Yes, most TIC financing is CMBS financing. CMBS stands for Collateralized Mortgage-Backed Securities. In fact, most financing for investment properties is CMBS financing, also known as ‘conduit’ financing.
Most CMBS financing is also non-recourse financing, which means that, generally speaking, the lender can not look to the borrower for any deficiency in the case of a foreclosure. CMBS financing really ushered in the era of non-recourse financing, as I will discuss below.
Prior to the mid-1990’s, most financing was what we call ‘portfolio’ lending. A bank, S&L, life insurance company of other financial institution would use its deposit base to make loans, which they then serviced to receive repayment. The problem was that this tied up the lender’s capital until (and unless) the loan was repaid, which limited their ability to make new loans. Since most mortgages for investment property are fixed rate, this also meant that a lender could be under-water, with the interest rate on a long-term fixed-rate mortgage being less than the rate that they paid on deposits. Combined together, these issues led to periodic credit crunches and caused many financial institutions to face severe financial strain.
During the mid-1990’s, the commercial mortgage market took a page from the residential mortgage and started packaging pools of commercial loans into one big bond offering, which could then be sliced and diced into multiple pieces, or tranches, based on the credit quality of the different loans, which are then sold to bond investors (the lender is effectively acting as a ‘conduit’, originating loans for the bond investors). This way, lenders could quickly recover their original capital, plus (hopefully) a profit on the sale of the loans. As a result of the growth of the CMBS market, borrowers can find much easier access to mortgage capital, lenders can get their capital back in order to make new loans and bond investors can select the tranches of these pools that best match their investment objectives.
One offshoot of the CMBS market is that there are very few remaining ‘portfolio’ lenders. Why hold the loan to maturity when you can select just those pieces that fit your investment needs? Another change is the rise of non-recourse financing. The bond investors want either the debt payment or the property; they don’t want to waste time going after borrowers (unless, of course, those borrowers commit ‘bad-boy’ acts against the lender or the property). The final big change is that almost all commercial mortgages carry potential severe pre-payment penalties.
Love it or hate it, CMBS financing has completely changed the world of commercial lending.
Jim
James G. Shaw
President and Chief Executive Officer
CapHarbor, Inc.
www.capharbor.com