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đ Banks didnât fix CREâthey just moved the risk off the balance sheet.
After a year of retreat, banks are back in the commercial real estate game. But donât confuse this rebound with recovery.
Hereâs whatâs actually happening:
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Troubled loans are being securitized, offloaded, or reclassified to reduce headline exposure.
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Some banks, like First Foundation, took mark-to-market losses when moving loans into âheld for saleâ statusânot because they sold, but because accounting rules forced a pricing adjustment.
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The slickest move? Regulatory arbitrage. Private credit firms buy a troubled loan above its distressed value, then get a new loan from the bank to cover the difference. That replacement debt? Reclassified as commercial & industrial, not CREâlowering the bankâs reported risk without actually reducing it.
These moves donât stay on bank booksâthey ripple into yours:
Loan sales are quietly setting new pricing anchors. Your next appraisal may reflect those markdowns.
Capital is back, but selective. Strong cash flow and low leverage get favorable terms. Everyone else faces higher spreads or tighter covenants.
40% of the $957B in CRE debt maturing in 2025 has already been extended once. These arenât fresh problemsâtheyâre recycled ones getting more expensive.
Risk didnât disappearâit migrated. It left the regulated banks and landed in private credit. If defaults rise there, the fallout hits fastâand hits values.
The fundamentals didnât improve. The accounting just got more creative.
đ Full article via Bisnow: https://lnkd.in/eChPs62V