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Writer's pictureRob Philion

Commercial Real Estate Debt Is Back With 170% Jump in Sales


Graph showing CMBS ahead of last year

Commercial real estate was one of the scariest assets in the US last year.


This year, investors are warming to it once again — and that’s helped revive a key property debt market. 


Investors have snapped up about $24.6 billion of new commercial mortgage backed securities so far in 2024, 170% more than the same period in 2023, according to data compiled by Bloomberg News. Spreads on the riskiest portions of CMBS deals have been among the top performers compared to other widely traded types of credit.


When lightning-quick bankruptcies felled several regional lenders last year and interest rates seemed on an endless march higher, and the commercial-property market all but ground to a halt. CMBS issuance plunged, and spreads blew out. 


Now those fears are receding. A once-frozen market for office towers is seeing deals again, and major real estate investors including Blackstone Inc. are greenlighting big investments in a sign that they believe property markets have begun to rebound. Add to that a Federal Reserve that’s signaled the end of rate increases — notwithstanding recent suggestions of a longer-than-expected timeline for cuts — and investors are once again ready to dive into new issues.


“Investors have warmed significantly to commercial real estate this year,” said TJ Durkin, head of structured credit and specialty finance at TPG Angelo Gordon. “It’s much different than the fear that characterized last year.”


Among the highlights this year are a $2.35 billion CMBS issued by Blackstone. That deal, which priced in March, is backed by a portfolio of 186 industrial properties across 11 states.

For CMBS buyers, the difference between this year and last is that they’re no longer applying blanket assumptions to the sector, said Morris Chen, a portfolio manager at DoubleLine Group LP. Instead, they’re “sharpening their pencils,” looking for value on a deal-by-deal basis. 


“Back then the market was overly bearish, thinking about the worst possible outcome,” said Chen. “It began to look beat up compared to other asset classes. That’s brought investors back in.” 


Demand for deals has driven spreads tighter, with CMBS bonds rated BBB- shrinking more than 250 basis points from a year ago, according to Citigroup Inc. data as of April 22. Only private residential mortgage backed securities and some of the riskiest collateralized loan tranches have done better, while investment-grade and high-yield corporate debt, asset-backed bonds and agency borrowing haven’t narrowed as much. 


Those tighter spreads in turn are helping draw in more borrowers.


“Borrowers have been holding out for an opportunity to refinance debt with short-term maturities and now they’re seizing on lower spreads to do it,” said Raviv Shtaingos, head of structured credit at ORIX Corporation USA.


Much of the shift in sentiment has occurred over the past few months, as a consensus developed that the Fed’s next move will be to lower interest rates. That’s good news for the bond investors and real estate owners — and issuers — who had been waiting for clarity on the end of the hikes. 


“People have been listening to the Fed and looking at economic data and concluding, ‘Rates are coming down or stabilizing, now is a good time to do deals,’” said Paul Staples, a trader at Academy Securities Inc.


To be sure, the gloom hasn’t entirely lifted. There’s still a long way to go to refinance a CMBS maturity wall that stood at $210 billion at the end of last year. And as long as interest rates remain above the super-low levels many borrowers locked in during the pandemic, valuation drops will continue to ripple through property markets as “cap rates” — a key metric used to price commercial real estate — adjust upward.


In recent weeks, of course, hot inflation data has upended some of that certainty about the Fed’s interest rate plans. Policy makers will meet next week and traders will parse Chair Jerome Powell’s comments for clues about the latest thinking around easing policy. 


But perhaps surprisingly, a higher-for-longer rate outlook may actually help lift CMBS issuance levels for the remainder of the year, according to a note by Bank of America Corp. strategists Alan Todd and Henry Brooks last week. The bank revised up its issuance forecast for CMBS by 20% to $90 billion for the year. That would put this year’s issuance in line with the $91 billion average for the last eight years, according to Bloomberg data. 


“A greater number of borrowers may simply decide to ‘bite the bullet’ if it begins to look like rates are unlikely to fall anytime soon,” they wrote.  


Article published in Bloomberg on April 26, 2024, with assistance from Katie Greifeld.

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