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by lotsofpulp 672 days ago
Correct, that is wrong. Lenders aren’t stupid, they want to see cash flow. Commercial mortgages will come with terms requiring a minimum debt service coverage ratio (DSCR) to avoid default:

https://www.investopedia.com/terms/d/dscr.asp

If a landlord leaves units empty, their income drops, so their DSCR drops, and the lender can consider the property in default.

That does not mean a lender will foreclose or otherwise take control of the property, they also might not want to get involved. But it does give them negotiating power, and is something borrowers want to avoid.

1 comments

But the DSRC doesn’t contract my understanding, it just shows there’s a floor to the number of unrented units.

Actually considering the DSRC it seems a large landlord would be more unlikely to lower rents unless desperate. Otherwise as people renew or lease at the lower rate, they’ll have less and less buffer

You claimed landlords are incentivized to keep spaces empty. Empty means zero income. DSCR with zero income is less than DSCR with some income.