CMBS Delinquencies Increase by 10% in January

CMBS Delinquencies Increase by 10% in January

In January, the delinquency rate for CMBS in the U.S. saw a significant increase of almost 10%, reaching 4.61%, according to a report by Kroll Bond Rating Agency (KBRA). The overall distress rate, which measures distressed loans across KBRA’s $317.3 billion rated CMBS universe, also rose more than 11% to reach 7.39%.

During this reporting period, newly added distressed loans totaled $3.4 billion and over half of these (53.7%) were due to imminent or actual maturity default situations.

The office sector had the largest portion (74/7%) of newly distressed loans at $2/5 billion with its distress rate increasing by 233 basis points from December’s level of8/55%. This was largely driven by two properties:280 Park Ave in Manhattan and One Market Plaza in San Francisco.

Mixed-use properties accounted for11/3% ($3852 million)of new distress while retail made up another11 /1 % ($3764 million). In contrast,multifamily experienced a decline month-over-month with its distress rate decreasingby59 bps.

This decrease was mainly due tothe liquidationofthe Veritas multifamily portfolio securing GSMS2021-RENT.This resultedin areported43% loss on thesecuritized balance.However,the reported loss includesa substantial reserve holdback that could potentially reverse much of it if released,says KBRA.

Pictured:280 Park Ave.

CMBS Delinquencies See Significant Increase in January

About the Publisher:
Steve Griffin is based in sunny Palm Harbor, Florida. He’s an accountant by profession and the owner of GRIFFIN Tax and REVVED Up Accounting. In addition, Steve founded Madison Avenue Technology. With a strong passion for commercial real estate, he’s also dedicated to keeping you up to date with the latest industry news.

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