Commercial Property Investments: How to Find the "Upside" Moorhead MN

An investment property is "Upside Down" when the owner owes more than the property is worth, which is something that many residential owners understand at the moment. This may be bad for the owners, but for investors these points of weakness in the property can sometimes be improved, adding value and rewards.

Lexstar commercial development
701 492-6123
1555 43 St S
Fargo, ND
Coldwell Banker Commercial Griffin Companies
612.338.2828
615 First Ave NE Suite: 500
Minneapolis, MN
NorthMarq Real Estate Services, LLC - Ninth St
(612) 342-2222
222 South Ninth St., Ste. 140
Minneapolis, MN
Kingdom Trust
612-388-7527
6400 Unity Avenue North
Minneapolis, MN
Christianson & Company Commercial Real Estate Services
952-393-1212
5528 Kellogg Avenue
Edina, MN
Community Enhancement / Pedestrian Studies
(612) 827-8080
5218 11th Ave. S.
Minneapolis, MN
Hillcrest Development LLLP
(612) 371-0123
2424 Kennedy St. N.E
Minneapolis, MN
Laurent Companies
952-445-6745
100 S. Fuller St.
Shakopee, MN
Hines Interests Limited Partnership
(612) 338-8250
200 South Sixth St. , Ste. 640
Minneapolis, MN
Frauenshuh
(952) 829-3480
7101 West 78th St.
Minneapolis, MN

Commercial Property Investments: How to Find the "Upside"

http://www.investortours.comAn investment property is "Upside Down" when the owner owes more than the property is worth, which is something that many residential owners understand at the moment. This may be bad for the owners, but for investors these points of weakness in the property can sometimes be improved, adding value and rewards.

The search for "Value Add" properties with Upside is what drives certain commercial property investors to ferret out tarnished, tainted or downright tawdry properties and become rehabilitation or repositioning experts. When you turn around properties with significant challenges, you can see annual returns of 30% and much more for your efforts.

Go looking for trouble

That's right: You are looking for properties with problems. Just make sure they are ones you can successfully address.

If you find a property with a vacancy rate of 15% in a market where the average is 5%. You may have some Upside available to you there, but it depends on whether you can actually bring the vacancy rate down to the market rate once you are the owner. If you do, you are assured a major return boost for your efforts.

Upside is a Three Step Process

1) Find the Problem

It isn't that hard to find problems in an ugly old strip mall or apartment complex with a bad reputation and a very motivated seller. Finding the problem is step one. This is the easy part.

2) Fix the Problem

The 64 thousand dollar question is how can you fix it? And it may be worth much more than $65K to you.

Here is where you can lean heavily on your local team—especially your property manager. Your property manager will know the neighborhood, the market rents and standard amenities for the area. They may know this building well. They may have even managed it in the past. You can sit down with them even before you put in a letter of intent, and brainstorm an action plan for addressing this property's problems and realizing the Upside.

Caution: Keep in mind that you are betting that you can fix a problem that the seller couldn't. Don't get cocky. Make sure that you and your property manager can see a step-by-step solution built on strategies that the seller didn't use or didn't execute well.

3) Harvest the Upside

Remember the multiplier effect of the capitalization rate on any extra income you can retain at the property. The math is pretty simple.

Increase in Income / CAP Rate = Increase i...

Click here to read the rest of this article from NuWire Investor