Post on 01-Apr-2015
transcript
Chapter 11:
Real Estate Cash Flow Pro Formas & Opportunity Cost of Capital (OCC)
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"PROFORMA" = a multi-year cash flow forecast
(Typically 10 years.) Show to: Lenders, Investors
But the proforma can be more useful than just “window dressing”, if done properly.
It is the basic vehicle to implement the DCF valuation and analysis procedure discussed in the previous chapter.
The CF proforma presents the numerators in the RHS of the DCF valuation equation.
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Uses of multi-year DCF analysis in real estate…
Estimate market value of assets CF projections should be unbiased mean mkt expctns
Estimate “investment value” of assets CF projections should be unbiased mean subject investor
effects (we’ll discuss in Ch.12)
Sensitivity analysis & “crash testing” (What if?) Explore upside, downside plausible ranges “Underwriting” for debt finance (sometimes deliberately
conservative CF projections)
Ex ante performance attribution For investment strategic decision making
Ex post analysis for diagnostics Performance attribution for investment management,
internal accountability mgt.© 2014 OnCourse Learning. All Rights Reserved. 3
2 types of CFs:
• Operating• Reversion (Sale of Property, Sometimes
partial sales)
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2 ways of defining "bottom line". . .
1) Property level (PBTCF, most common in practice):
Net CF produced by property, before subtracting debt svc pmts (DS) and inc. taxes.
CFs to Govt, Debt investors (mortgagees), equity owners.
CFs due purely to underlying productive physical asset, not based on financing or income tax effects.
Relatively easy to observe empirically.
Focus of Chapter 11.
2) Equity ownership after-tax level (EATCF):
Net CF avail. to equity owner after DS & taxes.
Determines value of equity only (not value to lenders).
Sensitive to financing and income tax effects.
Usually difficult to observe empirically (differs across investors).
Will be addressed in Chapter 14.
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Typical proforma line items...Exhibit 11-1:
At Property, Before-tax Level:
Operating (all years):Potential Gross Income = (Rent*SF) = PGI- Vacancy Allowance = -(vac.rate)*(PGI) = - v+ Other Income = (eg, parking, laundry) = +OI- Operating Expenses = - OE_____________________ _______Net Operating Income = NOI- Capital Improvement Expenditures = - CI_____________________ _______Property Before-tax Cash Flow = PBTCF
Reversion (last year & yrs of partial sales only):Property Value at time of sale = V- Selling Expenses = -(eg, broker) = - SE__________________ ______Property Before-tax Cash Flow = PBTCF
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Questions…
How forecast vacancy (v)?• Vac = (vac months)/(vac months + rented months) in typical cycle.• Look at typical vac rate in rental mkt; adjust for non-stabilized bldgs (e.g.,
gross vacancy in mkt typically > typical stabilized vac).• History of vac. in subject bldg.• Project for each space/lease: Probability of renewal & Expected vacant
period if not renewed.
How forecast resale value (“reversion”, V at end)?• Divide Yr.11 NOI by “going-out” (terminal) cap rate.
What should be the typical relationship between the going-in cap rate and the going-out cap rate?. . .• Usually going-out going-in (older bldgs have less growth & more risk), esp.
if little capital imprvmt expdtrs have been projected.
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Exhibit 11-2: NCREIF Same-Property NOI Growth vs Inflation: 1979-2011
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NCREIF NOI CPI
NOI gro avg = 3.0%/yr, Infla avg = 3.8%/yr. NOI is gross of CapEx averaging 31% of NOI. (Source: NCREIF)
Gray shade indicates GDP
recession
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Exhibit 11-3: Average Reported Vacancy Among NCREIF Properties: 1983-2011
0.0%
2.5%
5.0%
7.5%
10.0%
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15.0%
19831984198519861987198819891990199119921993199419951996199719981999200020012002200320042005200620072008200920102011
(Source: NCREIF)
Gray shade indicates GDP
recession
Vacancy tends to be cyclical© 2014 OnCourse Learning. All Rights Reserved. 9
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Mid 70s vintage Early 80s vintage
Basis Point Spread
Exhibit 11-2: As New Competitors Enter the Market, Spread Between Building and Submarket Vacancy Increases for Older Buildings(Source: Torto-Wheaton Research; “TWR Overview &Outlook”, Winter 2004.)
Vacancy tends to increase as buildings age
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11.1.3. Operating Expenses include:
Fixed:· Property Taxes· Property Insurance· Security· Management
Variable:· Maintenance & Repairs· Utilities (not paid by tenants)
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Operating ExpensesNOTE:
OE do NOT include: Income taxes, Depreciation expense.
Must include mgt expense even if self-managed. Why? . . .
Opportunity cost, “apples-to-apples” comparison with alternative investments that you don’t have to manage yourself.
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Capital Expenditures include:
Leasing costs:· Tenant build-outs or improvement expenditures (“TIs”)· Leasing commissions to brokers
Property Improvements:· Major repairs· Replacement of major equipment· Major remodeling of building, ground & fixtures· Expansion of rentable area
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Two truths often not reflected in proformas used in practice in the real world . . .
• Realistic long-term rental growth projections in most commercial properties in most areas of the U.S. should average slightly less than realistic expectations about general (CPI) inflation.
• Realistic long-term capital expenditure projections for most types of commercial property should average at least 10% to 20% of the NOI, or an annual average of about 1% to 2% of the property value.
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Exhibit 11-2: The Noname Building: Cash Flow Projection
Year: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 Item:
Market Rent/SF: $10.00 $10.10 $10.20 $10.30 $10.41 $10.51 $10.62 $10.72 $10.83 $10.94 $11.05 Potential Revenue: Gross Rent Space 1 (10000SF) $105,000 $105,000 $105,000 $103,030 $103,030 $103,030 $103,030 $103,030 $108,286 $108,286 $108,286 Gross Rent Space 2 (10000SF) $100,000 $100,000 $100,000 $100,000 $100,000 $105,101 $105,101 $105,101 $105,101 $105,101 $110,462 Gross Rent Space 3 (10000SF) $100,000 $101,000 $101,000 $101,000 $101,000 $101,000 $106,152 $106,152 $106,152 $106,152 $106,152 Total PGI $305,000 $306,000 $306,000 $304,030 $304,030 $309,131 $314,283 $314,283 $319,539 $319,539 $324,900
Vacancy allowance: Space 1 $0 $0 $0 $51,515 $0 $0 $0 $0 $54,143 $0 $0 Space 2 $0 $0 $0 $0 $0 $52,551 $0 $0 $0 $0 $55,231 Space 3 $100,000 $0 $0 $0 $0 $0 $53,076 $0 $0 $0 $0 Total vacancy allowance $100,000 $0 $0 $51,515 $0 $52,551 $53,076 $0 $54,143 $0 $55,231
Total EGI $205,000 $306,000 $306,000 $252,515 $304,030 $256,581 $261,207 $314,283 $265,396 $319,539 $269,669 Other Income $30,000 $30,300 $30,603 $30,909 $31,218 $31,530 $31,846 $32,164 $32,486 $32,811 $33,139 Expense Reimbursements Space 1 $0 $1,833 $2,003 $0 $1,651 $964 $1,118 $2,870 $0 $1,823 $329 Space 2 $0 $2,944 $3,114 $1,814 $3,465 $0 $153 $1,905 $469 $2,292 $0 Space 3 $0 $0 $170 $0 $260 $0 $0 $1,752 $316 $2,139 $645 Total Revenue $235,000 $341,078 $341,891 $285,238 $340,624 $289,075 $294,324 $352,974 $298,667 $358,602 $303,781
Reimbursable Operating Expenses
Property Taxes $35,000 $35,000 $35,000 $35,000 $35,000 $36,750 $36,750 $36,750 $36,750 $36,750 $36,750 Insurance $5,000 $5,000 $5,000 $5,000 $5,000 $5,250 $5,250 $5,250 $5,250 $5,250 $5,250 Utilities $16,667 $25,500 $26,010 $22,109 $27,061 $23,002 $23,462 $28,717 $24,410 $29,877 $25,396 Total Reimbursable Expenses $56,667 $65,500 $66,010 $62,109 $67,061 $65,002 $65,462 $70,717 $66,410 $71,877 $67,396 Management Expense $6,150 $9,180 $9,180 $7,575 $9,121 $7,697 $7,836 $9,428 $7,962 $9,586 $8,090 Total Operating Expenses $62,817 $74,680 $75,190 $69,684 $76,182 $72,699 $73,298 $80,146 $74,371 $81,463 $75,486
NOI $172,183 $266,398 $266,701 $215,554 $264,442 $216,376 $221,026 $272,828 $224,295 $277,139 $228,295
Capital Expenditures TI $50,000 $50,000 $55,000 $55,000 $55,000 $55,000 Leasing Commissions $15,150 $15,455 $15,765 $15,923 $16,243 $16,569 Common physical improvements
$100,000
Net Cash Flow (operations) $172,183 $201,248 $266,701 $150,100 $164,442 $145,611 $150,103 $272,828 $153,053 $277,139 Net Cash Flow (reversion) $2,282,951
IRR @ $2,000,000 price: 10.51%
Simple numerical example (in Appendix 11A: Exh.11A-1)
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Section 11.2:
“Opportunity Cost of Capital” (OCC) at the Property Levelor:
WHERE DO DISCOUNT RATES COME FROM?...
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Broad Answer: THE CAPITAL MARKETS
That is, competing investment opportunities.
(This is so, whether we are talking about IV or MV.)
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IN DCF APPLICATIONS, KEEP IN MIND WHAT THE DISCOUNT RATE IS...
Disc. Rate = Required Return= Oppty. Cost of Capital = Expected total return = r
= rf + RP = y + g,
among investors in the market todayfor assets similar in risk to the property in
question.
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11.2.3 Historical Evidence about R.E. OCC in the U.S.
But this particular 41-yr period may be abnormally favorable ex post for bonds & RE, and unfavorable for stocks.
Traditionally large-cap stock ex ante RP considered to be ≈ 600-800 bps; LTGovt Bonds ≈ 100-200 bps; Institutional RE 300-400 bps.
Asset ClassTotal
Return* VolatilityRisk
PremiumT Bills 5.60% 3.10% NAG Bonds 9.26% 11.73% 3.66%Real Estate 10.15% 10.86% 4.55%Stocks 11.56% 17.91% 5.96%Source: NCREIF, MIT, Ibbotson. *Arithmetic mean
Exhibit 11-4(updated): Historical return, risk, and risk premia, 1970-2010
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Survey avg 100-200 bps > Hist.avg.
11.2.4 Survey Evidence about R.E. OCC in the U.S.
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Exh.11-6 Backward-Looking vs Forward-Looking Total Returns in the U.S. Institutional Property Market: NCREIF vs PwC
Inflation LT Bond Yld NCREIF(Hist)* PwC IRR
*Trailing NCREIF average annual total return since 1977.
What to make of the difference between the blue and the purple lines?...
Perhaps a little tinting in the shades?...
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IRR – OAR = (y+g) – (y+CI) = (y+Infl-Depr) – (y+CI) = Infl – Depr – CI
The brown (IRR-OAR) line should be below the green (infla) line! (probably at least 200-300 bps below…)
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Exh.11-7 StatedGoing-in IRRs, Cap Rates, & Inflation
IRR - OAR Inflation PwC Caprate PwC IRR
“OAR” = “cap rate”, “CI” = capex rate = Avg ann. capital expenditures as fraction of property value
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How to "back out" implied discount rates from "cap rates" (OAR) observed from transaction prices in the property
market...
Cap rate = NOI / V = (CF+CI) / V = y + CI / V = r + CI / V – g
Therefore, from market transaction data...1) Observe prices (V)2) Observe NOI of sold properties. 3) Therefore, observe "cap rates" = NOI / V.4) Compute: r = cap rate – CI / V + g.
11.2.5
e.g.: Data from Real Capital Analytics, CoStar, Reis, etc.
realistic
^
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Build up the mkt’s implied OCC (IRR)…
IRR = y + g = (caprate – CI) + (Infl – Depr)Typically:IRR = (caprate – 100-200 bps) + (Infl – 100-200 bps)IRR = caprate + Infla – 200-400 bpsThese days (for “institutional”), IRR caprate. (Assuming infl approx 3%)(Shh!... IRR could even be a bit < caprate!... If low
inflation.But watch out: It can vary over time (e.g., infl, RE mkt),
and across differ types of RE mkts (e.g. “institutional” vs “mom&pop”, Class-A vs Class-B, etc)
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Take the r = rf + RP approach (2006 peak) . . .
• For typical 10 yr horizon investment (2006):
• rf = Expected average short-term T-Bill yield over life of R.E. investment, well approximated by 10 yr T-Bond yld – 100 bps (“yield curve effect”). (Bond mkt’s expectation of avg future short-term T-Bill yields over the next 10 years.)
• e.g., if T-Bond yld = 5%, then rf = T-Bond yld – 150 bps = 5% - 1.5% = 3.5%.
• RP = 250 to 400 bps for “institutional” investment property (based on NCREIF historical avg, ≈ ½ Stk Mkt RP), OCC = 3.5% + (2.5%-4%) = 6%-7.5% (or so);
• RP = 500 to 700 bps for “non-institutional” investment property (smaller, higher risk, less liquid), OCC = 8% - 11%.
11.2.6 Double Checking: Two Perspectives on the OCC Estimate
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Take the r = y + g approach (2006 peak) . . .
• y = “cap rate” (less CapEx) = e.g., in 2006 in the U.S. this was about 4 to 6% for “institutional” investment property, more like 6% - 9% for “non-institutional” investment property.
• Realistic growth rate g = Historical rental mkt growth rate – Historical inflation + Realistic projected future inflation (Bond mkt T-Bond yld – Infla-adjusted T-Bond yld “TIP”) – Property real depreciation rate (≈ 1%- 2%/yr)
• Typically g = 0% to 2% in most markets.
• r = y + g = e.g., in 2006 in U.S. ≈ 4% to 7% “institutional”, 6% to 11% “non-institutional”.
(Remember: This is meant to be applied to property-level CFs.)
Note disconnect with equilibrium rf + RP model
If y + g model below rf + RP model Current pricing is “high.”
11.2.6 Double Checking: Two Perspectives on the OCC Estimate
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Take the r = rf + RP approach (today). . .
• For typical 10 yr horizon investment (today):
• rf = Expected average short-term T-Bill yield over life of R.E. investment, well approximated by 10 yr T-Bond yld – 100 bps (“yield curve effect”). (Bond mkt’s expectation of avg future short-term T-Bill yields over the next 10 years.)
• e.g., if T-Bond yld = 2%, then rf = T-Bond yld – 150 bps = 2% - 1.5% = 0.5%.
• RP = 350 to 450 bps for “institutional” investment property (based on NCREIF historical avg, ≈ ½ Stk Mkt RP), OCC = 0.5% + (3.5%-4.5%) = 4%-5% (or so);
• RP = 500 to 700 bps for “non-institutional” investment property (smaller, higher risk, less liquid), OCC = 5.5% - 7%.
But these seem too low…
May reflect Fed intervention (“QE”)
11.2.6 Double Checking: Two Perspectives on the OCC Estimate
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Take the r = y + g approach (today) . . .
• y = “cap rate” (less CapEx) = e.g., today in the U.S. this is about 6% - 8% for “institutional” investment property, more like 8% - 10% for “non-institutional” investment property (non-distressed).
• Realistic growth rate g = Historical rental mkt growth rate – Historical inflation + Realistic projected future inflation (Bond mkt T-Bond yld – Infla-adjusted T-Bond yld “TIP”) – Property real depreciation rate (≈ 1%- 2%/yr)
• Typically g = 0% to 2% in most markets.
• r = y + g ≈ 6% to 10% “institutional”, 8% to 12% “non-institutional”.
(Remember: This is meant to be applied to property-level CFs.)
Note disconnect with equilibrium rf + RP model
If y + g model above rf + RP model Current pricing is “low.”
11.2.6 Double Checking: Two Perspectives on the OCC Estimate
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Watch out for terminology:
In Brealey-Myers “capitalization rate” is often used to refer to “r”, the total cost of capital (especially in corporate finance). “r” is also sometimes called the “total yield” (especially in the appraisal profession).
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Typical per annum OCC (“going-in IRR”) rates (late 1990s) . . .
For high quality ("class A", "institutional quality") income property:· 10% - 12%, stated.· 8% - 10%, realistic.
Lower quality or more risky income property (e.g., hotels, class B commercial, turnarounds, "mom & pops"): · 12% - 15%
Raw land (speculation): · 15% - 30%
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Typical per annum OCC (“going-in IRR”) rates (circa 2005) . . .
For high quality ("class A", "institutional quality") income property:· 7% - 9%, stated.· 5% - 7%, realistic.
Lower quality or more risky income property (e.g., hotels, class B commercial, turnarounds, "mom & pops"): · 8% - 10%
Raw land (speculation): · 12% - 25%
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Typical per annum OCC (“going-in IRR”) rates (circa 2011) . . .
For high quality ("class A", "institutional quality") income property:· 8% - 10%, stated.· 6% - 8%, realistic.
Lower quality or more risky income property (e.g., hotels, class B commercial, turnarounds, distressed assets, "mom & pops"): · 8% - 12% , realistic
Raw land (speculation): · 20% - 40%
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11.2.6 Variation in Return Expectations Across Property Types
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*Source: PwC Real Estate Investor Survey,2ndt quarter 2011
Malls Strip Ctrs Indust. Apts Suburb.OffChicago Off. Manh Off
Institutional 9.69% 8.97% 8.76% 8.78% 9.11% 9.55% 7.81%
Non-institutional 11.61% 11.32% 11.59% 10.98% 10.40% 12.43% 9.44%
Exh.11-8a: Investor Total Return Expectations (IRR) for Various Property Types*
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*Source: PwC Rea Estate Investor Survey, 2nd quarter 2011
Malls Strip Ctrs Indust. Apts Suburb.OffChicago
Off. Manh Off
Institutional 7.50% 7.40% 7.76% 6.29% 8.04% 8.33% 6.00%
Non-institutional 10.29% 9.90% 10.18% 7.99% 9.58% 10.50% 8.13%
Exh.11-8b: Investor Cap Rate Expectations for Various Property Types*
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Note that the difference in OCC tends to be much greater between “instituional” vs “non-institutional” quality real estate (100-300bps), than between most usage types of property (office, retail, industrial, residential) within either of those two categories.
Why do you suppose this is? . . .
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“Institutional” (aka “Investment Grade”) properties (larger, in primary mkts) exhibit different price behavior than smaller (“mom & pop”) properties, as seen in CCRSI…
Reflects different sources of financing (non-bank vs bank), different owner/investor clienteles (natl/intl instns vs local/users), different asset mkt segments.
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CoStar CCRSI, Investment vs General Commercial Properties: Same-property (repeat-sales) Prices, 2000-2012
CCRSI General Property
CCRSI Investment Property
Data source: CoStar Group Inc. Index values as of June 2012.
2001-10: RS obs RS $volGeneral 70% 21%Investment 30% 79%All 100% 100%
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IN DCF APPLICATIONS, KEEP IN MIND WHAT THE DISCOUNT RATE IS...
Disc. Rate = Required Return= Oppty. Cost of Capital = Expected total return = r
= rf + RP = y + g,
among investors in the market todayfor assets similar in risk to the property in
question.
© 2014 OnCourse Learning. All Rights Reserved. 36