John Oharenko |
Chicago,
IL, May 1, 2002 -- April represented one of the most volatile months in the
stock markets, with drops of 1000 points in a single day, reports The Real Estate Capital Institute®.
Under
such conditions, major benchmark rates continued climbing throughout the month
as investors absorbed more negative news about inflation.
The 5-year and 10-year notes rose about 60 basis points. The 5-year note also maintained an inverted yield curve over the 10-year note, although by a narrower margin.
That
said, many economists fear a recession should Fed rates approach 5% to stifle
inflation.
Lenders
still maintain loan underwriting discipline, despite the abundance of
capital. Pricing varies, but 4% to 5% falls within the most common
fixed-rate debt range.
Floating rate pricing starts at 250 basis points over select indices, increasing to 500 basis points for more entrepreneurial ventures.
Debt
yields range 7% to 10%+ restricting higher leverage debt, even with aggressive
equity pricing. Loan-to-value stays within the 75% or less
range.
However,
up to 85% is available under pref equity programs. Debt Service
Coverage Ratios (DSCR) start at 110% for projects with provable cash flow
increases, but 120% remains the standard.
John Oharenko, director of The Real Estate Capital Institute®, notes,
"Inflation takes center stage with investors based on ongoing expectations
of higher rates."
CONTACT:
John Oharenko
john.oharenko@reci.com
Executive Director
director@reci.com / www.reci.com
The Real Estate Capital Institute®
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