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Cshelton | 3 years ago
Most borrowers are currently electing to extend the maturities out another year, many getting IO (interest only) extensions from their lenders, rather than fall into special servicing. "Special Servicing" is the process to take deals like this and find the best outcome for the lowest lender on the capital stack waterfall. Fortunately, there are many processes in place to handle these kinds of things and not left for the taxpayers to bailout... typically.
Bailout? Why? Because it's not just these "rich" landlords/investors that lose their money. They are pension funds, retirement funds, Teachers retirement funds, public service funds, your neighbors' annuity, etc.
The whole thing is a big circle of money that becomes increasingly more complicated in each CRE cycle of boom/bust. The sentiment in the CRE world is definitely of uncertainty and caution right now. Many are optimistic about later this year and things turning around. It's not only Office either, many multifamily deals were done with a cap rate that could not be sustained, and now the deal is no longer "cash flowing", so the borrower cannot service the loan and they can't raise rents either as that side is also under pressure. With Office, companies are still not fully in office, combined with the layoffs, and the prospect of a down economy ahead has them cutting spending where they can. The leases don't renew, and the borrower has no ability to refinance with the rate hikes.
We're in a very delicate time period right now and one catalyst can send it in either direction, very quick.
swatcoder|3 years ago
And why did those socially vital funds invest in a boom/bust industry? Oh, because bailouts will protect them during the bust. Like free insurance. Whee.
What could go wrong with a feedback loop baked into the economy?
bcrosby95|3 years ago
voisin|3 years ago
Because retirees like when their funds earn more than T-bills and actually beat inflation and that entails taking risks. Otherwise everyone can work a hell of a lot longer.
Arnt|3 years ago
Compared to, say, shares or bonds issued by a consumer electronics company, or a cosmetics company, the real part of real estate is much bigger.
cjrp|3 years ago
Presumably because that's the only way they could generate the returns needed to fund the pensions?
nkh|3 years ago
It's a very good way to get out of this feedback loop, and I don't ever see anyone mention this very obvious solution.* The linked paper shows all of the different mechanisms that it could be accomplished. But when people go bust, it's even more straight forward.
* Obviously, the reason it isn't talked about in main stream circles is that it would work really well (as it does in Norway and Alaska) and dispossess the ultra wealthy (and the ultra wealthy own those outlets). But thought I'd share the idea here if case people haven't been exposed to it.
morelinks|3 years ago
Moral hazard.
Force bankruptcy and use any “bail out” to help the investors named above.
pg_bot|3 years ago
mynameishere|3 years ago
I am pretty sure they weren't going to share their profits with me had the ball landed on black. Screw them.
celestialcheese|3 years ago
So your hot take is that retired government employees, union laborers and other beneficiaries of pensions deserve to have their contribution to the pension and their retirement income zero'd out just because you don't get some of the money?
rhacker|3 years ago
FrontierPsych|3 years ago
My friend and I have been talking about this for a long time.
It would cost a lot less to buy these highrises and build them out for homeless, rather than the mess we pay for now.
aaomidi|3 years ago
bsamuels|3 years ago
0xfaded|3 years ago
ausbah|3 years ago