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CRE Finance World Summer 2015

18

Clay Sublett.

On the margin, we all compete with each other, but

there is certainly more competition within each lender type. It’s

always surprising when you think you complement a lender and

then all of a sudden they start competing with you. An example

would be multifamily deals that we lost to the agencies. The agencies

have become very competitive on value-add multifamily.

Spencer Kagan.

Our lending program has a pretty wide spectrum.

We compete with conduit lenders in the $10 million space and

compete with life companies on very large transactions. So there’s

no rule of thumb; but generally we tend to be fairly competitive

in CMBS up to $100 million in size and then between $100 and

$300 million life companies become competitive. However, once

a deal gets to be of a certain size, like Houston Galleria, CMBS

lenders tend to come back in competitively on these high-quality

assets. On the really large loans, it may be a club deal with an

insurance company versus a CMBS execution. Borrowers for

those very large deals tend to favor the CMBS execution.

Brian Furlong.

I think life companies can do club deals on a single

asset up to about $1 to $1.4 billion. There was kind of a ‘tooth-

and-nail’ competition on 200 Park Avenue (the MetLife building).

It went to CMBS ultimately, but the life company club bid it very

aggressively and that was about a $1.4 billion transaction. That’s

sort of the upper end of where the clubs cut off on the life-company

side. Larger balances are possible for portfolios.

Stephanie Petosa. Tell our readers a little bit about your borrowers.

Describe your typical borrower profile.

Clay Sublett.

In the banking environment, we like deposits and we

like relationships. We do very little broker and intermediary business.

That is not to say we don’t do any, but it’s very rare. We’re not

chasing transactions; our first discussion is about the borrower and

does the borrower fit our target? Our typical borrower is a long-term

holder; this doesn’t mean they hold everything, but that they have a

philosophy of holding and thus are not just merchant builders. We view

ourselves — especially on the balance-sheet side — as short-term

lenders. We don’t want to be a permanent lender. We would rather

complement a CMBS, agency, or life-company execution. We want

borrowers who understand we are going to provide them balance

sheet as a means to secure a permanent execution. It is important we

understand their business platform; are they ground-up construction,

acquisition rehab, and/or opportunistic buyers.

Larry Brown.

When so many lenders are seeing these packages,

the resulting deals can be pretty negative for bond investors. One

of the things I enjoy about having a smaller-borrower profile is that

these borrowers tend not to be as demanding and a lender can

therefore structure a sounder deal. As a lender, the old adage ‘Be

careful what you wish for’ often applies when dealing with some of

the larger institutional borrowers.

Spencer Kagan.

I have a different perspective than Larry on that

point. We often see these large transactions from brokers. Yet,

when we win these deals it’s often because we have some other

established relationship with the borrower beyond the brokerage

business. These borrowers may be a real estate investment banking

client, we may be providing them with some advisory service…so

we’re more than just a commodity to them. And, although those

deals tend to price tighter than conduit loans, they allow us to put

out substantial dollars and create loans with added structure. In the

conduit space, we oftentimes deal with repeat borrowers, although

we may see those coming through brokers. The one big difference

between what we’re seeing today versus the previous cycle is more

brokered business, but ultimately existing borrower relationships

can carry the day.

Lisa Pendergast. What percent of your origination volume comes

from pre-existing relationships with borrowers?

Clay Sublett.

From a ‘dollars-out-the-door’ perspective, it tends to

be the majority of what we do.

Larry Brown.

For Starwood, in the past four years we’ve done

over 400 loans for $5+ billion. The lion’s share is with repeat

clients from both the brokerage community as well as the direct-

borrower community.

Brian Furlong.

What we’re looking for in a borrower depends on

the total loan that’s involved, the all-in leverage, the loan term, etc.

If it’s a long-term loan, we might be more sensitive about certain

things, such as whether it is an active loan or passive loan in

terms of things that need to be done. We’re very sensitive about

construction lending given the heavy losses incurred cycle after

cycle compared to other types of lending. We try to lean in to the

very best sponsors. Same with bridge lending. The one thing that’s

different for us compared to commercial banks is that we have less

focus on relationship considerations external to the real estate

A Lender Roundtable: Real Talk from Real Lenders on Today’s Competitive Commercial and Multifamily Lending Environments

“We’re winning our share of the loans

we want to win but I think that any

good lenders lose the majority of the

loans they pursue.”

Larry Brown