Industry expects TALF extension to commercial market within weeks
April 15, 2009 05:00PM By Adam Pincus
Jeffrey DeBoer
The head of a national real estate trade association told
executives attending a Real Estate Board of New York-sponsored panel
discussion this morning that the federal government would announce
within weeks that the Term Asset-Backed Securities Loan Facility (TALF)
program would be extended to commercial real estate.
Jeffrey
DeBoer, president and CEO of the Real Estate Roundtable, said
Washington realized a credit crisis was looming in the commercial
credit market and needed to provide liquidity so lenders could avert
the crash.
Investors such as pension funds and private equity
firms could get financing from TALF to buy newly issued bonds with the
most secure AAA rating, which would help determine pricing in the
market. The bonds would help provide so-called price discovery because
the other elements of financing can be priced with the AAA bonds as a
point of reference.
"We do expect a formal announcement from
the government in the next few weeks," DeBoer said. Realizing that
there were reporters were in the room, he quickly changed his tune,
saying the announcement would hopefully come in the near future.
DeBoer
said rolling loans totaling about $2 trillion were coming due by 2012,
banks are barely lending and the stalled securitization market is
effectively shut down. To avoid a disaster, he said a federal credit
agency is called for.
The banks cannot lend at that level
again and "we don't expect the CMBS market to come back in its old ways
any time soon. So we said we need a credit facility; in other words --
in effect -- a gigantic credit card that would help finance new loans,
new originations," he said.
He spoke at the REBNY offices in Midtown on a panel discussing the three federal programs aimed at restarting lending: TALF, Troubled Asset Relief Program (TARP) and Public-Private Investment Program (PPIP).
Sheridan
"Schecky" Schechner, managing director at Barclays Capital, said at the
same meeting that federal regulators may strong-arm smaller banks to
participate in the legacy loan program, with threats of closing them
down if they do not.
"You know, Mr. Bank, we think it is a
good idea for you to lower your asset pool or we are going to shut you
down, so go sell. So we are not telling you what to do. But the
alternative is... death," he said.
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Comments
Anonymous
will the names of the recipients of this TALF money be available as public record? i want to know who in NYC receives this money!
Comment #1 Posted By: Anonymous 04/15/09
Anonymous
i want to know if my crooked landlord is getting both my rent money and money i pay in taxes.
Comment #2 Posted By: Anonymous 04/16/09