(BN) Commercial Mortgage Defaults in U.S. Bank Portfolios Reach 3.4%
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Commercial Mortgage Defaults in U.S. Bank Portfolios Reach 3.4% 2009-12-01 05:01:00.13 GMT By Hui-yong Yu Dec. 1 (Bloomberg) -- The commercial mortgage default rate on loans held by U.S. banks more than doubled to 3.4 percent in the third quarter as vacancies rose and rents declined, Real Estate Econometrics LLC said. Defaults climbed from 1.37 percent a year earlier and from 2.88 percent in the... [more]
Commercial Mortgage Defaults in U.S. Bank Portfolios Reach 3.4%
2009-12-01 05:01:00.13 GMT
By Hui-yong Yu
Dec. 1 (Bloomberg) -- The commercial mortgage default rate
on loans held by U.S. banks more than doubled to 3.4 percent in
the third quarter as vacancies rose and rents declined, Real
Estate Econometrics LLC said.
Defaults climbed from 1.37 percent a year earlier and from
2.88 percent in the second quarter, the New York-based property
research firm said today in a report. Default rates in the first
three quarters of 2009 have been the highest since 1993, the
firm said.
“Mortgages originated in 2006 and 2007 are experiencing
the most significant shortfalls in current cash flow relative to
current debt-service obligations,” Sam Chandan, chief economist
of the firm, said in the report.
Sheila Bair, chairman of the Federal Deposit Insurance
Corp., and Comptroller of the Currency John Dugan told Congress
in October that souring commercial real estate loans pose the
biggest threat to the U.S. banking industry. Non-performing
commercial property loans caused a majority of bank failures
this year, said Chip MacDonald, a partner specializing in
financial services at Atlanta-based law firm Jones Day.
Federal Reserve Chairman Ben S. Bernanke said in a Nov. 16
speech that “the fallout” for banks from commercial real
estate could slow the nation’s economic recovery.
Defaults on bank-owned commercial property mortgages posted
the biggest quarterly jump from the previous quarter in six
years of FDIC data analyzed by Real Estate Econometrics, the
company said.
Lenders working with property owners may be able to keep
the default rate to 4 percent for the fourth quarter, Chandan
said.
The firm reduced its fourth-quarter default estimate from
4.1 percent, and pared back its forecast for 2010 to 5.2 percent
from 5.3 percent. In 2011, Chandan estimates that 5.3 percent of
bank-held commercial property loans will be in default, less
than the 5.4 percent previously forecast.
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