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Conduit Lending Overview

Conduit loans are available for many different types of income producing commercial real estate properties, including, multifamily properties, self storage facilities, hotel, office buildings, industrial buildings, warehouse and retail properties.

 

Conduit loans are somewhat unfamiliar to many investors, having been around since the late 1990s. Additionally, many small banks don't offer conduit loans so investors have very little exposure to conduit lending and the many advantages these CMBS loans provide.

 

Borrowers seeking higher leverage and lower fixed-rates tend to prefer a conduit loan compared with traditional bank commercial mortgage loans. Most conduit loans are non-recourse, no personal guarantees, with exceptions for standard carveouts, commonly referred to as bad boy behaviors.

 

Within the capital marketplace there are a number of conduit lenders, including, life insurance companies, pension companies, financial services firms and some of the nation's largest banks and investment banks. Conduit lenders generally hold the conduit loan only until it can be securitized, typically less than two years.

 

In a securitization, there is sale of interests in the conduit loan and an assignment of the loan within a few weeks or months after the closing to an institutional trustee.

 

The investors who buy interests in the conduit loan are issued "pass-through" certificates. Instead of making payments to the institutional lender, the borrower makes payments to a commercial mortgage servicer, who sees that the payments are applied as provided in the conduit mortgage documents, including to fund any required reserves.

 

Payments of principal and interest are allocated according to the relative interests of the certificate holders.

 

Conduit loans offer attractive interest rates, but there are other factors to consider when deciding between a CMBS or traditional commercial real estate loan product, such as, prepayment penalties, commitment fees, subordinate financing, and other program options.

 

One of the requirements of obtaining a conduit loan is the borrowing entity must be a single purpose, bankruptcy-remote entity.

 

This may require either the creation of a new single-purpose entity or the amendment of the borrowing entity's certificate of incorporation, articles of organization or certificate of limited partnership, as well as of the by-laws, to give the lender and, ultimately, the rating agencies a sufficient comfort level.

 

Conduit loan documents are more standardized than with typical bank commercial financing. The borrower has less ability to negotiate changes. One issue that is important to borrowers is the ability to obtain insurance proceeds to rebuild after a casualty.

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This article is protected under the copyright laws of the United States (title 17 U.S. Code). Any unauthorized use is strictly prohibited. If you would like to reprint this article for use on a commercial website, please contact Capital Assets,Inc for more information. Capital Assets,Inc is an commercial real estate finance company and financial intermediary providing borrowers with a simplified way to obtain commercial financing and apartment financing through standardization and a product driven online platform.

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