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This is a #RealEstate #flyer #design .How is it?
Full view Here> https://bit.ly/2KTlCMU
To get similar flyer> https://bit.ly/2XTTdvu
How to Properly Evaluate Real Estate Investment Returns | Key Metrics Explained
In this video, we break down the key metrics used by professionals to evaluate real estate investment returns. From gross return and net return to NOI (Net Operating Income), cap rate, and net cash flow (NCF), we explain how to properly analyze a property’s profitability and avoid common pitfalls.
Navigating Commercial Real Estate Risk in 2025: What NYC Businesses Must Know
The Changing Landscape of Lease Risk and Tenant Default Tenant default and lease risk are top concerns for NYC landlords. In 2024, commercial tenant defaults rose by 8% nationwide. This trend highlights the need for early rent roll analysis and strong lease rollover risk mitigation. Vacancy Risk and Market Fluctuations in Urban Hubs Manhattan's office vacancy rate hit 22% in Q1 2025. Market fluctuations make cash flow stability harder to project. Regular rent roll analysis and DSCR monitoring are now essential to long-term planning. Cap Rate Compression and Property Valuation Challenges Cap rate compression continues across core NYC submarkets. Investors are seeing tighter spreads, reducing risk-adjusted return. Accurate property valuation tied to NOI performance remains key in this tightening market. Interest Rate Risk and Refinancing Pressure Rising rates have pushed refinancing risk to the forefront. Lender requirements are stricter. Loan covenants now emphasize DSCR and risk-adjusted return. A proactive exit strategy has become mission-critical. Environmental Liability and Zoning Compliance Environmental liability is up due to expanding flood zones and stricter EPA enforcement. Zoning compliance audits are recommended annually to avoid future title risk and building code violations. Natural Disasters and Seismic Risk in NYC Flood risk maps now cover 40% of NYC commercial zones. Seismic risk, though historically lower, is gaining attention. Property insurance premiums have surged 12% since 2023, demanding strategic risk allocation. Asset Management and Deferred Maintenance Planning Operational risk spikes when deferred maintenance goes unchecked. Strong asset management systems reduce long-term CapEx surprises. Tenants now seek buildings with modern, maintained systems to ensure business continuity. Management Risk and Occupancy Rate Optimization Poor management can tank occupancy rates and lease renewals. Strategic lease structuring and strong NOI reporting help maintain confidence across investor groups and tenants alike. Why NYC Leads in Global CRE Risk Solutions NYC firms are pioneering smarter lease structures and DSCR-based underwriting. The city's average risk-adjusted return remains 5.2%, outpacing major international markets. The North Star Universal, LLC is a risk management and advisory firm. Follow this blog for more insights into the evolving world of NYC realty and beyond @ thenorthstaruniversal.com/WP. Read the full article
What is a reversion cap rate in multifamily investing?
Good question.
A reversion cap rate is the projected cap rate at sale. So, let’s say you receive a prospectus to invest into a multifamily deal and it shows a projected cap rate at exit. This is also referred to as a reversion cap rate.
If you are given a prospectus that shows the cap rate going lower over time dropping from 5 to 4.5 over a few years this is an aggressive assumption and very optimistic. A more conservative estimate might show the cap rate going higher. If you would like to learn more about reversion cap rates in multifamily investing, you should contact my office.
I offer education and training to landlords, engineers, doctors and dentists, and many others that would like to learn how to enjoy the benefits of multifamily as quickly as possible. If that sounds interesting contact my office by going to www.benjaminzmiller.com and fill out the contact form.
If you want to learn how to invest, you should register for my free weekly investor meeting to learn more:
The mission of Benjamin Z. Miller’s investor networking group is to provide a place for new and experienced investors to network. Typical to
I hope that helps and good luck with your investing!
Benjamin Z Miller
www.benjaminzmiller.com
1-817-203-4160
https://www.linkedin.com/in/benmillersells/
https://twitter.com/BenjaminZMiller
Someone tried to lowball my apartment complex by saying it needed a higher cap rate. What should I do?
Good question.
If you feel that the offer you received on your apartment community was too low, you can contact my office at www.benjaminzmiller.com by filling out the contact form or by emailing [email protected]
In many cases I can purchase for more than the low baller that made you that offer so don’t get discouraged or think that you need to sell to them. Contact my office and get a second opinion and offer.
If you need help with learning multifamily, contact my office at www.benjaminzmiller.com and fill out the contact form.
I hope that helps and good luck with your investing!
Benjamin Z Miller
www.benjaminzmiller.com
The mission of Benjamin Z. Miller’s investor networking group is to provide a place for new and experienced investors to network. Typical to
Cap Rates - The Truth
The Truth About Cap Rates.
5 Myths Busted.
A lot of what you read about cap rate is simply wrong. I’m here to dispel the myths and tell you the real story. Perhaps no topic is more overrated, misunderstood, or debated than cap rate. I would also argue that cap rate has more inaccurate or misinformed articles written about it than pretty much any other topic on real estate, but no one wants to listen to me argue. Instead, why not just forget everything you’ve read about it, and start from scratch here? Cap Rate Definition Cap rate is short for “capitalization rate,” which is a mathematical formula used by appraisers to measure the value of income-producing real estate. Because it’s impractical to compare one income-producing property to another the same way you can with tract homes, a different method was needed to gauge value. Cap rate became the most widely accepted measurement. Cap rate is calculated by dividing the net operating income (NOI) by the property’s purchase price (or sale price, depending on which side of the table you are sitting on). For example, if the property produces $100,000 of NOI and is purchased for $1 million, the cap rate is 10%. If the purchase price is $2 million, the cap rate is 5%. NOI is income minus operating expenses. Debt service payments and capital improvement costs are ignored for the purpose of this calculation. NOI / (Purchase Price) = Cap Rate $100,000 / $1,000,000 = 10% Cap Rate Commercial real estate investors have an odd love affair with cap rate, which leads to all sorts of opinions on what cap rate is and what it means for their investment strategy. Here’s a list of some common statements I hear and read about cap rate: “Cap rate is equivalent to the return I receive if I pay cash for the property.” “I need to buy at a high cap rate to get the returns I’m looking for.” “A high cap rate means I’m getting a better deal.” “If interest rates rise by 1%, cap rates have to increase by 1%, too.” “I bought the property at a 5% cap rate and turned it into a 10% cap rate!” What do these five statements about cap rate have in common? They are all wrong. Yes, every one of them. Myth Busted: The All-Cash Return I wish people would stop saying, “Cap rate is the return you get if you paid all cash.” It is not. Here are two ways that this is wrong: I once bought a property that was around 300 units. The previous owner had their eye completely off the ball and hadn’t kept their rental rates up with the market. The day we closed escrow, our new management team arrived at the office to take over. Each time a new prospect walked in the door, we raised the quoted rent $25. We did this all day until the first person said no. It took five prospects, so we immediately had a $125 increase in new leases on the first day. It would only be a matter of time before the entire property cycled to the higher rate. Did that affect our return? You bet it did. So much for cap rate telling us anything about our expected return. Even if we hadn’t done that, to buy the property, we would have needed to inject additional cash to close the purchase. Closing costs, title insurance, legal fees, immediate capital improvements to correct deferred maintenance—you name it. The price we paid was not the cash we would spend. Cap rate is net operating income divided by purchase price. Our purchase price was less than the cash outlay, so this misconception of cap rate fails for a second time. Myth Busted: Higher Cap Rates Mean Higher Returns Reflecting on our second incorrect statement about cap rate, “I need to buy at a high cap rate to get the returns I’m looking for,” consider these two examples: Example 1: An 8% cap rate on a stabilized property in a stagnant market with no rent growth, no job growth, a slowly declining population, and no ability to push rents with renovations. Example 2: A 6% cap rate in a market with above-average population growth, job growth, and income growth with stable occupancy and high rent growth. The property is underperforming relative to nearby comps. With some minor cosmetic improvements, rents can be increased 20% on each unit that is rented to a new resident in upgraded condition. In nearly every case, over the long-term, example 2 will outperform example 1 despite example 1’s higher cap rate. Myth Busted: High Cap Rates Mean a Good Deal “A high cap rate means I’m getting a better deal.” This statement by itself is false. Our examples above illustrate this point across two different markets, but even within the same market you could have a property selling at an 8% cap rate that could be a worse deal than another property in the same market selling at a 6 percent cap rate. Example 1: An 8% cap rate on a 50-year-old property in which all the interiors have been recently renovated and the seller has pushed the rents to $25 higher than the comps. The property doesn’t need a thing; it is totally turnkey. Example 2: A 6% cap rate on a 20-year-old property that hasn’t been touched since it was built, except that the owner just put on a new roof. Interiors are original, rents are $150 below market, and renovated comps are getting $100 more than the non-renovated comps. Example 2 is more likely to be a better deal despite the lower cap rate. There’s nothing you can do to push the income in example 1; it’s been pushed as far as it can go. And example 1 is 50 years old. So despite the upgrades, the maintenance bills are likely to increase substantially over time. There could also be big-ticket items in your future, such as a new roof, foundation repairs, new windows, and new heating and cooling systems. The list goes on and on. But in example 2, you have multiple opportunities to increase income. The low-hanging fruit is just bringing the rents to market rate, in line with non-renovated comps. Then you have the option to go to the next level by performing minor interior cosmetic improvements to push rents further toward the level of the renovated comps in the area. Myth Busted: Rising Interest Rates Mean Rising Cap Rates It is often thought that cap rates move when interest rates move. You might hear people say things like, “If interest rates rise by 1%, cap rates have to increase by 1%, too.” There are two concepts at play that give people reason to believe this. Investment return The thinking is that if someone can invest in risk-free treasury bonds at 3% interest, why would they invest in real estate at a 4.5% cap rate? There isn’t enough of a risk premium to justify investing in real estate at such a low yield. Hopefully by now you already see why this argument is a red herring. Cap rate is not a measurement of investment return; it is a measurement of market sentiment. Under the right conditions, it’s entirely possible to capture a 20% return from a 4% cap rate property. As a result, comparing risk-free yields to real estate cap rates is like comparing airplanes to submarines. Borrowing costs The thinking here is that if interest rates rise, it costs more to borrow money. Therefore, you have to buy at a correspondingly higher cap rate in order to preserve investment returns. There are two reasons why this usually isn’t true. First, the debt represents only a portion of the purchase price, such as 65-75%—and in many cases even less—and the remainder of the purchase price is cash. This mutes the effect of a higher interest rate on the borrowed money to some extent. Second, if interest rates are increasing, it is also likely that the economy has momentum and perhaps inflation. Rents tend to rise during inflationary times, which in turn increases the income from the property—perhaps to an even greater extent than the increased borrowing cost takes from it. The bottom line is that cap rates compress and decompress at the whim of market sentiment. When real estate becomes less popular, prices go down, which means cap rates go up. When real estate is highly sought after, prices go up, which means cap rates go down. Cap rates can also move when outside factors alter investment returns. For example, if rent growth slows or operating expenses go up, the only way to achieve the same desired investment return is to pay a lower price for the property, which means buying at a higher cap rate. Interest rates are only one of the many inputs in solving for returns. Higher borrowing costs will certainly have an effect, but interest rates and cap rates don’t move precisely in parallel. Myth Busted: Forcing the Cap Rate Here’s another funny statement I hear often: “I bought the property at a 5 cap and took it to a 10 cap!” Someone might be inclined to boast this claim if, for example, they bought a property that historically threw off $100,000 NOI for $2 million (a 5% cap rate) and then they were subsequently able to increase the NOI to $200,000. But this claim fails from two directions. First is that cap rate is simply a measure of market sentiment, so “taking a 5 cap and making it a 10 cap” means that they just destroyed the market and lowered their property’s value by 50%. Remember, cap rate isn’t about their property; it’s what the market is willing to pay for an income stream. They alone can’t move the whole market, so they alone can’t move the cap rate. No matter what they did to the income later, they still bought $100,000 of historical NOI for $2 million, and that will always be a 5% cap rate. The second reason this statement fails is that they undoubtedly had to invest capital into the property by making physical improvements to drive the revenue higher. Boasting about moving cap rate (which is calculated using only the purchase price) ignores the additional capital required to achieve the higher NOI. And of course, this says nothing of the fact that using post-acquisition NOI to calculate cap rate is bending the rules of the formula itself. What anyone making this claim should be talking about is their yield on cost. This is similar to cap rate but more like a first cousin than a twin. To calculate it, divide the current NOI by the entire project cost, including purchase price, closing costs, sponsor fees, and capital improvements. Using the property from the example above, let’s say that $1 million was spent on closing costs, fees, and improvements, bringing the total project cost to $3 million, and the NOI grew from $100,000 to $200,000. In this case, they could claim that they bought the property at a 5 cap and after they stabilized it, they brought the yield on cost to 6.7%. This doesn’t sound as sexy as claiming they “made it a 10 cap,” but at least they’d be telling an accurate story. And here’s one more thing: It is entirely possible to double a property’s income and add no value at all. In the above example, if $2 million was spent on closing costs, fees, and improvements, the total project cost would be $4 million. Doubling the NOI to $200,000 results in a 5% yield on cost. If the market cap rate is still 5%, the property is worth exactly what was spent on it—there was no value added. Even if someone claims that they “brought the 5 cap to a 10 cap”—they really did nothing at all. Article courtesy of Brian Burke, President/CEO of Praxis Capital, Inc. For Specific Information contact Ed Bertha at (941) 921-2117 or [email protected] Burns & Bertha - Changing Lives - Red Line Investors - © 2020 www.DiscoverSuncoastHomes.com Read the full article
Buying an investment property? You must know the CAP Rate and how to calculate it. Cap rate = Net Income / Purchase price #caprate #investmentproperty #investmentpropertyforsale #newmarketrealestate#aurorarealestate#newmarket#aurora #RealEstate #Realty #Realtor #Realestateagent#Homeforsale #Newhome #Househunting #Broker #Newhome #Newhouse #Forsale #Property #Properties #Listing #Renovation #MillionDollarListing #HomeSale #HomesForSale #Property#Investment#Home#Housing#Listing #Mortgage#HomeInspection#CreditReport#CreditScore#Foreclosure#NAR #EmptyNest#Renovated#JustListed -- Follow @maxshokouhi for more Real Estate advice 👈 🏡 @maxshokouhi👈 (at Newmarket, Ontario) https://www.instagram.com/p/B3ChdXTlFCG/?igshid=1s1cj7xgnj6b9
GREATER TAMPA BAY AREA PRICE REDUCED! AVAILABLE! 8+? Unit Income Property with Annual Net Income: $76,800.00 on a deep canal. Ask me about it. Seller says bring all offers! Listed at $750k - REDUCED TO $697k Cap rate around 11 #reduced #caprate #apartmentbuilding #incomeproperty #pricereduced #canal #cassandrasellsproperty . Here is a RARE opportunity to purchase a fully occupied waterfront 8 unit apartment building (can easily be a 9 unit with buildout completion). This property is IDEAL for use as a sho Per a friend's request I have the profits and loss, balance sheet. #CassandraEckert (at New Port Richey, Florida) https://www.instagram.com/p/B0yz30ogo6S/?igshid=hi57v53hd9ng