Posts Tagged ‘bank’

Investment Banking in an Economic Meltdown

Thursday, June 25th, 2009

Investment banks are hunkering down locked_up_moneyto preserve capital, primarily because there are grave concerns about current property valuations, says Charles Krawitz, Senior Loan Sales Asset Manager, Fifth Third Bank, in an interview for The Alter Group podcasts on real estate.  Banks are reluctant to lend $10 million to a property that might be worth only $8 million, and with good reason.  Multifamily housing currently is the least distressed asset class, thanks to Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and FHA financing that is creating a market for loans on these properties.

Distressed assets fall into three tranches - buildings, loans and securities.  According to Charles, if a property is struggling and the cash flow is impaired, there is a commercial lending problem.  In a CMBS structure, the loan has been sliced and diced so many times that it’s likely to be toxic and beyond restructuring.  Fully 1.8 percent of commercial loans cannot be restructured, and $400 billion in loans are rolling over this year alone.  The challenge is to pin down values in a distressed market when there are no comparable sales statistics.

One smart thing that the government has done is expand loans to small businesses through the Small Business Association (SBA).  With interest rates so low, this is very beneficial to small businesses, Charles notes.  Capital is once again flowing - though not in a tsunami - but that’s very good news.  The government will be an equity partner, and it’s likely that certain approved vendors will be part of this program.  A lot of questions remain, but it’s a very strong effort on the government’s part.

To listen to Charles Krawitz’s entire interview on the state of investment banking, click here for the podcast.

Bank of America Slaps Foreclosure Notice on Waterview Tower

Tuesday, June 9th, 2009

Bank of America has pulled the plug on Chicago’s high-profile Waterview Tower with waterviewnightviewlowerres3cgits filing of a foreclosure lawsuit against the 90-story condominium and hotel tower overlooking the Chicago River.  The bank has sued to collect $20 million from the developer, an affiliate of Chicago-based Teng & Associates, which stopped construction last year.

The building’s troubles came to a head when Hong Kong-based luxury hotel chain Shangri-La Hotels & Resorts scrapped its plans for a 200-room hotel at 111 West Wacker Drive.  Various contracts then filed claims totaling $85 million against the developer.

Bank of America’s lawsuit illustrates two critical rules of successful real estate development.  First is the risk of starting a project without construction financing in place — in this case, funding a project with a short-term bridge loan while the developer was shopping around for a construction loan.  Second is the issue of first loss position in terms of collecting money owed when a borrower defaults.  Bank of America is in a first loss position since the contractors all signed their agreements before the bank extended the loan.  This means their contracts could supersede the bank’s.

Geithner: The Patient is Out of Intensive Care

Friday, May 15th, 2009

It’s been a long, strange ride, but the nation’s financial system is finally starting what is certain to be an extended healing process. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner believes that “the financial system is starting to heal” as he promised to move returned bail-out funds to community banks that need help.bandaid-on-broken-and-cracked-piggy-bank

Improved lending circumstances are tempering concerns about systemic risk and reduced leverage at banks, according to Geithner, who noted that “a substantial part of the adjustment process” for the financial sector is now coming to an end.

Several of the larger banks - Goldman Sachs, JP Morgan and Capital One Financial - want to repay the funds they received under the Troubled Asset Relief Program.  The Treasury will increase the money community banks can access to five percent of risk-weighted assets from three percent.  The government has already invested in preferred stock in 300 smaller banks.

“As in any financial crisis, the damage has been unfair and indiscriminate,” Geithner said.  “Ordinary Americans, small business owners and community banks who did the right thing and played by the rules are suffering from the actions of those who took on too much risk.”

Why the optimism?  Geithner points to declines in corporate bond spreads, lower risk premiums in inter-bank markets and cheaper default insurance on big banks as evidence that the financial system is healing.  “These are welcome signs, but the process of financial recovery and repair is going to take time,” he cautions.

Wells Fargo Wagon Rolls onto Wall Street

Friday, April 10th, 2009

The Wells Fargo wagon delivered good news to Wall Street when the San Francisco-based bank announced a record first-quarter profit of approximately $3 billion, or 55 percent per common share.  Contrast these numbers with the fourth quarter of 2008, when Wells Fargo reported a $2.6 billion loss.

The news sent the Dow Jones Industrial Average soaring 3.1 percent to finish the day at 8,083.38, the highest closing since February 9.wellsfargo

Wells credited the outstanding results to healthy lending margins driven by low interest rates and the resulting boom in mortgage lending activity.  “Our business momentum is strong, and we expect our operating margins to remain at the top of our peer group,” said John Stumpf, Wells Fargo’s CEO.  Applications for mortgages surged during the first quarter; Wells reported $83 billion in applications for new and refinance home loans during March alone.

Wells is the nation’s largest mortgage servicer and a leading home loan originator, so it benefited from the refinancing boom driven by extremely low short-term interest rates and the government’s purchases of mortgage bonds.

Although this is evidence that the Obama administration’s efforts to jump-start the economy by freeing up credit are starting to work, it is only the hint of a beginning for banks with significant mortgage portfolios.  Wells and competitors such as Bank of America, Citigroup and JPMorgan Chase remain dangerously exposed to falling asset prices, especially for commercial and residential real estate.