The Auditing Standards Board (the “ASB”) of the American Institute of Certified Public Accountants recently released new standards as part of the “Attestation Clarity Project” with the goal of redrafting all its standards “in clarity format” (what format were they in before? And, while we’re at it, can we try to use English here? Clarity format?). This Project will require compliance by bankers and issuers with very specific disclosure obligations (reps?) before the auditors will issue an Agreed Upon Procedures Letter (AUPs) for securitizations. Some of this formalized existing practice, but the changes go further and are far more prescriptive. A “new letter of representation” from the party who hires the auditors (the “Engaging Party”) is required as well as similar letters from the parties providing the data that the auditors are reviewing (each, a “Responsible Party”). These new rules will become effective on May 1, 2017. Any AUP that is issued after May 1 will be subject to the new rules.
Continue Reading New Accounting Rules Regarding AUPs Taking Effect May 1, 2017: More Fun for a Battered Industry
April 2017
The Dilemma of the Really Annoyed Borrower
Since my earliest days in the CRE capital markets biz, there has always been a drumbeat of grumbling from the borrower community about the annoying complexity, expense and delay of having one’s loan serviced in a capital markets transaction. It’s been going on forever. Like noise, like listening to Brits complaining about their weather; it’s ubiquitous, apparently personally gratifying, but largely inconsequential for outcomes. The business goes on. Data indicates that as many as 60% of all new CMBS loans come from refinancing non-CMBS loans, so it’s not like a structured finance ghetto here. The sell side takes comfort from the old saw that no sensible borrower would go to the CMBS window except as a last resort… like, three basis points or five bucks in extra proceeds. Ok, that’s a tad too harsh and dismissive. But going to the capital markets window for lower rates, more proceeds or less recourse is entirely rational. On the other hand, the narrative about the pain through servicing in the capital markets is also real.
Continue Reading The Dilemma of the Really Annoyed Borrower