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Asset Management

Asset managers use Firststreet to monitor lease execution risk across the portfolio, ensuring that income performance tracks against hold strategy assumptions and that execution gaps don't silently erode asset value.

Execution Risk View REAL-TIME
NOI Variance Analysis ONGOING
Manager Oversight INDEPENDENT
Commercial real estate architecture
Portfolio Execution Risk
Exposure $427,000 / yr
Total identified execution gaps across 4 assets
Priority: address before planned exit
Tracking On Plan
Asset A · NOI within 2% of underwritten hold assumptions
Year 2 of 5 · hold strategy intact
Independence Verified
Third-party manager billings validated against lease obligations
Independent governance layer active

The Governance Visibility Gap in Portfolio Management

Asset managers are accountable for portfolio performance but depend on operating teams, property managers, lease admins, property accountants, to execute the lease obligations that produce that performance. The information that flows upward from operations to asset management typically consists of rent rolls, variance reports, and occupancy summaries. None of those reports tell an asset manager whether the leases are being billed correctly. They tell you what was collected, not whether what was collected is what the leases require.

This creates a blind spot at the portfolio level. An asset manager can see that a property is performing below its underwritten NOI, but identifying whether the shortfall is attributable to market factors, lease structure, or execution failures requires digging into the lease administration layer, work that is time-intensive and typically happens only when something specific triggers a review.

Firststreet provides asset managers with an independent view of execution quality. Rather than relying on operational reporting to surface execution failures, asset managers can see directly, at the portfolio and asset level, where lease obligations are not being met and what the financial impact of those gaps is.

Tracking Execution Risk Across the Hold Period

Asset management decisions, hold/sell analysis, refinancing timing, capital expenditure prioritization, rely on income assumptions that are only as accurate as lease execution quality. An asset underwritten to a specific NOI profile in Year 3 of a hold needs that NOI to materialize, which requires that escalation and recovery obligations are being executed correctly from day one.

Firststreet's portfolio-level monitoring means asset managers see execution risk as an ongoing metric rather than a discovery during exit due diligence. Identified discrepancies are quantified in dollar terms, so the impact on asset-level NOI can be assessed directly.

Portfolio-Level Execution Risk
Aggregate view of identified lease execution gaps by asset, with financial impact quantified, so asset managers see where income is leaking across the portfolio.
Hold Strategy Income Validation
Monitors whether income performance is tracking against underwritten assumptions, separating execution failures from market factors in NOI variance analysis.
Third-Party Manager Oversight
Provides an independent governance layer over third-party managed assets, verifying execution directly rather than relying solely on manager reporting.
Portfolio Execution Risk
Exposure $427,000/yr
Total identified execution gaps across 4 assets
Priority: address before exit
Tracking On Plan
Asset A, NOI tracking within 2% of underwritten hold assumptions
Year 2 of 5
Independence Verified
Third-party manager billings validated against lease obligations
Independent governance layer

Preparing for Disposition With a Clean Governance Record

Exit due diligence is the moment when lease execution gaps become most visible and most costly. An acquirer's team reviewing lease documentation against billing records will surface the same discrepancies Firststreet would have found, but at that point, they become price adjustments, deal conditions, or contract renegotiations rather than operational corrections. The asset manager who governed the portfolio proactively throughout the hold arrives at disposition with a documented record of clean execution, not a list of items to defend.

Firststreet's governance record also shortens sell-side due diligence. When lease obligations are continuously monitored and the documentation is maintained, the seller's team can respond quickly and confidently to buyer inquiries. Each lease has a traceable record of how its obligations were modeled and monitored. That transparency builds buyer confidence and reduces the friction that slows deals down.

How This Looks in Practice

An example of how execution gaps between negotiated lease economics and operational reality get surfaced, and what they cost when they don't.

Scenario Institutional real estate fund  ·  $2.1B portfolio  ·  Mixed office and retail  ·  Quarterly investor reporting

Michael managed a mixed portfolio of office and retail assets for an institutional fund with quarterly investor reporting obligations. For three consecutive quarters, the portfolio had underperformed its IRR target by 80–90 basis points. The committee had heard various explanations, some market-driven, some tied to tenant credit performance, but nothing that fully accounted for the persistent gap.

A Firststreet analysis was run across the portfolio's 87 active leases. The platform structured every rent obligation, base rent, escalation schedules, percentage rent thresholds, CPI provisions, recovery structures, and compared them against Yardi configuration data.

Two categories of errors dominated the findings. First, percentage rent kick-in thresholds on 4 retail leases had never been configured in Yardi at all. The tenants were generating gross sales above their natural breakpoints, but the system had no record that percentage rent was owed. Second, rent escalation steps on 9 office leases had been applied against the wrong base year figure, in each case, the escalation had been calculated on the year-1 rent rather than the correct step-up base, understating the current obligation by 4–8%.

The combined annual revenue impact across both error categories was $1.4 million, enough to account for the full IRR gap the committee had been asking about.

Outcome

After correcting the ERP configurations and pursuing appropriate billing adjustments, the portfolio's trailing 12-month NOI improved by 1.2%. The next investor committee presentation shifted from explaining underperformance to presenting a systematic execution audit as a new operating procedure. Firststreet is now part of the fund's standard quarterly governance review cycle.

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