Real Property Management_Critical Function_01.31.17Adam C. Liebi
Similar to Fundamental Skills for Real Estate Development Professionals I – Site Selection and Due Diligence (Charles Long) - ULI Fall Meeting 102611 (20)
Call Girls Pune Just Call 9907093804 Top Class Call Girl Service Available
Fundamental Skills for Real Estate Development Professionals I – Site Selection and Due Diligence (Charles Long) - ULI Fall Meeting 102611
1. Fundamental Skills for Real
Estate Development
Professionals I
Site Selection
and Due Diligence
October 26, 2011
Charles A. Long
Charles A. Long Properties LLC
10:45 a.m. -12:00 p.m.
Site Selection and Due Diligence 1
2. Topics we plan to cover
I. Risk management during site acquisition.
II. Maximum supported investment and
residual land value
III. Six focus areas of project management and
due diligence.
IV.Acquiring the site while conducting due
diligence
Site Selection and Due Diligence 2
3. Learning Objectives:
For you to understand:
1. Managing risk in site acquisition as a
continuum of managing risk in
development.
2. Determining price and terms for site
acquisition reflecting the value the
project can afford.
3. Due diligence as part of site
acquisition.
3
Site Selection and Due Diligence
4. Our approach
Overview with class discussion
Ground rule:
Ask questions as they occur to you.
Site Selection and Due Diligence 4
5. •Charles A. Long
•Charles A. Long Properties, LLC
•Oakland, CA
• Developer specializing mixed use development in California, US
• Consultant on real estate development, redevelopment, capital finance
and economic development
• Instructor for ULI Real Estate School on development process, public-
private partnerships and sustainable development
• Former city manager of Fairfield, CA and interim manager in Mammoth
Lakes, Pinole, and Hercules, California.
• Author of “Finance for Real Estate Development” published April 2011
and contributing author to ULI Retail Handbook.
• Served on 14 ULI advisory panels, chairing panels in Salem OR,
Boise, ID and Dallas, TX
• Masters in Public Policy, UC Berkeley; platoon sergeant, US Army
5
Site Selection and Due Diligence 5
6. Managing Risk
in the
Development
Process
Site Selection and Due Diligence 6
7. Development today is more complicated
physically and economically
• More urban and mixed use
• Entitlement is longer and riskier
• More complicated economics
• More conversions from old uses
• Less leverage and no ―value add‖
financing
Appleton Mills, Lowell, MA
• Density confusion
Lakeside Steel Plant, Chicago West End Commons, Oakland, CA
7
Site Selection and Due Diligence
8. The Great Recession has changed
the capital stack
Much higher equity: now 35% or
Equity more—recourse provisions
tighter
Mezzanine or Disappearance of "Gap" financing
performing debt to pay for ―value-add‖ conversions
Much lower debt: now 65%
Debt or less
Site Selection and Due Diligence 8
9. Development is…
a separate self financing enterprise that goes from
small to large.
•9
Site Selection and Due Diligence 9
11. ―The developer is the conductor of a
chaotic and multi-disciplinary
process, albeit one that depends on
exogenous forces, especially market
demand and capital availability.‖
―No industry involves the
collaborative effort of so many
different disciplines to create a
product in such a publicly
accountable process as development.‖
Site Selection and Due Diligence 11
12. 80% to 90% of project value is created in
the pre-development phase
Acquisition, design, entitlement,
financing, risk management
Project Value
12
Site Selection and Due Diligence
13. Pre-development work
manages risk for all phases
By the start of construction, risks should be
reduced to factors that have already been
addressed and are controlled through good
management.
•13
Site Selection and Due Diligence
14. Pre-development funds are at risk
• Funding for pre-development comes
primarily from developer capital.
• If source is outside investors, required
return at least 25% and higher.
• Many projects are abandoned when
information about costs, markets or
government approval conditions show that
the project is unviable.
•14
Site Selection and Due Diligence
15. 5 Principles of successful
development management
1. Invest in information wisely: More
information reduces risk but it also has a
cost. Is the risk of loss worth the reduction in
risk?
2. Manage time: the longer it takes, the more
expensive the process will be.
•15
Site Selection and Due Diligence
16. 5 Principles of successful pre-
development management (continued)
3. Manage tasks: Identify and budget all tasks
and monitor.
4. Anticipate: Things go wrong in the
Development phase because somebody
didn’t spend the money early enough, or
somebody didn’t communicate key
information. Things going wrong early are
cheaper than later.
•16
Site Selection and Due Diligence
17. 5 Principles of successful pre-
development management (continued)
5. Foster teamwork among the professionals:
Select an effective team of multi-disciplinary
players. Especially, focus on the relationship
between the architect and contractor.
a) As much as 80% of project costs will be spent
through the contractor, another 5% through the
architect. These two disciplines MUST work
together.
•17
Site Selection and Due Diligence
18. Six areas of project management
Market and
Site Marketing
conditions
Entitlement
Financial Viability
Analysis
Construction Product
cost type and
management project
design
Site Selection and Due Diligence 18
19. Successful Developers
ANTICIPATE!
It is cheaper to solve problems
earlier than later.
Most of the value of a real estate project is
created before you start construction.
Site Selection and Due Diligence 19
20. Questions
1. Why does a real estate project have the greatest risk
of losing money in the early phases?
2. What are the 5 principles of pre-development
management?
3. What six areas do you need to focus on to reduce
risk and create value in the pre-development phase?
4. What do you need to have accomplished before you
spend significant amounts of money on a real estate
project?
Site Selection and Due Diligence 20
22. How much money does a real
estate project need to make to be
financially viable?
The minimum required (the ―hurdle‖)
return on costs depends on:
• Cost of capital, and
• Time to construct
Site Selection and Due Diligence 22
23. Rate of return-lots of choices
• Net operating income/Total cost=“the
Development Cap”
• Internal Rate of Return
• Return on sales (ROS)
• Return on costs (ROC)
• Return on equity (ROE)
The Hurdle Rate is the minimum rate of
return for proceeding with a project
•23
Site Selection and Due Diligence
24. Internal Rate of Return is the detailed
way to measure project return.
Spreadsheets make it easy:
Income for each period
Initial Investment 1 2 3 4
-$100.00 $6.00 $7.00 $8.00 $110.00
7.63% Internal Rate of Return
The discount rate at which the present value of the stream
of income equals the amount of the investment.
Site Selection and Due Diligence 24
25. To measure how much a project
makes:
Project Value minus Project Costs
Equals
Project Return
Site Selection and Due Diligence 25
26. The return on a project pays:
• Cost of debt: interest on a construction loan
(4%-6%)
• Return on equity: return to investors (15% to
20%)
• Developer profit: based on project
performance after debt costs and equity target
is reached
Site Selection and Due Diligence 26
27. Developer profit comes from:
• Fees: Developer fee of 2-4% of cost with incentive
bonuses.
• Co-investment: Developer is an equity investor in
10-15% of equity requirement.
• Sharing of success:
– Participation in profits over the ―preferred return‖ of 8-
12%
– Higher participation in profits over a target of 15-18%.
Site Selection and Due Diligence 27
28. Project value is
– Sale project: Total sales price (e.g.
homes, townhomes, condominiums,
etc)
– Income project: Total capitalized value
from NOI. (i.e. annual income: lease
revenues from retail, office,
apartments, etc.)
28
Site Selection and Due Diligence
29. Use a cash-on-cash hurdle rate
to evaluate project viability
• The minimum overall return on cost to proceed
with a project.
• Uses a weighted average of return on debt and
equity to determine the hurdle for a project’s
construction/absorption period
•29
Site Selection and Due Diligence
30. How much deposited today produces
$120 in two years if the earning rate is
9.5% per year?
1.095 X
Deposit 1.095 X 1.095 X
Deposit Deposit
1 Year
2 Years
1.095 X 1.095=1.2
$120/1.2 =$100
30
Site Selection and Due Diligence
31. How much can you afford to spend on a real estate
project to produce enough return to pay interest and
equity return over 2 years?
IF:
• Debt funds 75% of costs at 6% interest
• Equity funds 25% of costs at 20% rate of return.
• The weighted average annual cost of capital is
.75*.06+.25*.2 = 9.5%.
• At this cost of capital and delivery period you
need a 20% return on costs
31
Site Selection and Due Diligence
32. Cash-on-cash hurdle rate changes with different capital
mixes and different absorption periods
Debt Equity
Absorption % funding Interest % funding Annual Annual Hurdle
period return ROR Rate
36 60% 4.00% 40% 20% 10.4% 35%
36 80% 6.00% 20% 20% 8.8% 29%
24 60% 4.00% 40% 20% 10.4% 22%
24 80% 6.00% 20% 20% 8.8% 18%
18 60% 4.00% 40% 20% 10.4% 16%
18 80% 6.00% 20% 20% 8.8% 13%
12 60% 4.00% 40% 20% 10.4% 10%
12 80% 6.00% 20% 20% 8.8% 9%
Site Selection and Due Diligence
32
33. The most you can afford to spend
Project Value
Maximum =
supported
investment 1 + hurdle rate
•33
Site Selection and Due Diligence
34. A cash-on-cash return evaluates project
viability based on estimates of
cost and value
• Be careful to include adequate cost allowances
for all categories and, especially, contingency.
• Use a cash-on-cash hurdle rate for projects
with similar capital stacks and absorption
profiles.
34
Site Selection and Due Diligence
35. Cash-on-cash hurdle rate is an
approximation that saves time and
allows quick evaluation.
With more detailed information, do a
more detailed IRR analysis.
•35
Site Selection and Due Diligence
36. Pop quiz 1
What is the maximum supported investment?
Project Value Hurdle Rate
$36,000,000 20%
$39,000,000 30%
$50,000,000 25%
$60,000,000 25%
•36
Site Selection and Due Diligence
37. How much should you pay for the land?
Land is worth what you can use it for.
Residual Land Value is:
The price you can afford to pay at the start of
construction that will result in sufficient return to
attract investors and provide profit commensurate
with risk.
37
Site Selection and Due Diligence
38. Residual land value is the land
component of supported investment.
Project Value Supported
investment
1 + hurdle rate
MINUS
Development costs
without land
=Residual land value
38
Site Selection and Due Diligence
39. It is important to determine land price
as soon as possible because:
If the land price cannot be supported by the
project, the developer should immediately
abandon the project.
•39
Site Selection and Due Diligence
40. How should you adjust residual land value for:
• Long and costly pre-development?
• Longer construction period?
• Higher market risk?
• High land deposit payments during pre-
development?
• Higher city development fees?
• Land as ―equity‖?
40
Site Selection and Due Diligence
41. Pop quiz 2
What is the project residual land value?
Project Value Project Cost (w/o land) Hurdle Rate
$36,000,000 $25,000,000 20%
$39,000,000 $25,000,000 30%
$50,000,000 $35,000,000 25%
$60,000,000 $43,000,000 25%
•41
Site Selection and Due Diligence
42. Questions
1. Why is it important to determine land
prices as early as possible?
2. What information do you need to
determine whether land price is affordable
by the project?
Site Selection and Due Diligence 42
43. The six focus areas of
project management
and due diligence
43
Site Selection and Due Diligence
44. Project Management
• Development is a ―team process‖—create and
foster a common vision.
• Have a complete list of all tasks—Monitor!
• Foster the architect/contractor relationship: Insure
it is collaborative not confrontational.
• Understand what components cost compared to
their value.
Site Selection and Due Diligence 44
45. Shape the land acquisition terms to
the information
Site Market Community Project Construction
analysis assessment Support design costs
Financial analysis to acquire
land at no more than its
Residual Land Value
Site Selection and Due Diligence 45
46. Site analysis affects development
potential and costs
• Is there a recent survey of the site?
• Any investigation of hazardous waste?
• Unstable soils or flooding on the site?
• History of the development of the site?
• Is the title for the site clear?
• Encumbrances on the site and who will be
responsible for clearing these?
• Are adequate utilities and traffic capacity available
Site Selection and Due Diligence 46
47. The market determines what your
project is worth
• Market familiarity requires experience, immersion
and research.
• Visit other projects, watch transactions and
understand trends.
• Outside experts cost money but should be
involved early in evaluating market potential and
shaping the project design.
Site Selection and Due Diligence 47
48. Know the community
(the entitlement process)
• Understand how zoning and development regulations
affect use and costs.
• Visit the city council and observe how they make
decisions.
• Map the concerns of community groups
• Chart the time it will take.
• Try to reach agreement on processing steps and time with
the local jurisdiction.
Site Selection and Due Diligence 48
49. Project Design will lay out the site
• Engage the
architect during due
diligence.
• Respond to the
market
• Respond to the
community
• Parking, density,
height
Site Selection and Due Diligence 49
50. Product type selection drives market acceptance
(high density residential product types)
FLATS 200 Second Street, Oakland, CA
•74 Luxury Condominiums
•Parking ratio 1.11 TOWN HOMES, Oakland Estuary,
Oakland, CA
•148 units/acre
•Parking ratio 2.5
•31 units/acre
Interlocking
townhouse
configuration
Up to 35
units/acre with 2
car garages
Site Selection and Due Diligence 50
51. Construction costs
• Research costs and construction techniques.
• Know the market for construction services.
• Identify and resolve areas of uncertainty
• AS PART OF DUE DILIGENCE: Hire the
contractor to give you up-to-date information on a
specific site for a specific design.
Site Selection and Due Diligence 51
52. Financial Analysis
• Use current market and costs—avoid wishful
thinking!
• Reduce uncertainty by paying for information!
• Use a valid hurdle that incorporates time and cost
of capital!
• Analyze the economics of each component!
– What is its cost?
– What is its value?
Site Selection and Due Diligence 52
53. Cost pro-forma includes:
1. Building costs
2. Site Development (demolition, grading, utilities and
landscaping)
3. Parking (may be included in building for some types of
projects)
4. Connection and impact fees
5. Offsite costs such as traffic signals or road improvements
6. Design (architecture, engineering, consultants, etc)
7. Marketing (brokers, advertising, etc.)
8. Construction management
9. Financing /legal/administrative
10. Taxes during construction
11.Contingency: 10-15% in early stages
Site Selection and Due Diligence 53
54. DO NOT LUMP COSTS!
UNDERSTAND COSTS AND
VALUE!
YOU CANNOT CUT THE BOARD
LONGER!
Site Selection and Due Diligence 54
55. Understand the economics
• Off-site improvements
• Design and amenities
• Unit size
• Parking ratios and costs
• Density
• Early design will change during entitlement.
Evaluate project components in terms of
what they cost and what they are worth.
Site Selection and Due Diligence 55
56. The economics of density:
More is sometimes less
Site Selection and Due Diligence 56
57. Why things go wrong
• Somebody didn’t spend the money early enough.
• Somebody didn’t communicate key information.
• Things going wrong early are cheaper than later.
• Control risk through due diligence and
communication.
The best way to solve a problem is to find out
about it early enough to do something about it.
Site Selection and Due Diligence 57
58. Questions
1. Why is development a team process?
Site Selection and Due Diligence 58
60. The first six steps
1. Look for sites, investigate and identify
those with promise.
2. Do the six part analysis on the promising
sites and decide what the site is worth.
3. Begin negotiation with owners.
Site Selection and Due Diligence 60
61. The first six steps
(continued)
4. Make the offer: Letter of intent (LOI) or
letter offering to purchase. This step
frequently goes on for a while.
5. Execute a purchase contract setting forth
detailed terms of purchase and period of
due diligence.
Site Selection and Due Diligence 61
62. The first six steps
(continued)
6. Conduct the due diligence process prior to
escrow deposits becoming non-refundable
so you can get them back if you decide not
to proceed.
Site Selection and Due Diligence 62
63. Looking for sites
• Immerse yourself in the community, drive
it, bike it, walk it, understand it.
• Meet with community groups
• Map it: Google maps, parcel map services
• Immerse yourself in the market: Internet
data, visit projects, talk to tenants.
Site Selection and Due Diligence 63
64. Looking for sites
(continued)
• Talk to city hall
• Attend city council meetings
• Understand the entitlement process.
• Develop relationships with brokers, but
recognize that brokers have only a part of
the market.
Site Selection and Due Diligence 64
65. Decide what the site is worth
• Organize your analysis around the six focus
areas.
• Identify the areas of uncertainty and do
more research.
• Exercise judgment about market,
construction and entitlement risk.
Site Selection and Due Diligence 65
66. Begin negotiations
• Find out about the owner.
• Obtain as much information as possible
from the owner during negotiations.
• Understand before proposing.
• Use the open book, where possible
• Be trustworthy: never, never promise
something you can’t do.
• Recognize that buying land is a relationship.
Site Selection and Due Diligence 66
67. Making the offer
• A clear succinct letter of intent (LOI) or
offer sets forth the major business terms.
• Ask for concurrence on the letter as pre-
requisite to the attorneys negotiating the
purchase contract.
• Provide a reasonable time to execute the
contract.
Site Selection and Due Diligence 67
68. The purchase contract
• The property is ―tied up‖.
• Now you can spend money on investigation
(due diligence).
• Insure that there is adequate due diligence
time. Try to get as long as possible.
• Refundable deposit during due diligence.
• Minimize amount of non-refundable
deposits prior to close of escrow.
Site Selection and Due Diligence 68
69. The purchase contract (continued)
• Focus on buyer’s conditions to close:
– Condition of title and buyer’s obligations to
deliver clear title.
– Environmental and soils
– Conditioned on receiving entitlement?
– Maximum period to meet conditions
– Deposit refund conditions
Site Selection and Due Diligence 69
70. Due Diligence
• Engage your development team on the six
areas of focus and pay them to get more
reliable information.
• Decide impact of more reliable info on
contract price.
• Decide whether to
– proceed,
– renegotiate, or
– abandon.
Site Selection and Due Diligence 70
71. Typical due diligence cost:
first 60-120 days
(<$100 million project)
Item Cost
Soils, survey, title and environmental $20,000
Market Analysis $7,500
Preliminary project design $10,000
Determine entitlement process and likely $7,500
conditions
Pre-construction services $5,000
Total budget during refundable period $50,000
Site Selection and Due Diligence 71
72. Common issues encountered in
due diligence
• Title to property not clear.
• Easements prevent full site utilization.
• Survey finds less land.
• Soils not good for construction.
• Environmental hazards.
• Zoning or development requirements different
• Development fees higher
Site Selection and Due Diligence 64
73. Common issues encountered in
due diligence (continued)
• Construction costs higher
• Market strength weaker
• More controversy in community
• Site layout or unit production different
Site Selection and Due Diligence 65
74. A real estate project’s 3 funding
baskets
Basket 1 Basket 2 Basket 3
Prior to site control After site control Begin construction
Preliminary research, Entitlement, non-refundable
purchase contract, (hard) deposits and design.
refundable deposits, Time is not your friend Construction and
initial due diligence
delivery
EASY HARD EASY
Limit expenditures from Basket 2 with careful initial due diligence, good
purchase terms and careful entitlement management.
Site Selection and Due Diligence 74
75. Acquisition Do’s
DO
• Base value on market, •Be prepared to abandon the
entitlement, and current site if due diligence discloses
costs and prices, not on information that is inconsistent
comps and guesses. with the assumptions that
determined price.
• Create a relevant list of
―buyer’s conditions to •Understand how much
close‖ ―Basket 2‖ money you will
need.
Site Selection and Due Diligence 75
76. Acquisition Don’ts
DON’T
• Close without entitlement
• Skimp on the cost of
unless prepared to live with
researching due diligence
the consequences of no
issues.
entitlement
• Proceed beyond due
• Deposit non-refundable
diligence if there are major
money un-necessarily.
issues unresolved.
• Make un-necessary
• Engage in wishful thinking
commitments to Seller or to
about resolving due diligence
concerns. entitlement entity.
Site Selection and Due Diligence 76
77. Questions
Why is effective due diligence
so important to the success of a
real estate project?
Site Selection and Due Diligence 77
Editor's Notes
A real estate development is a self-contained enterprise. Its economic viability is based on whether, when built, it will pay its cost of development. But at the beginning, a real estate development has no income, it is only an idea into which the developer invests at-risk capital to determine whether the project can pay its costs if built. And, at the beginning of a project there are a lot of unknowns, and the risk of losing the money needed to gather the information on these unknowns is high. The developer needs to spend money on finding out: What is best way to respond to the market?What is the best design?How much will the best project costWill the project value pay the costs?What will the community supportWhat will the community require as development conditions.The earlier that a developer knows these things, the sooner the project viability can be determined.