| Business Enterprise Value in Shopping
Malls: An Empirical Test Author:
Jeffrey D. Fisher and George H. Lentz
Start Page: 167
End Page: 175
Volume: 5
Issue Number: 1
Year: 1990
Publication: Journal of Real Estate Research
Abstract: This paper discusses
the economic basis for the existence of business enterprise value in a shopping mall. The
existence of business enterprise value in a mall is then tested by examining the rent paid
by existing tenants on a lease renewal vs. that paid by new tenants for otherwise
identical space. The hypothesis that there is no difference in rents between renewals and
new tenants can be rejected. This suggests that with each lease renewal there is a
marginal increase in business enterprise value component of the rents. Proposed federal
regulations for the appraisal of federally related transactions, the uniform standards of
professional appraisal practice, and real property tax law call for separation of the
value of intangibles (which include business value) from tangible personal property and
from real property. Thus the business value portion of the mall rental should not be
capitalized into the value of the real estate. Because income from lease renewals included
business value, the leases must be adjusted before they can be used as an indication of
market rent.
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