Leverage: A Friend That Can Turn on You
Leverage is one of those concepts
we throw around a lot in commercial real estate. It sounds sophisticated—like
something whispered in back rooms by finance guys wearing French cuffs. But
really, it’s simple: leverage means using someone else’s money to buy something
you couldn’t afford on your own.
That “someone else” is usually a
lender, and the “something” is typically real estate. Whether you’re buying an
industrial building, an office condo, or a strip center, leverage is the reason
you don’t need a million bucks in the bank to make it happen.
Let’s walk through it—and then
I’ll explain why it’s both powerful and dangerous.
How
Leverage Works
Say you find a building you want
to buy. It’s priced at $2 million. You could write a check—if you happen to
have a spare $2 million lying around. But most investors don’t.
So you approach a lender. The
lender agrees to loan you 65% of the purchase price, or $1,300,000. That means
you need to bring $700,000 to the table. With that $700,000, you now control a
$2,000,000 asset. That’s leverage.
Why is this useful? Because you
get all the benefits of owning the building—rental income, appreciation, tax
advantages—without tying up your full net worth in a single deal. But, you’ve
borrowed $1,300,000 which must be repaid.
The
Power of Cash-on-Cash Return
Now here’s where leverage starts
to flex its muscles: cash-on-cash return.
Cash-on-cash is a fancy way of
asking, “What am I earning on the actual money I invested?”
If that $2 million building
brings in $100,000 in income after expenses and debt payments, and you only put
in $700,000 to acquire it, you’re earning roughly 14% annually on your cash.
(That’s $100,000 /$700,000.) Not bad.
But if you bought the building
all-cash and still brought in $100,000 a year, your return would only be 5%.
See the difference? ($100,000 / $2,000,000.
That’s why experienced investors
love leverage. It makes the return on yourmoney better because you’re using someone else’s money to own more.
What
Happens When the Math Goes Backwards?
There’s a flip side to this, and
it’s become more common lately: negative leverage.
Negative leverage happens when
the cost of borrowing exceeds the return you’re getting on the
property—specifically, when your interest rate is higher than the property’s
capitalization (cap)rate. Imagine paying 7% interest on a loan to buy a
building that only returns 5.5% annually. That’s a losing equation from day
one.
Unless you’re banking on major
rent growth, redevelopment, or some other value-creation, you’re effectively
paying to hold the asset. Your cash-on-cash return goes down, not up. And in
that scenario, leverage isn’t helping you—it’s hurting you.
We saw the opposite for years
when money was cheap. Investors could borrow at 3% and buy properties at 5%–6%
cap rates all day long. But today’s reality is different. Many deals that
penciled before don’t anymore—not because the buildings changed, but because
the cost of capital did.
The
Pitfalls of Leverage
Leverage works great when things
go well—when tenants pay rent, when rates stay low, and when property values
rise.
But if vacancy creeps in, or
interest rates rise, or your building needs unexpected repairs, that monthly
loan payment doesn’t go away. It still shows up—every month, like clockwork.
I’ve seen more than a few deals
that looked great on paper fall apart in practice because the borrower didn’t
leave enough breathing room. That extra margin of return? It can vanish quickly
when costs go up or income goes down.
And over-leverage can lead to
overconfidence. I’ve watched folks stretch into larger deals just because the
bank said “yes.” And when the market turned? That yes turned into a painful
lesson.
Using
Leverage Wisely
Leverage is neither good nor
bad—it’s neutral. It’s how you use it that matters.
Here are a few guiding principles
I share with clients:
• Be
conservative. Just because a lender will
loan you 80% of the purchase price doesn’t mean you should take it.
• Understand
your debt. Know your payments, your
interest rate, your amortization period, and what happens if rates change.
• Stress-test
your deal. If rents drop by 10%, can you
still pay the mortgage?
• Watch
for negative leverage. If you’re
borrowing at 7% to buy at a 5% return, you need a very clear reason for doing
so.
• Keep
reserves. Surprises happen. Don’t let one
roof repair or a missed rent payment jeopardize your investment.
Bottom line? Leverage can be your
best friend—or your worst enemy. Used with discipline, it can multiply your
wealth. Used carelessly, it can multiply your mistakes.
Choose wisely.
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