Adjustable Rate
Mortgage: Mortgage where the interest rate
adjusts periodically up or down through a set index.
Also called a floating rate
mortgage.
Adjusted Gross Income:
Gross income of a building if fully rented, less an
allowance for estimated
vacancies.
Adjustment Interval: The
period of time between changes in the interest rate for
an adjustable-rate mortgage. Typical adjustment
intervals are one year, three and five
years.
Amortization: The
process of paying the principal and interest on a loan
through regularly scheduled
installments.
Annual Percentage Rate
(APR): This is the actual rate of interest your
loan would be if you included all of the other
associated costs such as closing costs and
points.
Apartment Conversion: When
a rental apartment building is converted to individually
owned units.
Apartment
Rehabilitation: Extensive remodeling of an older
apartment building.
Appraisal: An
estimate of the value of a property, make by a qualified
professional called an
appraiser.
ARM: See Adjustable Rate
Mortgage.
Assumable Loans: Loans
that can be transferred to a new owner if a home is
sold.
Balloon
(Payment) Mortgage: Usually a short-term
fixed-rate loan which involves small payments for a
certain period of time and one large payment for the
remaining principal balance, due at a time specified in
the contract.
Basis Points (BP):
1/100th of 1% expressed as margin over index
rate.
BC & D Lender or Loan:
The term BC & D is a rating of the loan. We refer to
BC & D as "problem or troubled" credit rather than
using these letters.
Bond
Financing: Type of financing that is a promise
to repay the principal along with interest on a
specified date.
Buydown: the
process of paying additional points on the loan to
reduce the monthly mortgage. There are typically two
specific types: a Permanent Buydown, and a Temporary
Buydown. In a Permanent Buydown, a sufficient amount of
interest is prepaid to lower the rate permanently. In a
Temporary Buydown, only a sufficient interest is paid to
lower the payment for the first three years. The reason
to Temporarily Buydown, a loan is to lower the current
payments thereby more easily qualifying for the loan.
This usually makes sense because income will usually
continue to increase as the interest does. The most
common Temporary Buydown is called 3-2-1, meaning three
percent lower the first year, tow percent lower the
second year, and one percent lower the third
year.
Bridge Loan: Financing
which expected to be paid back relatively quickly, such
as by a subsequent longer - term loan. Also called a
swing loan.
Cap: The maximum
which an adjustable-rate mortgage may increase,
regardless of index changes. An interest rate cap limits
the amount the interest can change, while a payment cap
limits the increase in monthly payment to a specific
dollar amount.
Cap Rate: A
net yield set by an investor to determine the value of
an income producing property.
Capital
Expenditures: Line items on a profit and loss
statement that would not be expensed on an annual basis.
This category would include replacement of major
building systems, such as roofs, driveways,
etc.
Capitalization Rate: A method
used to estimate the value of a property based on the
rate of return on
investment.
Closing: The meeting
between the buyer, seller and lender (or their agents)
where the property and funds legally change hands. Also
referred to as "settlement".
Closing
Costs: The cost and fees associated with the
official change in ownership of the property and with
obtaining the mortgage, that are assessed at the closing
or settlement.
Commercial
Conduit: Direct link to an institutional
lending source.
Comparative Market
Analysis: An estimate of the value of a property
based on an analysis of sales of properties with similar
characteristics.
Conduit: The
financial intermediary that sponsors the conduit between
the lender(s) originating loans and he ultimate
investor. The conduit makes or purchases loans from
third party correspondents under standardized terms,
underwriting and documents and then, when sufficient
volume has been obtained, pools the loans for sale to
investors in the CBMS
markets.
Convertible: An option
available on some adjustable rate mortgages (ARM's) that
allows the loan to be converted to fixed rate mortgage.
Conversion usually involves paying a one-time fee and
conversion may be limited to within a certain time -
frame.
Cosigner: Someone who is
willing to sign mortgage loan obligation with you in
case you default on your monthly payments. Normally, the
cosigner is required to go through the same application
and approval process as the original signer of the
loan.
Credit Company: A lending
organization that obtains it source of funds from the
commercial market.
Credit
Enhancements: A loan to provide improvements to
the property.
Credit Report: A
search through your existing credit history by a
qualified credit bureau to determine if, and the number
of times, you may have been delinquent making monthly
payments on previous debts. Even when a credit report is
for the most part positive, many lenders require written
explanation for any negative comments within the credit
report. This type of report is usually required to
obtain a mortgage loan.
Debt Service Coverage
Ratio (DSC): A 1.0 means breakeven. The ratio is
calculated by taking the net operating income and
dividing it by the mortgage payments. Most lenders look
for a ratio of 1.25 or higher.
Debt
Service: The periodic payments (principal
and interest) made on a loan.
Debt
Ratio: One of several financial calculations
performed by your lender to determine if you can afford
a particular monthly payment. The debt ratio (also known
as the obligations ratio) is the sum of all your monthly
debt payments including your total monthly mortgage
payment divided by your total monthly income. Typically
acceptable debt ratios for Conventional Loan are 36 -
38%, FHA Loans are 41 - 43%, and VA Loans Are
41%.
Discount Rate: Many lenders
may offer you a lower "teaser" rate on an adjustable
rate mortgage for the first adjustment period. After
this period is over, the lender will adjust your loan
according to the normal lenders margin
rate.
Down - Payment: The amount of
money you put down, normally anywhere from 5 -
25%.
Due Diligence: The legal
definition: a measure of prudence, activity or
assiduity, as is properly to be expected from, and
ordinarily exercised by, a reasonable and prudent person
under the particular circumstances. In CMBS: due
diligence is the foundation of the process because of
the reliance securities investors must place on the
specific expertise of the professionals involved in the
transaction.
Engineering
Report: Report generated by an architect or
engineer describing the current physical condition of
the property and its major building systems, i.e., HVAC,
parking lot, roof, etc. The report also determines an
amount for calculating replacement reserves, if
needed.
Environmental Report:
Report generated by an qualified environmental firm to
determine potential environmental hazards in a
building's region or within the building
itself.
Environmental Risk: Risk of
loss of collateral value and of lender liability due to
the presence of hazardous materials, such as asbestos,
PCB's, radon or leaking underground storage tanks
(LUSTS) on a property.
Equity:
1.The difference between the fair market value and
current indebtedness, also referred to as "owner's
interest". 2. The difference between the amount owed on
the loan and the current purchase price of the home or
property
Equity Capital: Capital
raised from owners. In a commercial real estate case, a
lender will also provide equity capital for a percentage
of ownership.
Escrow: 1. A
special account set up by the lender in which money is
held to pay for taxes and insurance. 2. A third party
who carries out the instructions of both the buyer and
seller to handle the paperwork at the
settlement.
Fair Market Value:
An appraisal term for the price which a property
would bring in a competitive market, given a willing
seller and willing buyer, each having a reasonable
knowledge of all pertinent facts, with neither being
under any compulsion to buy and
sell.
Fannie Mae: A
congressionally chartered corporation which buys
mortgages on the secondary market from Banks, Savings
& Loans, Etc; pools them and sells them as
mortgage-backed securities to investors on the open
market. Monthly principal and interest payments are
guaranteed by FNMA but not by the U.S.
Government.
FHA: Federal Housing
Administration, a government agency.
Fixed
Rate Mortgage: A mortgage with an interest rate
that remains constant for the life of the loan. The most
common fixed-rate mortgage is repaid over a period of 30
years; 15-year fixed-rate mortgage are also
available.
Floating Rate
Mortgage: See Adjustable Rate
Mortgage.
Floor - To - Area Ratio
(FAR): The relationship between the total amount
of floor space in a multi - story building and the base
of that building. FAR's are dictated by zoning laws and
vary from one neighborhood to another, in effect
stipulating the maximum number of stories a building may
have.
Foreclosure: The
process by which a lender takes back a property on which
the mortgagee had defaulted. A servicer may take over a
property from a borrower on half of a lender. A property
usually goes in to the process of foreclosure if
payments are no more than 90 days past
due.
Forward Commitment: A written
promise from a lender to provide a loan at a future
time.
Freddie Mac (Federal Home
Loan Mortgage Corporation): Entity buys loans from
conventional lenders and packages them for sale to
investors as securities.
Government Loans:
One of two loan types called FHA or VA loan. These loans
are partially backed by the government and can help
veterans and low-to-moderate income families afford
homes. The advantages of these types of loans in that
they often have a lower interest rate, are easier to
qualify for, have lower down-payment requirements, and
can be assumed by someone else if the home is sold. Many
mortgage bankers can obtain these type of loans for
you.
Graduated Payment
Mortgages: A type of mortgage where the
monthly payments start low but increases by a fixed
amount each year for the first five years. The payment
shortfall or negative amortization is added to the
principal balance due on the loan. The advantages if
this type of loan is a lower monthly payment at the
beginning of the loan term. This disadvantages are
typically a slightly higher rate than traditional fixed
rate mortgage loan and lenders usually require a larger
down payment. In addition, the negative amortized amount
increases the balance due on the total loan which can be
a problem if the value of the home
declines.
Gross Income:
Total income, before deducting taxes and expenses.
The scheduled (total) income, either actual or
estimated, derived from a business or
property.
Growing Equity Mortgage:
A type of mortgage where the monthly payments start low
but increase by a fixed amount each year for the entire
life of the loan as compared to five years with a
Graduate Payment Mortgage. The advantage of this type of
loan is that the loan can usually be paid off in a short
duration than a traditional fixed rate loan. This
disadvantage of this loan is that the payment continues
to go up irrelevant of the income of the
borrower.
Hard
Equity: High interest rate
financing.
Housing Ratio: One of
several financial calculations performed by your lender
when applying for a conventional loan to determine if
you can afford a particular monthly payment. The housing
ratio(also known as the income ratio) is your total
monthly payment including taxes and insurance divided by
your total monthly income. Typically acceptable housing
ratios for Conventional Loans are 28 - 33% and FHA Loans
are 29 - 31%.
HUD: Housing and
Urban Development, a federal government
agency.
Index: An
economic indicator, usually a published interest rate,
that determines changes in the interest rate of an
adjustable - rate mortgage. ARM rates are adjusted to
reflect changes in the index. The margin is the amount a
lender adds to the index to establish the actual
interest rate on an ARM.
Interest:
The sum paid for borrowing money, which pays the
lender's costs of doing business.
Interest
Rate: The sum charged for borrowing money,
expressed as a percentage.
Interest
Rate Cap: Limits the interest rate or the
interest rate adjustment to a specified maximum. This
protects the borrower from increasing
rates.
Interest Shortfall: the
aggregate amount of interest payments from borrowers
that is less than the accrued interest on the
certificate.
Investment Banker: An
individual or institution which, acts as an underwriter
or agent for corporations and municipalities issuing
securities, but which does not accept deposits or make
loans. Most also maintain broker/dealer operations,
maintain markets for previously issued securities, and
offer advisory services to investors also called
investment banker. See also bank, commercial bank, and
originator, syndicate.
Jumbo (Non - Conforming)
Loans: A mortgage loan that exceeds the amount
that is acceptable by the government if the loan were to
be resold (on the secondary market) to Fannie Mae and
Freddie Mac. Usually, loans with a face value greater
than $227,150 (as of 1/1/98).
Lease Assignment:
An agreement between the commercial property owner and
the lender that assigns lease payments directly to the
lender.
Leasehold Improvements: The
cost of improvements for a leased property. Often paid
by the tenant.
Lender Margin:
This is simply the profit the lender expects to
receive from the loan. You can ask your lender what the
margin is on an adjustable rate mortgage. Typically,
lenders use a discount rate initially as a "teaser"
rate. You must be sure to get the normal margin after
the discount period is over.
Lines of
Credit: An arrangement in which a bank or vendor
extends a specified amount of unsecured credit to a
specified borrower for a specified time
period.
Loan origination Fee: The
fee charged by a lender, to prepare all the documents
associated with your mortgage.
Lock -
In: The process of fixing the interest rate for
a specific period of time irrelevant of future or
impending economical changes to the interest rate. This
process may require a fee or premium as it reduces your
risk that the monthly payments will change while the
loan paperwork is filed.
Lock - Out
Period: A period of time after loan
origination during which a borrower cannot prepay the
mortgage loan.
London Interbank Offered
Rate (LIBOR): The short - term rate (1year or
less) at which banks will lend to each other in London.
Commonly used as a benchmark for adjustable - rate
financing.
LTV: Loan to Value:
Proposed loan amount divide by the value of the
property.
Margin: The
amount that is added to an index rate to determine the
total interest rate.
Maturity:
1. The termination period of a note (e.g., a 30 -
year mortgage has maturity of 30 years.) 2. In sales
law, the date a note becomes
due.
Mezzanine: Late-stage venture
capital financing.
Miniperm: Short
term permanent financing, usually 3 to 5
years.
Mortgage Banker: An entity
that makes loans with its own money and then sells the
loan to other lenders.
Mortgage
Broker: An entity that arranges loans for
borrowers.
Mortgage Insurance:
A type of insurance changed by most lenders to
offset the risk of your loan when your down payment is
less than 20% of the value of the
home.
Mortgage Reduction Programs:
A type of Accelerated payment program whereby payments
are made more frequently usually bi - weekly or weekly
rather than the traditional monthly payment. Making more
frequent and accelerated payments reduces the amount of
principal more quickly which interest accumulation is
based on. The net effect can be a savings on the total
interest paid
Multi - Family Property
Class A: Properties are above average in terms
of design, construction and finish; command the highest
rental rates; have a superior location, in terms of
desirability and / or accessibility; generally are
professionally managed by national or large regional
management companies.
Multi - Family
Property Class B: Properties frequently do not
possess design and finish reflective of current
standards and preferences; construction is adequate;
command average rental rates; generally are well
maintained by national or regional management companies;
unit sizes are usually larger than current
standards.
Multi - Family Property Class
C: Properties provide functional housing;
exhibit some level of deferred maintenance; command
below average rental rates; usually located in less
desirable areas; generally managed by smaller, local
property management companies; tenants provide a less
stable income stream to property owners than Class A and
B tenants.
Negative
Amortization: Occurs when interest accrued
during a payment period is greater that the scheduled
payment and the excess amount is added to the
outstanding loan balance (e.g., if the interest rate on
ARM exceeds the interest rate cap, then the borrower's
payment will be sufficient to cover the interest accrued
during the billing period - the unpaid interest is then
added to the outstanding loan balance).
Net
Effective Rent: Rental rate adjusted for lease
concessions.
Net Operating Income
(NOI): Total income less operating
expenses, adjustments, etc., but before mortgage
payments, tenant improvements and leasing
commissions.
Net - Net Lease (NN):
Usually requires the tenant to pay for property taxes
and insurance in addition to the
rent.
Notice of Default (NOD): To
initiate a non - judicial foreclosure proceeding
involving a public sale of the real property securing
the deed of trust. The trustee under the deed of trust
records a Notice of Default and Election to Sell ("NOD")
the real property collateral in the public
records.
Non - Recourse: A
finance term. A mortgage or deed of trust securing a
note without recourse allows the lender to look only to
the security (property) for repayment in the event of
default, and not personally to the borrower. A loan not
allowing for a deficiency judgment. The lender's only
recourse in the event of default is the security
(property) and the borrower is not personally
liable.
Operating
Expense: Periodic expenses necessary to the
operation and maintenance of an enterprise (e.g., taxes,
salaries, insurance, maintenance). Often used as a basis
for rent increases.
Participation: A
type of mortgage where the lender receives a percentage
of the gross revenue in addition to the mortgage
payments.
Percentage Lease:
Commonly used for large retail stores. Rent payments
include a minimum or "base rent" plus a percentage of
the gross sales "overage." Percentages generally vary
from 1% to 6% of the gross sales depending on the type
of store and sales volume.
Phase I:
An assessment and report prepared by a professional
environmental consultant who reviews the property - both
land and improvements - to ascertain the presence or
potential presence of environmental hazards at the
property, such as underground water contamination,
PCB's, abandoned disposal of paints and other chemicals,
asbestos and a wide range of other potentially damaging
materials. This Environmental Site Assessment (ESA)
provides a review and makes a recommendation as to
whether further investigation is warranted (a Phase II
Environmental Site Assessment). This latter report would
confirm or disavow the presence of an mitigation efforts
that should be undertaken.
PITI:
Principal, interest, taxes and insurance. Your
calculated estimated of monthly
payments.
Points: Loans fee paid by
the borrower. One point is 1% of the loan
amount.
Prepayment Penalty: A Change for
paying off a loan before it is due.
Pre -
qualification: The process of determining the
amount of money a particular lender will let you borrow.
You should strive to obtain pre-qualification with at
least two or three lenders.
Prime
Rate: An artificial rate set by
commercial bankers. Many banks will use the Wall Street
Prime rate. This is a rate set by the top lending banks
in the country.
Principal:
1. The amount of debt, not including interest, left
on a loan. 2. The face amount of the
mortgage.
Property Appraisal: A
report showing exactly how much the particular
home
Property Classification:
Most lenders will classify a property by its age and
needed maintenance. As an example many insurance
companies will only loan on properties that are class A,
meaning that the properties age is 10 years old or less
and is not in need of repair.
Property
Tax: Taxes based on the market value of a
property. Property taxes vary from state to
state.
Rate Index: An index used to
adjust the interest rate of an adjustable mortgage loan
(e.g., the changes in U.S. Treasury securities (T-bill)
with 1-year maturity. The weekly average yield on said
securities, adjustable to a constant maturity of 1 year,
which is the result of weekly sales, may be obtain
weekly from the Federal Reserve Statistical Release H.15
(519). This changes in interest rates is the "index" for
the change in a specific Adjustable Mortgage
Loan).
Recourse: A loan for which
the borrower is personally liable for payment is the
borrower defaults.
REIT (Real
Estate Investment Trust): Pooled funds that purchase
and hold commercial real
estate.
Refinance: The renewal of
an existing loan by the some
borrower.
Rent Step - Up: A
lease agreement in which the rent increases every period
for a fixed amount of time or for the life of the
lease.
Replacement Reserves:
Monthly deposits that a lender may require a borrower to
a reserve in an account, along with principal and
interest payments for future capital improvements of
major building systems; i.e., HVAC, parking lot,
carpets, roof, etc.
Reserve
Funds: A portion of the bond proceeds
that are retained to cover losses on the mortgage pool.
A form of credit enhancement (also referred to as
"reserve accounts").
Residual
Income: The amount of money left over after you
have paid all of your ordinary and necessary debts
including the mortgage. This calculation is typically
used with VA loans.
Sale / Lease
Back: When a lenders buys a property and leases
it back to the seller for an extended period of
time.
Savings & Loans: A
federally or state charted financial institution that
takes deposits from individuals, funds mortgages, and
pays dividends.
SBA: Small Business
Administration, a federal government
agency.
Second Mortgage: A
mortgage on real estate, which has already been pledged
as collateral for an earlier mortgage. The second
mortgage carries rights, which are subordinate to those
of the first.
Secondary Financing:
A loan secured by a mortgage or trust deed, in which the
lien is junior, or secondary, to another mortgage or
trust deed.
Secondary Mortgage
Market: The buying and selling of first
mortgages or trust deeds by banks, insurance companies,
government agencies, and other mortgagees. This enables
lenders to keep an adequate supply of money for new
loans. The mortgages may be sold at full value ("par")
or above, but are usually sold at a discount. The
secondary mortgage market should not be confused with a
"second mortgage."
Spread:
Number of basis points over a base rate
index.
Standby Commitment: A formal
offer by a lender making explicit the terms under which
it agrees to lend money to a borrower over a certain
period of time.
Structural Report:
(see Engineering Report)
Tax & Insurance
Impound: Monthly deposits that a lender may
require to be included with principal and interest
payments for the payment of taxes and
insurance.
Tenant Improvements
(TI): The expense to physically improve
the property to attract new tenants to new or vacated
space which may include new improvements or remodeling.
May be paid by tenant, landlord, or both. Typically,
tenants are provided with a market rate TI allowance
($/sq. ft.) that the owner will contribute towards
improvements. The tenant must pay for amounts above the
TI allowance desired by the
tenant.
Term: The length of a
mortgage.
Title: The actual legal
document conferring ownership of a piece of real
estate.
Title Insurance: An
insurance policy which insures you against errors in the
title search - essentially guaranteeing your, and your
lender's, financial interest in the
property.
Triple - Net Lease: A
lease that requires the tenant to pay for property
taxes, insurance and maintenance in addition to the rent
(also referred to as " Net Net Net Lease").
Underwriting: The
process of deciding whether to make a loan based on
credit, employment, assets and / or other
factors.
Uniform Residential Loan
Application (1003): This application, also
called a URL - 1003 is the standard loan application
used by all lenders.
Underwriter:
The underwriter is the lender or company who actually
provides the money for you loan. A mortgage broker
"brokers" and represents several different underwriters
and depending on your situation they choose the "best"
underwriter for you and your
lender.
Upfront Fees: Generally
refer to fees charges to pay for third party costs like
appraisals.
VA
(Veterans Administration) Loan: A type of
government loan administered by the Veterans
Administration. Eligibility for VA loan is restricted
and limited to qualifying veterans, and to certain home
types. You need to check with the VA to determine if you
qualify. The maximum VA Loan is
$184,000.
Workouts:
Attempts to resolve a problematic situation, such as a
bad loan.
Yield
Maintenance: A prepayment premium that allows
investors to attain the same yield as if the borrower
made all scheduled mortgage payments until maturity.
Yield maintenance premiums are designed to make
investors indifferent to prepayments and to make
refinancing unattractive and uneconomical to
borrowers.
Yield To Average
Life: Yield calculation used, in lieu of "Yield
to Maturity" or "Yield to Call," where books are retired
systematically during the life of the issue, as in the
case of a "Sinking Fund," with contractual requirements.
Because the issuer will buy its own bonds on the open
market to satisfy its sinking fund requirement if the
bonds are trading below Par, there is, to that extent,
automatic price support for such bonds; they therefore
tend to trade on a yield - to - average - life
basis.
Yield To Maturity
(YTM): Concepts used to determine the rate of
return an investor will receive if a long - term,
interest - bearing investment, such as a bond, is held
to its maturity date. It take into account purchase
price, redemption value, time to maturity, coupon yield
and the time between interest payments. Recognizing time
value of money, it is the discount tare at which the
present value of all future payments would equal the
present price of the bond (also referred to as "internal
rate of return"). It is implicitly assumed that coupons
are reinvested at the YTM rate. YTM cam be approximated
using a bond value table (also referred as a "bond yield
table") or can be determined using a programmable
calculator equipped for bond mathematics
calculations.