I disagree. Things like acquisition cost, which is typically a capitalized fee, is not a standard drive off.
The point I was trying to get across is that looking at the “cap cost reduction” column and trying to garner information from it doesn’t help much. In this case, the cap cost reduction was $2272, however, they could have written the deal with the acquisition fee capitalized and the cap cost reduction would have read as $3267 instead… And it would have been then exact same deal. The only number that matters is the actual DAS amount. How that DAS amount breaks out can be very easily manipulated with different bookkeeping.