Lease

When all of the expenses associated with a property are included in the base rental rate of a commercial lease, you most likely have a Full Service Gross Lease. These expenses include real estate property taxes, property insurance, utilities, maintenance, and janitorial. Some office leases, retail leases and industrial leases are gross leases.

Landlord

A commercial lease structured in this manner places the risk of expense growth upon the landlord. The landlord is responsible for any increase in the price of insurance, property taxes, or utilities. A landlord may choose this lease because the rental market demands it, the tenant leases the entire building, or the property only has one utility meter and the landlord cannot accurately divide utility costs.

Tenant

A commercial gross lease relieves the tenant of the risk of price inflation. As well, it simplifies the lease rate as the tenant will only be quoted a base rental rate that includes all expenses for the property.

Combination Leases

Most commercial leases are a combination of a net lease and a gross lease. In other words, the tenant pays some of the expenses and the landlord pays some of the expenses.

Industrial Gross Lease

In an industrial gross lease the tenant pays a base rental rate and their share of the common area expenses. The landlord will pay the property taxes and insurance costs in the first year or base year. In subsequent years, any property taxes or insurance costs above the base year amount are the responsibility of the tenant.

Modified Gross Lease

A modified gross lease is similar to a full service gross lease except that one or more item may be the responsibility of the tenant. In a modified gross lease a tenant may be responsible for their own utilities, janitorial, or maintenance costs depending on the scenario.

Procuring a commercial lease for your business can be challenging. If you would like assistance with this process, please call today at (925) 385-8798 to see if we can assist you.

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Filed Under: Commercial Leasing Tagged With: Commercial Leases, Commercial Real Estate Investing, Terminology

January 24, 2012 by Peter Maclennan 3 Comments

Why Young Professionals Should Buy a Duplex, Triplex, or Fourplex

In my last post I detailed Why Young Professionals Should NOT Buy a House. In this post I will explain why your first home should be shared with some tenants.

The author and radio host Dave Ramsey has said that a home or personal dwelling is a stake in the ground to which the owner is chained. Your life will most likely revolve around the area where you buy a home. You will work nearby, play nearby, and raise a family where you plant this stake. What if you want to change any of these items?

Often, professionals just beginning their career do not plan to spend their life in the same location that they find their first job. The energy of big city life is not as appealing when you have to raise a family. Their first job is a dead end and a graduate degree is required for advancement. Or you find great success in your career but the next promotion is in another state or another country. What do you do with that condo or fixer of a home you bought?

Financially Wise

Imagine instead that you bought a fourplex (a single building with four separate living units). This fourplex in Concord, CA is a current example. Argyll Avenue – Fourplex

The property is listed for $375,000. According to the listing agent the property has 2 -2 bedroom units and 2 – 1 bedroom units. Let’s figure 3% for closing costs and fees for a total of about $386,000. Our first-time home buyer decides to make an offer at list price with 10% down. Their loan amount will be $347,000.

A loan of $347,000 at 5% interest will have a payment of $1,863 per month. Property taxes and insurance will add roughly an additional $612 per month. If our home buyer mows his own grass and does repairs himself, he likely won’t have many other expenses beyond the occasional repair or vacancy. The total expenses for the property will be roughly $2,475 per month.

According to the listing agent, the 2 bedrooms rent for $1250 each per month and the 1 bedrooms rent for $850. To be safe let’s knock $150 off of each of those and say that the 2 beds will fetch $1100 and the 1 bedrooms will get $700. Our industrious and frugal buyer doesn’t have a roommate and decides to live in a one bedroom unit. His gross income from the property will be 2 x $1,100 = $2,200 plus $700 = $2,900. If we imagine that each of the rented units will be vacant for 10% of the year, this would reduce his gross income by $242 per month. His or her gross income will be $2,658 per month.

In review, our home buyer will be receiving $2,658 per month in rent and expenses will be roughly $2,475 per month. The net income to our home owner will be $183 per month and he will be living rent free.

Besides living rent free there will likely be some tax benefits to our home owner. Cost recovery or depreciation can be claimed on the rented units. The owner may be able to offset taxes on earned income.

If our intrepid home buyer decides to pay down the mortgage by paying “rent” of $700 per month, the home buyer could apply $883 to principal each month ($183 in cash flow).

Assuming the fourplex does not increase in value at all the value would be $375,000 at the end of 5 years. The outstanding principal would be a shade under $260,000. The home buyer has equity of almost $115,000. Calculating selling and closing costs at 8% of the gross fourplex value ($30,000), our investor has net equity of $85,000 to roll into his next purchase. Our investor could refinance the property at 80% LTV and pull out $40,000 in equity to purchase the next investment property.

Flexibility

Buying a fourplex has provided the investor with some flexibility. We assumed that the investor lived in a 1 bedroom unit. If the investor gets a roommate or marries, they could move to one of the two bedroom units without having to buy something else.

If our first-time buyer needs to relocate, the property should have enough income to pay all property expenses when fully rented. Our first-time buyer can safely transfer to another city without worrying about selling a home first.

 Conclusion

The fourplex purchase allows our hypothetical buyer a financially fit decision and a level of freedom that a SFR does not allow. It appears that an investment property, is far superior to the single family home purchase for our first time buyer. (Please do not construe this as a hard and fast rule or investment advice.)

Call me at (925) 385-8798 to see if we can find a duplex or fourplex that fits your investment needs.

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Filed Under: Benefits of Real Estate Investing, Real Estate Investing Tagged With: Argyll Avenue, Concord, concord ca, first time home, first time home buyer, fourplex, young professionals

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