Sunday, October 9, 2011

Knife Care Tips For Your Fixed Blade Or Folding Knife That Cost You Nothing But Can Save You Lots

!9# Knife Care Tips For Your Fixed Blade Or Folding Knife That Cost You Nothing But Can Save You Lots

Basic Knife Care

Of all the styles of Knife blades available on the market today, there are only two categories of blade that are most important. The sharp and working and the dull and broken. One kind you want, the other you don't.

In order to keep your knife in the sharp and working category, there are a few basic rules that you may want to follow. These rules are not rocket science, in fact most are only common sense but it is suppressing how often they are ignored.

There are not many of us who would fillet a fish with an axe or use a screw driver to skin a deer or even use a can opener to cut a rope, yet we look down in horror and surprise at our dull, chipped and broken knife blade after using it chop trees, remove screws or open a can. Those of you who are reading this with a smile on your faces know exactly what I am talking about.

Rule # One is: as a modem knife is a precision instrument it should be used only for the tasks it was designed for. When this rule is broken your knife blade will be broken, it is the most common reason for knife failure.

Now we get down to basic care and maintenance.

Just like the old saying " A stitch in time saves nine"; well this holds true when it come to knife sharpening.

Rule # Two is: Knife sharpening should be done lightly and often, depending upon the amount of work your knife has done. It is far better for both you and your knife blade to keep it sharp all the time, as opposed to stoning , grinding and honing for hours after you have discovered your fine edged knife has turned into a thing that looks like a butter knife and will not even cut string.

Rule # Three is: All Carbon steel and stainless steel knife blades should be cleaned and dried after use. Also depending upon the amount of use they should also be oiled using a 3 in 1 oil or some other kind of other light oil. If your knife has been exposed to salt water or even swimming pool water, it should be cleaned and oiled as soon as possible. Salt and chlorine can corrode the knife very quickly.

Yes, even Stainless Steel knives should be cleaned and oiled. This is because the Stainless steel used for knives has additives included in it to make it stronger and more durable. This makes the stainless more corrosion resistant rather than corrosion proof.

These are the three basic rules of Knife Care; if they are followed you and your knife will be together for a long time.

I hope you have found this article informative and useful and I hope my sense of humour did not offend anyone.


Knife Care Tips For Your Fixed Blade Or Folding Knife That Cost You Nothing But Can Save You Lots

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Monday, October 3, 2011

Walgreens, CVS, and Rite Aid - What RE Investors Should Know in 2011

!9# Walgreens, CVS, and Rite Aid - What RE Investors Should Know in 2011

Walgreens, CVS or Rite-Aid: What is the best tenants in 2011?

There are 3 major drugstore chains in the U.S.: Walgreens, CVS and Rite Aid. Here are some important statistics on the three major drug chains as of July 2010:

Walgreens At number 1 with market capitalization of $ 29.33 billion $ 66.25 billion in sales and S & P rating of A +. According to Walgreens, 75% of U.S. population lives within 3 miles of their stores. On 1 October 2009 Walgreens opened its 7,000 th store in Brooklyn, New York. InApril 2010, has acquired 258 pharmacies, Duane Reade in New York metropolitan area. CVS At number 2 with market cap of $ 42.09 billion, $ 99.1 billion revenue (CVS Walgreens sells less than the revenues of the group only if Caremark is removed), and S & P rating of BBB +. CVS opened its 7000 th store in Little Canada, Minnesota, October 5, 2009 and currently operates 7,025 pharmacies .. Rite Aid A 3, with a market capitalization of $ 869 million, $ 25.53 billion in revenue, 4,780 pharmacies and S & PReview of B-.

Investors purchase properties of this drug chains occupied for the following reasons:

The grocery store chain business is very recession sensitive. People need medicine when they are ill, are independent of the state economy. Both rich and poor in the United States have access to drugs. Some even claim that people with low income through the use of multiple medications free or low cost drugs offered by the government-sponsored programs. Thus, the tenant must be good at the time and hardThey have the money to pay the owners. The store grocery store chain has good prospects in the United States: People are living longer and need more medications for longevity, such as Actonel for osteoporosis, Alzheimer's symptoms to receive Aricept vertical. Older people tend to use more medications than younger ones, because they often have more medical problems. As 78 million baby boomers approaching retirement age starting in 2008, the projected increase in demand for the medicine drug chains in the next 20Years. The drug market continues to expand as the population of the United States will continue to grow. More and more Americans suffer from various diseases. The number of Americans who suffer from seasonal allergies in the past 15 years has doubled to 37 million people for Fortune magazine. They spent $ 5.4 billion in 2009 for drug allergy. When their lifelines ball (75% of Americans are designed to be overweight or obese by 2020), are more Americans with diabetes, high cholesterol diagnosed in youngand younger age. In addition, doctors also recommend the treatment of various diseases before then by a better understanding of the disease. For example, physicians prescribing antiretroviral drugs to patients immediately after they are infected with HIV, rather than waiting for the infection of AIDS. More doctors are combined with insulin to oral medications to treat type 2 diabetes, rather than just the drugs administered orally to treat alone. All these factors increase the size of the pharmaceutical market. Advances in geneticsEngineering has introduced several new kits for genetic testing of DNA, allowing genetic diagnosis of vulnerabilities to inherited diseases and illnesses. Genetic testing is currently the fastest growing segment in the field of diagnostics. Some of these genetic tests are expected to transform into direct-to-consumer testing kits at a drug store in the near future. Following FDA approval, these new products could provide additional revenues for pharmacies will. The shift of healthCare Reform Bill, 23 March 2010 provides coverage for about 33 million more Americans. This is a great gift pharmacy sector. There are new drugs to treat previously untreatable diseases, and emerging diseases, such as Viagra for men of bad luck, Zoloft for depression, Avastin for colon cancer, Herceptin for breast cancer, nicotine patches for smokers stop, Tamiflu for a possible pandemic of avian influenza, swine influenza vaccine (H1N1) influenza pandemic, Tekturna / Rasilezused for the treatment of 'hypertension and several new drugs for AIDS, and Attention Deficit Disorder (ADD). The new drugs are very expensive, for example, a year's supply of Avastin costs about $ 55,000. Eli Lilly has sold more than $ 4800000000 Zyprexa for schizophrenia and in 2007, but many people have never heard of this drug. There are existing drugs now approved for the treatment of new diseases and thus their revenues. For example, Lyrica was originally to be pain caused by nerve damage in humanswith diabetes. And 'now approved by the FDA for fibromyalgia, which affects 5.8 million Americans to treat each WebMD. Major advances in genetics, biology and stem cell research is expected to create a new class of drugs to treat diabetes, Parkinson's and various rare genetic diseases. For example, the new drug from Novartis Ilaris targets genetic causes of a hereditary disease that only 7,000 known cases worldwide. Hopes, however, gradually expand their Novartis medicines to a blockbuster drugto frequent disturbances caused by similar genes. Technology and modern life lead and require new products, such as pregnancy test kits, Lamisil for toenail clarity, Latisse eyelashes longer and thicker, Premarin for menopausal symptoms, diabetic monitors, toothbrushes Electronic teeth, contact lenses, contact lens cleaners, diet pills, vitamins, pills, spiral, food supplements and cholesterol-lowering pills (Americans spent nearly $ 26B in 2006 on cholesterol. The drugs alone for IMS Health, a Connecticut-based consulting company that monitors pharmaceutical sales) There are also several operations: C-shares, opened bypass heart kidney transplants triple and breast enlargements. More transactions mean more drugs like Vicodin for pain therapy and warfarin in the prevention of blood clotting are necessary in practice. Before the customer can order the medicine aisles or pharmacy counters to obtain, must move from chocolates, soft drinks, digital cameras, watches,Toys, dolls, beer and wine, cosmetics, video games, flowers, perfumes and greeting cards. Chemists hope that the one-hour photo services and change which are the liquid propane tank. The stores also carry seasonal items like Halloween costumes and "As Seen on TV" products, such as Shamwow. As a result of customers who buy more of their prescriptions and drugs in these pharmacies. Rite Aid has sold over 28 000 non-pharmacy products in their stores, but Walgreens has 22,000 differentitems on store shelves. CVS reported that non-pharmacy sales represented 30% of the company's total sales in January of 2007. The figure for Walgreens is 34% and 37% for Rite Aid. Many pharmacy locations are in effect convenience stores especially ones that are in residential or rural areas. And so Walgreens hopes that customers also pick up WD-44, and screw drivers at its stores instead of at Home Depot; Thai Jasmine rice, and fish sauce to avoid a trip to Safeway or Kroger Supermarkets. During the recession, sales of these non-drug items are down as customers buy what they need and not what they want. Walgreens tries to reduce the number of items by 4000. It also introduces its own private label which has higher profit margins. There are more and more generic medications on the market as a number of enormously popular brand-name blockbusters will lose their 20-year long patents, e.g. Lipitor (best selling drug in the world to lower cholesterol) in 2010, Viagra (you know what it's for) in 2012. Drugstores prefer to sell generic drugs to customers due to higher profit margins than the brand-name medications. Some people are addicted to pain killers, e.g. Hydrocodone and consume a large amount of medicine, e.g. 30-day dosage in a day to get high. According to testimony from the National Institute on Drug Abuse, US retail pharmacies dispensed nearly 180 million prescriptions in 2007 for opiates, e.g. Hydrocodone. A high percentage of these prescriptions are probably not used for any legitimate medical purposes. This author estimates that at least 10% of the dispensed prescription drugs are not used at all and sit idle in the medicine cabinets. They are eventually expired and thrown away. These companies sign very long-term, NNN leases, guaranteed by their corporate assets. This makes the investment in the underlying property fairly low risk, especially for Walgreens with an A+ S&P rating. In fact, these properties are sometimes referred to as investment-grade properties. Once the drugstore chains sign the lease, they pay the rent promptly and timely. This author is not aware of any properties leased by one of these drugstore chains in which the tenants failed to pay rents. Even when the stores are closed due to weak sales (Walgreens closed 119 stores in 2007), these companies may sublease the properties to other companies and continue to pay rents on the master leases. A typical Walgreens lease consists of 20-25 year primary term plus 8-10 five-year options. During primary term and options, there will be no rent increases in most of the leases. This is the main disadvantage of investing in Walgreens drugstores. A typical CVS lease consists of 20-25 year primary term plus 4-5 five-year options. The rent is normally flat during the primary term and then there is a 2.5%-10% rent increase in the in each 5-year option. A typical Rite Aid lease consists of 20-25 year primary term plus 4-8 five-year options. The lease often has a rent increase every 5-10 years.

Investment Risks: Although the pharmacy business in general is recession-insensitive, there are risks involved in your investment:

The main downside about investing in pharmacies is there is little or no rent bump for a long time, e.g. 20-50 years, especially for Walgreens. So the rent is effectively reduced after inflation is factored in. This is one of the main reasons these properties do not appeal to younger investors. The 3 drugstore chains now have a new formidable competitor, Wal-mart. Wal-mart sells prescription drugs in more than 4000 Wal-mart, Sam's Club and Neighborhood Market stores in 49 states. The retail giant is known for launching in 2006 a highly-publicized generic prescription drug program which now sells 350 generic medications for a 30-day supply. The actual number of medications is less as the medications with different strengths are counted as different medications. For example, Metformin 500 mg, 850 mg, and 1000 mg are counted as 3 medications. Wal-mart probably makes very little profits on these medications if any. However, the marketing campaign--created by Bill Simon, the President and CEO of Wal-mart US, generates a lot of publicity for Wal-mart. Wal-mart hopes to draw customers to its stores with other prescriptions where it has higher profit margins. In an unscientific survey with just one brand-name prescription of Lyrica, this author finds the lowest price at Costco, the highest price at Walgreens and Wal-mart at the middle. Other drug chains try to counter Wal-mart in different ways. Target now offers the same 350 generic medications for for a 30-day supply. Walgreens has a Prescription drugs club with membership fee which offers 1400 generic medications for as little as /week. CVS says it will match any offers from its competitors. Chief Business Correspondent Rick Newman from US World & News Report predicted that Rite Aid might not survive in 2009. While Rite Aid is still around in 2010, dire predictions continue. The study by Audit Integrity gave Rite Aid about a 10.5 percent chance of filing for bankruptcy in 2010. Drugs are also sold in thousands of supermarkets, Target stores, and Costco warehouses. However, there are no drive-thru windows at these stores or Walmart to conveniently drop off the prescriptions and pick up medicines. Customers will not be able to pick up their prescriptions during lunch hour or after 7PM at Target stores or supermarkets. They need to have membership to buy medicines at Costco. Others may not fill their prescriptions at Walmart because they don't want to mingle with typical Walmart customers who are in lower income brackets. And some babyboomers don't want their prescriptions filled at Target or Walmart because there are no comfortable chairs for them to sit down to wait for their medicines. Many leases in areas with hurricanes and tornados are NNN leases with the exception of roof and structure. So if the roof is damaged, you will have to pay for the expenses. The tenant may move to a new location down the road or across the street when the lease expires. This risk is high when the property is located in small town where there is low barrier for entry, i.e. lots of vacant & developable land. The tenant may ask for rent concession to improve its bottom line. The possibility is higher if the tenant is Rite Aid and if the store has low sales revenue and/or higher than market rent. More Americans are walking away from their prescriptions, especially the most expensive brand-name medicines. This may have negative impact on the sales revenue and profits of drug stores and consequently may cause drug store closures. According to Wolters Kluwer Pharma Solution, a health-care data company, nearly 1 in 10 new prescriptions for brand-name drugs were abandoned by people with commercial health plans in 2010. This is up 88% compared to 4 years ago just before the recession began. This trend is driven in part by higher and higher co-pays for brand name drugs as employers are shifting more insurance costs to their employees.

Among 3 drugstore chains, Walgreens and CVS pharmacies in general have the best locations-at major intersections while Rite Aid has less than premium locations. Walgreens tends to hire only the top graduates from pharmacy schools while Rite Aid settles with bottom graduates to save costs. When possible all drugstore chains try to fill the prescriptions with generic medications which have higher profit margins

Walgreens: the company was founded in 1901 by Charles Walgreen, Sr. in Chicago. While the company has existed for more than 100 years, most stores are only 5-10 years old. This is the best managed company among the three drugstore chains and also among the most admired public companies in the US. The company has been run by executives with proven track records and hires the top graduates from universities. Due to its superior financial strength--S&P A+ rating-- and premium irreplaceable locations, properties with leases from Walgreens get the highest price per square foot and/or the lowest cap rate among the 3 drugstore chains. In addition, Walgreens gets flat rent or very low rent increase for 20 to 60 years. The cap rate is often in the low 6% to 7.5% range in 2009. Investors who buy Walgreens tend to be more mature, i.e. closer to retirement age. They are looking for a safe investment where it's more important to get the rent check than to get appreciation. They often compare the returns on their Walgreens investment with the lower returns from US treasury bonds or Certificate of Deposits from banks. Walgreens opened many new stores in 2008 and 2009 and thus you see many new Walgreens stores for sale. It will slow down this expansion in 2010 and focus on renovation of existing stores instead

CVS: CVS Corporation was founded in 1963 in Lowell, MA by Stanley Goldstein, Sidney Goldstein, and Ralph Hoagland. The name CVS stands for "Consumer Value Stores". As of 2009, CVS has about 6300 stores in the US, mostly through acquisitions. In 2004, CVS bought 1,200 Eckerd Drugstores mostly in Texas and Florida. In 2006, CVS bought 700 Savon and Osco drugstores mostly in Southern California. And in 2008 CVS acquired 521 Longs Drugs stores in California, Hawaii, Nevada and Arizona for .9B dollars. The acquisition of Long Drugs appears to be a good one as it CVS does not have any stores in Northern CA and Arizona. Besides, the price also included real estate. It is also bought Caremark, the largest pharmaceutical services company and changed the corporation name to CVS Caremark. When CVS bought 1,200 Eckerd stores, it formed a single-entity LLC (Limited Liability Company) to own each Eckerd store. Each LLC signs the lease with the property owner. In the event of a default, the owner can only legally go after the assets of the LLC and not from any other CVS-owned assets. Although the owner loses the guaranty security from CVS corporate assets, this author is not aware of any incident where CVS closes a store and does not pay rent.

Rite-Aid: Rite Aid was founded by Alex Grass (he just passed away on Aug 27, 2009 at the age of 82) and opened its first store in 1962 as "Thrif D Discount Center" in Scranton, Pennsylvania. It officially incorporated as Rite Aid Corporation and went public in 1968. By the time Alex Grass stepped down as the company's chairman and chief executive officer in 1995, Rite Aid was the nation's largest drugstore chain in terms of total stores and No. 2 in terms of revenue. His son, Martin Grass, took over but was ousted in 1999 for overstatement of Rite Aid's earnings in the late 1990s. Rite Aid is now the weakest financially among the 3 drugstore chains. In 2007, Rite-Aid acquired about 1,850 Brooks and Eckerd drugstores, mostly along the East coast to catch up with Walgreens and CVS. In the process, it added a huge long term debt (currently owes over .69 Billion) and is the most leveraged drugstore chain based on its market value. The integration of Brooks and Eckerd did not seem to go well. Revenue from some of these stores went down as much as 20% after they change the sign to Rite Aid. In 2009, Rite-Aid had over 4900 stores and over Billion in revenues. The figures went down in 2010 to 4780 stores and .53 billion in revenue. On January 21, 2009 Moody's Investor Services downgraded Rite Aid from "Caa1" to "Caa2", eight notches below investment grade. Both ratings are "junk" which indicate very high credit risk. Rite Aid contacted a number of its landlords in 2009 trying to get rent concession to improve the bottom line. In June 2009, Rite Aid successfully completed refinancing .9 Billion of its debts. However, it continues to struggle in 2010 as same store sales decreased 2.5% in June, 1.7% in May, 1% in April,.1% in March, 3.2% in February, and 2.1% in January..

Things to consider when invested in a pharmacy

If you are interested in investing in a property leased by drugstore chains, here are a few things you should consider:

If you want a low risk investment, go with Walgreens. In stable or growing areas, the degree of safety is the same whether the property is in California where you get a 6% cap or Texas where you may get a 7.5% cap. So, there is no significant advantage to invest in properties in California as the property value is based primarily on the cap rate. In 2010, the offered cap rate for Walgreens seems to come down from 7.5%-8.4% in 2009 to 6.5%-7.5% for new stores. If you are willing to take more risk, then go with Rite-Aid. Some properties outside of California may offer up to 10% cap rate in 2010. However, among the 3 drug chains, Rite Aid has 10.5% chance of going under in 2010. Should it declare bankruptcy, Rite Aid has the option to pick and choose which locations to keep open and which locations to terminate the lease. To minimize the risk that the store is shuttered, choose a location with strong sales and low rent to revenue ratio. Financing should be an important consideration. While the cap rate is lower for Walgreens than Rite Aid, you will be able to get the best rates and terms for Walgreens. A 7.25% cap Walgreens with 5.25% interest rate on the loan will generate more cash flow than a 10% cap Rite Aid with 9% interest rate (if you could find a lender for Rite Aid). If you are not a conservative investor or risk taker, you may want to consider a CVS pharmacy. It has BBB+ S&P credit rating. Its cap rate is higher than Walgreens but lower than Rite Aid. Some leases may offer better rent bumps. On the other hand, some CVS leases, especially for properties in hurricane areas, e.g. Florida are not truly NNN leases where landlords are responsible for the roof and structure. So make sure you adjust the cap rate down accordingly. Some of the CVS locations have onsite Minuteclinic staffed by registered nurses. Since this clinic idea was introduced recently, it's not clear having a clinic inside CVS is a plus or minus to the bottom line of the store. All 3 drugstore chains have similar requirements. They all want highly visible, standalone, rectangular property around 10,000 - 14,500 SF on a 1.5 - 2 acre lot, preferably at a corner with about 75 - 80 parking spaces in a growing and high traffic location. They all require the property to have a drive-thru. Hence, you should avoid purchasing an inline property, i.e. not standalone and property with no drive-thru windows. There is a chance that these drugstores may not want to renew the lease unless the property is located in a densely-populated area with no vacant land nearby. In addition, if you acquire a property that does not meet the new requirements, for example a drive-thru, you may have a problem getting financing as lenders are aware of these requirements. If the pharmacy is opened 24 hours a day, it is in a better location. Drugstore chains do not open the store 24 hours day unless the location draws customers. Many properties may have a percentage lease, i.e. the landlord can get additional rent when the store's annual revenue exceeds a certain figure, e.g. M. However, the revenue used to compute percentage rent often excludes a page-long list of items, e.g. wine and sodas, tobacco products, items sold after 10 PM, drugs paid by governmental programs. The excluded sales revenue could account for as much as 70% of store's gross revenue. As a result, this author has seen only 2 stores in which the landlord is able to collect additional percentage rent. The store with a percentage rent is required to report its monthly sales to the landlord. As an investors, you want to invest in a store with strong gross sales, e.g. over 0 per square foot a year. In addition, you also want to check the rent to revenue ratio. If the figure is in the 2-4% range, the store is likely to be very profitable so the chance the store is shut down is low. It does not matter how good the tenants are, avoid investing in declining and/or low-income areas or small towns with less than 30,000 residents within 5 miles ring. In a small town, it may be the only drug store in town and captures most of the market share. However, if a competitor opens a new location in the area, revenue may be severely affected. These properties are easy to buy now and hard to sell later. In 2009 where the credit market is tight, you may have problems finding a lender to finance these properties. Many properties have an existing loan that the buyer must assume. If you have a 1031 exchange, think twice about buying this property. You should clearly understand loan assumption requirements of the lenders before moving forward. Should you fail to assume the existing loan (assuming an existing loan is a lot more difficult than getting a new loan), you may run out of time for a 1031 exchange and may be liable to pay capital gain. With few exceptions, drugstore chains do not own the stores they occupy for several reasons. Here are just a couple of them: They know the pharmacy business but don't know real estate. Stock investors also don't want Walgreens to become a real estate investment company. Owning the real estate will require them to carry lots of long term debts which is not a brilliant idea for a publicly-traded company. About 10% of the drugstore properties for sale and typically CVS pharmacies require very small amount of equity to acquire, e.g. 10% of the purchase price. However, you are required to assume an existing fully-amortized loan with zero cash flow. That is, all of the rent paid by the tenant must be used to pay down the loan. The cap rate may be in the 7% range, and the interest rate on the loan could be attractive in the 5.5% to 6% range. Hence, the investor pays off the loan in 10 to 20 years. However, the investor has no positive cash flow. This requires you to come up with outside cash to pay income tax on the rental profits (the difference between the rent and mortgage interest). The longer you own the property, the more outside cash you will need to pay income taxes as the mortgage interest will get less and less toward the end. So who would buy this kind of property? The investors who have substantial losses from other properties. By acquiring this zero cash flow property, they may offset the income from the drugstore tenant against the losses from other investment properties. For example, a property has 5,000 of rental profits a year, and the investor also has losses of 0,000 from other investment properties. As a result, the combined taxable profits are only ,000. The uninformed investors who fail to consider that they have to raise additional cash to pay income taxes.

Out of the Box Thinking If you put too much weigh on the S&P rating of the tenants, you may end up either taking a lot of risks or passing up good opportunities.

Good location should be the key in your decision on which drug store to invest in. It's often said a lousy business should do well at a great location while the best tenant will fail at a lousy location. A Walgreens store that is closed down later on (yes, Walgreens closed 119 stores in 2007) is still a bad investment even though Walgreens continues paying rent on time. So you don't want to blindly invest in a drug store simply because it hasa Walgreens sign on the building. No company is crazy enough to close a profitable location. It does not take a rocket scientist to understand that a financially-weak company like Rite Aid will make every effort to keep a profitable location open. On the other hand, a financially-strong Walgreens will need justifications to keep an unprofitable location open. So how do you determine if a drug store location is profitable or not if the tenant is not required to disclose its profit & loss statement? The answer is you cannot. However, you can make an educated guess based on store's annual gross revenue is often reported to the landlord as required by the percentage clause in the lease. With the gross revenue, you can determine the rent to income ratio. The lower the ratio, the more likely the store is profitable. For example, if the annual base rent is 0,000 while the store's gross revenue is M then the rent to income ratio is 5%. As a rule of thumb, it's hard to make a profit if this ratio is more than 8%. So if you see a Rite Aid with 3% rent to income ratio then you know it's likely a very profitable location. In the event Rite Aid declares bankruptcy, it will keep this location open and continue paying rent. If you see a Rite Aid drug store with 3% rent to income ratio offering 11% cap, chances are it's a low risk investment with good returns. The weakness of corporate guaranty from Rite Aid is probably not as critical and the risk of having Rite Aid as a tenant is not really that significant. Drug stores with new 25 years leases tend to sell at lower cap, e.g. 7-7.5% cap on new stores versus 8.0-8.5% cap on established locations with 8-10 years remaining on the lease. This is because investors are afraid that the tenants may not renew the leases. Unfortunately, lenders also have the same fear! As a result many lenders will not finance drug stores with 2-3 years left on the leases. The fact that drugstores with new leases have a premium on the price means they have potential of 10% depreciation (buying new at 7.3% cap and selling at 8.3% cap when the leases have 10 year left). Some investors will not consider investing in drug stores with 5-10 years left on the lease. They might simply ignore the fact that the established stores may be at irreplaceable locations with very strong sales. Tenants simply have no other choices other than renewing the lease.


Walgreens, CVS, and Rite Aid - What RE Investors Should Know in 2011

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