Investment Inputs
Investment Valuation
Year-by-Year Pro Forma
| Year | NOI | CapEx | PBTCF | PV of PBTCF |
|---|
Formula Breakdown
Model Assumptions
- Constant NOI growth rate applied uniformly (no lease-level modeling or tenant rollover)
- Annual cash flows assumed at year-end (both PBTCF and sale proceeds at end of Year n)
- Exit cap rate applied to Year n+1 NOI (first year of next owner per Geltner convention)
- Single discount rate representing unlevered property OCC (no intralease/interlease risk decomposition)
- CapEx represents normalized recurring capital reserves, growing at its own rate independent of NOI
- No financing — property-level (unlevered) analysis only; for levered returns see CRE Returns Calculator
- No income taxes — pre-tax cash flows
- No vacancy modeling — Year 1 NOI is assumed net of vacancy; growth rate is net
- Purchase price represents total acquisition basis (buyer transaction costs not modeled separately)
For educational purposes. Not financial advice. Market conventions simplified.
Understanding CRE Pro Forma Analysis
What is a Pro Forma?
A real estate pro forma is a forward-looking financial model that projects a property's income, expenses, and cash flows over a defined holding period. It forms the basis of DCF (discounted cash flow) valuation — the standard method for estimating the investment value of commercial real estate (Geltner Ch. 10-11).
DCF Value = Σ[PBTCFt / (1+r)t] + Net Reversion / (1+r)n
NPV = DCF Value − Purchase Price
IRR = Rate where NPV = 0
DCF Valuation
DCF valuation discounts all projected future cash flows back to the present at the investor's required rate of return (the opportunity cost of capital). The property's value has two components: the present value of operating cash flows during the holding period, and the present value of the net sale proceeds (reversion) at the end.
Going-In vs. Exit Cap Rate
The going-in cap rate (Year 1 NOI / Purchase Price) reflects the yield at acquisition. The exit cap rate is an assumption about what buyers will pay at disposition — it is applied to the terminal NOI (Year n+1) to estimate the sale price. If exit cap < going-in cap, the model assumes cap rate compression (market appreciation beyond NOI growth). Most conservative underwriting assumes a slightly higher exit cap.
Practical Applications
- Acquisition Screening: Compare DCF value to asking price — positive NPV indicates value creation
- Sensitivity Analysis: Vary growth rate, exit cap, and discount rate to stress-test the deal
- Hold Period Optimization: Find the holding period that maximizes IRR
- Unlevered vs. Levered: Start with this unlevered analysis, then layer in financing using the CRE Returns Calculator
Frequently Asked Questions
Disclaimer
This calculator is for educational purposes only. It uses simplified assumptions including constant NOI growth and independently growing CapEx. Actual CRE investment decisions should incorporate lease-by-lease analysis, detailed capital expenditure schedules, vacancy modeling, tax implications, and professional due diligence. Consult a qualified real estate professional or financial advisor for investment decisions.