From TRD New York: Banks are aggressively lending on commercial properties
even as developers and equity investors are starting to pull back amid fears of
a downturn.
“It’s tougher right
now,” Craig Bender of ING Group’s U.S. real estate lending arm told the Wall
Street Journal. “The banks are hungry. The life insurance companies are
hungry.”
Total U.S. commercial
real estate lending volume decreased slightly to $491 billion in 2016 — down 3
percent from 2015, according to the Mortgage Bankers Association. But that’s
mostly because there are fewer acquisitions to finance as investors become more
cautious.
Banks, in contrast,
are in many cases still bullish. Wells Fargo, for example, plans to lend around
the same volume in 2017 as it did in 2016 ($30 billion). Still, its head of
commercial real estate Mark Myers said the bank is “more cautious” than a year
ago.
Lending bulls point to
the loan delinquency rate, which is at the lowest level in more than a decade.
A mere 0.59 percent of loans held by banks and thrift associations were
delinquent for more than 90 days according to the MBA, compared to 4.21 percent
in 2010. [WSJ] — Konrad Putzier
Original Content The Real Deal
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