Key financial calculations, ratios, and valuation methods used to analyze real estate investments and performance.
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Foundation terms you need to know first (92 terms)
Development costs are all the expenses incurred during the process of acquiring land, designing, constructing, and preparing a real estate project for use or sale, from start to finish.
Equity investment in real estate involves directly owning a portion or all of a property, providing the investor with an ownership stake and the potential to benefit from appreciation and rental income.
Accrual basis accounting records revenues when they are earned and expenses when they are incurred, regardless of when cash actually changes hands. This method provides a more accurate picture of a business's financial performance over time.
Base rent is the fixed, minimum rent amount paid by a tenant to a landlord for the use of a property, excluding additional charges like operating expenses, taxes, or utilities.
An office building is a commercial property designed for businesses to conduct administrative, professional, or commercial operations, offering spaces for work and meetings.
Complex strategies and professional concepts (127 terms)
Slow BRRRR is an advanced real estate investment strategy that extends the traditional BRRRR (Buy, Rehab, Rent, Refinance, Repeat) cycle over a longer period, often several years, to maximize equity appreciation and mitigate market risks.
An Equity-for-Property Swap is an advanced real estate investment strategy where an investor exchanges equity in one or more properties or entities for direct ownership of another property, often to achieve tax deferral, portfolio restructuring, or strategic asset acquisition.
The accounting process of recognizing the estimated cost of an Asset Retirement Obligation (ARO) as a liability and capitalizing a corresponding asset, which is then depreciated over its useful life, reflecting the future costs associated with retiring a long-lived asset.
A Personal Financial Stress Test is a systematic evaluation of an individual's or household's financial resilience against adverse economic scenarios, crucial for real estate investors to safeguard their portfolios.
Equity dilution occurs when a company or investment vehicle issues new shares, decreasing the ownership percentage of existing shareholders. In real estate, this often happens in syndications or partnerships when additional capital is raised.
Waterfall distribution is a tiered profit-sharing structure in real estate syndications, dictating how cash flow and profits are allocated among investors and sponsors based on predefined hurdle rates and preferred returns.
Work-in-Process (WIP) in real estate refers to the value of a property undergoing development, renovation, or construction, including all accumulated costs until completion. It represents an asset on the balance sheet for projects not yet ready for sale or use.
Working capital is the difference between a company's current assets and current liabilities, indicating its short-term liquidity and operational efficiency. For real estate investors, it represents the readily available funds to cover immediate operational expenses, unexpected repairs, and short-term obligations.
Worst-case scenario planning is a strategic process in real estate investing that identifies and quantifies the most severe potential risks and their financial impacts, allowing investors to develop mitigation strategies and contingency plans to protect their capital.
A write-off in real estate investing is an expense that can be legally subtracted from your gross income to reduce your taxable income and lower your overall tax burden.
Year-over-Year (YoY) change measures the percentage change in a specific metric, like property values or rental income, compared to the same period in the previous year. It helps investors understand trends by smoothing out seasonal fluctuations.
Yield in real estate measures the annual income generated by an investment property as a percentage of its cost or equity, providing a key indicator of its income-producing efficiency.
The yield curve is a graphical representation of the yields of bonds with equal credit quality but differing maturity dates, providing critical insights into market expectations for future interest rates and economic growth, which are vital for real estate investment decisions.
Yield maintenance is a prepayment penalty designed to protect a lender's yield on a commercial loan by ensuring they receive the same return had the borrower not prepaid, typically calculated as the present value of the difference between the loan's interest rate and a benchmark Treasury yield.
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