#leaserestructure

TenantSee Weekly: How a Building Sale Affects Lease Negotiations

TenantSee Weekly:  How a Building Sale Affects Lease Negotiations

The pace of investment sale activity in San Francisco is accelerating.  This is the “Great Reset” about which we’ve written.  It’s driven by capital partners (equity/lenders) deciding there is no viable pathway to own their way to an exit and choosing to sell (usually at a steep discount to what they paid and/or the value of the debt).  Ultimately, these capital stack resets are healthy as they activate the asset, enabling new capital partners to transact at market.

TenantSee Weekly: What's the Rate

TenantSee Weekly:  What's the Rate

If you look at the quarterly market reports provided by all major real estate service firms (Cushman & Wakefield, included), you will find that rent data is typically expressed in terms of “Asking Rents”.  Reports will cite the trend in Average Asking Rents by submarket, or by building class.  This is a somewhat misleading indicator.  Why?  Because it does not reflect the rent after negotiations, which often includes reductions in rate from the Asking Rate and potentially significant landlord-funded concessions.  In other words, Asking Rents reflect what landlords are asking, not what they’re getting.

TenantSee Weekly: From Blend and Extend to End and Extend

TenantSee Weekly: From Blend and Extend to End and Extend

The so called “blend and extend” deal structure has a number of applications, among them a scenario in which a landlord might account for a downward adjustment to a tenant’s rent by amortizing the value of the adjustment with interest into a new term.  Say, for example, a tenant has 3 years remaining on a lease and the market value for the space has dropped from $75/sf to $60/sf.  The landlord would adjust the rate to market ($60/sf) and spread the $15/sf differential over the new term.  If the interest rate were 8%, and the term 7-years, this would add $2.80/sf to the rent.