CRE Investment Metrics and BON Method

The BON Method is similar to using a cap rate because both are designed to give you a quick estimate of value. Cap rates help investors ballpark a property’s value today based on NOI; the BON Method does the same for future value once the building is stabilized. In that sense, BON is an overly simplistic reversion analysis.
SBA Lending is loosening up, but inventory is tight.

SBA lending just hit record highs, pushing owner-user demand far ahead of available inventory. With limited office product and attractive SBA financing, pricing remains firm—and condo conversions are emerging as a smart solution for owners. Here’s what’s driving the market and why 2026 is positioned for an owner-user surge.
Batten Down the Hatches: The 2026 Debt Wave Is Coming

A massive surge of commercial real estate debt is coming due in 2026, and higher rates are colliding with softening values. Sacramento owners—especially those with loans maturing between 2025 and 2027—need clarity now. The smart move is to run a simple “refi or sell” analysis before lenders force the
Sacramento’s Office Market Comeback: The $6M Turnaround at 3900 Lennane

Occupancy Creates Value – Vacant buildings sell at discounts; stabilized assets command premiums. 3900 Lennane shows the power of executing a clear leasing and repositioning strategy.
Deal or No Deal – There is always something!

Our clients’ needs constantly change, so it’s crucial to adapt and anticipate – even if they are unaware, they need help. Most clients or soon-to-be clients don’t know what they don’t know.