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CRE Finance World Summer 2015

20

in terms of documentation is one area that causes borrowers,

especially smaller borrowers, concern. Larger CMBS borrowers

tend to enjoy more tailored documentation, particularly as it relates

to release provisions in large portfolio loans.

Clay Sublett.

I think borrowers are still very much concerned about

the servicing aspect. We have borrowers — bank clients — that

say CMBS is their execution of last resort. Small- and medium-

sized borrowers in particular continue to struggle with things like

SNDAs, collateral releases, or collateral lease approvals of major

tenants. Knowledgeable borrowers tell us they’ll consider CMBS if

the loan is secured by a totally stabilized property. I’ve got a good

bank client today working to develop a multifamily property. He

wants to carve off a portion of the existing collateral and the special

servicer is saying, fine, but for me to consider this you need to

send me X amount of money. That really sits poorly with an awful

lot of borrowers.

Larry Brown.

Look, CMBS is a trillion dollar industry, so while any

system could always be improved, I often advise borrowers of both

the positives and negatives of CMBS. You often get the most

proceeds for the best rate, but there are

potentially more hoops to jump through

in the servicing of your loan.

Brian Furlong.

I think the difference

between winning and losing a loan

is about 5 to 20 basis points. If a life

company is quoting the same price or

is a basis point tighter than a CMBS lender, it is going to win 99%

of the time. Five or 10 basis points is about where things begin to

really matter.

Does Size Matter? Large Loan Single-Asset/Borrower CMBS

or Conduit Pari-Passu Notes?

Lisa Pendergast. Why are we seeing such a large preponderance

of single-borrower deals in the market today?

Spencer Kagan.

I think we have tension right now between how

large a conduit deal can get in terms of total size. This becomes

difficult, particularly when you’re trading triple-A bonds. Before the

financial crisis, it was not unusual to have $4 billion or $5 billion,

even up to $7 billion pools. Large loans that would previously go

into a conduit execution can’t in today’s environment, so larger

loans are currently being securitized as stand-alone transactions.

But we haven’t seen enough demand, particularly at the triple-A

levels, to accommodate what we would like to do for large loans in

conduit executions.

Stephanie Petosa. When would you do a large loan as a standalone

vs. splitting a large loan into pari-passu notes and placing it in

several conduit CMBS?

Spencer Kagan.

It’s a matter of managing spread risk and deal size.

There are many different things that we consider when determining

how to execute. Pari-passu notes create more granularities in

pools, but the elongated timing slows down the execution velocity

and thereby exposes the issuer to spread risk. The other thing I

would say is that a number of standalone deals to date have been

floating rate. The floating-rate market is not as strong as we all

thought it might be a year ago; so some of those deals are more

likely to be executed as standalone.

Brian Furlong.

As Spencer pointed out, I think there’s more depth

in the fixed-rate, very large single-asset/single-borrower space.

The floating-rate space is a bit more challenging given that it used

to be supported by European banks and SIVs that no longer exist.

The result is that the market is seeing less of that sort of debt and,

when it does come to market, it usually is a little bit off the run.

Clay Sublett.

The banks are a bit different

because we lend on less-stabilized

properties. So we look to the relationship

and the profile of the borrower. By

profile we mean are they holders of real

estate or just transactional? We’re not

as interested in a transaction borrower

because we think there is higher risk.

We want to have a relationship and lend money to people who are

long-term holders of real estate with a cash-flowing portfolio. We

are playing in a mid-tier market in terms of borrower and asset size

and in terms of financial strength. We generally target borrowers

with $50 million to $500 million of real-estate assets and less than

20% of their portfolios in new construction or under development.

The Wall of Maturities: Opportunity or Risk?

Lisa Pendergast. Do you view the ‘Wall of Maturities’ as an

opportunity or a risk?

Brian Furlong.

On the one hand, the refinance risk has been

scaled down from where it was just a few years ago. This is due

largely to the current environment in which values on almost all

commercial real estate have risen sharply as cap rates remain low

and capital availability high. On the other hand, I think we don’t

really know how bad it may get. The 2006-2007 underwriting was

really very bad and so it hasn’t been tested. I think the jury is still

out to some degree but it seems a little less scary than it did a few

years ago.

A Lender Roundtable: Real Talk from Real Lenders on Today’s Competitive Commercial and Multifamily Lending Environments

“Hopefully, the increased demand

for capital allows lenders to become

increasingly more selective about

the product they’re willing to lend on.”

Spencer Kagan