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Archives for July 2023

Apartment Developers Turn to Non-Bank Lenders for Construction Loans

July 25, 2023 by CARNM

Apartment developers are finding ways to pay for new construction projects–without using loans from traditional banks.

For years, multifamily developers have relied on large, short-term loans from banks to finance the construction of new apartment buildings. But rising interest rates and a string of banks failures—most prominently Silicon Valley Bank, Signature Bank and First Republic Bank—have thrown a shock to capital markets. Other banks are encumbered with existing real estate debt that they are concerned about—particularly on the beleaguered office sector. As a result, many local and regional banks simply are not originating new construction loans. And the loans that are in the market are much more conservative with higher interest rates and covering a lower loan-to-cost ratio than previous cycle norms.

However, other types of lenders have been willing to step in the breach allowing apartment developers to find new ways to finance development projects.

Developers who can afford to wait to close their financing are finding relatively large construction loans with relatively low, fixed interest rates from the programs of the Federal Housing Administration (FHA). Private debt funds and commercial mortgage REITs are also providing senior construction loans with generous amounts of leverage—though the interest rates they offer are relatively high, even compared to current bank financing.

Finally, some developers are making due with the small loans at high interest rates now offered by banks. They use mezzanine financing from lenders like debt funds to fill gaps in their capital stack.

“Though difficult, if you can secure the financing then it may actually turn out to be a good-to-great time,” said Carl Whitaker, economist for RealPage, based in Richardson, Texas.

Developers still building

Developers started construction on new multifamily projects at a seasonally-adjusted annual rate of 482,000 units, according to data from the U.S. Census and Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD). That’s down from highs of more than 600,000 units in 2022. But it is still a lot of new construction compared to historical norms.

These developers may struggle to find financing now, but they might have relatively little competition for senior debt once they finally finish their new buildings, says Whitaker.

Many are starting their projects with relatively little help from banks. Prior to capital markets tightening, apartment developers came to rely on construction loans from banks that easily covered 75% of the cost of development with relatively low, floating-rate interest rates. They typically filled the rest of their capital stack with mezzanine loans, their own equity or equity from partners like private equity funds with end investors like family offices or high-net-worth individuals.

But with rising rates, the capital stack has evolved.

“Recent construction finance offers from banks have been 55% to 65% loan-to-cost, with a minimum debt service coverage of around 1.25x to 1.30x,” says Scott Thurman, head of FHA lending for CBRE.

Those debt-service-coverage requirement are especially difficult to meet as short-term interest rates continue to rise. Many banks now offer construction loans to apartment developments with rates that float 400 basis points over the Secured Overnight Financing Rate (SOFR), according to numerous experts interviewed for this story. That works out to all-in rates that now float at about 9%–a huge increase from just a year ago.

FHA provides fixed-rate construction loans

A growing number developers are closing construction loans provided by FHA programs.

“FHA construction financing is an attractive choice,” said CBRE’s Thurman. These loans are non-recourse and have a fixed rate that once a property is finished and has leased up, automatically converts to a 40-year, fully-amortizing permanent loan. FHA has also not tightened its credit or loan sizing parameters. “In fact, FHA just increased its large loan threshold from $75 to $120 million,” said Thurman.

Also, the fixed interest rates on FHA loans are based on the long-term yield on 10-year Treasury bonds, which were hovered around 4.0% in July.

“FHA financing offers developers a great opportunity to avoid the strain and uncertainty of high, short-term interest rates. Most construction loans provided by banks have interest rates that float over a benchmark like SOFR, which had floated all the way up to about 5.1 percent, as of July 10,” said Joe Averbook, managing director for Greystone, working in the firm’s offices in New York City.

The drawback is that FHA loans infamously take about 12 months to close. The time FHA loans took to close stretched even longer during the confusion of the COVID era, said Greystone’s Averbook.

At the end of 2022, Claret Communities received a firm commitment from FHA to provide a 221(d)(4) construction loan to build 210 new apartments at Noble Vines at Okatie Crossing, Claret’s development project in Hardeeville, S.C.

Claret, an apartment developer based in Chamblee, Ga., had already spent nearly a year working its way through FHA’s long process to approve a 221(d)(4) loan arranged by Greystone.

“There’s a lot of hoops you got to jump through with FHA,” said Lee Terry, managing member of Claret Communities. “Most developers don’t do FHA because it’s just too much too much brain damage—but the benefits far outweigh that.”

Once a developer receives a firm commitment from FHA, the loan usually closes about 45 days later. During that period, the borrower can lock in the interest rate on the loan.

However, 2022 had not been a usual year. While underwriting officials at FHA had examined Claret’s plans for Noble Vines, the cost of construction growth, pushed to total cost to develop Noble Vines from $55 million up to about $60 million.

“The market was going crazy on us,” says Terry. However, the apartments rents in the market around Claret’s development site had also grown quickly–and that could help Noble Vines qualify for a larger loan. Claret asked FHA to increase the loan amount. “You have an option with HUD to reopen your underwriting even after you receive your firm commitment.”

FHA loans can technically be as large as 85% of the total cost of development, but that size is limited by how much income the property produces. That income must equal 1.18x more than the cost of the property’s loan payments.

When it finally closes, the FHA loan will probably provide about $43 million, according to Terry. That’s about 74% of the $60 million that it will cost Claret to develop Noble Vines.

“Compared to a conventional bank loan where you’re putting up 50 percent equity, that’s great,” says Terry. He expects Noble Vines to receive its firm commitment from FHA for this larger loan in 60 to 90 days. The loan should close another 45 days after that.

The interest rate of this loan is likely to be fixed at about 150 basis points over the yield on 10-year Treasury bonds, said Terry. That would work out to an all-in interest rate fixed at about 5.5% based on current Treasury yields. Terry hopes that the yield on Treasury bonds will drop over the next few months. So far in 2023, the benchmark yield has hovered between 3.3% and 4.0%.

Claret uses equity from limited partners such as wealth managers, family offices or high-net-worth individuals to finish the financing of its development projects. At Noble Vines, the limited partner is a family office, said Terry. These partners typically receive a preferred return of 7%, plus a 60% share of the profits from the completed development. That typically works out to an internal rate of return of 15% to 20%, he said.

Debt funds provide high-leverage loans a little faster

Private debt funds are another source of financing for developers frustrated with the difficulty of finding a bank loan.

“Banks, you know, are loaning less,” said John Hutchinson, Co-CEO and global head of origination for Trez Capital, working in the private debt fund manager’s Dallas offices.

In late 2022, Trez provided a $26 million construction loan to build 115 apartments in a new five-story building with a view of downtown Seattle and Elliot Bay. Construction started before the end of 2022, after a relatively fast underwriting process. Debt funds typically close their construction loans in 45 to 60 days. The developer declined to be named in this story.

The loan from Trez covers 74% of the $35 million total development cost of the planned mid-rise.

That’s much more than a conventional bank loan would provide. A typical regional bank loan to a project like this would probably cover about $20 million, or just 55% of the $35 million cost of construction, according to Yonah Sturmwind, manager of commercial lending specialty originations at Alliant Credit Union, based in Chicago.

He should know. As a credit union, Alliant is a federally insured depository institution–a bank. Sturmwind is also deeply familiar with the loan to the Seattle property. Alliant provided Trez with about $14 million of the capital for the loan in what Sturmwind calls a “note-on-note financing.” Alliant’s contribution allows it to invest of the Seattle property without originating a loan itself or even having to deal with the borrower.

Alliant’s contribution lowers the cost of capital for the loans, which made it possible for Trez to offer the developer of the Seattle property an interest rate that floats about 600 basis points over SOFR. That’s much higher than the cost of conventional back financing or FHA financing. But it’s relatively low for a loan from a debt fund, according to Sturmwind.

Trez made the loan to the Seattle property using capital from four of its funds: Trez Capital Prime Trust, Trez Capital US, Trez Capital Yield Trust and Trez Capital Yield Trust U.S. Investors in these trusts range from institutions to high-net-worth individuals and wealth managers. At least two of the funds managed by Trez that invest in apartment loans target yields over 20% for their investors, said Hutchinson.

Source: “Apartment Developers Turn to Non-Bank Lenders for Construction Loans“

Filed Under: All News

Office Sales Continue Their Slide

July 25, 2023 by CARNM

To no one’s surprise office investment sales continue to plummet, reaching $14.8 billion in the first half of 2023 compared to $43.7 billion in the same period last year, according to Commercial Edge.

The national vacancy rate reached 17.1% in July, rising 180 basis points over figures from a year ago. Listing rates fell in several markets, including some of the most expensive such as New York City where they were down 2.8% year-over-year and in the Bay Area where they were down a greater 5.57% for the same period.

The different asset classes and different geographic markets saw different trajectories. Urban A and Class B buildings remain the hardest hit for new leases with asking rates falling and vacancies rising. The national average full-service equivalent listing last month was $37.82, an increase of 0.6% from a year ago but average rates for A and A+ spaces went down by 1.4% from last year to hit $45.41 per square foot. Class B, however, has inched up by 0.3% to $30.37 per square foot and Class C also went a bit higher at 0.3% to $23.04 YoY.

In the suburbs, properties increased the most, up 3.3% to $30.76 per square foot, versus the prior year. But Central Business District office spaces went down 1.7% to $49.02 per square foot. Urban offices have also gone down by 1.4% to $44.80 per square foot YoY.

Medical office buildings represent one of the bright spots, deemed a “safe haven” by the report because they’re consistent year to year, due to the country’s aging population which needs healthcare services on a regular basis, and advances in medical technology and treatments from shifted procedures away from hospitals to outpatient centers. Throughout 2023’s first half, the average hit $296 per square foot, nearly $100 more per square foot than the national office building average.

Half of the top 25 markets recorded vacancies above the national average, with some much more than others. Denver increased 310 bps in the last 12 months and is at 20.1% versus the national average of 17.1%. This correlates with the fact that Denver has one of the highest rates of remote work, according to the Census Bureau’s American and Community Survey. To lower it, Denver’s city government is working with other cities to pay a consulting firm to study the possibility of converting vacant buildings in their CBDs to housing. 

In Austin, there’s a big pipeline coming with construction of more than 1.5 million square feet started this year, the most of any market in the country. A lot of that is due to the 48-story The Republic tower with 800,000-square feet-plus. The city has a high office utilization figure, but the report says it could risk having too much supply as the vacancy rate rises.

In New Jersey, lab space has been the catalyst for making the state an active market, with $928 million in closed office deals.

Onyx Equities and Machine Investment Group purchased a 2-million-square-foot former Merck building for $187.5 million. Also, activity stems from the cluster of pharmaceutical companies in the state.

Los Angeles had the largest sales volume of $1.11 billion in office deals for the first six months of this year, outpaced only by New York City at $1.27 billion and Boston at $1.28 billion.

As a whole, the Midwest’s major office markets had lower vacancy rates than West Coast hubs. The Twin Cities and Chicago saw the third- and fourth-lowest average listing rates amid U.S. office markets at $27.25 per square foot and $27.40 per square foot, respectively; overall, they were described as sluggish.

Source: “Office Sales Continue Their Slide“

Filed Under: All News

Meet the Commercial Association of Realtors New Mexico’s new executive director

July 21, 2023 by CARNM

The Commercial Association of Realtors New Mexico hired Nathan Brooks, a former firefighter and real estate veteran, as its new executive director.

After graduating high school in New Hampshire in 1995, Brooks joined the U.S. Air Force. He was stationed at Kirtland Air Force Base in New Mexico, where he served as a firefighter for three years until a knee injury forced him to hang up the gear.

During his time at the base, Brooks said he fell in love with the state’s diverse culture and chose to create a life here. He said he enjoyed the intricacies of real estate management and wanted to create a difference in the industry.

Brooks would go on to work for the Greater Albuquerque Association of Realtors (GAAR) for 13 years, serving as operations administrator and director of professional development before being promoted to the chief operations officer role from 2017-2023.

He credits GAAR for helping him acquire the skills necessary to perform in his new role.

As the new executive director, Brooks oversees two staff members and reports to the board of directors. He is involved in all financial aspects of the association including strategic planning and day-to-day operations.

Brooks is currently attending the University of New Mexico, earning a bachelor of business administration degree with a concentration on organizational leadership. He plans to graduate in 2024 and aims to utilize his newfound skills to improve his work.

Albuquerque Business First recently caught up with Brooks to talk about his career goals and interests.

This interview was edited for brevity and clarity.

Albuquerque Business First: You collect sports cards. How did you get into the sport of collecting?

Nathan Brooks: I’m an avid collector of sports cards in general, but I also like to go to different shows around the state and collect gems and minerals. It all started when I was a kid. I collected everything when I was younger — rocks, baseball cards, football cards, basketball cards. You name it, I collected it.

What are your career goals? Long term, I want to guide this association into the future and just make it a little better than I found it.

Do you have any advice for realtors here in New Mexico? Just take every opportunity to get the skills and knowledge that you need to be successful in your business, whether it’s residential or commercial real estate. Focus on professional development and use the resources that your association has to offer.

Source: “Meet the Commercial Association of Realtors New Mexico’s new executive director“

Filed Under: All News

CRE Carrying Costs Are Nearly as Burdensome as Interest Rates

July 21, 2023 by CARNM

Little things can add up. For CRE, that is a range of costs including insurance, utilities, taxes, and other operating expenses. That can burden a property just as easily as higher interest rates.

According to a Moody’s Investor Service report cited by Barron’s, overall expenses for CRE properties are up by more than a third between 2017 and 2022. Insurance is up 73% over the last five years, utilities are 40% more expensive, and property taxes and other operating expenses rose 27% and 29% respectively.

And the lion’s share of these cost burdens, insurance, show little sign of retreating.

Commercial property insurance premiums hit a record rise of 20.4% in the first quarter of 2023. It’s the first time since 2001 that rates jumped more than 20%. Premiums have been rising by double digits in many markets. Some policy renewals offered half the coverage for that same price. The lack of affordable options is putting needed levels of coverage out of the reach of owners.

Yardi reported that states with increasing climate-related risk, such as Florida and Texas, see their costs rising upwards of 50% and starting to threaten new development and property sales.

Insurance prices are hitting deep into the financial viability of CRE projects, Brett Forman, managing partner at Forman Capital, tells GlobeSt.com. “I got an email yesterday from a fund I’m personally invested in. They didn’t have claims. Their insurance costs have risen by 70%. That changes the cash flow dynamics. It’s a big line item.”

The problem is that insurance companies are being hit hard by climate change-driven natural disasters. Massive coverage obligations even in a few geographic areas can drive the overall finances of carriers, which then will increase rates across the board.

“People talk about rental growth, but they’re not quick to mention expense growth,” Forman says. “In my mind, you don’t get dollar for dollar credit for the rent growth if expenses have gone up.”

John Vavas, a commercial real estate finance attorney at law firm Polsinelli, points to insurance as well as other carrying costs like taxes. Add increased debt service and it can mean having to find additional equity.

“When you think of a borrower having to bring new equity into a deal, that dilutes them substantially in the valuation,” Vavas adds. “It’s going to affect returns from a cash-on-cash perspective.”

The increase in costs can then affect the ability to get refinanced. Lenders who are watching risk worry that suddenly NOI at a property could drop, making it more difficulty to ensure payments. “It’s already happening because of interest rates,” Vavas adds. “But you add into some of these other geographic specific issues like [insurance in] California or Florida, and it makes it harder to pencil a deal.”

Source: “CRE Carrying Costs Are Nearly as Burdensome as Interest Rates“

Filed Under: All News

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