Apartment Finance
Today
capital markets
mezzanine Financing
Mezz Grows Costly
APARTMENT FINANCE TODAY • May/June 2009
Rates shoot up into the high-teens as certain lenders walk away.
BY Jerry Ascierto
AS BANKS AND OTHER institutional
lenders scale back their balance-sheet
lending appetite, it’s getting harder to
find mezzanine financing.
Developers who can locate mezz
financing are finding it much more costly
today. Mezz lenders are now offering rates
between 14 percent and 17 percent, up
from 11 percent to 13 percent a year ago.
Life insurance companies and banks are
reserving balance-sheet loans for only their
strongest borrowers—those with whom
they have a deep relationship. So lenders
who specialize in mezz financing now have
the market mostly to themselves, according
to Will Baker, a vice president at Bethesda,
Md.-based Walker & Dunlop, a commercial
real estate lender focused on multifamily.
New Players
While smaller mezz providers, such as
Short Hills, N.J.-based Mezz Cap and Philadelphia-
based LEM Mezzanine, are still
in the game, the most active mezz lender
today may be New York City-based RCG
Longview. In fact, RCG Longview closed
a $602.5 million mezzanine debt fund in
February and will likely target about half
of it at multifamily borrowers.
RCG Longview will favor stabilized
assets in primary markets, a shift from the
standard acquisition/rehab deals that the
company was focused on in rosier times.
Today, the company sees opportunity
in properties with significant deferred
maintenance, where the financing could
be used to improve the asset’s operating
performance, either through lower costs or
higher occupancies.
“The standard mod/rehab business
model doesn’t work as well anymore,” says
David Valger, a director who runs RCG
Longview’s multifamily debt division. “But
there are opportunities for us in properties
with deferred maintenance, so that you’re
not underwriting a bump in rents but a
significant improvement in performance.”
Cash-in refinancings will also be a focus
of the new fund. Many owners with maturing
debt will need to recapitalize their
properties this year. But senior mortgage
lenders, such as banks, life insurance companies,
and Fannie and Freddie, are underwriting
at tougher terms now, constraining
proceeds and ultimately contributing to the
need for more debt to bridge the gap.
The higher mezz rates in the market
reflect the additional risk from uncertainty
and continued erosion of market
fundamentals that many areas are facing.
Consider that capitalization rates for Class
A properties may move to 7.5 percent or
8 percent; Class B properties may move to
8 percent or 9 percent; and Class C properties
may hit more than 10 percent in the
next year or so, according to Valger. “The
pricing is indicative of the kind of spread in
values you’re seeing today,” Valger adds.
Underwriting standards have also gotten
tougher. In the past, RCG Longview
would underwrite at below a 1.00x debt
service coverage ratio (DSCR) with
reserves. The company would anticipate
that additional cash flows would bring the
property into a positive DSCR range. But
now, the company is more likely to underwrite
at a breakeven and higher DSCR.
RCG Longview partners with Fannie
Mae, providing mezz debt on the CI
Mezz-Mod Rehab and DUS Plus programs.
The volume of Mezz-Mod Rehab deals
has slowed considerably over the past six
months as lenders favor stabilized assets
over transitional deals. But the DUS Plus
product, which combines mezz debt with
a Fannie Mae permanent loan for conventional
properties, has seen more interest
lately, especially for cash-in refinancings.
Alternate Approaches
Some institutional lenders are partnering
with other capital sources to keep the
flow of mezz loans available to their clients.
Prudential Mortgage Capital Co. has partnered
in the past with pension funds and
foreign insurance companies on co-investment
activity and is actively exploring such
partnerships today.
“Mezzanine and bridge-type loans are
not something we’re programmatically doing,”
says David Durning, senior managing
director of originations at the Newark, N.J.-
based firm. “But there are some avenues
that we’re pursuing that may bring us additional
investor appetite for that space.”
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