https://wallstreetonparade.com/2024/05/delinquencies-on-office-property-loans-at-banks-are-at-8-percent-while-office-loans-the-banks-sold-to-investors-show-31-percent-in-trouble/


By Pam Martens and Russ Martens: May 13, 2024 ~

On Friday, the Federal Reserve released its semiannual Supervision and
Regulation Report on banks. Commercial real estate loans at banks –
particularly on office properties – continued to rank high on the Fed’s
list of concerns. The Fed included the chart above showing that delinquency
rates on office property loans held by the banks had skyrocketed from just
over 1 percent at the end of 2022 to over 8 percent as of December 31,
2023. (The red text and arrow have been added by Wall Street On Parade.)

Banks are major lenders to the commercial real estate (CRE) market,
providing almost $3 trillion in financing. According to a February 27
report from S&P Global, as of the end of the fourth quarter of 2023, two
megabanks dwarfed all others in their commercial real estate loan exposure.
JPMorgan Chase Bank NA, the largest bank in the U.S., held $173.31 billion
in CRE loans while Wells Fargo Bank NA held $139.65 billion. Bank of
America ranks second to JPMorgan Chase Bank NA in terms of assets, and yet
its CRE loan exposure is less than half that of JPMorgan Chase, at $82.80
billion, according to S&P Global.

Friday’s Fed report built on concerns expressed by the Fed in its April
release of its Financial Stability Report. The Fed voiced the following
concerns in the April report in regard to the commercial real estate market:

“CRE market conditions continued to deteriorate, especially for the office
sector, and prices continued to decline against a backdrop of high vacancy
rates and weakening rents…

“The CRE office sector has faced strains resulting from an ongoing
post-pandemic adjustment, and these strains could contribute to additional
weakness in prices and rents going forward. Vacancy rates for offices
located in central business districts and coastal cities increased further,
and rents continued to decline since the October report.”

The Fed also noted that in its March 2024 Senior Credit Officer Opinion
Survey, it had added a “special question” related to Commercial
Mortgage-Backed Securities (CMBS) that were collateralized with office
properties. It said that the answers from senior credit officers pointed to
“a tightening of financing terms and weakening of liquidity in the office
CMBS market, as collateral quality has weakened and demand for funding has
increased.”

Just how much pain is being felt in the CMBS market related to office
properties was further quantified on May 3 when Scott Carpenter reported
the following at Bloomberg Law:

“About $52 billion, or 31%, of all office loans in commercial mortgage
bonds were in trouble in March, according to KBRA Analytics.

“That share is up from 16% a year ago, according to the firm. Some cities
have bigger headaches than others, with Chicago and Denver offices having
75% and 65% in jeopardy, respectively.”

Pause for a moment and let those surreal numbers sink in. According to the
New Capital Journal, Chicago ranks third among U.S. cities for GDP output,
after New York City and Los Angeles. But 75 percent of the office proprty
loans bundled into CMBS and sold to investors are in trouble?

The fact that the Fed is reporting that a little more than 8 percent of the
office loans still on the books of the banks are in trouble but somehow 31
percent of the office loans the banks bundled into CMBS and sold to
investors are in trouble hints at a replay of the tricked-up operations of
the megabanks heading into the 2008 financial collapse. Some banks back
then told their sales staff to make it a top priority to bundle and sell
their “shitty deals” to investors and then made billions by shorting
(betting against) the toxic waste they knew were in those deals.

On April 13, 2011, following a two-year investigation, Senators Carl Levin
and Tom Coburn, Chairman and Ranking Member of the Senate’s Permanent
Subcommittee on Investigations, released a 635-page report on the 2008
financial crisis, which detailed the fraudulent role that Wall Street
megabanks had played in crashing the U.S. economy. The report includes this
paragraph on how Goldman Sachs attempted to profit from its own “shitty
deals”:

“When Goldman Sachs realized the mortgage market was in decline, it took
actions to profit from that decline at the expense of its clients. New
documents detail how, in 2007, Goldman’s Structured Products Group twice
amassed and profited from large net short positions in mortgage related
securities. At the same time the firm was betting against the mortgage
market as a whole, Goldman assembled and aggressively marketed to its
clients poor quality CDOs [Collateralized Debt Obligations] that it
actively bet against by taking large short positions in those transactions.
New documents and information detail how Goldman recommended four CDOs,
Hudson, Anderson, Timberwolf, and Abacus, to its clients without fully
disclosing key information about those products, Goldman’s own market
views, or its adverse economic interests. For example, in Hudson, Goldman
told investors that its interests were ‘aligned’ with theirs when, in fact,
Goldman held 100% of the short side of the CDO and had adverse interests to
the investors, and described Hudson’s assets were ‘sourced from the
Street,’ when in fact, Goldman had selected and priced the assets without
any third party involvement. New documents also reveal that, at one point
in May 2007, Goldman Sachs unsuccessfully tried to execute a ‘short
squeeze’ in the mortgage market so that Goldman could scoop up short
positions at artificially depressed prices and profit as the mortgage
market declined.”

See the video clip below from a related hearing, featuring the late Senator
Carl Levin questioning a Goldman Sachs executive, Daniel Sparks, on how it
pushed its “shitty deal” onto unsuspecting investors.



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Skyrocketed at Largest U.S. Banks, Not the Smaller Regionals

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