Glossary of Commercial Terms
The following is a list of abbreviations
frequently used in commercial real estate business.
ACCRUED ITEMS OF EXPENSE - Incurred expenses that are not yet
payable.
ACCRUAL METHOD - An accounting method of reporting income in
which expenses incurred and income earned for a specific period are
reported, although the expenses and income may not have actually been
paid or collected.
AD VALOREM - According to value (Latin). This term is generally
used to refer to real estate taxes, according to a fixed percentage
of value.
ADJUSTED COST BASIS (A.C.B.) - The original cost of a property,
or V-Day Value, plus improvement costs, plus costs of sale = A.C.B.
at sale.
AFTER TAX EQUITY YIELD RATE - The annual rate of return on equity
after payment of income taxes; similar to internal rate of return after
taxes.
AFTER TAX INVESTMENT - The net cost to make an investment after
allowance or deduction for tax consideration offsets.
AFTER TAX YIELD - Annual profit remaining after payment of income
taxes; the annual rate of return on equity after payment of income
taxes.
AGREEMENT FOR SALE - An equitable right which can be registered
at the Land Registry Office.
AGREEMENT OF SALE - An interim Agreement; the first legally
binding agreement into which buyer and seller enter and on such terms
and conditions as the parties may decide.
ARBITAGE - The difference between the interest of a wrap-around
mortgage and the prime mortgage.
ARM'S LENGTH - Unaffected
by abnormal pressures; a normal price of transaction resulting from
normal competition.
ASSESSED VALUE - The value placed on land and buildings separately,
by a County Assessor for use in levying real estate taxes.
BALLOON - That portion of a mortgage loan which is not amortized
an payable in a lump sum at the end of the loan term.
BAND OF INVESTMENT - The technique of combining weighted rates
attributable to components of a capital investment to derive a weighted
average rate attributable to the total investment.
BASIS - The value of property for income tax purposes, which
is usually computed as the sum of original cost of improvements, plus
capital improvements, less accrued depreciation. (See U.C.C.)
BLANKET MORTGAGE - A single mortgage that covers more than one
piece of real estate.
BONDS - Securities issued by a corporation or a governing body
to raise funds. Bonds are backed by a promise to pay a certain sum
of money on a specific date, plus interest, payable in installments
during the term of the bonds.
BOOK VALUE - The acquisition costs of an asset less any accrued
depreciation.
BREAK-EVEN POINT - The figure at which occupancy income (gross
income) equals all required expenses (variable costs) and debt service
(fixed costs).
CASH FLOW BEFORE TAXES (C.F.B.T.) - The remaining funds after
all cash expenses and debt curtailment have been paid out of income
received from the operation of any income-producing property. Usually
expressed as a yearly figure.
CASH FLOW AFTER TAXES (C.F.A.T) - As above plus or minus tax
results.
CASH ON CASH - A percentage figure arrived at by dividing the
cash flow before taxes from a property by the total investment in the
property and multiplying by 100. Also called Cash Yield.
CAVEAT EMPTOR - Let the buyer beware.
C.C.A. - Capital cost allowance, which for income tax purposes
is a permissable deduction from income, which may be claimed in whole
or in part. Cannot create a rental loss.
COMMON STOCK - That class of corporate stock to which there
is ordinarily attached no preference with respect to the receipt of
dividends or the distribution of assets on corporate dissolution.
COMPONENT DEPRECIATION - A method of calculating depreciation
where separate items of a building having different useful lives are
depreciated on different schedules. For example, furniture may be depreciated
at 20%, class 8, while paving may be depreciated at only 8%, class
17.
COMPOUND INTEREST - Interest paid on original principal and
also on the accrued and unpaid interest which has accumulated as the
debt matures.
DEBT-COVERAGE RATIO -
Net annual income divided by annual debt service. For example, if net
annual income is $140,000 and debt service is $100,000, the debt coverage
ratio is $140,000 divided by $100,000, or 1.40. It is a measure of safety
from the lender's point of view.
DEMOGRAPHY - The statistical science dealing with the distribution,
density, vital statistics and so forth of a population.
DEPRECIATION - Loss of value due to all causes. Depreciation
includes (1) physical deterioration, ordinary wear and tear, (2) functional
depreciation and (3) economic obsolescence, causes outside the property.
DEPRECIATION FOR TAX PURPOSES - Called Capital Cost Allowance.
There are 3 methods to determine base for C.C.A.
(1) Allocation of Purchase Price on the Offer to Purchase. Agreed
upon
by both seller and purchaser.
(2) Use accredited appraiser who will provide an allocation between
land and
improvements.
(3) Use assessment ratios of land and improvements.
The depreciation deduction taken annually must be deducted from the
undepreciated capital cost of the property for later calculations of
potential gains on disposition.
DEPRECIATION, DECLINING BALANCE METHOD
OF - Where the improvement portion of an investment
is depreciated and the annual amount allowable is subtracted from the
original U.C.C. or remaining U.C.C. For example, Class 3 - 5% declining
balance. This class of property is limited to a C.A.A. of no greater
than 5% of the U.C.C. or the total amount of taxable income before C.C.A.,
if it is less than 5% of the U.C.C. for the period involved. You cannot
shelter other income with C.C.A. in a Class 3 property, as Revenue Canada
will not allow a "paper loss"caused by capital cost allowance,
on this type of property.
EFFECTIVE GROSS INCOME - The estimated gross potential income
less allowance for vacancies and/or credit losses; the estimated gross
potential income less allowances for fluctuations.
EFFECTIVE INTEREST RATE - The percentage of interest that is
actually being paid by the borrower for the use of the money, distinct
from nominal interest.
EMINENT DOMAIN - The right of the people or government to take
private property for public use upon payment of compensation.
E.O.Y. - End of year.
EQUITY BUILD-UP - Increase
in the equity investor's share of total property value resulting from
gradual debt reduction through periodic repayment of principal on a
mortgage loan and/or increase in total property value.
EQUITY RATIO - Original equity ratio is the down payment divided
by the sales price.
EQUITY RATE OF RETURN (E.R.R.) - A true annualized rate of return
on equity capital including the full effect of any gain from appreciation
of the investment, plus the principal reduction of mortgages in a given
year, plus the C.F.A.T., divided by the initial investment. Disposition
not considered in this rate as selling costs not used. For a rate of
return forecasting disposition see I.R.R.
ESCALATION CLAUSE - In a lease, provides for lessee to bear
the amount of any increase in a particular expense over an established
lease year.
FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT RATE OF RETURN - A rate by which cash flows
are realistically re-invested as received to project a realistic forecast.
FREE-AND-CLEAR RETURN - A method of evaluating investment opportunities
in which annual project income is divided by the total project cost
to arrive at the free-and-clear return; assumes no debt financing.
FUNCTIONAL OBSOLESCENCE - Defects in a building or structure
that detract from its value or marketability; usually the result of
layout, design, or other features that are less desirable than features
designed for the same functions in newer property. Example of curable:
high ceilings, outdated furnace. Example of incurable: poor style,
low ceilings.
GAIN - The amount arrived at after deducting A.C.B. from sales
price on disposition of property. The full gain could be taxable, depending
on how Revenue Canada views the seller, i.e. a "trader"will
pay tax on the full gain.
GAP LOANS - A loan or a commitment to make a loan that covers
the difference between the "floor loan"(the guaranteed
minimum loan committed by a major lender) and the "ceiling loan"(the
maximum loan committed by a major lender), usually tied to a certain
gross rental amount.
GROSS INCOME - The total money received from income property,
or a business, before operating expenses, taxes, depreciation, commissions,
salaries, fees and so on are deducted.
GROSS RENT MULTIPLES (GRM) - Sales price or value divided by
gross annual income. For example, if sales price is $325,000 and gross
annual income is $50,000, the G.R.M. is 6.5 ($325,000 divided by $50,000).
It is a "rule of thumb" used by many investors who set
their own individual standards or derive it from the market.
HOLDING PERIOD - The term of ownership for an investment.
INTEREST - Money paid for, or earned by, the use of capital
as distinguished from return of capital; analogous to yield. In mortgage-equity
work, the term "interest" is reserved for the return on
a mortgage loan.
INTEREST ONLY LOAN - A non-amortizing loan for which the lender
receives only interest during the term of the loan and recovers principal
in a lump sum at the end of the term: a "straight" loan.
INTERNAL RATE OF RETURN (I.R.R.) - The annualized rate of return
on capital which is generated or is capable of being generated internally
within an investment or portfolio during the period of ownership. The
calculation of I.R.R. involves the process of discounting the after-tax
flows and after-tax net sale proceeds, so that the sum of their present
value is equal to the initial investment.
INTERPOLATION - The calculation or estimation of a quantity
within the range of data upon which the calculation or estimate is
based; the process of approximating an intermediate value which falls
between tabular entries is a set of tables.
LEASE - A written or
an oral contract between a landlord (the lessor) and a tenant (the lessee)
transferring the right to exclusive possession and use of the landlord's
real property to the lessee for a specified period of time and for a
stated consideration (rent).
LEASEBACK - A transaction in which an investor purchases property
and then leases it back to the seller.
LEVERAGE - The use of
another's money (usually a financial institution) for a proportion of
the costs of purchasing or developing a real estate investment. When
the return on the equity portion of the investment is higher than it
would have been without leverage, positive leverage is said to exist.
When the return on the equity portion of the investment is lower than
it would have been without leverage, negative or reverse leverage is
said to exist.
NET INCOME MULTIPLIER - The relationship between price or value
and net income expressed as a factor: The reciprocal of the Overall
Rate. Identical answers are found by multiplying net annual income
by the Net Income Multiplier (NIM) or dividing it by the Overall Rate.
To illustrate: Overall Rate of .106137: $240,000 divided by .106137
= $2,261,228. (Refer to "RECIPROCAL" in glossary).
NET LEASE - Lease under which the tenant pays the agreed upon
rent plus utilities and taxes.
NET INCOME - The difference between effective gross income (property)
and the expenses including taxes and insurance. The term is qualified
as net income before debt service.
NET-NET LEASE - Lease under which the tenant pays the agreed
upon rent plus utilities, taxes, insurance and maintenance.
NET-NET-NET LEASE - Lease under which the tenant pays the agreed
upon rent plus all costs of maintenance and repair. Also called triple-net
lease.
PRESENT WORTH - As an amount, present worth of an income stream
or single income payment due in the future worth less compound interest.
It is the original capital amount or value that will generate the future
income stream or sum at an anticipated yield rate within a specified
period of time. The present worth factors, applied as multipliers in
a "discounting"process, automatically compute and subtract
compound interest from the payment or payments receivable in the future
so that the original principal remains. Thus is the time value of money
measured.
PRIME RATE - The interest rate (or discount rate) which a commercial
bank charges for short-term loans to borrowers with highest credit
ratings; the minimum obtainable interest rate in commercial banking
at a particular point in time; often the basis for "floating
rates" such as "Prime Plus 2", meaning the prevailing
prime rate plus two percentage points.
PRINCIPAL - A capital sum; payment which represents partial
or full repayment of capital loaned or invested as distinguished from
payment of interest; the unrecovered capital remaining in a loan or
investment.
PRO FORMA - A model document drawn up to meet legal requirements,
for purposes of forecasting future business projections, or holding
periods to disposition to calculate return rates, and discounted cash
flows. Also used on major developments as feasibility studies.
REALIZED GAIN (also referred to as "Indicated Gain") - Fair
market value minus adjusted cost basis of the property.
RETURN TO INVESTOR - Benefit received by investors, including
one or more of the following components:
Cash Flow - Cash distributions from operations after provision
for reserves for maintenance, repair and replacement.
Tax Shelter - The value of losses passed through to the investor
that can be used for tax purposes to offset or "shelter" other
income.
Equity Build-Up - Increase in equity, resulting from reduction
of mortgages by payment of principal, also appreciation in value,
and realized only upon sale, or refinancing.
REVERSION - The return of rights in real estate to the grantor,
such as the return of the full use of real estate to the lessor at
the expiration of a lease; the estate returned or due to be returned;
in mortgage-equity analyses, synonymous with proceeds of resale at
the end of the ownership projection period.
REVERSE LEVERAGE - A situation that occurs when financing is
too costly; when the total yield on a cash investment is less than
the interest rate or borrowed funds.
SALVAGE VALUE - The anticipated value of an asset at the end
of its economic life.
SIMPLE INTEREST - Interest computed on the principal amount
of a loan only as distinguished from compound interest.
SINKING FUND - A gradually accumulated fund created to diminish
a debt. At the end of a given period, the fund will have a sufficient
amount, including interest earned, to replace the loss or satisfy the
obligation that has fallen due.
SINKING FUND FACTOR - A multiplier used to compute periodic
contributions to a sinking fund which will grow with compound interest
at a selected rate for a specified period of time; the amortization
rate; the amount per period which will grow to one dollar at a given
rate in a given period of time; one of the classic six functions of
one dollar.
TERMINAL LOSS - Where the assets (building) may have been disposed
of but a balance of U.C.C. remains at the end of taxation year. The
remaining balance of U.C.C. must be deducted from income in full, in
the year the assets are disposed of.
UNDEPRECIATED CAPITAL COST (U.C.C.) - The amount left undepreciated
upon disposition of property.
WRAPAROUND MORTGAGE - A technique in which the lender assumes
payment of the existing mortgage and give a new, increased mortgage
to the borrower at a higher interest rate. The new mortgage "wraps
around" the existing one.
YIELD - Money paid or earned as a return on capital; analogous
to interest but commonly used in connection with return on equity investments;
as distinguished from interest paid on mortgage loans; the term "yield" may
denote profits in total dollars or it may be used as a contraction
of the term "equity yield rate", denoting the annual rate
of return on equity capital.
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