Affordable Housing Finance
SPECIAL FOCUS
Capital Markets Outlook 2009
Brace Yourself
AFFORDABLE HOUSING FINANCE
• November 2008
Shocking capital markets upheaval makes
for a turbulent year ahead for developers
BY JERRY ASCIERTO
The capital markets grew more
uncertain every day heading
into the fourth quarter. The
government’s seizure of
Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, and
AIG, the bankruptcy of Lehman Brothers,
and the disappearance of Washington
Mutual, Wachovia, and Merrill Lynch,
raised the economic fever to a crisis.
The single-family market meltdown
that began last year has spread like wildfire,
incinerating subprime lenders and the
government-sponsored enterprises (GSEs)
before leveling century-old financial institutions
that weathered the Great
Depression but could not survive 2008.
As of early October, the collapse of
large financial institutions—and the
impact of the government’s proposed
financial industry bailout—was still too
raw for many in the industry to digest.
But taken together, this disruption of
the capital markets means more pain in
2009 for affordable housing developers.
Many predict that fewer projects will get
done next year as debt financing grows
more costly, construction financing proves
elusive, and low-income housing tax credit
(LIHTC) prices diminish further.
As Goldman Sachs and Morgan
Stanley teetered on the brink of collapse,
Congress wrestled with a $700 billion
financial industry rescue plan, an unprecedented
government intervention intended
to avoid a further run of bank failures.
While Congress bickered, the Dow Jones
Industrial Average dropped 777 points, its largest
single-day collapse, and short-term interest rates
such as the Securities Industry and Markets
Association municipal swap index and London
Interbank Offered Rate (LIBOR) spiraled out of
control.
“My personal view is that we are about
halfway through this global credit contraction,”
says Wade Norris, a principal with
Eichner & Norris, a Washington, D.C.-based
law firm that specializes in tax-exempt bond
finance. “And as the global capacity for lending
continues to shrink, the price of lending
will continue to rise.”
The 800-pound gorilla in the room is
the LIHTC market. The reduced investing
appetite of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac,
which accounted for more than 40 percent
of the market, hobbled the rate of affordable
housing production this year. Add to
that the uncertain fate of AIG’s
SunAmerica division—another active tax
credit buyer—and the problem could only
get worse next year.
The remaining tax credit investors
now have the luxury of cherry-picking
only the strongest deals in the strongest
markets, while many deals in secondary
and tertiary markets get scuttled. Tax
credit pricing is averaging about 85 cents
per $1 of tax credit nationally—down
from an average of 95 cents in 2007—and
is expected to decline further in 2009.
“We’re hearing from equity providers
that the market’s going into the high 70s
to mid-70-cent range in the first quarter
of next year,” says Sean Thomas, director
of planning and preservation for the Ohio
Housing Finance Agency (OHFA). “But
we still don’t know where the floor is yet.”
A 15-year veteran of OHFA, Thomas calls
2008 “probably the toughest year I’ve
seen for affordable housing developers.”
Four percent deals done through taxexempt
bond financing have been affected
more than 9 percent deals. Some state
housing finance agencies are reporting
large portions of unused tax-exempt bond
allocations as investors shy away from
most new-construction 4 percent deals.
Even when there is investor interest, the
deals are difficult to pencil out as credit
pricing continues to fall, increasing the
need for gap financing (for more on the
tax credit equity outlook, see page 26).
“Acq-rehabs are going to be strong,
because you could have some in-place
income that allows you to deliver units
more quickly. But new-construction bond
deals are going to be extremely challenging
next year,” says Phil Melton, a senior
vice president focused on affordable housing
at Grandbridge Real Estate Capital.
(for more on the tax-exempt bond market,
see page 28).
Related Affordable, which owns
more than 11,000 units in the Northeast
and Florida, finances the lion’s share of its
transactions through tax-exempt bonds.
But the company anticipates a difficult
environment heading into 2009.
“The pricing went from 98 cents nine
months ago, down to the low 80s today in
some of our markets,” says Mark Carbone,
president of Related Affordable, in late
September. “We have a healthy pipeline
for next year, but I just hope we can close
them all, or at least some of them.”
Betting on debt
It’s not just LIHTC pricing that
makes for an uncertain future; the price of
bond credit enhancements from Fannie
Mae and Freddie Mac have been rising all
throughout 2008.
Fannie Mae exited the market a few
times this year, unable to figure out how
to price risk appropriately, given its
liquidity situation and the shaky capital
markets. Freddie Mac also briefly exited
the market, and raised its rates significantly
when it returned. Freddie Mac
doubled its liquidity fee from 25 to 50
basis points and also jacked up the application
fee for variable-rate bond transactions
by a factor of 10 to 1 percent, up
from 0.1 percent of the loan amount.
| Short-Term Liquidity Dries Up |
| The Securities Industry and
Financial Markets Association
(SIFMA) Municipal Swap Index |
Three-Month Treasury Bill |
| DATE |
RATE |
DATE |
YEILD |
| Sept. 3 |
1.63 |
June 16 |
2.04% |
| Sept. 10 |
1.79 |
July 16 |
1.35 |
| Sept. 17 |
5.15 |
Aug. 15 |
1.8 |
| Sept. 24 |
7.96 |
Sept. 17 |
0.03 |
| In late September, short-term liquidity dried up as bond buyers held their breath,
waiting for the federal government to bail out the troubled financial services sector. |
Related closed a few tax-exempt
bond credit enhancements through the
GSEs earlier this year with spreads of
about 50 basis points, for an all-in rate of
approximately 5 percent. The company
was quoted spreads of up to 150 basis
points in September, for all-in rates in the
low 6 percent range. “It makes some deals
infeasible,” Carbone says.
Carbone believes the government’s
bailout of Fannie and Freddie will refocus
the GSEs on their core mission of providing
liquidity for affordable housing. “When the
smoke clears, which might take a few
months, I think Fannie and Freddie will be
required to provide even more affordable
housing credit enhancement than in the
past,” he says.
Pricing on debt for 9 percent deals
from the GSEs has also increased.
Unfunded forward commitments for 9
percent deals are pricing with spreads at
about 400 basis points, while a funded
forward commitment is coming in around
340 basis points, for an all-in rate of
between 7.7 percent and 7.1 percent,
respectively, as of late September.
Prices for short- and long-term debt
had been rising at the GSEs throughout
the year. Freddie Mac, along with Fannie
Mae, had provided sub-6 percent fixedrate
debt for 9 percent LIHTC deals
through the first half of the year, but as of
early September, that figure was closer to
6.5 percent. Many expect these rates, as
well as those of forward commitments, to
hover within 25 basis points of their
present levels next year.
Construction financing was the hardest
debt to procure in 2008, and the spate of recent bank failures will make it much more
difficult to find construction debt. The
impact of the government’s rescue plan
remains to be seen, though it may provide
relief by taking troubled assets from banks,
freeing up their balance sheets. Still, the
outlook for commercial banks is grim, as
many expect smaller banks to suffer the fate
of Wachovia and Washington Mutual.
“We expect the banks to contract
even further this year and the first part of
next year,” says David Cardwell, vice president
of capital markets for the National
Multi Housing Council. “There’s a lot of
expectation that there’s going to be some
bank failures during the fourth quarter
and into 2009, especially the smaller and
regional players.”
Established developers with bank relationships
will still have access to capital, but many
newcomers will be turned away in 2009.
Insurance companies are expected to
continue cherry-picking deals next year as
they have throughout much of 2008.
Insurance companies may be a driving
force early in the year, as they were in
2008, before filling up their coffers and
growing more selective. Spreads should be
competitive in the early part of 2009 from
insurance companies, though the firms
will, as always, favor low leverage deals.
The turmoil may force tax credit developers
to turn again to the Federal Housing
Administration (FHA), which enacted
some significant changes this year to make
its multifamily programs work better with
tax credits. The FHA’s flagship Sec.
221(d)(4) program offers 90 percent loanto-
cost, a 1.11x debt-service coverage ratio,
40-year amortization, and is non-recourse.
The rate race
For a time in late September, the
short-term bond market had all but
collapsed. Buyers were nonexistent as
interest rates for seven-day variable-rate
bonds spiraled from 1.8 percent in mid-
September to 7.96 percent two weeks
later. The bond market held its breath,
waiting for the federal government’s
bailout package to pass.
LIBOR, a benchmark used to set
many short-term loans like construction
financing, also spiraled out of control
after the bailout bill’s initial defeat, rising
431 basis points Sept. 30 to an all-time
high of 6.8 percent. The 10-year Treasury
has stayed relatively stable heading into
the fourth quarter, at about 3.8 percent.
But many expect the benchmark rate to
rise in the winter as a result of the government’s
financial services rescue plan,
before stabilizing in the first half of 2009.
As of press time, the capital markets
outlook for 2009 hinged on several
unknowns. What effect will the government’s
bailout bill have? Was the collapse
of Lehman, Wachovia, Washington
Mutual, and Merrill Lynch a signal of the
market’s bottom, or the beginning of further
pain? Will Fannie Mae and Freddie
Mac continue to provide the same level of
financing in 2009 that they did in 2008?
“We’re in brand new territory,” says
Don King, a director at CWCapital who
specializes in placing agency debt. “And
nobody knows where this is going.”
— with additional reporting by
Liz Enochs
|