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Thursday, February 11, 2010

17

Understanding the Commercial Real Estate Crisis

THERE WILL BE GRAPHSEarlier, we mentioned today's Congressional Oversight Panel's report on what they call "a commercial real estate crisis on the horizon." The horizon, it turns out, is rather near! So, let's back this up. Commercial real estate loans usually have a rather short term of between three and ten years, and there is often a large final payment at the end of that term-a payment which is almost always covered by an additional loan. The panel is explaining, rather obviously, both that loan default rates are already high and that additional lending is difficult to secure, and so a rather high rate of default on these much larger payments should certainly be expected. Over the next four years, $1.4 trillion in loans will hit the end of their terms. Half of those loans are for property that is underwater. What's more, a number of these loans come from banks that may be stretched a bit thin. Those are the basics, but let us look at some of the panel's easy to understand graphs about the situation!

1Because large institutions aggressively took over residential lending, smaller banks began to focus on commercial lending. But big banks still took the big customers, obviously, who could show easy income from other properties to secure loans. So, in short, the small banks were left with the riskier offerings. This graph categorizes loans made with what are politely called "lax" standards.

Meanwhile, the nature of commercial lending was changing. "In the late 1990s, only six to nine percent of the loans in commercial mortgage-backed securities [CMBS] transactions were interest-only loans, during the term of which the borrower was not responsible for paying down principal. By 2005, that figure had climbed to 48 percent, and by 2006, it was 59 percent." Translation: three out of five of the CMBS loans in 2006 were not even engaged in paying down the loan; they were merely servicing the interest, a much smaller payment. Just ten years ago, nine out of ten CMBS commercial loans were actually having the money owed paid down.

The number of interest-only loans ratched down dramatically in 2008, but had a significant upswing in 2009.

2"Nonaccrual status" means a loan that is no longer collecting interest, most likely because it is beyond 90 days overdue. This graph pretty much speaks for itself!

3I would suggest that this graph speaks for itself fairly well also.

4This graph explains some of the underpinning of loan default due to that old tradition of nonpayment, called "lack of income due to vacancy." Of particular note is the strong recent upswing in retail vacancy.

Those are some of the basics. The entire report is largely readable by real humans, if you'd like to give it a whirl! (And don't be scared of its 189 page length-there's just a lot of footnotes and appendices and stuff. You know, facts and whatnot.)

17 Comments / Post A Comment

Kevin
Kevin (#2,559)

It appears that it is already upon us.

katiebakes
katiebakes (#32)

Yes - this is what has me super worried. It's a giant dirty boot hovering over any "green shoots." SO MUCH DEBT COMING DUE (not just real estate loans, either) in the next few years. Run for (un-leveraged) cover!

HiredGoons
HiredGoons (#603)

Welcome to another Lost Decade ladies and gentlemen. I hope you all know how to start fires with eyeglasses.

At this point the only way I can get through my days is 'dum de dum oh that's a puppy! Ooo, what a lovely painting! I'm going to eat something...'

Thinking concretely about the future is low on the laundry list.

theheckle
theheckle (#621)

Do we get manga and the culture of cute? Beer in vending machines? NOTHING?

Mindpowered
Mindpowered (#948)

Sarah Palin is kinda cartoonish though.

HiredGoons
HiredGoons (#603)

Everything is just fucking insane to me; the mind reels etc. You almost have to laugh, but then you remember there are people out there suffering (more so) be they in Haiti or in Kansas with inadequate food, shelter, etc. and then these fucking Wall Street bonuses and the rabid politically climate and the CLIMATE CLIMATE and perpetual war... All you can really do to deal with it is stop and it enjoy when the sun hits your face or when you hear a kid laughing or a pigeon flies up off the sidewalk and almost hits you in the face and oh jesus now I sound like Holden Caulfield.

valet of the dolls

But seriously? If you don't take some pleasure out of those small moments of connection and aliveness and whatever that feeling is when you're just glad you noticed something, felt something, it's a pretty rough slog.

HiredGoons
HiredGoons (#603)

I know! (hugs)

propertius
propertius (#361)

I'm beginning to wonder how many more lost decades we have left.

6h057
6h057 (#1,914)

I wonder how many are going to take the Greenpoint Terminal options where you get a bunch of homeless men in dank basements full of dusty rags and have them melt the insulation off wires to scrap for vodka?

I hear those fires are easy to get started once you get the flaming barrel cooking.

lempha
lempha (#581)

And here I was thinking that commercial real estate was coming around because of Nordstrom's buying (some of?) the old Union Square Virgin space. Ugh. This is scary.

lempha
lempha (#581)

*Or leasing or whatever they're doing. Point is, I was way underinformed.

Limaceous
Limaceous (#2,392)

Right now the industry is doing the "pretend & extend" thing -- basically ignoring the fact that values have fallen 25%-35% (depending on which index you're looking at) and extending the terms of the loan (at the original loan-to-value) for another few years because by then values will have recovered and this will all just be a bad dream, thus allowing owners to not have to find new financing.

Because new financing isn't happening. This is partly because banks are freaked out by the idea of making new loans to what is clearly a declining sector, and also because no one wants (or has the ability) to put in fresh equity (necessary because acceptable loan-to-values are coming down at the same time that values are falling).

But pretend and extend will only buy the industry a few years' time... but by then we'll all be running from zombies and living in fallout shelters, so it all evens out in the end.

KarenUhOh
KarenUhOh (#19)

We were so much happier when we were deluded.

brent_cox
brent_cox (#40)

I'm convincing myself that this insight is just another delusion.

Ronit
Ronit (#1,557)

so many charts. Is Choire doing a Calculated Risk impression?

greymatter
greymatter (#3,181)

but who sustains the realized loss? we saw yesterday that it wouldnt be the old rich - they have minimally leveraged assets which they dont need to sell. The new rich have highly leveraged assets which they may have to sell (but they wont lose, because they didnt have much equity in there in the first place) and the loss will be sustained by the shmucks who had their money in TIAA Cref which lent into the deal... but those schmucks werent doing much for the economy anyway... or the loss will be sustained by a bank, which, if it was a small bank with middle class investors and depositors will be allowed to fail, or if it was a well politically well connected bank with rich investors and employees, will be bailed out. Being the rich FTW!

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