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Underwriter and Rating Agency Issues in Securitized Loan Transactions

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Overview Role of Rating Agencies What is a rating Why are ratings necessary Rating Agency methodology CMBS rating methodology Floating rate loan and single borrower ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Underwriter and Rating Agency Issues in Securitized Loan Transactions


1
Underwriter and Rating Agency Issues in
Securitized Loan Transactions
  • Presented to ICSC 2002 Law Conference
  • David W. Forti, Dechert
  • Michael Weinberger, Cleary Gottlieb, Steen
    Hamilton
  • October 24, 2002

2
Overview
  • Role of Rating Agencies
  • What is a rating
  • Why are ratings necessary
  • Rating Agency methodology
  • CMBS rating methodology
  • Floating rate loan and single borrower deals

3
Overview
  • Rating Agency surveillance
  • Post-closing surveillance of transactions
  • Rating actions

4
Role of Rating AgenciesWhat is a CMBS Rating
  • Ratings are assessments of likelihood that bond
    holders will receive timely payment of interest,
    and ultimate payment of principal by the rated
    final distribution date of a deal - some period
    of time beyond the last maturity date of loans

5
Role of Rating AgenciesWhat is a CMBS Rating
  • Three national statistical rating agencies
    routinely rate CMBS deals - Moodys, Standard
    Poors and Fitch. Most CMBS deals have at least
    2 rating agencies
  • Each tranche of bonds in deal will have its own
    rating

6
Role of Rating AgenciesInvestment Grade Ratings
7
Role of Ratings Subordination
  • Real estate loans rarely possess attributes
    necessary to support highly rated bonds
    subordination of classes of bonds is used as
    credit enhancement on CMBS deals
  • Subordination shifts risk of non-payment to more
    junior classes

8
Role of Ratings Subordination
  • In evaluating deals, rating agencies determine
    the levels of subordination, i.e., the amount of
    bonds that must be subordinate to each tranche to
    support particular rating
  • Issuers goal is to have lowest subordination
    levels possible

9
Role of Rating Agencies Why Are Ratings
Necessary
  • Investment in CMBS transactions is significant
    source of capital for commercial real estate
    lending
  • Understanding credit risk embedded in each CMBS
    deal is complex and time consuming - multiple
    loans each is unique

10
Role of Rating Agencies Why Are Ratings
Necessary
  • Investors in investment grade bonds often lack
    time and real estate expertise to do detailed
    analysis
  • Ratings provide mechanism for matching CMBS bonds
    with particular investor risk tolerance

11
Rating Agency Methodology
  • In evaluating deals, rating agencies do
    individual loan analysis and portfolio or pool
    analysis

12
Rating Agency Methodology
  • Individual loan analysis considers
    credit-worthiness of individual loans, including
    underwritten cash flow, cash flow volatility,
    tenant quality, anticipated rollover, property
    type, quality, location and competitiveness,
    borrower and manager reputation, market
    conditions, loan structure and amortization

13
Rating Agency Methodology
  • Portfolio analysis considers credit-worthiness of
    entire pool on aggregate basis, including pool
    size, number of and size of loans, property
    types, overall property quality, and
    concentrations, including by borrower, property
    type and location

14
Rating Agency Methodology
  • In reviewing pools, rating agencies typically
    conduct a full file review of large loans, and a
    random sample of other loans

15
Rating Agency MethodologyIndividual Loan
Analysis
  • In evaluating individual loan, rating agencies
    typically re-underwrite stabilized net cash flow
    for collateral property, using rating agencys
    criteria for determining sustainable net cash
    flow, which is capped to determine stabilized
    value of the property

16
Rating Agency MethodologyIndividual Loan
Analysis
  • Values are used to determine DSCR and LTV ratios
    for loan
  • Rating agency underwriting criteria and
    capitalization rates often more conservative than
    market

17
Rating Agency Methodology
  • General model for determining CMBS subordination
    levels has 3 main components - default
    probability, loss severity and pool composition
  • Individual loans quantified using DSCR and LTV
    ratios to assess default probability and loss
    severity

18
Rating Agency Methodology
  • May be adjusted for property/loan features likely
    to impact default probability or loss severity,
    including environmental conditions, applicable
    state foreclosure practice, subordinate
    indebtedness and presence/absence of loan
    provisions, such as lender-controlled cash
    management, escrow requirements, and bankruptcy
    remote borrowers

19
Rating Agency Methodology
  • Pool composition is evaluated to determine
    concentrations of risk
  • Pool diversity (borrower, property, type,
    location) analyzed to determine if performance of
    otherwise unrelated loans may be highly
    correlated to one another

20
Rating Agency Methodology
  • Pool size and loan size analyzed because small
    pools or pools with disproportionately large
    loans concentrate risk

21
Rating Agency Methodology
  • Subordination levels can be further affected by
    deal structure issues, such as unusual bond
    structures, quality of loan representations made
    by depositor, and unusual PSA provisions

22
Rating Agency Methodology
  • Once analyses complete, rating agencies determine
    subordination levels for pool, i.e., the
    aggregate amounts of bonds that will qualify for
    particular ratings
  • Some classes of bonds may be unrated, meaning
    that issuer has requested rating agencies not to
    rate those bonds

23
Rating Agency MethodologyFloating Rate Loans
  • Modeling floating rate loan pools requires
    evaluation of additional factors, because
    floating rate loans often interest only balloon
    loans, and may be higher leveraged short-term
    loans

24
Rating Agency MethodologyFloating Rate Loans
  • Interest rate risk, little or no amortization,
    and higher leverage increase default and loss
    severity probabilities, which may result in
    higher subordination levels
  • Interest rate risk can be mitigated with interest
    rate cap agreements

25
Rating Agency MethodologySingle Borrower
Transactions
  • Evaluating single borrower CMBS transactions is
    similar to other CMBS transactions, except that
    all credit risk is concentrated in one borrower
  • Single borrower transactions may be a single
    large asset, or pool of cross-collateralized
    assets

26
Rating Agency MethodologySingle Borrower
Transactions
  • Because no diversity in single asset deals,
    transactions much have extraordinary credit
    quality, including property quality, market
    position, borrower and management expertise, loan
    structure and leverage to support highest rated
    bonds

27
Surveillance
  • Surveillance is the post-closing monitoring of
    CMBS transactions by rating agencies
  • Purpose of surveillance is to ensure that ratings
    of bonds accurately reflect current investment
    risk, and provide information to investors
    regarding performance of CMBS deals

28
Surveillance
  • Surveillance teams monitor information provided
    by servicers about each deal, including review of
    collateral performance of large loans and
    statistical pool-level review of conduit loans,
    as well as evaluation of current pool composition
    and characteristics

29
Surveillance
  • Surveillance also involves review of post-closing
    borrower requests involving changes to loan
    components originally evaluated by rating
    agencies, including equity sponsorship,
    subordinate indebtedness and property management

30
Surveillance Rating Actions
  • Bond ratings may be adjusted at any time to
    respond to performance trends (positive or
    negative) which change credit risk for a
    particular tranche of bonds
  • Affirmations of ratings occur when a transaction
    has performed as expected with no significant
    delinquencies or problems

31
Surveillance Rating Actions
  • Upgrades of ratings occur most often when there
    is increased credit support in a pool, though
    negative changes in pool composition may negate
    the effect of such enhancements
  • Downgrades of ratings generally result from
    actual or projected losses that are higher then
    originally anticipated

32
Surveillance Rating Actions
  • Within a deal each tranche is reviewed, and
    rating changes may affect some classes of bonds
    but not others
  • Because of subordination feature of CMBS bonds,
    senior bonds are most often upgraded and junior
    bonds are most often downgraded
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