§ Institutional Benchmarks · 01
Commercial Exit Caps
The exit cap is the single most consequential assumption in any institutional commercial real estate underwrite. It anchors residual value, drives unlevered IRR, and determines whether a transaction clears its cost-of-capital hurdle on Day 1.
The conceptual framework
An exit cap is the projected stabilized capitalization rate at the point of disposition. It expresses the relationship between forward Net Operating Income and assumed sale value: Exit Value = Year-N NOI ÷ Exit Cap. Sophisticated underwriters apply an exit cap that is higher than the going-in cap — the "spread to entry" — to reflect duration risk, capex recovery, and the unobservable future cost of capital.
Three regimes by strategy
- Core / Core-Plus: Stabilized assets in gateway markets typically receive an exit cap +25 to +50 bps above going-in to reflect cycle conservatism.
- Value-Add: Repositioning strategies justify a +50 to +100 bps spread, recognizing that the stabilized basis exists at a future date with embedded execution risk.
- Opportunistic: Development and distressed strategies often use a +100 to +200 bps cushion, alongside an explicit residual sensitivity table.
Cross-border calibration
Exit caps cannot be lifted between geographies without adjustment. Liquidity depth, currency-hedge cost, sovereign yield curves, and landlord-tenant law materially alter the institutional bid. A comparable-quality logistics asset typically clears at meaningfully different yields across North American, Western European, GCC, and major Asia-Pacific markets — driven by capital availability, not underlying cash-flow quality alone.
Sensitivity discipline
Institutional investment committees expect exit-cap sensitivities presented in 25-bps increments across at least a ±100 bps band, with IRR and equity-multiple impact quantified at each step. A deal that only works inside a 25-bps tolerance is, by definition, an interest-rate bet rather than a real-estate underwrite.