ABSTRACT

Property and Money is a simple guide to the investment and financial aspects of commercial property. Putting property into its financial context, it seeks to bridge the world of the surveyor and property developer and the investment and financial markets of the City of London.

The book starts from first principles, assuming no pre-existing knowledge. It is thus suitable for students as well as more established property practitioners and its appeal extends to bankers, solicitors, accountants and fund managers whose work brings them into contact with commercial property transactions. This updated and expanded edition includes coverage of:

- Principles and pitfalls of property finance

- How the property investment market works

- Evaluating property and its performance

- Understanding property companies and their accounts

- How property companies get into trouble

- Bank loans, bonds, profit-share agreements, leasebacks and other methods of property finance

- The crash of the early 1990's and its consequences.

Based on a widely acclaimed series of articles that appeared in Estates Gazette magazine, Property and Money is complemented by an extensive index and glossary and enlivened by Nick Newman's cartoonist-eye view of the property world.

chapter |4 pages

Introduction

chapter 1|6 pages

1 Characteristics of property

chapter 2|5 pages

2 What we mean by yield

chapter 3|6 pages

3 Why values rise and fall

chapter 4|5 pages

4 Valuing future rental increases

chapter 5|5 pages

5 Evaluating the asking price

chapter 6|7 pages

6 Calculating the actual return

chapter 7|10 pages

7 Valuing leaseholds

chapter 8|5 pages

What land is worth

chapter 9|5 pages

Measuring property performance

chapter 10|5 pages

When valuations are needed

chapter 11|4 pages

How accurate are valuations?

chapter 12|5 pages

Valuing from the armchair

chapter 13|5 pages

Property financing constraints

chapter 14|10 pages

Investors and traders

chapter 15|7 pages

Property and property company shares

chapter 16|10 pages

Foreword to the figurework

chapter 17|8 pages

Tackling property company accounts

chapter 18|5 pages

On and off balance sheet

chapter 19|5 pages

Classes of capital and capital issues

chapter 20|5 pages

Calculating with convertibles

chapter 21|8 pages

The profit and loss account

chapter 22|5 pages

Profit and loss refinements

chapter 23|5 pages

Untangling a property trader

chapter 24|5 pages

24 Off balance sheet traders

chapter 25|11 pages

25 Cash flow before profit

chapter 26|14 pages

26 Launches on the stock market

chapter 27|5 pages

27 Property company takeovers

chapter 28|5 pages

28 Categories of finance

chapter 29|5 pages

29 Financing with commercial paper

chapter 30|4 pages

30 Multiplying the financing options

chapter 31|13 pages

Hedging interest rate risks

chapter 32|5 pages

Borrowing for the long term

chapter 33|5 pages

Yields and redemption yields

chapter 34|5 pages

Problems of security

chapter 35|5 pages

Tapping the euromarkets

chapter 36|5 pages

Warrants, options and complex convertibles

chapter 37|6 pages

Project loans for development

chapter 38|5 pages

Loans with profit share

chapter 39|6 pages

Lenders and loan enhancements

chapter 40|5 pages

Mortgages for business

chapter 41|8 pages

Credit risk and credit enhancement

chapter 42|5 pages

Leasebacks old and new

chapter 43|7 pages

Unitisation and securitisation

chapter 44|6 pages

How property bucks the trend

chapter 45|6 pages

Trends in finance and property cycles

chapter 46|14 pages

The crash of early 1990s

chapter 47|6 pages

Valuing over-rented properties

chapter 48|5 pages

Phoney rents and true rents

chapter 49|5 pages

How rent-free periods affect values

chapter 50|5 pages

Why landlords like headline rents

chapter 51|6 pages

Valuing with shorter leases

chapter 52|12 pages

Who does what in property