CMBS Cause Rental Woes

Scores of investors, landlords and tenants have yet to see their troubles end when it comes to commercial mortgage-backed securities (CMBS), particularly when the properties are being rented. …

Scores of investors, landlords and tenants have yet to see their troubles end when it comes to commercial mortgage-backed securities (CMBS), particularly when the properties are being rented. In this situation, even if a tenant is on time with the rent the property loan may be in trouble because it’s been combined into a CMBS bundle that is now in default or worse. Many experts believe there is no real answer to this kind of problem and the most effective advice for tenants is to know the state of the commercial loan attached to the property and be aware that finding new commercial space may be the only choice in the end. For more on this continue reading the following article from National Real Estate Investor.

Myriad options are emerging for dealing with loans originated on net lease assets in the boom years that have become distressed and continue to cause difficulties in the wake of the financial crisis. That was the theme of a panel on workouts and refinancing at NREI and RetailTraffic.com’s National Net Lease Investment Conference, held in Chicago on Nov. 1 and attended by more than 150 commercial real estate pros.

“One of the problems that we have discovered over the last couple of years is that you can have a single tenant paying their rent, but they are (combined) in a defaulting CMBS pool that has bigger problems elsewhere,” said David Clark, senior vice president at DTZ. Because of the way in which CMBS pools are structured, this can reduce the options for dealing with the distressed situation. For instance, “Depending on where the default is, the landlord and lender may not have any ability to make any changes in the lease, whatsoever, including extensions,” said Clark.

These issues can become even more exacerbated when in situations in which multiple CMBS pools have been aggregated.

“There are a number of pools out there where the CMBS sponsor of that pool actually went and bought 10 CMBS pools, crammed them together—took them into a top CMBS pool—and then redistributed a set of bonds so that you actually have a CMBS stack on top of a CMBS,” said Clark.

Members of the panel voiced pessimism about the prospects for a good resolution of these types of situations.

“We do not have a solution for that,” said Clark. “We tell the tenant, ‘do the best you can, make sure that the landlord keeps the heat on. You are probably going to have to move.’”

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One of the difficulties with working out and refinancing CMBS situations is that “there is a lack of understanding of what is a securitized loan and who is the lender and what responsibilities do they have,” said Donald Shapiro, president and CEO of Foresite Realty Partners. “Right off the bat, the process is unclear and ambiguous … and education is the key.”

For example, Shapiro describes a common situation in which tenants are frustrated and not sure where to turn and saying, “‘I don’t know what is going on with my property. I don’t know who to talk to. The landlord tells me one thing. The lender tells me to send my rent to the lock box. Who is actually in charge?’”

Outside help

Panelists at the session agreed that a competent receiver can play a key role in helping to make the best of these types of problems.

“We advise our clients—do everything you can to get a receiver appointed, because that is a neutral third party,” Clark said.

Help also could come from the growing role of private equity in some net lease situations.

Shapiro talked about how large private equity funds are buying pools of distressed assets and debt and ending up with net lease investments and figuring out how to resolve them.

“They are not interested in fighting,” Shapiro said. “They are not interested in bringing up legal fees and getting in front of a judge. They are trying to work things out.”

These problems provide important lessons about loans on net lease assets, and the next few years also are likely to be even more educational.

“Make no mistake, we are going to have a lot of these loans, on the smaller side, owned by private equity firms or big pools, and their patience is going to run out, too,” said Shapiro. “That is uncharted territory again. We do not know where that is going to go.”

More generally, the problems underscore the need to recognize the risks that can arise for those who are “looking for the safety of the triple net deal,” said Donald I. Resnick, partner and chair of the real estate practice at Jenner & Block.

“No one should believe it is like buying a bond. As the investor and as the tenant, you have to go in with your eyes wide open. It is a different scenario when everything is going great,” said Resnick. “We have been through a bad cycle. If you have been around long enough, you have been through a lot of bad cycles, but once the economy gets good, people forget about the bad cycles.”

This article was republished with permission from National Real Estate Investor.

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