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CRE Finance World Summer 2015

44

Borrowers

In the pre-GFC era, the main attraction to a borrower of a CMBS

loan was the hugely attractive pricing compared to balance sheet

loans. As interest rates rose in the months immediately prior

the GFC, the attractive price offered by CMBS loans fuelled the

exponential growth of the CMBS market with increasing numbers

of borrowers seeking finance through this means. However today’s

market is the complete antithesis of this with interest rates at

record lows which, coupled with increased competition from lenders

(especially the less regulatory constrained shadow banks), has

enabled borrowers to obtain financing at record low rates without

the need to turn to CMBS. Consequently, despite the re-opening of

the CMBS market there is not the same appetite from borrowers for

CMBS loans that generated the surge of issuance in the months

prior to the GFC.

What are the drivers?

Arrangers

Although the level of CMBS 2.0 issuance has been low compared

to the levels reached at the peak of the market, this is unsurprising

given how few arrangers are bringing CMBS deals to the market.

Inevitably over time, the number of arrangers will undoubtedly

increase, providing a much needed boost to primary issuance

however such players can also be forgiven for being reticent. The

successful execution of multi-loan and multi-borrower transactions

during 2014 is a much welcomed boost to opening up the market

for new arrangers, as such deals demonstrate the market is not

simply confined to sourcing and securitising a very limited stock

of large loans but it has also given the nod to the securitisation of

a portfolio of smaller loans.

Investors

On the investor side, with the continued low interest rate environment,

the ECB’s introduction of large scale quantitative easing, and

investors’ relentless search for yield, CMBS is increasingly looking

like a desirable proposition for the fixed income investor. Unfortunately,

due to the stuttering and lumpy nature of issuance over the past

few years, investors have been reluctant to put in place the internal

resources and infrastructure required to invest in this asset class

with any real volume. If however, the market can demonstrate that

it is capable of delivering greater primary issuance with a smoother

flow of deals, this will precipitate the deeper and stronger investor

base required to absorb and competitively price the volume of

deals that should hopefully be destined for the market.

Borrowers

The real driver for significant primary CMBS issuance is however

likely to lie in the hands of the borrowers and their demand for

better priced loans spurred on by a rising interest rate environment.

However before CMBS becomes flavour of the month for such

borrowers, the regulators will have to first clamp down on the

shadow banks and through regulation erode the competitive

advantage that they currently enjoy over traditional CRE lenders

(although given the pace of regulatory change this is unlikely to

happen anytime soon). With the levelling of the regulatory playing

field and a rising interest rate environment, it is likely that borrower

demand will drive the CMBS market and then once again we will

see significant primary growth.

As has been demonstrated by the number and type of CMBS 2.0

deals that have hit the market since Chiswick Park, CMBS clearly

has a role as a financing tool for CRE in Europe. In particular,

CMBS has an integral role for financing those assets that would

otherwise be more difficult (due to size of the loan or complexity

of their underlying structure) for a bank to distribute in the

syndication market.

It is inevitable, that with more arrangers in the market there will

eventually be a greater volume of CMBS issuance. Equally with

regard to the seasoned players, they will generate more deals as

they become more efficient in executing transactions in various

jurisdictions. However it will not be until interest rates start to rise

and there has been a greater standardisation of regulations that

apply to the shadow banks that we will start to see a meaningful

increase in CMBS issuance. Although it is frustrating that there

has not been a boom in primary issuance, this may not be a thing.

The gradual growth coupled with the refining and finessing of

structures that we are currently witnessing, will ultimately make

European CMBS a far more sustainable and robust financing tool

for CRE.

Some Crystal Ball Gazing on European CMBS