FINANCETAX
CREDIT EQUITY LIHTC Investors on What's Driving ThemAFFORDABLE
HOUSING FINANCE • July 2008 BY DONNA KIMURA
Pat Nashs phone has been ringing off the hook. The longtime low-income housing
tax credit (LIHTC) investor has had a hectic 2008, with an unprecedented number
of requests coming from developers and tax credit syndicators. With several
investors sitting on the sidelines this year, those who have been active, like
Nash, are very popular. Weve turned away hundreds of millions
of dollars of deals this year, said Nash, managing director of JPMorgan
Capital Corp., explaining that there wasnt enough time and staff resources
to close more transactions. His team also turned down transactions that did not
meet the firms yield expectations and other economic metrics. Nash
and other investors are concerned that some good affordable housing deals might
not get done in todays market. JPMorgan Capital has consistently
invested in LIHTCs since 1994. Nash declined to say how much business the firm
has done so far in 2008. A national investor, JPMorgan Capital focuses
on proprietary funds and direct investments. It has also participated in multi-investor
funds on a select basis. (AFFORDABLEHOUSING FINANCE is published by Hanley Wood,
LLC, a company owned by affiliates of JPMorgan Partners, LLC.) One area
that has changed this year is the length of time that the firm will leave open
an offer to invest, said Bill Pelletier, who manages the firms proprietary
and direct investment products. We have shorter fuses on deals,
he said, explaining that they like to keep an offer open for 60 to 90 days. We
are no longer able to make a commitment to invest and let it sit there for an
extended period of time. The firm doesnt want to get locked
into a price and yield at a time when yields to investors have been rising.
Yields had inched up to 7 percent, sources said at the end of May. When investor
yields rise that means prices paid to developers for their tax credits decline.
The market is struggling to find the right balance of having strong enough yields
to attract investors and high enough prices for developers to do their deals.
Several investors have stepped out of the market over the past year for a variety
of reasons, including low yields, which were in the 5 percent range about a year
ago. Banks and other companies that have experienced recent losses also have a
reduced need for tax credits. Its made for a tough and interesting year.
The obvious difference was the lack of available equity. That sums up everything,
said Christoph Gabler, senior director of AEGON USA Realty Advisors, Inc., which
invested approximately $300 million in LIHTCs last year and plans to invest a
similar amount in 2008. The firm recently surpassed the $2 billion mark in its
overall investments. The overall dearth of equity leads to one of Gablers
concerns: good deals not getting done this year. In a perfect working
market, bad deals wont get done or will be priced accordingly, he
said. But in the first half, some perfectly good deals werent getting
done. Thats bad news for affordable housing developers who
rely on LIHTC equity to finance their projects. That also leaves a broader issue
of potentially having fewer affordable housing units being built. Gabler
believes this is a short-term problem. The initial panic that was felt by many
in the industry at the start of 2008 has eased as the market has started to settle,
he said in late May. It used to be that yields were the main point of discussion
for many investors, but that has changed, added Gabler, who has focused on direct
investments but has also invested in syndicated funds. We talk about yields
after deal terms and deal structure, he said, citing strong guarantees and
larger reserves as key considerations. Deal terms are being looked at in
conjunction with yields and risk, he said. Gabler said the lack of equity
is the result of some investors sitting on the sidelines. If they start to come
back, the second half should see more activity. Historically, the second
half of the year is busier as states make their reservations and investors try
to close deals before the end of the year. One investor who took a wait-and-see
approach in the first half of the year was GE Real Estate. Weve been
slow and cautious, said Jim Mendelson, managing director of the firms
affordable housing group. 2007 was a big year for us, and were digesting
that at the moment. The firm also wanted to be patient and assess
market conditions, which Mendelson described as choppy. He
anticipates making some investments in the second half of the year and thinks
the market will eventually settle down. The tax credit bus has been too
strong for people to not migrate back, he said. |