Jeanne Peck |
Chicago, IL, March
2, 2013 - The shortest month of the year closed with overall improved real estate capital market conditions
-- at least for borrowers seeking debt.
Treasuries dropped about 15 basis points and mortgage spreads compressed, resulting in nearly 25 basis
points lower rates.
Renewed fierce competition among funding sources negates any
clear differentiation between various types of lenders today.
Banks, lifecompanies, Wall Street, agencies and private capital sources
are all bidding within very tight underwriting ranges for higher-quality
assets and creating new lending programs to fit almost every client preference. Floating rate loans enjoy historically low pricing and benchmark LIBOR and bank prime rates remain flat for more than a year.
That said, any meaningful pricing discussions are within the realm of the
fixed-rate debt.
Based upon term, current pricing ranges for multifamily, office, retail and industrial properties requiring fixed-rate debt and assuming typical leverage levels of much as 75% are as follows:
Based upon term, current pricing ranges for multifamily, office, retail and industrial properties requiring fixed-rate debt and assuming typical leverage levels of much as 75% are as follows:
* Five-year term: 2.75% to 3.5%, with banks prevailing in this term.Often times, such loans are structured using swap contracts.
* Ten-year term: 3.75% to 4.5% with life companies and conduits leading the pack. Select banks offer such terms to preferred customers.Agencies still lead the market for apartment deals.
With so much competition on pricing at levels many funding
sources find unprofitable, the capital markets are reevaluating risk
spectrums. In search of yield, more lenders find themselves targeting
secondary markets, higher leverage and non-traditional property types.
For
example, an un-flagged hotel in a secondary market will be priced at
least 75 to 100 basis points than typical loans. All in all, such risk premiums are far much more compressed than in any time since the Great
Recession when pricing was double to triple of today's levels. In fact, even high-risk, short-term "situational" debt yields are moving into the
higher single-digit yield range in many cases.
The Real Estate Institute's Jeanne Peck notes,
"With the economy skirting a
contraction in December 2012, improving economic conditions
and limited new
supply [especially] in the non-multifamily property sectors,
lenders feel
more comfortable with risk today. Many are clearly willing to widen risk
tolerances to snag more yield."
Contact:
Jeanne Peck,
Executive Director