Showing posts with label default. Show all posts
Showing posts with label default. Show all posts

Saturday, October 18, 2014

$278.1Bln of Conduit Loans Mature in ‘15-’17

A total of 22,514 CMBS conduit loans with a balance of $278.1 billion come due in the next three years. While a seemingly massive wall of maturities, the volume has shrunk by nearly 10 percent over the past nine months. And given continued favorable lending market conditions, it’s likely to continue shrinking.

Indeed, just about every major investor group has increased its holdings of commercial mortgages, according to recent data from the Mortgage Bankers Association, which found that the universe of outstanding commercial mortgages increased by 1 percent during the second quarter to $2.6 trillion.

Banks and thrifts, the largest holders of mortgages, saw their inventory of loans increase by a robust 1.8 percent over the first quarter, to $929.9 billion. CMBS and other securitized vehicles saw their inventory decline to $532.9 billion. That’s largely due to the fact that run-off outpaced new originations - at least through the second quarter. Life-insurance companies, meanwhile, saw a 1.3 percent increase in their inventories, to $345.8 billion.

The open lending spigots have led to a steady pace of loan pay-offs - a big chunk of the loans being securitized today were written to refinance existing CMBS loans - as well as a sharp increase in the volume of defeasance, where loan collateral is replaced by government securities.

Wells Fargo Securities noted that so far this year $12.4 billion of CMBS loans have been defeased, or replaced by government securities. That compares with a volume of $11.3 billion for all of last year and amounts to a near doubling of the $6.4 billion of volume recorded during the year’s first half.
Next year, 6,263 conduit loans with a balance of $64.6 billion come due. In 2016, that increases to 8,230 loans with a balance of $104.3 billion and in 2017, 8,021 loans with a balance of $109.2 billion come due. The volume excludes loans that have been defeased. Because those are backed by government securities, they aren’t at risk of defaulting at maturity.

Even though the volume of loans that mature between 2015 and 2017 steadily has been declining, many of the remaining loans could pose challenges. The thinking has been that loans that easily could be refinanced would have been by now, simply because interest rates are lower than they were when the current crop of maturities were written.

A total of 9,482 loans with a balance of $153.8 billion, or 55 percent of the loans that mature during the 2015-2017 period, have debt yields of 10 percent or less, based on the latest available net operating income figures as compiled by Trepp LLC.

A loan’s debt yield is calculated by dividing a collateral property’s NOI by its loan’s balance and is a gauge used to determine how comfortably the property can carry its debt.
Meanwhile, the collateral for 5,351 loans with a balance of $64.9 billion generates less than 10 percent more than what’s needed to fully service their securitized loans. In other words, their debt-service coverage ratios are less than 1.1x. Lenders typically prefer loans whose collateral can generate 120 percent, or 1.2x, the cash flow needed to fully service their borrowings.

Using DSCR as a gauge, office loans could face the biggest challenges in refinancing, as 1,209 of the loans coming due between 2015 and 2017, with a balance of $27.6 billion have DSCRs of less than 1.1x. Of the retail loans that will be coming due between those years, 1,941 with a balance of $22.8 billion have DSCRs of less than 1.1x.

Among those that might face challenges are the $200 million loan, securitized through Banc of America Commercial Mortgage Trust, 2005-3, against the Woolworth Building in Manhattan. The 811,791-square-foot office property last year generated $12.7 million of net cash flow, which is about 20 percent more than that needed to fully service its non-amortizing loan. But the $13.6 million of NOI it produced results in a debt yield of only 6.8 percent. The well-leased property also supports $50 million of additional debt. And its largest tenant, the General Services Administration, occupies its 112,692 sf under a lease that matures next October. It leases its space on behalf of the SEC, which had reduced its footprint in the building when its lease originally matured two years ago.

Monday, October 28, 2013

RPT-Fitch: 3Q defaults stabilize for U.S. CMBS

Summary:  Fixed rate US CMBS defaults fell in 3Q'13

  • 3Q'13: 93 newly defaulted loans totaling $1.1 billion
  • 2Q'13: 97 newly defaulted loans totaling $1.4 billion
  • 3Q'12: 119 newly defaulted loans totaling $2.2 billion



New York --(Reuters/Fitch)--
Cumulative defaults for fixed-rate U.S. CMBS fell slightly last quarter, according to Fitch Ratings in its latest weekly CMBS newsletter.

Fitch reports that 93 loans totaling $1.1 billion newly defaulted in third quarter-2013 (3Q'13), down slightly from 97 loans and $1.4 billion 2Q'13. More encouraging signs for the sector are the year-over-year comparison (119 loans totaling $2.2 billion defaulted in 3Q'12) and the decreasing incidence of defaulted large loans (82 of the 93 newly defaulted loans under $20 million).

An additional 56 loans (original securitized loan balance of $390 million) did not refinance at their 3Q'13 maturity date. Of that amount, 15 of the loans (totaling $102 million) had paid in full by the end of the quarter.

http://www.reuters.com/article/2013/10/28/fitch-3q-defaults-stabilize-for-us-cmbs-idUSFit67438620131028

Friday, October 25, 2013

Fitch: Penney Stress Could Pressure U.S. Malls But Not CMBS

Summary:  A J.C. Penney default could mean more to malls than it does to CMBS holders because J.C. Penney makes up such a small part of these CMBS deals.  Malls, however, that do not have other anchor tenants, are likely to suffer substantially.  J.C. Penney was downgraded to CCC earlier this month.


New York --(Fitch Ratings)--
If J.C. Penney's financial challenges result in the closure of a portion of its stores, some malls would likely struggle to replace the retailer, Fitch Ratings says. We do not expect the potential closure of the company's stores to impact rated CMBS deals because they represent relatively small amounts of those transactions.

One mall that could struggle if its J.C. Penney anchor were to close is Riverbirch Corner Shopping Center in Sanford NC. The mall's other anchor tenants are Belk and Goody's. Riverbirch could have difficulty finding find another retailer to take over the large space currently held by J.C. Penney. Riverbirch is approximately 20 miles from Raleigh, NC and 30 miles from Fayetteville and Fort Bragg. The loan on that shopping center is just $12 million, 0.3% of CGCMT 2007-C6.

Other malls would have less difficulty in replacing a J.C. Penney store. Fitch believes for example, that Aventura Mall in Miami, Florida could manage a closure of its J.C. Penney anchor promptly. The mall has several stronger anchor tenants including Nordstrom and Bloomingdales and a favorable location in the northern Miami suburb. Should the J.C. Penney store in that mall close, we believe it would be possible for the mall to find another tenant. The loan on that mall is in LBUBS 2007-C7.

Loans on many properties with J.C. Penney stores are in conduit deals with vintages back to 2001. Two large single borrower mall transactions also contain JC Penney as an anchor, the QCMT 2013-QC at $600 million and JPMCC 2011-PLSD. Both of these malls are located in strong locations at or above 95% occupancy.

J.C. Penney's real estate portfolio has been appraised at over $4 billion and includes properties it owns and leases. According to the company's most recent corporate filings, it owns 306 stores, operates 123 ground leased stores, and leases 675 stores. It also owns nine distribution centers and leases another six. Earlier this month, Fitch downgraded J.C. Penney's Issuer Default Rating to 'CCC' from 'B-'.