Commercial Banker Discusses Typical Loan Scenarios for Private Money Deals
The increased speed and flexible underwriting comes at a
steep price with interest only rates often in the teens, 3- 6 points being the
norm and loan terms being relatively short at 12 – 36 months.
Why would owners pay such high fees/rates? In short, because it makes sense for
them based on their current situation. Below are examples of transactions where
it made sense for our borrowers or go the hard money route:
The problem was four-fold: Personal credit was in the 400’s, the owner had
virtually no liquidity, the owner had no development experience and the
year-to-date, profit & loss and balance sheet showed that his business was
losing money. These issues eliminated any type of conventional financing.
The owner knew that the property would be a cash cow, and drastically improve
his overall financial position, if he could get the money needed to complete
the project. For the lender the deal made sense as well, due primarily to the
low loan to value (High equity).
In addition, the exit strategy was simple, after the building was renovated and
leased out, the property would stand on its own and qualify for conventional
financing based off the new cash flow.
Metro
Besides the above, multiple conflicting partners further complicated the matter
and made conventional financing that much more difficult to obtain.
However, the properties where in solid condition and had much equity. The
borrowers where able to leverage the equity and refinance their existing
mortgage and roll other business debt into the private money loan.
The result was increased cash flow enabling the business to regain
profitability – even though their rate was much higher than the previous
mortgage.
The primary issue for the conventional lender was that although the current net
operating income could support the proposed loan, the historical (average of
the last 3 years) net operating income could not meet the traditional bank’s
Debt Coverage Ratios.
The buyer, fearing that he would lose the property and money he had already put
into the deal, used private money to meet the closing schedule. The exit strategy
to pay off the private money loan was to simply continue to document the
current net operating income and refinance the debt into a conventional loan
one year out.
These are typically private money scenarios. Others include foreclosures,
distressed properties, recent bankruptcies, lack of existing cash flow,
partnership buy outs, land contract refinances, “need for speed,”etc.
Common positive traits that make the loans financeable include loan to values
less than 60% and clear “exit strategies” on how the borrower is going to pay
back the private money lender.
Yes, hard money is expensive, but can be a viable option given the right (Or
wrong) set of circumstances.
About the Author: Jeff Rauth
Jeff Rauth is President of Commercial Finance Advisors, Inc. based out of Bloomfield Hills, MI. He specializes in Commercial Real Estate Loans between $100,000 - $5,000,000. Offers unique loan programs such as Commercial 30 Year Fixed, private money loans and 90% non SBA financing. He can be reached at 248 990-7602. jrauth@cfa-commercial.com | www.cfa-commercial.com.
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