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2009:
CMBS Defaults Expected to Soar in
2009
Defaults on commercial mortgage-backed securities (CMBS) will
triple this year to an all-time high, according to recent reports by
Fitch Ratings and Standard and Poor's.
By Jerry Ascierto
CMBS defaults will reach 3 percent by year-end, the highest default
ratio in the history of the market, double the previous
high of 1.5 percent set in 2003, according to Fitch. Standard &
Poor's sets the bar even higher, saying it could reach 3.5
percent by year-end.
CMBS defaults reached 1.15 percent at the end of January, a dramatic
rise from the 0.43 percent default rate of September
2008. About 40 percent of those defaults are multifamily loans,
according to Fitch, though multifamily comprises only about
30 percent of the U.S. CMBS industry.
In January, three large CMBS loans that were originated in 2007
pushed the default rate above 1 percent. Two of the three
were multifamily loans—the $225 million loan secured by Riverton
Apartments in New York City, and a $130 million pool
consisting of 2,900 units located in Virginia, Georgia, and North
Carolina.
Yet the majority of multifamily defaults are occurring on smaller,
older properties by small-company borrowers. Canadian
ratings agency DBRS notes that of the $3.2 billion in fixed-rate
multifamily CMBS in default in the United States, $2.2
billion are smaller loans (under $25 million and averaging about $7
million).
While many multifamily REITs tapped the CMBS market in its heyday,
"the loans that are in default at the moment are not
necessarily those borrowers," says Susan Merrick, a managing
director at Fitch. "A lot of the multifamily defaults are
smaller properties, and the borrowers are generally single-property
owners and not as experienced, generally."
Multifamily CMBS loans are having the hardest time in Florida,
Michigan, Arizona, Nevada, and California—the states hardest
hit by the single-family meltdown. Multifamily CMBS loans in these
states have a default rate of 4.1 percent, the highest of
any property type and more than 20 percent above the national
average, according to Fitch.
Across the country, defaults of fixed-rate CMBS loans increased 17
percent in February over January, bringing the default
rate of fixed-rate CMBS to 1.21 percent, according to Erin Stafford,
a senior vice president at DBRS.
"If it keeps going at that rate, it will definitely hit 3 percent by
the end of the year," Stafford says. She notes that the
default numbers would be even higher if figuring in loans on the
verge of default that were voluntarily transferred to
special servicing by borrowers giving an early heads-up to lenders
about their inability to pay next month's coupon.
All of the recent trend lines have been severe and negative. Since
the fourth quarter of 2008, about 70 percent of 30-day
delinquencies are becoming 60-day delinquencies. "In earlier 2008,
it was more 30 percent to 40 percent on average," says
Eric Rothfeld, managing director at Fitch. "There's certainly a
trend of that percentage increasing substantially beginning
in the fourth quarter."
At the end of January, about $1.7 billion in CMBS loans were 30-days
delinquent, and if all of those rolled to 60 days, the
default rate today would be about 1.5 percent, according to Fitch.
Fitch is forecasting total U.S. CMBS issuances to be about $12
billion in 2009, with most of it coming in the second half, a
stark contrast to the record $230 billion issued in 2007.
Somewhere in between those figures lies the market's sweet spot.
"Prior to 2004, what had been done was around $80 billion or so, and
that seems to be a very viable market," Stafford says. "If it
returns to a $50 billion to $100 billion market going
forward, that would be fine."
HousingFinance.com