Approach to Real Estate Finance UniBG, 19 December 2016 t t - - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Approach to Real Estate Finance UniBG, 19 December 2016 t t - - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Approach to Real Estate Finance UniBG, 19 December 2016 t t Contents Introduction: ING Real Estate presence in Italy Main Characteristics of a Commercial Real Estate Lender Object Clients Typical Loan Structure


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Approach to Real Estate Finance

UniBG, 19 December 2016

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Contents

  • Introduction: ING Real Estate presence in Italy
  • Main Characteristics of a Commercial Real Estate

Lender

  • Object
  • Clients
  • Typical Loan Structure
  • Eight steps from Origination…to Final Repayment
  • Q&A
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ING Wholesale Banking, Real Estate Finance:

Introduction: ING Bank NV An established real estate footprint in Italy

ING Direct:

  • Strong presence in Italy with a solid base of more than one

million clients.

  • Active since 2001, with focus on retail banking
  • Main asset class represented by residential mortgages
  • Maximum initial LTV 80%, fully amortizing structures
  • Tenors up to 30 years
  • Established player active in Italy with a dedicated branch

since 2006, client base largely represented by institutional investors

  • Specialized lender with focus on Commercial Real Estate

loans

  • Coverage on office, retail and logistics property sectors
  • Target initial LTV 50-60%, bullet structures can be

considered

  • Standard tenor 5 years

ING Wholesale Banking, Lease:

  • Active in Italy since 1995, currently 5,000 real estate clients
  • Focus on real estate financial leases, mainly granted to SMEs

to finance owned-occupied premises

  • High initial LTVs mitigated by amortization over the life of

the loan

  • Standard tenor 10-18 years

RESIDENTIAL MORTGAGES RETAIL CLIENT BASE COMMERCIAL RE LOANS INSTITUTIONAL INVESTORS FINANCIAL LEASES END-USERS, SMEs

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Main Characteristics of a Commercial Real Estate Lender

  • Real Estate lenders are specialized property financiers. Core business is “lending to properties” often on a non-recourse basis rather

than “lending to companies”.

  • Preferred collaterals are top quality income producing properties, assets generating a yield to the investors through rental income.

As for financial instruments, yields vary depending on the specific asset class and risk profile of the property.

  • Main covered property sectors are income producing office, retail and logistics assets. Reduced appetite to pure industrial

properties, specific factories, non-income generating residential assets, as well as little exposure on construction/development projects.

  • Market Value and creditworthiness of the real estate asset to be financed – apart from location and intrinsic quality of the building -

is strictly correlated to the capability of the property to attract tenants willing to pay a level of rent sufficient to service the debt and remunerate the owner.

  • Focus on quality of the tenants and on terms and conditions of rental agreements.

Object:

Retail sector: designer outlet Office sector: multi-tenant scheme Logistics sector: modern warehouse

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Clients/Sponsors:

  • Institutional investors represent the main client base for Commercial Real Estate financiers:
  • Real Estate investment and asset managers, managing funds on behalf of institutional investors. Funds are generally

defined “core”, “core plus” or “speculative”, depending on the targeted risks/reward profile of the underlying properties/portfolios. Normally international funds hold assets via SPVs (Special Purpose Vehicles in the form of limited liability companies holding the property) while German and Italian law funds generally hold assets directly on the fund’s books.

  • Real Estate property companies, investing in commercial RE either directly or via SPVs with the aim of holding as a long term

investment or as short term trading investment.

  • Real Estate developers, who typically invest in plot of lands to develop new properties with the aim of selling them upon

completion or holding as a long term investment. They normally invest via SPVs.

  • Little exposure on end-users, industrial companies and corporates directly occupying their HQ (mostly corporate risk than pure RE

approach), as well as limited lending to private investors.

Main Characteristics of a Commercial Real Estate Lender

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  • Real Estate financiers primarily lend on a secured basis.
  • The standard security package includes mortgage on the financed property, pledge on the shares of the SPV, pledge on bank

accounts, assignment of receivables arising from lease contracts, insurance policies, hedging contracts.

  • Preference is lending to SPVs as they are “closed borrowers” with substantially one asset (the property or portfolio of properties

financed by the lender) and only one financial indebtedness (the loan issued). They cannot acquire further assets nor take extra indebtedness, unless approved by the lender..

  • Strong preference for low initial Loan-to-Value (LTV) financings (50-60%) with ample Interest Service Cover Ratio (ICR) above 2.0x.
  • Loan maturity is usually in a range between 3 and 6 years.
  • In view of the above mentioned conservative initial LTV and short tenors, RE lenders are comfortable to structure bullet loans or

loans with small amortizations, with substantial bullet repayment at maturity (90%-95% if the initial financed amount).

  • Interest rate risk is usually fully hedged through hedging instruments such as interest rate swaps (IRS), caps or collars.
  • Monitoring of the performance during the life of the loan mainly performed through periodic test of covenants (at least on annual

basis):

  • LTV (Maximum Loan To Value) = Outstanding Loan Amount / Market Value of the financed property
  • ICR (Minimum Interest Cover Ratio) = Net Operative Income / Interest Service
  • DSCR (Minimum Debt Service Cover Ratio) = Net Operative Income / Debt Service (Interest Service + Amortizations)
  • Information covenants = delivery of periodic financial statements, valuation report of the financed property, rent-roll,

asset/property management report, etc.

  • Commercial Real Estate Lenders rely on a substantial due diligence (legal, administrative, tax, accounting, valuation, technical

and environmental) carried out by reputable external advisors.

Typical loan structure:

Main Characteristics of a Commercial Real Estate Lender

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Eight steps from Origination…to Final Repayment

1. Origination

  • Finance request received by front office staff by client/sponsor after direct meeting and discussions. Scope can be

financing of an initial acquisition or refinancing of an existing financial indebtedness close to maturity.

  • Finance request shall contain at least indication of requested amount, characteristics of the property or portfolio object
  • f requested facility, desired tenor, information on the borrower and track record of the sponsor.
  • Subsequent meetings between lender’s deal principal with client representatives aimed at discussing the structure and

characteristics of the potential transaction.

  • Preliminary analysis on the borrower and sponsor is performed by dedicated staff within the bank, including site visit of

the asset and internal/external valuation.

  • If both client (KYC/CDD process) and structure fit with bank lending policies, next steps can be processed.

2. Indicative Term Sheet

  • Proposal is submitted to the appropriate commercial committees (green light committees) and discussed among front
  • ffice representatives.
  • In case of positive outcome and satisfactory risk/return profile of the potential transaction, an Indicative TS is issued to

the client/sponsor. The document contains indicative terms and conditions (amount, margin, fees, tenor, security package, covenant structure) on the basis of which the lender can seek final approval in front of bank credit committees.

  • Indicative TS is reviewed by the client and in case of acceptance the lender can process the formal credit request to the

committee (phase 3).

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3. Credit Application

  • A credit package is prepared by dedicated staff (usually front office with combination of specialized real estate and

financial skills), containing at least:

  • Executive Summary with main conditions presented in the Indicative Term Sheet
  • Detailed analysis of the financials of the borrower/sponsor
  • Real Estate analysis of the property object of financing with site vist report/inspection sheet
  • Calculation of Rating of the borrower
  • Sanity Check of the transaction (ratio between expected income and RWA risk weighted assets of the financing)
  • The credit package is extensively analyzed and discussed with credit risk management department, who is in

charge of assessing risk metrics behind the transaction and validating the terms and conditions presented in the application.

  • As advice is circulated by credit risk management department to final decision makers/mandates (credit committee

composed by management of the bank), for the final decision.

4. Binding Term Sheet

  • In case of approval, a Binding Term Sheet is issued to the client, reporting binding terms and conditions of the financing

that will be reflected in the loan agreement (amount, margin, fees, tenor, security package, covenant structure, undertakings, set of reps&warranties conditions precedent to be satisfied before closing/disbursement).

  • Binding Term Sheet have a validity usually not exceeding one month and shall be signed-off by the client in case of full

acceptance.

Eight steps from Origination…to Final Repayment

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5. Execution Phase

  • Draft of full set of legal documentation (loan agreement and security package) is prepared by lender’s external legal

counsel and reviewed by lender’s deal principals.

  • Negotiation of the legal documentation between lender and client with the assistance of respective legal counsels.
  • Active involvement of external advisors, due diligence reports delivered to the lender as main condition precedent for
  • signing. Set of due diligence to cover:
  • Valuation of the property/collateral
  • Legal and administrative issues
  • Tax/Fiscal and accounting issues
  • Technical and environmental areas.
  • Sign off of the loan agreement and security package in front of a Notary.

6. Disbursement

  • All conditions precedent are checked and verified by lender and legal counsel, including request of drawdown

submitted by the client at least 2 days before disbursement date.

  • Facility is funded by lender treasury department and finally disbursed by accounting team directly to the client bank

account.

  • Disbursement is usually net of arrangement fee paid upfront to the lender and net of substitute tax.

Eight steps from Origination…to Final Repayment

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7. Monitoring

  • After disbursement, the outstanding loan starts to produce interest and shall be periodically monitored by the lender.
  • Monitoring of the performance of the loan is carried out by lender deal principal together with portfolio management

department.

  • Main monitoring tools are periodic checks of financial covenants (LTV, ICR. DSCR), as well as well as regular delivery of

information covenants (financial statements, asset/property management reports, information on the cash flow of the property, tenancy schedule with detail of the active tenants).

  • Periodic meetings with clients are held to discuss performance of the borrower as well as of the financed property.
  • Waivers and modifications can be negotiated and implemented – if necessary – during the life of the loan, subject to

approval of relevant lender credit committees.

8. Last but not least….Final Repayment

  • Remaining amount of the outstanding facility is repaid at expiry date.
  • Refinancing/extension can be implemented upon request of the client/sponsor, subject to lender approval and to new

market conditions.

  • All securities are released by the lender upon full repayment of the facility amount.

Eight steps from Origination…to Final Repayment

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Q&A Session Thank you for your attention!