Article on Washington Post

| Posted by david on October 1, 2010 |

This article published today by Steven Pearlstein seems to support our stance on this so so-called “banking crisis.” Read Steven’s article and then read our blog below!

http://wapo.st/avvdpU

How to fix the so called ‘Banking Crisis’ in the U.S.

| Posted by stuart on June 28, 2010 |

First of all, we do NOT have a banking crisis in the U.S., we have a regulatory crisis. This will take some explanation. In typical government fashion of getting involved after it’s too late and screwing up a problem worse than if it had just been left alone, the commercial (and arguably residential) distressed loans crisis in this country has been made substantially worse by our government and the FDIC.

There are some undeniable facts in this current distressed banking situation.

  • Commercial real estate values have fallen.
  • Many of the loans backing this real estate are ‘underwater’.
  • The FDIC has stepped its enforcement of banks and their lending practices.

While the fallen commercial real estate values and underwater loans cannot be changed at this time, the FDIC practices can and should be so this country does not wind up in a situation like Japan.

The FDIC has already created zombie banks

We already have zombie banks that have been created. Banks that have so many underwater loans that they cannot sell because doing so would cause them to recognize an immediate capital loss on their balance sheets. Instead the banks continue operating with minor write downs in value, as much as they can take against earnings per quarter. In the meantime, the FDIC has seriously stepped up its auditing and enforcement of banking loan underwriting and imposed loan classification limits based on bank capital, as well as increasing the capital requirements for the banks. All of this has been done ‘after the fact’ of course.

If these actions were taken pre-crisis, before the real estate crash and before complete deregulation which allowed banks to engage in derivative trading practices that their executive officers had no real understanding of, we wouldn’t be in nearly as bad of a situation as we are now. But, let’s not go back in time and do ‘what if’ scenarios. We are in the present and we need a current solution.

Why banks can’t make loans

Here’s a very simplified explanation. A bank can only lend money up to a certain multiple of it capital on hand. For example, let’s say a bank had a 5% capital requirement (we’ll ignore loan classification limits for now) and had a capital base of equity of $100 million dollars. To find out how much money a bank can lend, you simply take $100 million divided by .05%. That gives the bank loan making capacity of $2 billion dollars. Simple, right?

If we go back a few years, the FDIC had capital requirements in place for most mid size banks (less than $5 billion in loans) of around 3-4%. As the commercial real estate values fell, the crisis began, the public howled, and the politicians got on their soapboxes and pontificated their greatness, the FDIC started getting tougher on banks. The FDIC, at the politicians behest, did this at the worst possible time.

Thank you FDIC (and the politicians)!

As a result of the fallen commercial real estate market, the FDIC began (among other actions) to increase the banks capital requirements. Many banks saw their requirements arbitrarily increased from 5% to 12% for example. This has the effect of restricting a bank from making loans. In our example above, the same bank that had $100 million in capital, now at a 12% requirement can only make $833 million in loans, a $1.167 billion dollar difference!

But what if the banks already has that $1.167 billion dollars lent out? Well, the FDIC allows them to hold on the them (with a lot of restrictions of course) if they are performing. But what if these loans go into default? What if the loans don’t meet the FDIC restrictions? Then the bank has to sell them, increase capital, or get taken over by the FDIC and have the assets sold by one of five approved loan sale advisors (don’t get me started on this subject!). Unfortunately, since the bank is already way over the amount of money they have based on a new arbitrary ‘safety limit’, they can’t make any new loans…even to the most qualified borrowers!

No loans, no business, no jobs

So, if you and some recently laid off friends want to borrow some money to start a new business, you can’t! If you’re an existing business with great credit, great prospects, great employees, etc. and you want to expand and hire people, but need to borrow money to buy some commercial space or equipment, you can’t! Or let’s say your a well running existing business, never missed a loan payment, but your balloon credit line is up for renewal, the bank cannot renew the loan!

That’s OK though, just because your business goes out of business, and you lay off your employees, and they lose their homes…at least the politicians and FDIC employees have jobs and are busy.

Why the FDIC is doing the exact wrong thing right now

With The FDIC increasing capital requirements, getting tougher on loan underwriting, imposing strict loan classification limits (real estate, non owner occupied investment property, etc), it should be viewed the same as the government increasing taxes, the FED increasing interest rates, tightening the money supply, and cutting government spending during a recession! It’s unthinkable that the government would take all those actions, since everyone knows those are the precisely wrong actions to take during an economic contraction, and yet that is EXACTLY what the FDIC is doing to banks, and therefore all of us!

The FDIC needs to let the private sector solve this problem, with some caveats and intelligent oversight and regulation. There are already many hedge type funds, and pools of money looking to buy distressed bank loan assets, but the banks cannot sell at a price the investors are willing to purchase for. The reasons are mentioned above, the banks cannot take any additional capital hit. And, with all due respect to bankers, they are NOT real estate investors, developers, or shrewd, market savvy, value adding business people. They are bankers, and should restrict their activities to making prudent loans!

Finally, how to fix the banking crisis quickly and put the economy back on track right now!

  • Temporarily relax capital requirements for banks.
  • Put in place regulations that require periodic progress towards better capital positions.
  • Allow bankers to be bankers, let the C’s of lending come back somewhat.
  • Let performing loans be renewed!

Temporarily relax capital requirements for banks

By temporarily relaxing the capital requirements for banks to near zero, banks will be able to sell their non performing or distressed loans at market clearing prices to investors. Since these loans are ‘dead’ on the books right now anyway; the loans produce no income, the underlying properties have to be foreclosed upon (which is expensive and time consuming), and then the OREO (Other Real Estate Owned) still has to be sold most likely at a loss, it is better for the banks to get what cash they can from the distressed loan sale and redeploy that money into an income producing loan to a qualified borrower. Right now the banks can borrow money from the FED to lend at nearly .25% and lend at 7% or better! That is a HUGE interest rate spread that will allow the banks to EARN their way back to a sound capital position quickly!

Put in place capital progress requirements for banks

Since having capital requirements for banks is a sound idea, relaxing the requirements to near zero can only be for a temporary time. The FDIC should work with each bank management to put in place attainable and reasonable time and capital benchmarks to get the newly cash rich banks back to very safe capital levels. For example, 1, 2, 3, and 5 year benchmarks seem reasonable.

Allow bankers to be bankers!

I got my first loan on my own when I was 13 years old for an ATV purchase from my local community bank. The lending officer knew my parents, knew my teachers and where I went to school, and knew that I worked bagging groceries and mowing lawns and doing whatever I needed to do to make money to repay the loan. In other words, it was a loan based on Character (one of the C’s that used to define bank loan making decisions). Bankers these days have been restricted and regulated down to customer service clerks where they have no decision making authority left. The bankers have no discretion. There are good, prudent bankers out there that make excellent loan decisions. We need to let them make loans, make the banks hold their loans, and stop them from trying to make profits packaging loans and trading derivatives.

Let Performing loans be renewed

If a business is making their existing loan payments, and their business future prospects look reasonably sound, then allow the banks to ‘roll’ the loan when it comes due. Many business lines of credit and/or loan have balloons or short maturity dates of a year or two. These performing loans used to be nearly automatically renewed (with new fees generated to the banks each time, of course), however, with higher capital requirements, these loans couldn’t be renewed by the banks. I can’t tell you how many personal stories we have heard from sound businesses that went bankrupt because their multimillion dollar loan was suddenly not renewed! These companies had never missed a payment, had customers, employees, and the personal guarantees from the business owners. The FDIC, at the behest of knee jerk reactions from the politicians, have destroyed more small and mid size businesses, their employees, and consequently caused more job losses and home foreclosures than most people realize.

Summary

This entire banking crisis is based on flawed, knee jerk, policies from the FDIC that run exactly counter to sound macroeconomic policy. While the above is a simplified version (in the interest of brevity) of the problem and solutions, it is nonetheless doable and would overnight fix most of the banking crisis, create jobs, stabilize if not propel the real estate market, and benefit the economy and government with increased tax revenue from the increased economic activity.

Stuart Dobson
Commercial Note Brokers

Banks need to prepare for their own oil spill

| Posted by david on June 22, 2010 |

I keep getting updates from news outlets about banks – mostly community banks – being foreclosed upon by the FDIC. More and more banks are not meeting the capitalization requirements set forth by the FDIC and are thus being force to shut their doors.  These community banks are pillars of their community and when they’re being shut down, I can imagine that a wave of uneasiness flows through the community.  Why are these banks closing up shop?  Well for one, their balance sheets are somewhat messed up – they have too many commercial notes that are not performing on their books and the FDIC isn’t too happy about that.  Banks need to step up and be pro-active about their balance sheets and clean it up as fast as possible.  They don’t want to see these balance sheets explode in their face and like a BP oil rig.  They should use a virtual special asset manager like Commercial Note Brokers to help them with their REO, residential and commercial real estate notes.

Robert Kiyosaki wrote a very interesting article today about the looming sub-prime/derivative disaster waiting to blow up in our faces.  That may sound a bit drastic but a $700 Trillion dollar disaster (according to Kiyosaki) is waiting to happen.  Through my blogs, I’ve hinted to the fact that we’re facing a financial bomb but nothing as big as a $700 Trillion.  This is somewhat disturbing when you think about it. 

Beware the Media

| Posted by david on May 9, 2010 |

The media has a lot of power over people – how they think, how they work, who they should vote for, where they should spend their money and etc.  The media also has a lot of persuasion when dealing with finance markets.  Ever hear the phrase – “bought into the hype”?  Let me explain.  A big reason as to why the big residential real estate recession hit was because people were getting loans and buying houses they had no means to buy.  The media kept pushing stories about the average Joe who was making hundreds of thousands of dollars each month on flipping houses.  Hey – if it’s so easy, anyone can do it – right?  Sure – till the market reaches the tipping point and it crashes.  These stories were run online, in the papers, and on news channels.  Everywhere you looked, you were hearing about these mega successful people in the real estate field.

Uplifting articles and news stories will continue to run.  However, you must be wary of them.  The public likes to think that the market is on a rebound.  They want to read and hear about how the market is on the rebound and that the economy is heading north – especially the commercial real estate market. Well, maybe some pockets around the country are on the rebound.   But you can’t read an article about the market in New York and expect it to have anything to do with Kansas City.  Savvy investors know this and know the market is still on the way down.  These investors are cashing in on this market – buying discounted commercial notes and REO properties all across the country.   The market may be going up in certain areas but I still don’t believe we’ve seen the worse yet of the commercial real estate market.  Banks with commercial loans will most likely be fretting the FDIC for many years to come.  If you’re trying to purchase commercial bank notes, you can and you will most likely get a good deal.

Ski The Summit 2010

| Posted by david on March 22, 2010 |

Ski The Summit 2010 Excellent Adventure

Jason Pavlovic and Stuart Dobson of Commercial Note Brokers are just back from a great business conference hosted by Summit Investment Group held at Steamboat Grand Resort. Summit Investment has now had their 7th annual Ski The Summit conference and retreat.

Colorado Prime Location

This year the group met in SKI TOWN USA, Steamboat Springs, Colorado. This year’s conference was larger and more diverse than any in the past. There were over forty firms represented from the US and Canada. Among over fifty participants were a record nine female participants representing banks, investment firms, attorneys and lenders.

Great Hosts!

The concentration of this conference was distressed commercial real estate backed notes, CRE and commercial and industrial notes, C&I. Participants represented both buyers and sellers for these asset classes. Bob Ekland, C.J. Burger, Bruce Fairbanks and Steve Emerson were among the gracious hosts of this year’s events.

Excellent food and drink!

The conference was a place for the participants to put names and faces together. Events were centered around the excellent powder skiing at Steamboat. Two great dining experiences at the Ore House and Three Peaks grill were provided plus a great Apres-Ski at Slopeside Bar and Grill at Gondola square.

Business and Pleasure!
Participants representing large well capitalized interest looking for all asset classes including Hotels, Multi-family and Commercial backed CRE debt were delighted to have the opportunity to meet. Participants were able to participate in a NASTAR race with the top finishers in the group awarded trophies for the office shelf.  The last event for the adventuresome was a sno-cat ski tour in the untracked champagne power that Steamboat is famous for the world over.  An excellent time was had with great potential for future business.

 

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