Liquidity gridlock worsens in US commercial real estate sector
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[November 08, 2023] By
Shankar Ramakrishnan
(Reuters) - Private lenders, in pole position as high interest rates
leave them as the sole option for many in the commercial real estate
market (CRE), are turning more selective and worsening a liquidity
gridlock in a sector facing trillions of dollars of maturing debt.
In recent months, banks looked to rework terms on maturing CRE debt to
stave off loan defaults, but they required additional infusion of equity
capital allowing private lenders an opportunity to provide rescue
financing through mezzanine debt, preferred equity or fresh common
equity, industry sources said.
Initially those workouts were focused on the office sector, but now are
spreading to multi-family, industrial and hotels. And those workouts are
becoming mathematically untenable even for private lenders. This is
happening as rental income, across sectors, is not keeping up with the
increase in debt servicing costs, said several industry players.
"Debt is available, but not in the same amount as before and it is also
meaningfully more expensive. That leaves a few choices, and none of them
are ideal," said Mike Comparato, president of Franklin BSP Realty Trust.
Borrowing costs for the CRE market have risen more than income, a
situation prompted by the steepest jump in interest rates in decades.
Exacerbating factors include tighter lending standards after the March
regional bank failures and falling office occupancies post-COVID.
“It is a fantastic time to be a private lender," said Jeff Holzmann, COO
at Texas-based RREAF Holdings, a real estate investor. "But that doesn't
mean that every opportunity that comes to you is a good one."
There are assets that may never recover even with lower interest rates
because they are in cities where the market is deteriorating because of
crime and declining demographics. Some would also need large investments
for a turn-around which ate into returns, he said.
NO REAL OPTION
Rising caution among private lenders will worsen the paucity of
liquidity for property owners who have no real exit option.
Two-year interest rate caps that protected against rising rates mature
in coming years, and new caps that used to cost thousands now cost in
the tens of millions of dollars, said several industry players.
As property valuations dropped on weaker fundamentals, borrowers also
qualified for a smaller senior refinancing loan at rates that were at
least 500 basis points higher.
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Buildings stand in New York City, U.S., July 26, 2023. REUTERS/Amr
Alfiky/ File Photo
Razmig Boladian, co-managing partner at Rubicon Point Partners said
even if lenders push office property owners to get a loan at any
interest rate for a refinancing, they cannot do it because borrowers
are unable to pay back their loans and lenders do not have the
balance sheet availability to lend.
"The market is strained for liquidity; it's an absolute gridlock.
Even with a massive drop in valuations in vacant buildings, there is
no guarantee you will generate returns to justify the investment,"
he added.
Selling out of an asset is also becoming harder. Either there are no
buyers or a limited pool who demand such a low valuation that
existing owners could end up with no proceeds after paying off
loans, said Claudia Faust, co-founder and managing partner at
Hawkeye Partners, a real estate investor.
Though estimates vary, nearly $2 trillion of CRE debt is expected to
mature in just the next two years, which will increase demand for
private liquidity.
"There is a paucity of lenders in the market. Last year we would
regularly compete with 5 to 10 lenders when issuing a new quote but
this year, oftentimes, we are the only lender submitting a quote,"
said Alex Horn, managing partner at BridgeInvest, a private CRE
mortgage lender.
They are on track to receive applications for $40 billion of loans
in 2023 compared to just over $20 billion in 2022, but only 2% might
finally get a loan as some were over-leveraged and likely to
struggle with debt servicing payments, said Horn.
Jay Hiemenz, president and chief operating officer at Alliance
Residential, said depending on the property sector, it could take 3
years or more to even get to a recovery cycle.
Some private lenders faced the risk of ending up paring their
portfolios that were expensive to manage, he added.
The current delinquency rate for loans in commercial mortgage-backed
securities is 4.76% but it is expected to approach 10.51% in coming
years - the peak touched during the global financial crisis,
according to Moody's Analytics.
But the firm's head of commercial real estate economics Thomas
LaSalvia said probability of a contagion effect was low.
"There will be a clearing out of a good deal of over-supply of
assets that no longer work in the current economy but there is not
enough evidence for this to cause a systemic crisis," he added.
(Reporting by Shankar Ramakrishnan; Editing by Anna Driver)
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