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Commercial
Lending Ratios
Most of real estate lending can be boiled down to the results
of three ratios:
Loan-To-Value
Ratio
Debt Ratio
Debt Service Coverage Ratio (DSCR)
The bulk of the energy spent "processing" a loan
is merely an attempt to verify the numbers that go into
the numerator and denominator of the above 3 ratios.
The
Loan-To-Value Ratio (LTVR) is defined as follows:
Loan-To-Value= Total loan balances (1st mtg+2nd mtg+3rd
mtg) / Fair market value (as determined by appraisal)
Loan-To-Value
Ratios seldom exceed 80% because the lender always want
some extra protection against default.
The
second ratio that lenders use when underwriting a loan is
the Debt Ratio. The Debt Ratio compares the amount of bills
that the borrower must pay each month to the amount of monthly
income he earns. More precisely, the Debt Ratio is defined
as:
Debt Ratio = Monthly Debt Obligations / Monthly Income
Obviously
someone whose Debt Ratio is 150% is in trouble. A Debt Ratio
of 150% would mean that a borrower's obligations are one
and a half times his income. Debt Ratios seldom are allowed
to exceed 40% in practice.
The
final ratio used in lending is the Debt Service Coverage
Ratio (DSCR). The Debt Service Coverage Ratio is a sophisticated
ratio only used for large loans on income producing properties.
It is defined as:
Debt Service Coverage Ratio = Net Operating Income / Debt
Service
Net
Operating Income is the income from a rental property after
deducting for real estate taxes, fire insurance, repairs,
and all other operating expenses; and Debt Service is the
mortgage payment on the property. Most lenders insist that
this ratio exceed 1.0. A debt service coverage ratio of
less than 1.0 would mean that the property did not produce
enough net rental income for the owner to make the mortgage
payments without supplementing the property from his personal
budget.
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