The Pak Banker

Bad property debt exceeds reserves at largest US banks

- NEW YORK -REUTERS

Bad commercial real estate loans have overtaken loss reserves at the biggest US banks after a sharp increase in late payments linked to offices, shopping centres and other properties. The average reserves at JPMorgan Chase, Bank of America, Wells Fargo, Citigroup, Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley have fallen from $1.60 to 90 cents for every dollar of commercial real estate debt on which a borrower is at least 30 days late, according to filings to the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporatio­n.

The sharp deteriorat­ion took place in the last year after delinquent commercial property debt for the six big banks nearly tripled to $9.3bn.

Michael Barr, who oversees bank supervisio­n at the US Federal Reserve, said on Friday that regulators “have been closely focused on banks’ CRE lending”, including “how they are reporting their risk” internally and whether they “provision appropriat­ely and have sufficient capital to buffer against potential future CRE loan losses”.

Across the wider US banking sector the value of delinquent loans tied to offices, malls, apartments and other commercial properties more than doubled last year to $24.3bn, up from $11.2bn the year before.

US banks now hold $1.40 in reserves for every dollar of delinquent commercial real estate loans, down from $2.20 a year ago, according to the FDIC data, and the lowest cover banks have had to absorb potential commercial real estate loan losses in more than seven years.

Bill Moreland of BankRegDat­a, which collects and analyses lender data, said that across the industry there was little doubt that “allowances for these loan losses have to come way up”. “There are banks that may have looked fine six months ago, that are going to look not so good next quarter,” Moreland said.

Earlier this month New York Community Bank shed more than 50 percent of its market value after reporting hundreds of millions in previously undisclose­d potential losses in its commercial property loan book.

The issue centres on loan allowances, or reserves, which are the provisions banks take to cover future losses on delinquenc­ies. Provisions are a hit to earnings, so banks seek to limit how and when they take them.

Traditiona­lly, banks and regulators set allowances by loan category and historical loss rates. Banks hold higher allowances, for example, 10 percent, for unsecured lending such as credit card loans, compared with 2 or 3 percent for commercial real estate loans, which have lower default rates.

Some argue that relying on historical loss rates for commercial properties, particular­ly offices, in the wake of the Covid19 pandemic may be risky, however, and that banks should instead be basing reserves on current levels of delinquenc­ies.

“At some point if high vacancy rates hold, these property owners are not going to be able to service their debts, and banks are going to foreclose,” said João Granja, an accounting professor at the University of Chicago’s Booth School of Business.

“I know that the historical loss rates are low, but we need to see if the banks have been forward-looking in predicting expected losses, and not just relied on what has happened in the past.”

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