Friday, December 12, 2014

An S&P Ban Seen Having Big CMBS Impact


Word that the SEC may suspend S&P from rating commercial MBS transactions sent a shudder through the sector this week.

CMBS lenders said a ban would have a major negative impact on the single-borrower market, where S&P is the dominant rating agency. CMBS shops would likely have to turn to Moody’s or Fitch, which generally take a harder credit-quality stance on single-borrower deals. That would result in smaller loan sizes or higher interest rates, which could depress CMBS issuance by driving borrowers to other types of lenders or by rendering some acquisitions and refinancings uneconomical.

The secondary-market impact could also be significant if an SEC action voided S&P’s outstanding ratings during a suspension. That could force investors whose guidelines require a rating from a major agency to dump bonds, depressing prices.

Bloomberg reported on Monday that the SEC "is seeking to suspend" S&P from rating CMBS transactions. The news agency added that S&P was holding settlement talks in an effort to avoid the sanction.

Nomura researchers speculated that a ban could last one year. The SEC and S&P declined to comment.

The exact nature of the SEC’s investigation is unclear. In July, S&P disclosed that it was being investigated for possible violations of federal securities laws connected to its ratings and disclosures for six CMBS transactions in 2011. Bloomberg said the SEC was investigating whether S&P "bent rating criteria to win business."

Given the uncertainty about the likelihood, scope, timing and length of any SEC sanction, CMBS lenders said they were taking a wait-and-see attitude for now, continuing to quote loan terms on the expectation that S&P will rate transactions. But they acknowledged that they risk taking losses on loans being warehoused when an SEC action is announced.

Likewise, traders said the Bloomberg report had no immediate impact on prices in secondary-market trading.

S&P has almost disappeared from the conduit market because of a series of missteps since the crash and issuer complaints that its methodology doesn’t produce consistent rating patterns. But that same methodology produces relatively favorable credit-enhancement levels on single-borrower transactions, enabling lenders to write larger loans at lower rates. That has made S&P the dominant agency in that sector, with an 81% market share this year, versus 19% apiece for Moody’s and Fitch. Single-borrower transactions account for one-quarter of overall U.S. issuance.

But if S&P isn’t used, a lower percentage of a loan would qualify for an investment-grade rating. That would force a property owner to either borrow less or use mezzanine financing to make up the difference, increasing the blended coupon.
Lenders said the impact would vary widely from loan to loan, but as examples, they said that leverage ratios might decrease to 65% from 70%, and coupons might rise by 25-75 bp. Borrowers would then have to decide whether to pay the higher cost, borrow less, turn to another lender or not proceed at all.

Senior CMBS executives were glum about the prospect of a suspension. One said it would have "a major impact." Another said it would make "a material difference." A third said it would "cast a dark cloud over the CMBS market."

One veteran in the large-loan market said that profits have already been squeezed by increased lending competition this year. "We’ve been skating on thin ice as it is," he said. "If S&P goes away, it’s going to make this business extremely tough."

"Stand-alone deals will still get done," said another lender, "but it means the whole pipeline will have to get re-priced. If it

happens suddenly, there will be some people who’ll get stuck. They’ll have priced a deal a certain way, then find they have to change directions mid-stream. That’s where the pain will occur."

For the secondary market, the worst-case scenario is that S&P would be forced to withdraw its rating on outstanding bonds. Some buy-side shops have investment guidelines requiring that bonds carry a rating from S&P, Moody’s or Fitch. So if S&P’s ratings are dropped and neither of the other agencies rates the bonds, those investors could be forced to sell.

"If [S&P has] to take all their prior ratings off, that would be a problem," said one CMBS trader. But another trader noted that since the market crash, some institutional investors have dropped the requirement of having a rating from the traditional "big three." And the impact would largely be limited to post-crash single-borrower transactions.

So far, secondary-market prices haven’t been affected. This week, unrelated to the Bloomberg report, an unidentified holder sold about $55 million of single-borrower CMBS rated in most cases by S&P but not the two other major agencies. All of the bonds traded at levels that met or exceeded price talk circulated by dealers.

The SEC’s investigation is believed to stem at least partly from a controversial incident in July 2011, when S&P abruptly withdrew its ratings on a $1.5 billion CMBS transaction that had already priced and was about to settle. The unprecedented action derailed the multi-borrower transaction and caused issuers

Goldman Sachs and Citigroup to lose millions, touching off a firestorm of criticism in the industry and prompting angry issuers to boycott the agency on conduit transactions.

S&P attributed the unprecedented action to the discovery of a possible inconsistency in how its analysts had been calculating the debt-service-coverage ratios for new and legacy transactions.

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