KBRA releases a recap of the CRE Finance Council’s (CREFC) 16th annual High Yield, Investing & Lending Conference, held on May 3 as a one-day virtual event. KBRA was a participating sponsor of the summit, which included a fireside chat followed by five panel discussions and attracted 363 registered attendees.
Several key themes that emerged from the panel discussions include:
- The focus on bank stress and regional lenders is warranted. However, exposure may be overstated, as media reported figures attributing 80% of CRE lending to midsize and regional banks often overlook non-FDIC insured private lenders.
- Not all regional banks are created equal, despite recent headlines. The U.S. banking system is relatively granular with over 4,000 FDIC-insured participants.
- Private capital has moved into the vacuum created by the regional bank pullback. However, lenders have limited options to clear their balance sheets without an active securitization market.
- Preferred equity is becoming more popular as lenders are offering borrowers less favorable terms in the form of lower loan-to-value (LTV) ratios; cash-in refinancing is seen as a win.
- Office-to-residential (or mixed-use) conversions, critical to combating housing shortages, will require public-private partnership and a dramatic reset in basis to be viable.
- Despite the negative outlook toward office, many properties remain viable if sponsors are willing to invest in upgraded amenities or perform partial conversions.
- There has been a push for more fundamental underwriting, especially for multifamily, industrial, and life sciences, with a focus on flattening rents, increasing operating expenses, and evaluating tenant funding sources (primarily venture capital (VC)-backed life sciences).
- Directional clarity from the Federal Reserve would benefit CRE as interest rate uncertainty remains a major issue.
- Additional government intervention on behalf of borrowers or lenders is undesirable due to potential inflationary pressures and political fallout.
- The sale of Signature Bank’s $60 billion loan portfolio will reset loan pricing and guide investors industry wide.
- Construction lending, specifically on multifamily, remains relatively strong, though many light-transitional deals are falling to the wayside as would-be bridge loans are getting swapped for five-year fixed loans.
- Intermediate-term products, such as the five-year conduit, have provided some liquidity, but may not have staying power if rates decline.
To view the recap, click here.
Related Publications
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- CMBS Loan Performance Trends: April 2023
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- Conduit CMBS Default and Loss Study Spotlight on Five-Year Loans
- CRE Secular Trends: How Long Will Tailwinds Benefit Industrial?
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