tenant-credit-analyst

star 22

Use when assessing a prospective tenant's creditworthiness from financial statements, computing DSCR/current ratio/debt-to-equity, estimating default probability, recommending security structures (deposit, LC, personal guarantee), or sizing financial covenants for a lease.

reggiechan74 By reggiechan74 schedule Updated 5/15/2026

name: tenant-credit-analyst description: Use when assessing a prospective tenant's creditworthiness from financial statements, computing DSCR/current ratio/debt-to-equity, estimating default probability, recommending security structures (deposit, LC, personal guarantee), or sizing financial covenants for a lease.

Tenant Credit Analyst

Overview

Tenant credit analysis determines:

  • Default probability: Likelihood tenant cannot pay rent
  • Credit quality: Strength of tenant's financial position
  • Security requirements: Deposits, guarantees, financial covenants needed
  • Lease structuring: Appropriate rent escalations, term, and protections

Critical Insight: Rent is worthless if tenant defaults. Credit analysis is the first step in lease negotiation.

Core Concepts

Debt Service Coverage Ratio (DSCR)

Definition: Ability to cover rent from operating cash flow.

Formula:

DSCR = Net Operating Income (NOI) ÷ Annual Rent

Where:
NOI = EBITDA or Operating Cash Flow
Annual Rent = Base Rent + Estimated Operating Costs

Interpretation:

  • DSCR > 2.0: Strong (2x coverage)
  • DSCR 1.5-2.0: Acceptable (modest cushion)
  • DSCR 1.2-1.5: Marginal (thin cushion, require security)
  • DSCR < 1.2: High risk (insufficient cash flow, reject or require guarantees)

Minimum Standard: 1.25-1.50 for most industrial/office leases

Current Ratio

Definition: Ability to pay short-term obligations (including rent).

Formula:

Current Ratio = Current Assets ÷ Current Liabilities

Interpretation:

  • >2.0: Strong liquidity
  • 1.5-2.0: Adequate liquidity
  • 1.0-1.5: Tight liquidity (monitor)
  • <1.0: Liquidity crisis (reject)

Minimum Standard: 1.5 for most commercial tenants

Debt-to-Equity Ratio

Definition: Financial leverage and solvency.

Formula:

Debt-to-Equity = Total Liabilities ÷ Shareholders' Equity

Interpretation:

  • <1.0: Conservative (low leverage)
  • 1.0-2.0: Moderate (acceptable)
  • 2.0-4.0: Aggressive (require guarantees)
  • >4.0: Over-leveraged (high risk)

Context: Varies by industry (capital-intensive businesses have higher D/E)

Working Capital

Definition: Liquidity cushion to absorb short-term fluctuations.

Formula:

Working Capital = Current Assets - Current Liabilities

Interpretation:

  • Positive and growing: Healthy
  • Positive but declining: Warning sign
  • Negative: Cash flow stress (reject unless guaranteed)

Rule of Thumb: Working capital should exceed 6-12 months of rent

Methodology

Step 1: Obtain Financial Statements

Required documents:

  • Balance Sheet: Assets, liabilities, equity
  • Income Statement (P&L): Revenue, expenses, net income
  • Cash Flow Statement: Operating, investing, financing cash flows
  • Notes to Financial Statements: Accounting policies, contingencies

Preferred: Audited or review engagement (CPA prepared) Acceptable: Notice to Reader (compilation) Red Flag: Internally prepared (no CPA oversight)

Time Period: Most recent 2-3 years

Step 2: Calculate Key Ratios

Liquidity Ratios:

  • Current Ratio
  • Quick Ratio (excluding inventory)
  • Working Capital

Leverage Ratios:

  • Debt-to-Equity
  • Total Liabilities ÷ Total Assets
  • Interest Coverage Ratio

Profitability Ratios:

  • Gross Margin
  • Operating Margin
  • Net Margin
  • Return on Assets (ROA)
  • Return on Equity (ROE)

Cash Flow Ratios:

  • Operating Cash Flow ÷ Current Liabilities
  • Free Cash Flow (after capex)
  • DSCR (operating cash flow ÷ rent)

Step 3: Trend Analysis

Compare current year vs. prior years:

  • Improving trends: Revenue growth, margin expansion, debt reduction
  • Deteriorating trends: Revenue decline, margin compression, increasing leverage
  • Red flags: Sudden changes, inconsistent performance

Step 4: Industry Benchmarking

Compare tenant's ratios to industry norms:

  • Use industry reports (RMA, Statistics Canada, Dun & Bradstreet)
  • Identify outliers (above/below industry standards)
  • Adjust expectations for industry (e.g., grocery stores have low margins but high turnover)

Step 5: Qualitative Assessment

Beyond numbers:

  • Management quality: Experience, track record
  • Business model: Recurring revenue, customer concentration
  • Industry dynamics: Growth vs. declining industry
  • Competitive position: Market share, differentiation
  • Litigation/contingencies: Lawsuits, regulatory issues

Step 6: Credit Scoring

Assign credit grade:

A+ / A / A-:  Excellent credit (Fortune 500, strong financials)
B+ / B / B-:  Good credit (solid financials, some leverage acceptable)
C+ / C / C-:  Acceptable credit (requires standard security: deposit)
D+ / D / D-:  Marginal credit (requires enhanced security: deposit + guarantee)
E:            Poor credit (reject or require full guarantee + large deposit)

Step 7: Security Recommendations

Based on credit grade:

Grade A: Minimal security (1-2 months deposit or waive) Grade B: Standard security (3 months deposit) Grade C: Enhanced security (6 months deposit or partial guarantee) Grade D: Strong security (12 months deposit + personal guarantee) Grade E: Maximum security (full personal guarantee + 12 months deposit) or reject

Key Metrics

Debt Service Coverage Ratio (DSCR)

  • Formula: NOI ÷ Annual Rent
  • Minimum: 1.25-1.50
  • Target: 2.0+

Current Ratio

  • Formula: Current Assets ÷ Current Liabilities
  • Minimum: 1.5
  • Target: 2.0+

Debt-to-Equity

  • Formula: Total Liabilities ÷ Equity
  • Maximum: 2.0-3.0 (industry dependent)
  • Target: <1.5

Revenue Growth

  • Formula: (Current Year Revenue - Prior Year Revenue) ÷ Prior Year Revenue
  • Red Flag: Negative growth for 2+ consecutive years
  • Target: Positive and consistent

Operating Margin

  • Formula: Operating Income ÷ Revenue
  • Industry Dependent: Compare to industry norms
  • Red Flag: Declining margins

Red Flags

Financial Statement Red Flags

Qualified Audit Opinion:

  • Auditor expresses concerns or limitations
  • Action: Request explanation, consider rejection

Going Concern Warning:

  • Auditor questions ability to continue operations
  • Action: Reject or require immediate guarantee

Negative Equity:

  • Liabilities exceed assets
  • Action: Reject (insolvent)

Negative Working Capital:

  • Current liabilities exceed current assets
  • Action: Require guarantee or large deposit

Declining Revenue (2+ years):

  • Business is shrinking
  • Action: Require enhanced security, shorter term

Losses (Net Income < 0):

  • Unprofitable operations
  • Action: Assess sustainability, require guarantee if persistent losses

Cash Flow Red Flags

Negative Operating Cash Flow:

  • Burning cash from operations
  • Action: Reject unless startup with equity financing

High Capex Relative to Cash Flow:

  • Capital spending exceeds operating cash flow
  • Action: Monitor liquidity, may indicate growth or distress

High Debt Service:

  • Interest + principal payments exceed operating cash flow
  • Action: Refinancing risk, require guarantee

Qualitative Red Flags

Frequent Address Changes:

  • Moved multiple times in recent years
  • Action: Flight risk, require larger deposit

Litigation / Judgments:

  • Outstanding lawsuits or judgments
  • Action: Assess materiality, may require guarantee

Tax Liens / Garnishments:

  • Government claims against tenant
  • Action: High default risk, reject or guarantee

Multiple Related-Party Transactions:

  • Payments to owners/family members
  • Action: May be masking profitability or siphoning cash

Customer Concentration:

  • 50% of revenue from 1-2 customers

  • Action: Loss of key customer = default risk

Common Use Cases

Use Case 1: New Tenant Application

Situation: Manufacturing company applies for 10,000 sf industrial space at $8/sf/year = $80,000/year rent. Submits 3 years of financial statements.

Analysis:

  1. Calculate DSCR: NOI = $180,000, DSCR = $180,000 ÷ $80,000 = 2.25 (Strong)
  2. Current Ratio: $420,000 ÷ $280,000 = 1.5 (Acceptable)
  3. Debt-to-Equity: $500,000 ÷ $300,000 = 1.67 (Moderate)
  4. Revenue trend: Year 1: $2M, Year 2: $2.2M, Year 3: $2.5M (Growing)
  5. Profitability: Net margin = 9% (Healthy for manufacturing)

Output:

Credit Grade: B+
Security Recommendation: 3 months rent deposit ($20,000)
Lease Term: 5 years acceptable
Covenants: Annual financial statement requirement
Recommendation: APPROVE with standard security

Use Case 2: Startup Tenant

Situation: Technology startup (2 years old) applies for office space. Limited operating history, venture capital funded.

Analysis:

  1. DSCR: Negative NOI (losses), DSCR = N/A
  2. Current Ratio: $1.2M ÷ $300K = 4.0 (Strong liquidity from equity raise)
  3. Debt-to-Equity: $300K ÷ $900K = 0.33 (Low leverage)
  4. Cash burn: $50K/month, 24 months runway remaining
  5. Venture backing: $2M Series A raised 6 months ago

Output:

Credit Grade: C- (early stage, unprofitable)
Security Recommendation:
  - 12 months rent deposit ($120K), OR
  - Personal guarantee from founders + 6 months deposit
Lease Term: 3 years maximum (matches runway)
Covenants: Quarterly financial statements, maintain $500K minimum cash balance
Recommendation: CONDITIONAL APPROVAL (require enhanced security)

Use Case 3: Renewal - Credit Deterioration

Situation: Existing tenant (8 years in building) requests 5-year renewal. Recent financials show declining performance.

Analysis:

  1. DSCR: Was 2.5, now 1.3 (declining but still acceptable)
  2. Current Ratio: Was 2.0, now 1.4 (tight liquidity)
  3. Revenue: Declined 15% year-over-year
  4. Net Income: Positive but down 40%
  5. Management explanation: Lost major customer, rebuilding

Output:

Credit Grade: C+ (was B+, downgraded)
Security Recommendation:
  - Increase deposit from 3 months to 6 months
  - Add financial covenant: Maintain DSCR > 1.25
  - Quarterly reporting requirement
Lease Term: 3 years (shorter than requested 5 years)
Rent: Below-market renewal to support recovery
Recommendation: APPROVE RENEWAL with enhanced security (better than vacancy)

Use Case 4: Corporate Guarantor Analysis

Situation: Tenant has weak credit (DSCR 1.1), but parent company offers corporate guarantee.

Analysis - Guarantor:

  1. Parent DSCR: 3.5 (strong)
  2. Parent Current Ratio: 2.2 (strong)
  3. Parent Debt-to-Equity: 0.8 (conservative)
  4. Parent Net Worth: $15M (> 10x annual rent)
  5. Guarantee structure: Absolute and unconditional

Output:

Tenant Credit Grade: D
Guarantor Credit Grade: A-
Security Recommendation:
  - Absolute and unconditional corporate guarantee from parent
  - 3 months deposit (standard)
Lease Term: 5 years acceptable (based on guarantor strength)
Recommendation: APPROVE (rely on parent guarantee, not tenant)

Integration with Slash Commands

This skill is automatically loaded when:

  • User mentions: tenant credit, DSCR, financial analysis, credit risk, guarantee, security deposit
  • Commands invoked: /tenant-credit, /default-analysis
  • Reading files: *financial*statement*, *balance*sheet*, *income*statement*

Related Commands:

  • /tenant-credit <financial-statements-path> - Full credit analysis with scoring and security recommendations
  • /default-analysis <lease-path> <default-description> - Assess default scenarios and landlord remedies

Examples

Example 1: Comprehensive Credit Analysis

Tenant: Acme Distribution Inc. Space: 20,000 sf industrial warehouse Proposed Rent: $10/sf/year = $200,000/year

Financial Data (Most Recent Year):

  • Revenue: $5,000,000
  • Gross Profit: $1,250,000 (25% margin)
  • Operating Expenses: $900,000
  • EBITDA: $350,000
  • Net Income: $200,000
  • Current Assets: $1,200,000
  • Current Liabilities: $600,000
  • Total Assets: $2,500,000
  • Total Liabilities: $1,400,000
  • Shareholders' Equity: $1,100,000

Ratio Analysis:

DSCR = $350,000 ÷ $200,000 = 1.75 ✓ (Acceptable, above 1.50 minimum)

Current Ratio = $1,200,000 ÷ $600,000 = 2.0 ✓ (Strong liquidity)

Debt-to-Equity = $1,400,000 ÷ $1,100,000 = 1.27 ✓ (Moderate leverage)

Working Capital = $1,200,000 - $600,000 = $600,000 ✓ (3x annual rent)

Operating Margin = $350,000 ÷ $5,000,000 = 7% (Typical for distribution)

ROE = $200,000 ÷ $1,100,000 = 18% ✓ (Strong return)

Trend Analysis (3 years):

  • Revenue: $4.2M → $4.7M → $5.0M (Growing 6-8%/year)
  • EBITDA Margin: 6.5% → 7.2% → 7.0% (Stable)
  • Debt-to-Equity: 1.45 → 1.35 → 1.27 (Deleveraging)

Credit Decision:

Credit Grade: B+

Strengths:
- Strong DSCR (1.75x)
- Excellent liquidity (2.0 current ratio)
- Consistent revenue growth
- Deleveraging trend

Weaknesses:
- Moderate leverage (D/E 1.27)
- Industry-typical low margins

Security Recommendation: 3 months rent deposit ($50,000)
Lease Term: 5 years
Covenants: Annual financial statements, maintain DSCR > 1.25
Personal Guarantee: Not required

RECOMMENDATION: APPROVE

Example 2: Red Flag Analysis

Tenant: Struggling Retail Corp. Financial Data:

  • Revenue: Year 1: $2.5M, Year 2: $2.2M, Year 3: $1.8M (declining 15-20%/year)
  • Net Income: Year 3: -$150,000 (loss)
  • Current Ratio: 0.9 (current liabilities exceed current assets)
  • Debt-to-Equity: 4.5 (highly leveraged)
  • DSCR: N/A (negative EBITDA)
  • Audit Opinion: Going Concern warning

Red Flags Identified:

  1. Declining revenue (3 consecutive years)
  2. Unprofitable (net loss)
  3. Negative working capital (current ratio < 1.0)
  4. Over-leveraged (D/E 4.5)
  5. Going Concern warning (auditor doubts ability to continue)

Credit Decision:

Credit Grade: E (High Risk)

RECOMMENDATION: REJECT

Rationale:
- Insufficient cash flow to cover rent
- Insolvency risk (negative working capital)
- Auditor going concern warning
- Declining business trend

Alternative: Only consider if:
- Personal guarantee from solvent guarantor (net worth > $1M)
- 12 months rent deposit ($240K)
- Short-term lease (1 year)
- Above-market rent to compensate for risk

Skill Version: 1.0 Last Updated: November 13, 2025 Related Skills: commercial-lease-expert, indemnity-expert, default-and-remedies-advisor, effective-rent-analyzer Related Commands: /tenant-credit, /default-analysis (VTS approval memos are now generated via the commercial-lease-expert skill, which auto-loads on relevant questions)

Install via CLI
npx skills add https://github.com/reggiechan74/vp-real-estate --skill tenant-credit-analyst
Repository Details
star Stars 22
call_split Forks 7
navigation Branch main
article Path SKILL.md
More from Creator
reggiechan74
reggiechan74 Explore all skills →