HoustonAg_2009 said:
Circling the wagons on this Georgetown property along with multi-family in general (just sharing my experience).
* This Georgetown new development is currently being leased up and did a cash neutral refi to lower debt service payments (got out of construction loan). They did issue some notes at 12% pref return to finance some small shortfalls. They sit higher up in the stack - I participated as I believe there is low risk of them not getting paid. This investment is now pro forma is around 1.5x CoC which is lower than original.
* All bridge loan deals that I'm in have been hurt by debt service raises (they all had caps, but still had large initial increases) and new rate cap purchases. Additionally a few have had issues with delinquency and time in which it took to evict (upwards of 6-9 months in some instances). These deals have now released capital raises of approx 30% of initial investment. The "new money" will be higher in the stack versus original equity. Revised pro forma is 1.3-1.4x if you participate in the capital call and approx 1.1x if you don't participate.
* Fixed rate (without significant delinquency) is doing "just fine" when compared to above bridge loans. All mine are still paying distributions from 3-6%.
* Questions:
- Are you now seeing deals with positive leverage? I'm starting to see a few.
- Are you seeing people buy down the rate to get even/positive leverage? I'm starting to see a few.
- I feel like the multifamily market won't crumple, but rather this is a bump in the road so I've been "dollar cost averaging" on a few deals in 2023. 2024 will be a grind and hopefully a good business model will survive. Any thoughts here are appreciated.
Definitely a lot more cash neutral refi's out there. The drop in treasury has saved a lot of deals in the last 4-5 months. Hopefully your cash neutral refi deal was into a 5/7YR fixed and not another floater?
How is lease up going? Austin has a 5.2% decrease in asking rents and 40,000 units of supply coming to market in the construction pipeline with a lot of it for North Austin.
With some of these developers, they are having to become proper asset managers and it's tough for them. Management companies will make or break you. Had seen one where they hired a new company who said they would drop rents and take away concessions. It's not helpful seeing GPR in free fall, concessions at 5-8% AND then bad debt on top of it at 3.5%. Hard to make a deal pencil with 16-20% economic vacancy, just get some asses in chairs and paying rent.
Very few deals with positive leverage but most that are out there have been higher cap rate, class C type product.
Almost everyone is buying down rates these days but you need to make sure if you are buying down, it's being done from 100% of par and not at 100.5% or 101%. Some seedy bankers out there trying to take advantage….
Multifamily is in a tough spot regardless for 2024. The common theme is survive to 2025 and even more bearish is "stay in the mix until 2026".
Insurance costs are really destroying some people and are likely to keep getting worse. Some experienced portfolios are seeing their renewals come in at 40% higher than existing policy. Which really hurts at a time when rents aren't rising or you can't push them as much to offset. Liquidity is key IMO.
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