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The concept of negative leverage

If you tune in to our quarterly earnings calls, a recurring theme you've heard me talk about for over two years is negative leverage. Negative leverage is an incredibly unhealthy dynamic and has been shockingly prevalent in the Commercial Real Estate market for over two years, longer than any period in my 30-year career. 

Negative leverage1 is very easy to understand. It exists when a loan constant2 (coupon + amortization3, or only coupon for interest-only loans) is higher than a property’s capitalization rate (cap rate)4 - which is the unleveraged return5 on equity. 

For example, if someone acquires an asset for a 5% cap rate, that means they are receiving a 5% return on their equity investment because they are not utilizing any debt. The return on that equity can increase or decrease in the future based on performance of the asset cashflows. 

Impact on equity returns

Historically, in "normal" markets, investors will borrow debt at a loan constant or coupon that is lower than their cap rate - which results in positive leverage - meaning their return is higher than their 5% unleveraged return. We have been living in a market for over two years where the cost of debt is higher than the cap rate, resulting in the equity return declining by the borrower utilizing debt. 

 What does this mean? While Real Estate has exhibited strong fundamentals in several areas, ex-office, technical factors such as negative leverage have forced equity allocators to be very selective.

On the other hand, supply demand dynamics appear to favor lenders, and we always enjoy an environment where we get to swim downstream.

Resolving negative leverage

Negative leverage is solved in one of two ways, either interest rates decline or cap rates increase, or both. Until the commercial real estate market returns to positive leverage environment; real estate equity allocators must beware of their leverage utilization and allocate with a long-time horizon mindset.



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