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Lavery | 5 years ago

Turmoil, yes, but internalized to the corporations impacted. One of the major impacts of the financial crisis a decade ago was the massive increase in private equity ownership of real estate. Groups like Blackstone (BX), the largest residential landlord in the US, may take a hit. Not covered in the article (but referenced elsewhere on HN lately), you're seeing even worse trends in retail-focused commercial mortage backed security portfolios. REITS like Simon (SPG, a mall operator) have been cut in half since pre-COVID.

Your question, though, is presumably around whether we'd expect problems with systemically important banks. Highly unlikely, for two reasons:

First, regulatory changes to their capital structures largely prevent them from holding things like CMBS on their balance sheet unless they reserve significant amounts of capital against it. This is what facilitate the rise of private equity landlordship: banks exited the business.

Second (and this has, largely, already happened) the Fed and other central banks learned their lessons well, and were swift and comprehensive about backstopping the financial markets.

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ls612|5 years ago

Third, Dodd-Frank domestically and Basel III rules internationally make banks hold far more safe capital on their books precisely to cushion against a shock like this. Turns out those rules work.

barryrandall|5 years ago

Here’s the question I’m trying to answer: Do current stress tests contemplate a scenario of the same magnitude as 1/3 of US renters simultaneously missing payments?