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Archives for November 2021

Loans Backed by Office Buildings Were Supposed to be Battered. That Prediction Proved Wrong.

November 4, 2021 by CARNM

Office loan portfolios held by non-bank lenders have been posting steady performance, helped by long leases, high quality assets and some workouts.

When the COVID-19 pandemic forced companies around the country to send their workers home in the spring of 2020, some market observers began to worry about the long-term impact on the office sector, especially after “a few weeks to flatten the curve” turned into months and then a year and media outlets published stories claiming that the office is dead forever and everyone wants to work remotely. Many casual observers predicted that businesses would abandon their headquarters in big cities and either go entirely remote or switch to smaller hubs in the suburbs. This would lead to vast amounts of empty office space around the country and defaults on loans backed by those buildings.

In reality, a combination of long-term leases on office space, many companies’ reluctance to make permanent real estate decisions based on an abnormal situation and lenders’ willingness to do workouts with borrowers had led to a fairly stable situation where a lot of existing office loans are concerned.

A mid-October report from Moody’s Investors Service found that even under the most severe projected economic strain, the value of office properties in non-bank lender’s loan portfolios would decline by 11 percent between today and year-end 2023. By comparison, office building values declined by 24 percent during the last real estate downturn, between 2007 and 2011. The performance of non-bank lenders’ office loans serves as an important bellwether as these lenders have an outsized exposure to the sector, at 35 percent of their total property loan portfolios.

Moody’s estimates that as of August 2021, the delinquency rate on CMBS loans backed by office properties averaged 2.60 percent, far below the overall CMBS delinquency rate of 6.22 percent. And the firm’s researchers project that with plenty of capital and reserve buffers to deal with potential losses, non-bank lenders’ office portfolios should continue to post a stable performance over the following 12 to 18 months.

Likewise, the September data from research firm Trepp LLC shows that the office loan delinquency rate currently averages 0.9 percent, up 10 basis points compared to pre-pandemic. The loans hit the hardest by COVID-19 were those backed by hotel and retail properties, which reached delinquency rates of 11.9 percent and 4.9 percent respectively.

Office loans most likely to hold up through real estate down cycles and unexpected crisis like the COVID-19 pandemic are backed by assets with stable cashflows, diversified rent rolls, long-term leases and sponsors with deep enough pockets to carry debt through difficult economic periods, notes New York City-based James Millon, vice chairman of U.S. structured finance with commercial real estate services firm CBRE. That pretty much describes the type of office product backing non-bank lenders’ loan portfolios.

Moody’s researchers note that most of these loans are first mortgages on class-A properties in major markets owned by deep-pocketed institutional investors, and feature low loan-to-value (LTV) ratios (averaging in the mid-60 percent) and short tenors of three to four years. The conservative LTVs create a buffer for the lenders to deal with potential value declines even in a severe downturn, while the owners’ considerable reserves of equity allow them to avoid having to walk away from their assets.

According to James Dunbar, senior managing director with the mortgage team of global alternative investment advisor Varde Partners, the pandemic had a minimal impact on the firm’s office loan portfolio, which he attributes to Varde’s underwriting standards and loan origination criteria.

What’s more, class-A properties continue to be the most attractive to tenants and usually require less investment in capital improvements to compete for new leases as the recovery takes hold.

Willing to work on it

Non-bank lenders’ willingness to do loan workouts also helped reduce delinquencies on their office loans and avoid bankruptcy losses. Another Moody’s report noted, “Forbearance and loan modification appear to be prevailing practice in dealing with COVID-19-related troubled loans across the CRE industry… These helped drive lower delinquency rates, as many borrowers are no longer behind on mortgage payments under the modified loan terms.”

The predicted rise in foreclosures and debt sales just didn’t happen, according to CBRE’s Millon—no one completely sold off a loan book. “The pandemic was no one’s fault, and banks restructured loans,” he notes, adding that some lenders stepped-up interest rates to recover losses and others recapitalized loans.

Non-bank lenders also took steps to resolve pandemic-related payback issues, says Millon. Debt funds, for example, extended upcoming fund maturity dates to create longer loan periods or required additional equity.

And the long lease terms inherent in office transactions contributed to a more muted effect on office fundamentals than was projected, he notes.

The pandemic has lasted longer than anyone expected, and Millon admits that the office sector still has a ways to go before it returns to where it was pre-COVID-19. “Leasing is picking up, giving us an idea of where the market is at,” he says, noting that while there was no “light-switch” return to the office, tenant occupancy in New York and other gateway cities is ticking up weekly.

Dunbar also remains bullish on the return to office over the long term. He notes that improvements in underlying market fundamentals have resulted in stronger loan performance, including payoffs of forborne amounts ahead of schedule. He concedes, however, that “we expect tenants will have a near-universal need to re-evaluate their space requirements over the coming years as leases expire.” That has led to questions around the future of the office sector that have yet to be answered.

As a result, some non-bank lenders have reduced their office loan exposure over the past year and a half. For example, Starwood Property Trust and Blackstone Mortgage Trust, which has the highest concentration of office loans in the non-bank universe at 53 percent, both reduced their exposure to the office sector by 16 percent and 8 percent respectively since the pandemic began, Moody’s reports. “The pandemic caused uncertainty, and lenders are constantly focused on downside risk,” Million says.

At the same time, Apollo Commercial Real Estate Finance, Claros Mortgage and KKE Real Estate Finance increased their office loan exposure by 41 percent, 30 percent and 26 percent, respectively. Office buildings with life sciences components have been a big factor in the growth of these portfolios.

Source: “Loans Backed by Office Buildings Were Supposed to be Battered. That Prediction Proved Wrong.“

Filed Under: All News

How Zillow’s Latest Moves Will Impact the Housing Market

November 4, 2021 by CARNM

Its ‘iBuyer’ platform has led to two-thirds of the homes it listed for sale featuring an asking price below what Zillow paid.

Zillow’s unexpected announcement in October that it was temporarily pausing its home-buying activities raised many analysts’ eyebrows. Now, the company is reportedly offloading thousands of homes at a discount, Marketwatch reported Wednesday.

It also announced it would lay off 25% of its workforce over the next few quarters.

Some argue that more concerning trends could be on the way. The company’s Zillow Offers division—what’s known as an “iBuyer”—purchases and sells homes directly to consumers, typically renovating them in between.

Following a report in mid-October from Bloomberg, Zillow confirmed that its Zillow Offers division would not be signing any additional new contracts to purchase homes through the end of 2021.

In explaining the move, Zillow said the company was facing a backlog of renovations and dealing with operational-capacity issues.

Now, though, Bloomberg is reporting that the company is selling off roughly 7,000 homes, looking to claw back $2.8 billion in the process. A separate report from KeyBanc analyst Edward Yruma found that two-thirds of the homes Zillow has listed for sale feature an asking price below what Zillow paid for the property, with the average discount being 4.5%.

“Zillow may have leaned into home acquisition at the wrong time,” Yruma wrote in a research note.

Potentially a ‘Minimal Impact’

Crystal Sunbury, senior manager and real estate senior analyst with RSM US, tells GlobeSt that she believes there will be a minimal impact from Zillow on pricing or supply in the existing home market.

“The number of homes that Zillow purchased on a quarterly basis ranged from 86 to 9,680 homes,” Sunbury said. “To provide perspective, the most recent seasonally adjusted annual rate of existing home sales for the United States, according to the National Association of Realtors, was 6.29 million homes (with 5.59 million being single family homes and .7 million being condos/coops). This would put the average number of single-family homes sold on a monthly basis in the United States at 465,000, with Zillow representing a minimal portion of those.”

iBuyers operate in limited markets. Zillow had the most homes in the Phoenix, Minneapolis-St. Paul, Houston and Dallas markets, Sunbury said. “Given the relatively small quantities of homes being sold by Zillow, we will not be seeing a large influx of inventory, and thus, this would have a minimal impact on pricing,” she said.

Sunbury said the iBuyer business is risky and operates on low margins and is contingent on scale for investments to pay off.

“Where companies have seen the greatest success with iBuying is when they are able to isolate to a limited geography and buy more than just one or two homes, and instead really focus on development and expansion of an entire community,” she said.

“This community approach model is one that homebuilders have been employing recently, with many expanding their operations from not just ‘building to sell,’ but also building to rent. When you are able to achieve scalability in a very specific geographic presence, there are opportunities for success.”

Sunbury said that the greatest challenge the current existing home market faces is affordability. The first-time homebuyer affordability index declined from 118.8 during the Q1 2021 to 100 in Q2 2021.

“Many would-be, first-time homebuyers are seeing housing price increases and forgoing purchases until prices begin to settle,” she said. “Additionally, home builders are running into supply chain and labor constraints, which are slowing their ability to produce new homes to keep up with the surge in demand.

Market Trends Misinterpretation

Rick Rudman, Chairman, President and CEO of Curbio, a pre-sale renovation company for the single-family home market, tells GlobeSt, “In markets where iBuyer presence is significant, we may see a dip in housing prices in the very short-term. iBuyer presence isn’t the same in all markets across the country, so we realistically wouldn’t expect to see any remarkable changes in pricing nation-wide.

“What is really going to affect home prices in the short and long-term is inventory, which will continue to be in flux regardless of iBuying. What we can expect to see, however, is lower prices being offered by iBuyers everywhere. Now that Zillow has stepped out of the iBuying game, there is less competition in the sector as a whole, meaning that companies like Opendoor can make lower offers and still win business.”

Rudman said that there are many distinct factors which contributed to Zillow exiting iBuying, some of which are unique to Zillow, and some of which are not.

“Zillow’s misinterpretation of market trends and purchasing homes at higher prices appears, at least for now, to be isolated to Zillow,” he said. “However, labor and supply shortages also contributed to Zillow’s situation, and both of those things are certainly not unique to Zillow. There has been a contractor labor shortage for years now, and it has only been exacerbated by the pandemic. iBuyers rely on fixing up homes before reselling them to make a profit, and that can’t be done without labor and supplies.

“If iBuyers can’t figure out a solution to labor and supply shortages, the entire industry will certainly take a hit.”

Chris Loeffler, the CEO and co-Founder of CaliberCos, tells GlobeSt, “Zillow had it, the brand, the capital and the access to win this race at scale. What they didn’t have, and you cannot replace, is the proper balance of local, specialized knowledge and flexibility to move with the market. Technology can enable better real estate investing. What it cannot do is replace a world-class local team that realizes each property is unique.”

Source: “How Zillow’s Latest Moves Will Impact the Housing Market“

Filed Under: All News

LEX Makes History With First Real Estate IPO Accessible To All US Investors

November 3, 2021 by CARNM

LEX Markets, a commercial real estate securities marketplace built for all investors, announced today that it is taking a building public through a novel securitization process in a first of its kind IPO. This is the platform’s first offering open to all investors, and represents a new way to invest in commercial real estate. LEX allows accredited and non-accredited investors to buy equity shares of individual commercial real estate assets and trade them, without fees or required holding periods, on LEX’s fully-licensed securities platform.

The property, 286 Lenox Avenue, is a commercial office and retail property located in New York’s Harlem neighborhood. Built in 2019, it spans 18,759 leasable square feet and has three existing tenants, including a branch of Wells Fargo bank. Beginning today, shares of 286 Lenox are available on LEX’s platform at an opening price of $250 per share. The Offering Circular for the offering is available here. The initial offering aims to raise $2.15 million in equity.

“This is a historic moment for commercial real estate investing. Making the $17 trillion dollar commercial real estate market accessible to everyone is a process, and opening up the LEX marketplace to all investors is a huge step,” said Drew Sterrett and Jesse Daugherty, Co-Founders and Co-CEOs of LEX Markets. “Our mission at LEX is to empower wealth creation by solving real estate’s access and liquidity problems. We’re proud to be building the future of real estate investing with a world class team of real estate industry veterans and technologists. 286 Lenox is a key moment in time moving us out of concept and into growth-stage of our company.”

LEX will continue to diversify its offerings across geographic markets and asset types. 286 Lenox follows the successful beta launch of a $24 million commercial property in Portland, ME (now trading under ticker: GWYGU which initially was offered to a small number of private, closed-beta users only). Starting now, these assets (and all future assets) are available on the LEX platform for all investors.

Today, LEX is opening its platform – previously invite-only beta – to the public. More than 10,000 investors have already signed up to join LEX and will be taken off a waitlist and given full access to the product. LEX allows both accredited and non-accredited investors to buy, sell, and trade shares of commercial real estate assets on LEX’s fully-licensed securities platform, which leverages matching technology from Nasdaq. These shares may also offer quarterly distributions through a tax advantaged structure.

LEX’s mission is to empower wealth creation by solving real estate’s access and liquidity problems, providing access to high-quality individual commercial real estate assets for investors, and offering owners of the underlying income-producing properties a base of permanent capital while still allowing them to maintain operational control.

“As owners, we see tremendous value creation opportunity through LEX. We’re excited to be on the forefront of this new opportunity and to open the investment to investors from all walks of life,” said Alexander Smith and Joey Cohen of Regal Capital Acquisitions, 286 Lenox Ave’s managing partners.

LEX offers owners of commercial real estate assets the ability to raise capital by securitizing a portion of their property, allowing them to recapitalize equity and receive cash from a newly-formed permanent capital vehicle. Owners can optimize their capital stacks, allowing them to crystallize promotes and carried interest while increasing investment performance and replacing limited partner investors, term capital, preferred equity and/or mezzanine debt. With a distributed model, LEX allows owners to keep full operational control while acting as the GP/Managing Member of the new public capital, and to continue to receive management fees for the asset. With a new infusion of capital, owners and existing partners are able to add value to their assets through improvements, market repositioning, and lease-ups.

About LEX

LEX is a venture-backed commercial real estate securities marketplace. LEX allows all investors – accredited and non-accredited – to buy and sell shares of individual commercial real estate assets without lockups, starting at $250/share. The platform utilizes the same proprietary trading technology used by 70+ global securities markets around the world. Property owners retain operational control of their properties and benefit from a new way to unlock equity by taking buildings public. For more information, please visit http://lex-markets.com or follow LEX on Twitter at http://twitter.com/Investwithlex.

No Offer or Solicitation

This communication does not constitute an offer to sell or the solicitation of an offer to buy any securities or a solicitation of any vote or approval, nor shall there be any sale of any securities in any state or jurisdiction in which such offer, solicitation, or sale would be unlawful prior to registration or qualification under the securities laws of such other jurisdiction. The Offering Circular for the offering is available here.

Source: “LEX Makes History With First Real Estate IPO Accessible To All US Investors“

Filed Under: All News

CRE Would Be Hit With Some Taxes, Dodge Others, Under Biden Plan

November 3, 2021 by CARNM

Companies and investors would need to rework tax planning.

The Biden administration announced the latest Build Back Better framework on October 28. It still isn’t clear when the social spending package is up for a vote or even whether it has enough Democratic backing to pass. But if it does become law, there are tax changes that aim to, at least partially, offset the cost.

There would be an impact on commercial real estate industry according to an analysis by the National Multifamily Housing Council.

There isn’t an increase in the top marginal tax rate of 37%. However, for those who make $10 million or more in modified adjusted gross income—AGI less investment interest expense—there would be a 5% surtax. Those earning more than $25 million would see a total surtax of 8%.

Capital gains taxes would see a similar adjustment. The 20% top rate remains in place, but it also sees the dual 5% (minimum of $10 million in modified AGI) or 8% (minimum of $25 million) surtax.

Then there is the expansion of the existing 3.8% net investment income tax (NIIT) that is a Medicare contribution tax. For single filers making over $400,000 annually or married couples with a greater than $500,000 income, the NIIT closes some existing loopholes and applies to capital gains, interest, dividends, annuities, royalties, and rents earned in the ordinary course of a trade or business.

By the NMHC’s reckoning, the combination of surcharges and NIIT expansion would raise the top capital gains rate to 31.8% from the current 20%.

A provision that limited excess business loss deductions under the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act of 2017 and that Congress had retroactively limited to starting after 2020 and that is in effect for the 2021 tax year wouldn’t end by 2027. Instead, it would become permanent. Losses that exceeded business income plus $250,000 for individuals and $500,000 filers would be taxable.

Also, while losses would be carried forward, they couldn’t act as net operating losses and could not offset wages or portfolio income in later years.

Among some proposals that didn’t find their way into the framework were the three-year waiting period on carried interest, an end to like-kind 1031 exchanges as well as stepped-up basis on death, changes to the types of investments people could make with IRAs, and changes to grantor trusts and valuation rules under estate taxes. There were also no expansions of the Low-Income Housing Tax Credit and the Rehabilitation Tax Credit.

In addition, there are some energy efficiency tax credits that will be of interest to CRE. Paying all contractors and subcontractors prevailing wages could result in a five-fold increase of baseline credits. Buildings of at least four stories could receive tax credits of 50 cents per square foot of energy savings that exceed 25% of ASHRAE standards, with additional credits available for incremental percentage point savings of up to $1 a square foot. The New Energy Efficient Home Credit would also extend through 2031.

Source: “CRE Would Be Hit With Some Taxes, Dodge Others, Under Biden Plan“

Filed Under: All News

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