“Congressman Garret”, “Covered Bonds”, FDIC, House, Ratings, Senate, “Senate Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs Committee”, SIFMA “Sovereign Risk”
Continue Reading Monday Afternoon at the SIFMA Spotlight Series on US Covered Bonds — Developing a US Covered Bond Market
Crunched Credit
Distressed Debt: Boston Properties Next Up At Bay Colony
Two weeks ago, As the World Turns – a CBS soap opera documenting the lives of the inhabitants of the fictional town of Oakdale, Illinois – ended a 54 year run on daytime television. A shorter-tenured, but nonetheless compelling, local epic aired this week as Boston Properties announced that it had emerged from a bidding war to secure the Bay Colony Corporate Center – perhaps the premier office campus in New England – for a price of approximately $185 million (inclusive of assumed debt). As a real estate finance attorney in Boston, it’s a property I have fielded a lot of calls about. And, although missing the ubiquitous case of amnesia, it’s a story that would have made the good people of Oakdale proud.
The story of Bay Colony, corporate center, begins with its construction (on the former site of a pig farm along the Cambridge reservoir) at the height of the tech bubble. Located along Boston’s Route 128 tech corridor, the site comprises almost a million square feet of space on 58 acres, with 3,000 parking spaces to accommodate a rent roll that has listed a who’s who of Hub-area tech, venture capital and telecomm tenants. In fact, the sheer number of resident venture firms over the years – Advanced Technology Ventures, Charles River Ventures, Cedar Fund, Ironside Ventures, JAFCO Ventures, Longworth Venture Partners, Matrix Partners, Northbridge Venture Partners and Polaris Ventures Partners, to name a few – contributed to the property’s legendary status among entrepreneurs looking for investment dollars. A single workday onsite could yield three pitches.Continue Reading Distressed Debt: Boston Properties Next Up At Bay Colony
ASF Sunset Seminar: What to Expect from the Dodd-Frank Rulemakings
The general theme of the American Securitization Forum Sunset Seminar held on Wednesday at Dechert’s NY office was the unintended consequences of the Dodd-Frank Act. Our largest conference room was packed with over a hundred securitization industry players all searching for the best predictions on the shape of the massive amount of regulations coming our way over the next few months. First on the agenda was a discussion of the repeal of Rule 436(g) and the resulting Securities Act liability for rating agencies. Dodd-Frank’s intent was to improve the value of ratings by making rating agencies more accountable to investors. Unfortunately, the rating agencies would not consent to their ratings being disclosed and the entire public securitization market was stopped cold. Not helpful for a market struggling to return to "normal.” We have the temporary fix issued July 22 of this year in the form of an SEC No-action letter green lighting the omission of ratings in registration statements, but what happens next? Most likely– the SEC will amend Reg AB Items 1103 and 1120 to not require ratings in registration statements. However, the SEC is considering requiring ratings in non-ABS registration statements, so how likely is this most likely solution really? Other ideas—in no particular order of likelihood: Congress will reinstate 436(g). Doubtful. The SEC will extend the No-action letter indefinitely. Perhaps. Ratings agencies assume the liability or are indemnified by issuers. Maybe. One panelist predicted that in the short run, we’ll have uncertainty; and in the long run, more uncertainty. Consensus is that there’s a long road ahead and harmonization amongst the regulators and applicable agencies is key. Also keep in mind as this unfolds that rating agency accountability is also to be achieved under Dodd-Frank by new private rights of action against ratings agencies (and other parties) leading perhaps to nationally certified class actions. As a result, the rating agencies will be seeking comfort and indemnity from issuers on the accuracy of data given to them in the course of their diligence.
The discussion turned to conflicts of interest and the prohibition against engaging in any transaction that would result in a material conflict of interest with respect to any investor for one year following closing (other than hedging activity or market-making/sales to provide liquidity for the ABS). An example of this conflict would be underwriting ABS then shorting the synthetic ABS that references the first ABS. One issue raised with respect to compliance is the problem of information barriers between departments at investment banking institutions.
Continue Reading ASF Sunset Seminar: What to Expect from the Dodd-Frank Rulemakings
REMIC Rules Provide “Safer” Harbor for Releases
As a follow up to my earlier post, we just issued this article (pdf) about the IRS’ recent Revenue Procedure (pdf) regarding the REMIC rules. The problems inherent in last September’s REMIC Regulations have been well-covered in this blog. In short, the IRS surprised the industry by requiring a mortgage loan to pass an 80% value-to-loan test as a condition to any lien release (the same test required upon initial contribution to the REMIC). While the existing REMIC Rules could have been read to only expressly permit releases of property in connection with a qualifying defeasance, the pervasive view among issuers and their counsel for years was that certain releases (outparcels, condemnation, and partial releases upon pay-down, to name a few) were permissible so long as the release was at the option of the borrower and was subject only to certain objective criteria.Continue Reading REMIC Rules Provide “Safer” Harbor for Releases
Covered Bonds Anyone?
Covered bond legislation is once again a hot topic on Capitol Hill. Representative Scott Garrett (R-NJ) co-sponsored the latest iteration of his proposed legislation (United States Covered Bond Act of 2010 or H.R. 5823 (pdf)) along with Representatives Kanjorski (D-NJ) and Bachus (R-AL). The House Financial Services Committee recently voted in favor of reporting H.R. 5823 to the full House of Representatives for consideration, which hopefully will be taken up for a vote this fall shortly after the August recess.Continue Reading Covered Bonds Anyone?
Keeping PACE with Green Energy Movement
Like a lot of homeowners this summer, my wife and I are looking to put new windows into our home. We moved last October, leaving our downtown condo when the impending arrival of our second daughter promised to make things a little too tight. A drafty winter and a number of windows that, well, just couldn’t be opened this spring demonstrated a need – and President Obama’s Energy Tax Credit cemented the deal. As I’ve learned, like almost everything associated with a new-old house, windows ain’t cheap – and the windows that qualify for the tax credit really ain’t cheap. The increased cost takes 20 years (on average) to recoup based on the marginal energy savings (something to do with U-factors and Solar Heat Gain Coefficients according to Home Depot). But the government wouldn’t have to pay you to do it if it made good economic sense.Continue Reading Keeping PACE with Green Energy Movement
Update: Treasury Clarifies REMIC Rules on Property Releases
As I discussed in my prior blog post, and this article, last September’s REMIC regulations left servicers, lenders and borrowers in a quandary over the effect the new “principally secured by real estate test” would have on troubled multi-property loans with release features. The new rules, in some cases, could have resulted in adverse…
Industry Considers CMBS 2.0 Rep Package
Issuers, investors, rating agencies and other industry participants continue to wrestle with the fundamental changes that will come to define CMBS 2.0. Among the (many) issues raised in the "Best Practices" guidelines issued by CREFC during June’s get-together was a proposal for market-wide, programmatic change to the package of representations and warranties given by securitization issuers. Specifically, investors are calling for the formulation of a market standard list of reps and warrants, and for a standard procedure for receiving any deviations on a deal-by-deal basis. One would hope this would sate the appetite of the investing community – a community ravenous after being starved of ground lease exceptions and knowledge qualifiers during the lean years.Continue Reading Industry Considers CMBS 2.0 Rep Package
Market Desire for Revenue Could Spark Lending
It’s been very difficult to come up with a cohesive theory on what this earnings’ season has meant for the financial sector – and what investors’ reactions could mean for the credit markets. On Wednesday, Morgan Stanley reported earnings of 80 cents a share, crushing analysts estimates and sending its shares up 8% by mid-morning.
American Bankers Association: Regulatory Reform Initiative
Today the American Bankers Association will publish its Summary and Analysis of the Regulatory Reform Conference Report. The project will provide detailed summaries of each title of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act conference report, as well as analysis of which entities will be affected and how. The conference report has…