8-14-15

Real Estate Journal — August 14 - 27, 2015 — 13A

www.marejournal.com

M id A tlantic

M ultifamily F inancing

By George D. Johnson, Jr., Rittenhouse Capital Advisors Multi-Family Finance: The Landscape Ahead

A

s we enter the second half of 2015, and with the impending move of

risk back to the borrower. Today, borrowers are keenly aware of what the future holds for rates, and most look to lock in their rate as soon as possible. On the lending side of that equation, we have seen lenders discontinue their early rate lock programs. The overwhelming majority will not formally lock the rate until all third party reports are completed, signed off on, and the commitment is issued and accepted. Through the “recovery-ex- pansion” phase of the apart- ment segment, lenders have generally maintained their dis-

cipline on leverage where 75% LTV remains the norm. There are a handful of bank balance sheet options available at 80% LTV, but typically reserved for acquisition deals. That aggres- sive leverage is typically offset with more stringent underwrit- ing (i.e., T12) or some level of recourse. CMBS lenders are getting more multi-family deals done picking off lower quality assets and assets in secondary-tertia- ry markets. Higher leverage is also an option via CMBS in con- junction with mezzanine debt. Maximum proceeds will largely

be determined on underwriting to a “debt yield” threshold. On the development side, expect the pace of new projects to taper off significantly. The multi-family cycle in the Mid- Atlantic is in late stage “expan- sion”. This, coupled with soon to be rising interest rates, the recent additions to the supply side and the noose put around the neck of the banks vis-à-vis “Basil III”, development money will be harder to come by. None of this is unusual in this stage of the cycle and there are lenders out there making exceptions on pricing, leverage,

rate lock and other loan terms. There is an ample supply of equity in the market as well, for the right deals. It just takes a more concerted effort to find the perfect combination on the ever-changing landscape of multi-family finance. George D. Johnson, Jr. is president & CEO of Rit- tenhouse Capital Advisors. He has been in the commer- cial real estate financing industry for over 30 years. Throughout his career, he has been directly respon- sible for loan production approaching $1B. n

interest rates upward, we have started to see “cau- t i o n a n d change” on the lending landscape for multi-family owners in the

George Johnson, Jr.

Mid-Atlantic Region looking to acquire, refinance or develop a multifamily project. The availability of 10-year fixed rate product is starting to contract given lender’s un- certainty over long-term rates. Agencies such as Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac are still an option but have been pricing intentionally “wide”. Bank bal- ance sheet lenders are slowly but surely moving out of the 10-year fixed rate business and pricing 3, 5 and 7-year product more competitively. Those Lenders offering 5 and 7-year fixed rates as their core product are now stress testing their underwriting at higher interest rate levels (i.e. 5.25% to 6.25%) to test for refinance risk. Lenders offering floating rate debt on “value-add” proj- ects are performing the exact same exercise. On fixed rate debt, lenders are offering loan terms of 10 to 12 years in duration. The term starts with the initial 5 or 7 year fixed rate. Extensions are then offered at a predetermined interest rate spread over a base index shifting the interest rate Meridian Capital Group composes $41.3m mortgage loan formultifamily WASHINGTON, DC — Meridian Capital Group negotiated a $41.3 million mortgage for the purchase of Marbury Plaza, a multifamily property located in Washing- ton, DC. The seven-year loan, provid- ed by a balance sheet lender, features a competitive fixed- rate of 3.50% and one-year of interest-only payments fol- lowed by a 30-year amortiza- tion schedule. This transaction was negotiated by Meridian senior vice president, Barry Lefkowitz , who is based in the Company’s Iselin, NJ office. Marbury Plaza is located at 2300 Good Hope Rd., SE. n

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