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Commercial
Loan Glossary
Note:
The following information is provided without
warranty of any kind and for your information
only.
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A
B C
E F
G H I J
K L M
N O
P Q R
S T
U V
W X Y
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A
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Adjustable
Rate Mortgage:
A 2-dimensional measure of land
equaling 160 square rods, 10
square chains, 4,840 square
yards, or 43,560 square feet.
Adjustment Interval:
The period of time between
changes in the interest rate
for an adjustable-rate mortgage.
Typical adjustment intervals
are 6 months and 1 year.
Amenities:
Noted
in the appraisal, the non-monetary
benefits derived from property
ownership.
Amortization
Period:
The
period, or length of time, over
which the principal portion
of a mortgage loan is scheduled
to be paid down through periodic
payments.
Appraisal:
An estimate of the value
of a property made by a qualified
professional called an appraiser.
(Impero Commercial Lending typically
requires the appraiser to be
MAI certified.)
Assumability:
A
mortgage loan which can be transferred
to another person without a
change in the terms of the loan.
This typically requires a flat-fee
to be paid to the lien-holder
for transferring.
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B
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Balloon
Payment:
One large payment of the remaining
principal balance of a mortgage,
due at a time specified in the
contract (i.e. a 5-year balloon
would have periodic payments
made through 5 years and then
a lump-sum payment made on the
60th month.)
Basis Point: 1/100th
of 1% usually expressed as a
margin over an index rate.
Borrowing Entity Type:
The legal form under which property
is owned.
Bridge/Short-Term Loan:
A short-term or interim loan
for borrowers who need more
time to find permanent-financing
or are repositioning a commercial
property. |
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C
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Call:
(see Balloon Payment) Essentially
the lien-holder has a �call
provision� noted in the
contract in which they can call
the note due in full. Typically
this is a 5-year or a 10-year
call.
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, etc.
Carve
Out: The definition
used for the inclusion of recourse
in loan documents for fraud
and misrepresentation.
Cash-Out
Refinancing: When the
principal amount of a new mortgage
involved in refinancing is greater
than the principal amount outstanding
on the existing mortgage being
refinanced, and all or a portion
of the equity is converted to
cash.
Commercial
Mortgage-Backed Security (CMBS):
A bond or other financial obligation
secured by a pool of mortgage
loans.
Cost
of Funds Indexl (COFI):
Index used to determine interest
rate changes for adjustable
rate mortgages. It is based
on the cost of funds of the
11th District of the Federal
Home Loan Bank.
Conduit: The financial
intermediary that sponsors the
link between the lender(s) originating
loans and the 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 CMBS market.
Constant Maturity Treasury (CMT):
An index based on the U.S. Treasury
that is used in the pricing
of debt for banks.
Construction Type:
The type of construction used
for a commercial building (i.e.
concrete tilt-up, etc.).
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D
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Debt
Service: The periodic
payments (principal and interest)
made on a loan.
Debt Service Coverage Ratio
(or Debt Coverage Ratio):
Measures a mortgaged-property�s
ability to cover monthly payments
defined as the ratio of net
operating income over the periodic
payments (principal and interest)
made on a loan. A DSCR of less
than 1.0 means that there is
insufficient cash flow generated
by the property to cover required
debt payments. Typically a lender
requires a DSCR of 1.25 or better
depending on the property type.
Defeasance: A clause
in a mortgage that gives the
borrower the right to prepay
a commercial mortgage by purchasing
US Treasuries in an escrow account
to pay off ongoing debt service.
Discount Rate: The
rate of interest that the Federal
Reserve charges member banks
for loans. |
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E
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Environmental
Report:
Report generated by qualified
environmental firms to determine
potential environmental hazards
in a building's region or within
the building itself. These reports
are typically called a "Phase
I", "Phase II",
etc and subsequent reports are
only required if the preceding
report expresses any concerns
as to the suitability of the
property.
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 on a property.
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F
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Federal
Funds (Fed Funds):
Fed Funds is the interest rate
charged by those banks with
excess reserves on hand (reserves
over and above the minimum required
by the Federal Reserve) to those
banks in need of overnight loans
to meet reserve requirements.
Since it is set daily, the Federal
Funds rate is the most sensitive
indicator of the direction of
interest rates.
Fixed-Rate Mortgage:
A mortgage with an interest
rate that remains constant for
the life of the loan.
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I |
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
interest rates. |
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L
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Libor:
The rate that the most creditworthy
international banks dealing in
Eurodollars charge each other
for large loans. Rates are quoted
in monthly increments out to 1
year.
Loan Processing Fee:
The fee charged by a lender
to prepare all the documents
associated with your mortgage.
Loan-to-Value
Ratio (LTV)
: The ratio between
the principal amount of the
mortgage balance, at origination
or thereafter, to the current
value of the underlying real
estate collateral. The ratio
is commonly expressed to a potential
borrower as the percentage of
value a lending institution
is willing to finance. The ratio
is dynamic and varies by lending
institution, property type,
geographic location, property
size, etc.
Lock-Out Period: A
period of time after loan origination
during which a borrower cannot
prepay the mortgage loan without
paying the interest the loan
would have incurred during the
lock-out period.
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M
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Margin:
The amount that is added to an
index rate to determine the total
interest rate.
MAT:
Monthly Average Treasury.
Maturity: 1. The termination
period of a note (e.g., a 25�year
mortgage has a maturity of 25
years). 2. In sales law, the
date a note becomes due.
Mezzanine/Second Loan:
A loan secured by a mortgage
or trust deed in which the lien
is junior, or secondary, to
another mortgage or trust deed.
Money Market: The market
for short-term debt instruments.
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. |
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N
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Non-Recourse:
A mortgage or deed of trust securing
a note without recourse allowing
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.
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.
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O
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Organization:
Securing a completed mortgage
application from a commercial
(or residential) borrower.
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P
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Phase
1 Report: (see environmental
report) 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 environmental
hazard and, should one be found,
will recommend additional review
and/or mitigation efforts that
should be undertaken.
Points
(Loan Discount Points):
Each point is equal to 1% of
the total amount of a mortgage.
Typically charged in connection
with originating or funding
a loan.
Prepayment Penalty:
Fees paid by borrowers for the
privilege of retiring a loan
early.
Prime
Rate: The rate at which
banks lend to their most creditworthy
customers.
Principal: 1. The amount
of debt, not including interest,
left on a loan. 2. The face
amount of the mortgage.
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R
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Rate
Index:
An index used to adjust the
interest rate of an adjustable
mortgage loan (e.g., the change
in U.S. Treasury securities
(T-Bills) with 1-year maturity.
The weekly average yield on
said securities, adjusted to
a constant maturity of 1 year,
which is the result of weekly
sales, may be obtained weekly
from the Federal Reserve Statistical
Release H.15 (519). This change
in interest rates is the "index"
for the change in a specific
Adjustable Mortgage Loan.
Recourse: Personal
liability.
Rent Roll: A list of
tenants leasing a property,
which details terms of lease,
area leased, and the amount
of rent being paid.
Replacement Reserves:
An amount set aside from net
operating income to pay for
the eventual wearing out of
short-lived assets. Monthly
deposits that a lender may require
a borrower to 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: In CMBS,
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"). |
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S
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Second
Mortgage:
A mortgage that is second in priority
because of the time of recording
the mortgage or of the subordination
of the mortgage.
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. Not to be confused
with a "second mortgage."
Self-Amortizing Mortgage:
One that will retire itself
through regular principal and
interest payments. Contrast
with balloon mortgage or interest-only
loan.
Spread: Number of basis
points over a base rate index.
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T
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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.
Term: The length of
time a mortgage rate is fixed
or adjustable prior to it coming
due. Different from loan amortization.
Third Party Costs:
Costs resulting from third-party
reports such as appraisal reports,
environmental reports or structural
engineering reports.
Title Insurance: An
insurance policy that insures
you against errors in the title
search - essentially guaranteeing
your, and your lender's, financial
interest in the property.
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U
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U.S. Treasury
Bill:
Treasury Bills, or T-Bills,
are short-term securities with
maturities of up to one year.
They are issued by the U.S.
Government at a discount from
face value. The price is quoted
in yield, not dollars. At maturity,
T-Bills are redeemed for full
face value. T-bills are issued
in three-month, six-month and
1-year maturities and are backed
by the full faith and credit
of the U.S. Government.
U.S. Treasury Bond:
Treasury Bonds are long-term
securities with maturities greater
than 10 years. Treasury bonds
are coupon-bearing securities
that pay interest on a semi-annual
basis. Treasury bonds are backed
by the full faith and credit
of the U.S. Government.
U.S. Treasury Note:
Treasury Notes are intermediate-term
securities issued with 2, 3,
5, and 10-year maturities. Treasury
notes are coupon-bearing securities
that pay interest on a semi-annual
basis. Treasury notes are backed
by the full faith and credit
of the U.S. Government.
Underwriting:
The process of deciding whether
to make a loan based on property
cash flow, credit, and/or other
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Y
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Yield:
The rate of return on a security,
taking into consideration annual
interest payments, purchase price,
redemption value, and the time
remaining until maturity.
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.
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SOURCE: CCIM Institute
- Commercial Real Estate Glossary |
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© 2007 by Reliant Capital Funding, LLC. All
rights reserved.
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