Posts Tagged ‘Public trading’

Accounting Standards Designed to Increase Transparency

Thursday, October 22nd, 2009

is_accountingprinciples_440x248New accounting standards calling for property to be marked to market,  and changes in lease accounting rules will strongly impact balance sheets, income statements and the general financial outlook of American companies. Unfortunately, many corporations are not ready to deal with the changes, according to a new report from CB Richard Ellis.  The mark-to-market requirement - known as FAS 157 - became effective for financial assets November 15, 2007, and for non-financial assets such as real estate on November 15, 2008.

CBRE’s white paper - entitled “FAS Talking - Unpacking Real Estate’s Impact on Financial Statements” - notes that the estimated balance sheet impact of the lease accounting revisions will be in excess of $1 trillion.  According to the report, the combined consequences of mark-to-market and lease accounting changes might negatively impact earnings, capital requirements, debt covenant ratios, credit ratings and other yardsticks of financial health.

Todd P. Anderson, CBRE senior managing director of global corporate services, who wrote the report with Michael M. Omiya, CFO of Boeing Realty Corporation, says that the changes are “a continuation of the effort to have greater financial transparency, in particular in the financial statements of publicly traded corporations.”  According to Anderson, “In the absence of comparable sales, you have to figure out how to establish a value for your property.”  Corporations should accomplish that before the end of the year when they are on deadline to complete tax and accounting responsibilities.  “The corporate real estate department, if it understands what’s going on in the mark-to-market arena, can come in early and start to take a look at its properties and basically create an argument for why it is valuing properties the way it is,” Anderson concludes.

Bad Debt? Sell It on the Stock Market

Thursday, July 30th, 2009

To purge their balance sheets of debt and avoid future writedowns, more and more U.K. banks are considering plans to transfer commercial property loans into REITs. Such strategies entail using REITs as publicly traded “exit vehicles” to limit the losses they and their borrowers face.

uk-stock-market The British Property Federation is currently pushing the idea to the government as a solution for state-owned banks saddled with real estate loans.  Ian Marcus, head of real estate at Credit Suisse Group AG, remarks, “It’s obviously being considered by all relevant parties because the sector needs to recapitalize and that is one methodology of doing so.”

U.K. banks are currently weighed down with 227 billion pounds (US$371 billion) of loans against retail properties, office buildings and warehouses after funding the real estate boom that ended in 2007, reports a De Montfort University study.  According to BNP Paribas, approximately 100 billion pounds of the loans are due to mature in the next three years.

The values of the commercial properties they are secured against have declined by an average 44 percent from their peak two years ago, calculates London-based Investment Property Databank, Ltd.  Peter Cosmetatos, the British Property Federation’s finance director, concludes, “Allowing mortgage REITs would seem a natural and sensible way for REITs to help banks reduce their exposure to real estate and recapitalize the sector.”

It’s an interesting proposition and creates a new play - allowing opportunity players to get undervalued, under-performing loans at the share level.

UK Debt Repayment Dates

UK Debt Repayment Dates