LeonCLi
Freshman Member
- Joined
- Jul 1, 2019
- Professional Status
- Certified General Appraiser
- State
- California
Put yourself in the shoes of a potential purchaser (something that we should try to do for any property). If the breakeven point was reached last year only, a potential purchaser might not give significant value to the overage rent potential. If it is a stable business that has surpassed that breakeven for several years and is expected to continue to surpass that level, additional value may be assigned to the overage portion. Either way, it is a riskier portion of the cash flow than the base rent, which directly impacts the discount rate.
Also, hope this doesn't sound rude because that's not the intention, but this is the type of problem that is ideal for working closely with a supervisor on. They know more about the background and the market than us, since we are speaking purely on generalities.
I had varying opinions from supervisors on this, which like it was reiterated by earlier commentators, depends on more data and the background of the situation. The general consensus was "At a rate higher than minimum base rent", but they couldn't say for certain given the context of the problem. Thanks for the input on the higher risk given data for only 1 year. A trend over 2 or 3 years would be better.