#lenders

TenantSee Weekly: Impossible Math

TenantSee Weekly:  Impossible Math

Imagine you invested in an office building in San Francisco in 2015.  At the time, the building was 95% occupied.  You paid $750/sf for the building and secured a loan on 50% of the value at the rate of 3.5%.  50% of the building’s tenant leases rolled in 2023/2024, a fact you underwrote as opportunity, opportunity to increase net operating income by achieving higher rents.  Then the pandemic hit.

TenantSee Weekly: The Negative Deal

TenantSee Weekly:  The Negative Deal

Investors invest in office buildings to generate a positive return on their investment.  Return is created in 2 primary ways, one is through ongoing profits generated from the individual leasing transactions completed within the project, and the other is through financing activities (taking on debt which allows the investor to pull equity from the investment or selling the asset).  This TenantSee Weekly is focused on the first of these 2 scenarios, the one in which the landlord seeks to create positive cash flow through its leasing activities.

TenantSee Weekly: Sublease, Terminate, or Restructure

TenantSee Weekly: Sublease, Terminate, or Restructure

Subleasing is the most common approach occupiers take in mitigating the cost of underutilized space.  Yet in San Francisco, it has become increasingly difficult to sublease office space.  With recoveries ranging from 0 to 25%, companies must consider the full spectrum of options.  Remember, too, sublease recoveries can be expensive to execute (fees and concessions); and, in subleasing, the occupier takes on a variety of risks that can prove costly (e.g., subtenant default). 

TenantSee Weekly: Knowledge, Leverage, and Opaque Markets

TenantSee Weekly: Knowledge, Leverage, and Opaque Markets

An office lease is a unique financial transaction.  While supply data is widely available, the values associated with completed leases are not so readily available, nor is the financial position of the landlord and its partners.  In effect, despite the preponderance of available data in residential markets (e.g., Zillow, etc.), office markets remain opaque.  The educated occupier can certainly access more information today than in decades past. But it’s not enough to merely know available spaces. Achieving a complete understanding of the markets can only be accomplished by partnering with a firm which is engaged in the market in a variety of very specific contexts.  You need an intimate understanding of landlord motivations, capital structures, and even the intricate dynamics of tenants within a building. Yet many real estate service firms don’t have this information because they lack the practice groups.