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Edited on Wed Mar-10-10 10:53 PM by AllentownJake
A commercial real estate loan is generally financed differently than a mortgage. Since the real estate is used primarily for a business, most of the purchase is financed.
Under normal conditions:
If you decided to purchase a $1,000,000 building and you could show steady revenue projections to the satisfaction of the bank, the bank will finance the entire $1,000,000. Terms are generally different. You make interest payments and take a lump sum payment from you at the end of the term of the loan. In reality it is like a mortgage backed bond. The terms are generally 4-5 years.
Now, in normal conditions, you can refinance the loan every 4-5 years, make the last payment which includes the principle in the payment, and either take more money out in the form of borrowing the entire value of the property, or finance less of the property and establishing equity in the appreciation of the property. Most of the time the entire value of the property is financed.
Now, if the price of the property declines, this becomes an issue. Banks will not lend past the value of the collateral in this market, which is the building. So if your $1,000,000 building is now $800,000 than you have three options.
1) Cough up $200,000 and refinance $800,000
2) Default
3) Give the bank some money in addition to the property, to avoid a legal battle.
Now if your business is doing well in that location, and you expect the property to return to over $1,000,000 in value over the course of the loan. Option 1 might be acceptable.
If your business is doing poorly, option 2 and 3 look more acceptable. If you have other assets for the bank to go after in litigation, option 3 is the most likely outcome. If you don't your business declares bankruptcy and the bank gets the property. 2 and 3 will result in a loss to the bank.
Banks are not real estate investment companies. They generally aren't keen on holding property. It has expenses (insurance, property taxes, maintenance) banks generally sell real estate at auction, which means they sell it below appraised value. This is fine by the bank, since holding the property brings about expenses and a real estate asset without tenants drains liquidity and a sale creates it. Though the bank must make up the capital lost on the balance sheet in the loss on the property to remain solvent, overall.
Unlike residential real estate, the business owner makes a business decision. They either leave or agree to pay. If they leave, the bank gets the keys. There generally isn't scenes with the Sheriff.
Supply and Demand take over when there are lots of defaults and lots of banks looking to unload property. More properties at auction, lower asset values, more defaults.
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