Multi-Period Analysis

About This Presentation
Title:

Multi-Period Analysis

Description:

Multi-Period Analysis Present Value Mathematics Real Estate Values Set by Cash Flows at different points in time. Single period Analysis revisited Single Period ratio ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:6
Avg rating:3.0/5.0

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Multi-Period Analysis


1
Multi-Period Analysis
  • Present Value Mathematics

2
Real Estate Values
  • Set by Cash Flows at different points in time.
  • Single period Analysis revisited
  • Single Period ratio analysis
  • Cash on Cash return
  • ROI excess of 10? From book
  • Depends upon inflation and interest rates

3
Present Value Analysis
  • Single sum Analysis Review
  • FV (1r)n PV
  • PV FV/(1r)n
  • rinterest rate, n of periods
  • Or PV and FV formula in excel
  • Multi-period analysis discounts a stream of
    different cash flows at a particular rate.
  • The discount rate risk free rate risk premium
    (ie risk free rate US T Bill yield)

4
Discounted Cash Flow (DCF)
  • Three main steps
  • Forecast the expected future cash flows
  • Ascertain the required total return
  • Discount the cash flows to the Present Value at
    the required rate of return

5
1) Forecast Cash Flows
  • Use Year One budget to expand to future periods.
  • Set assumed growth rate projection to income and
    expense items.
  • Use exact numbers if know otherwise estimates
  • Typical estimates include CPI, Mkt Study
    estimates, or past experience
  • Calculate the Terminal Value
  • Based on the final years cash flow
  • Typically apply a CAP rate to final year cash flow

6
Terminal Value/Resale Price Calculation
  • Final Years cash flow determined by applying a
    CAP rate to final years cash flow.
  • Net Operating Income
  • Projected for Final Year
  • ------------------------------------
  • CAP Rate
  • Represents an inflow of cash as if property were
    sold at the end of the analysis period.
  • Need to deduct any expected selling costs
  • Dont forget to deduct repayment of remaining
    balance of loan

7
Capitalization Rates Revisited
  • Rate set for quick valuation of assets based on
    one years Net Operating Income
  • The rate is usually set by comparison of what
    other similar properties are selling for in the
    market.
  • A way of quoting observed market prices for real
    estate as Bond Yields are the way bond prices are
    reported.
  • The CAP rate for terminal value may be slightly
    higher than one for a valuation today
  • Reflecting the age of the property
  • Higher uncertainty regarding inflation and
    interest factor

8
Amortization of Loans
  • Will need to create an amortization table of the
    loan to know expected value of loan in last year.
  • Calculate payment, calculate principle and
    interest portions of payments, deduct principle
    portion from prior years amount.

9
2) Determine Discount Rate
  • Three Main Determinants of Discount Rates
  • Opportunity Cost of Capital
  • How much can your money earn in other investments
    like stocks and bonds.
  • Discount Rates move with Interest Rates
  • Inflation Rates
  • Risk
  • Higher Risk, higher discount rate, Lower price
  • Growth Expectations
  • Where is the property in its Life Cycle
  • Is the location a growing or declining area
  • Investors willing to pay more for growth prospects

10
3) Discount Cash Flows to Net Present Value
  • NPV PV(benefit)-PV (Cost)
  • Net Present Value Rule
  • Maximize the NPV across all mutually exclusive
    alternatives
  • Never choose an alternative that has NPVlt0
  • 0 NPV deals are OK
  • Discount rate implies that at 0 investor is just
    earning their required return
  • Finding deals with very large NPV usually means
    you have an error in your calculations

11
Most Common Errors
  • Rent and income growth assumption too high.
  • Do rents always grow with inflation?
  • Depreciation of building real terms inflation vs
    inflation applied to todays value
  • Capital improvement expenditures projection too
    low
  • Can average 10 20 of NOI
  • Terminal CAP rate too low
  • Typically slightly higher than going in cap rate
  • Discount Rate too high
  • May offset the other mistakes
  • Unrealistic expectations

12
Example from Book P. 90
  • Year one Gross Rent 1,000,000
  • Vacancy Rate 7
  • Year One Operating Expenses 700,000
  • Net Operating Income - 230,000
  • Discount Rate 8
  • Terminal CAP 8.5
  • Income escalation 3
  • Operating Expense escalation 4
  • Sale of property at the end of year 6
  • Purchase Price 2,820,285

13
Internal Rate of Return
  • The rate that discounts all the net cash flows to
    equal a 0 NPV
  • Algebraic solution cannot be done. Must use
    computer.
  • The IRR function in Excel asks for a guess of the
    expected IRR to help give the correct response
  • A common measure used by companies in capital
    budgeting.

14
Remember It is All Still Just Estimates
  • GIGO applies

15
The Nature of Risk
  • The chance or probability that the investor will
    not receive the expected or required rate of
    return.
  • We have already seen that as risk increases
    expected return is also increased

16
Business Risk
  • Related to variances from estimates in
  • capital expenditures,
  • gross possible income,
  • vacancy and credit loss
  • Operating Expenses
  • Property Value
  • Static or unsystematic business risk
  • Physical causes and beyond the control of the
    investor
  • Fire, floods, injuries
  • Can be shifted to others through insurance
  • Dynamic or systematic risk
  • Related to changes in general business conditions
    and conditions of the property. External not
    under the control of the investor.
  • Market supply and demand, quality of property
    management, change in economic base or taxes.
  • Cannot be transferred to others therefore
    requires risk premium in return calculation

17
Financial Risk
  • Risk of not receiving expected return due to
    financial obligations of debt financing
  • Risk created by debt financing
  • Increases whenever the debt levels increase
  • Debt decreases net cash flows however increase
    IRRs if leverage is favorable
  • Because investors demand a higher return for the
    increased risk.
  • Internal financial risk
  • Relates to the ability of the project to pay debt
    service
  • External financial risk
  • Ability of the investor to obtain funds from
    external sources.
  • As sources become more difficult to obtain
    external financial risk increases.

18
Transfering or Eliminating Risk
  • Play the real estate cycle
  • Wait for the right time for real estate decisions
  • Do not invest in overbuilt or recessionary
    markets
  • Non recourse mortgages
  • Shifts the burden of financial risk to the
    property and the lender
  • In the event of default the investor could lose
    the property
  • Avoid pre-payment penalties, indexed loans
  • Insurance policies
  • Limited-liability forms of ownership
  • Long term leases with escalation clauses
  • Transfers vacancy risk to the tenant

19
Reducing the remaining Risks
  • Negotiation of appropriate loan amount and terms
  • Lower amount has less risk
  • Purchase Price
  • Negotiation of better purchase terms
  • Diversification
  • Good accounting controls and reporting systems
  • Good research
  • Good Property Management
  • Superior location
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)