Close Menu
Invest Intellect
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Invest Intellect
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest
    • Home
    • Commodities
    • Cryptocurrency
    • Fintech
    • Investments
    • Precious Metal
    • Property
    • Stock Market
    Invest Intellect
    Home»Property»Banks may have dodged a commercial real estate doomsday
    Property

    Banks may have dodged a commercial real estate doomsday

    August 27, 20256 Mins Read


    two model buildings on a desk with a person working on a laptop in the background

    After spending years as a wildcard on banks’ balance sheets, commercial real estate loans are again getting boring.

    Banks with concentrations in CRE have had to tiptoe through quarter after quarter as those portfolios sputtered under pressure from the Covid-19 pandemic and the economic environment. But now analysts and bankers are less concerned about the once-feared doom that CRE could reap upon financial institutions.

    Stephen Lynch, vice president of the financial institutions group at Moody’s Ratings, said that in 2023 and 2024, fear about banks’ exposures to CRE was a hot topic, but those conversations have largely quieted down.

    “I wouldn’t want to say we’re out of the woods yet, but I think the feverish concern of these mass defaults and mass major losses geographically across the U.S., independent of region, is taken off the table,” Lynch said. “Now it’s more about cleaning up properties that aren’t capitalized correctly or are not stabilized to current conditions.”

    The so-called extend-and-pretend strategy — where lenders work with borrowers by modifying loans to avoid taking losses, at least until macroeconomic pressures lighten up — seems to have worked for the most part, said John Toohig, head of whole loan trading at Raymond James.

    Commercial real estate deals are picking back up, according to data from the CRE analytics firm MSCI Real Assets, which reported that transaction volumes were up 13% in the first half of 2025 from the same period last year. Valuations seem to be, if not surging, stable.  And at this point, banks have had time to steadily set aside reserves for any losses that they may eventually take.

    “There still will be some losers,” Toohig said. “We do still see a lot of extensions, and we do still see some loans that candidly should be charged off, but they’ve been able to continue to modify and push out. Barring no shock, barring no tariff tantrum or war or something, it does appear like we’re on the other side.”

    There are still challenges, but many of them are idiosyncratic across individual properties. Other troubles are tied to specific geographic regions and asset classes. 

    “What you’re going to have now is we’re probably going to bump along the ground, as far as losses go,” Lynch said “It’s going to be lumpy. It’s going to be property-specific.”

    Office properties have been a source of woe for banks, as the pandemic fueled work-from-home policies, which triggered a mass exodus from city centers. 

    Multifamily loans also showed signs of stress, but for different reasons. As interest rates rapidly rose in 2022 and 2023, deposit costs began to outpace the yield on fixed-rate apartment building loans that were originated when rates were still at rock bottom. Additionally, in some regions where there was a surge in construction of multifamily properties, demand for housing couldn’t keep up, leaving some properties under-leased.

    Eagle Bancorp, a small bank just outside of Washington D.C., took a $70 million loss in the second quarter due to troubled office loans. Some of the pain came as the $10 billion-asset bank learned more information about the valuation of office properties in the D.C.-Maryland-Virginia region following government spending cuts by the Trump administration and its Department of Government Efficiency. More than one-third of Eagle’s $965 million office loan portfolio is in troubled status.

    And in New York City, community banks with large exposures to rent-regulated real estate are running stress tests on their loan books, as the upcoming mayoral election could mean drastically different housing policies that put pressure on lenders.

    But in the Sun Belt and across certain metropolitan areas, the oversupply of multifamily properties is starting to work itself out, Mustafa said. According to CBRE research, the overall multifamily vacancy rate fell to 4.1% in the second quarter, its lowest level since 2022.

    Christopher Wolfe, managing director of U.S. banks at Fitch Ratings, said there’s been some “natural healing” in the office sector. He pointed to return-to-office policies that have helped shore up demand for space in office buildings. While the asset class is still seeing some deterioration across the U.S., the pace of decline has cooled, and some regions are outperforming the country.

    Plus, a CBRE survey of its professionals reports that most respondents believe capitalization rates — which estimate investment properties’ rates of return — peaked in the first half of the year, meaning that risk is expected to decrease from this point, as buildings’ operating incomes comprise a smaller percentage of their valuations. The report didn’t discuss the factors that led to the expectation that cap rates will decrease.

    Another factor in the ebbing tide of real estate fear is a newfound sense of certainty — as recent deals and loan originations provide more clarity about valuations.

    Five of the largest real estate firms — CBRE, JLL, Cushman & Wakefield, Colliers, and Newmark — increased their financial guidance for 2025 after logging some of their strongest earnings in years, boosted by leasing activity and property sales.

    The added clarity on valuations can help lenders bulk up or bring down their total reserves, as they can better determine specific credit factors, such as loan-to-value ratios and debt service coverage ratios.

    “If we rolled the clock back a year, or more, there was a lot of uncertainty.” Wolfe said. “You didn’t see a lot of activity and transactions. And what you did see was big valuation drops, especially on office properties.”

    A year and a half ago, Flagstar Financial shares tumbled after the Long Island bank slashed its dividend and announced an unexpected $552 million provision for credit losses, primarily tied to office loans. The then-$98 billion-asset bank eventually had to be rescued with a $1.1 billion capital infusion, which brought along a fresh management team.

    But the last 18 months have made a big difference; Flagstar is now projecting profitability by year-end.

    Zions Bancorp. saw its classified commercial real estate loans decrease by $196 million in the second quarter, due to improved leasing and cash flow on multifamily and industrial properties. The bank also lowered its overall provision for credit losses by $1 million — its first decrease in three years — based on “reduced emphasis on certain portfolio specific risks such as commercial real estate and changes in portfolio mix,” Zions Chief Financial Officer Ryan Richards said on the bank’s earnings call last month.

    Adam Mustafa, president and CEO of the consulting and analytics firm Invictus Group, said that while he thinks most banks are pretty well-reserved for CRE losses, the sector hasn’t provided a windfall, either. As property valuations hold steady, CRE has been “on pause” for his firm’s clients, which are banks that mostly range from $1 billion to $20 billion of assets, he said. 

    “We have not seen a significant increase in commercial real estate pricing through our clients, at least,” Mustafa said. “We haven’t seen a decrease either. It’s really been kind of flat, almost across the board.”



    Source link

    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email

    Related Posts

    Real Estate Simulator 2 Announced For Steam in 2026

    Property

    The Top 10 UK House Buying Companies of 2026

    Property

    Property tycoon ‘lusting over his junior co-worker offers her £2MILLION to leave husband in real-life Indecent Proposal’

    Property

    Real estate trends and predictions for 2026 and beyond, part one

    Property

    Budget 2026: Tax breaks on affordable rental housing, seamless regional logistics policies, real estate sector’s demands get more real

    Property

    Real estate tycoon accused of indecent proposal to realtor mom while enjoying an affair. Now her cuckolded husband strikes back

    Property
    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    Top Picks
    Precious Metal

    Great Britain fail to win gold amid worst World Championships return for 20 years

    Investments

    China’s central bank battles bond frenzy to protect economic stability

    Commodities

    BP Raises Full-Year Divestment Expectations After Results Beat Views — Commodities Roundup

    Editors Picks

    Beware: The ECB Digital Currency Is Coming

    April 4, 2025

    Zambian copper belt crisis: 50 million litres of acidic wastewater from Chinese mine contaminates Kafue River basin

    September 10, 2025

    MétalNéo aime les défis techniques, le sel de son savoir-faire

    April 11, 2025

    partenariat avec Ather Energy en Inde

    May 28, 2025
    What's Hot

    gold: Commodity Talk: Investors should remain long on gold, says Anuj Gupta of HDFC Securities

    August 5, 2024

    Asia bonds look vulnerable as Fed rate cuts deliver less support

    October 8, 2025

    The sector is on the cusp of a new digital era for property information – Rudolf

    April 25, 2025
    Our Picks

    Why copper is set to play a big role in BHP’s future

    December 17, 2025

    Infracom augmente ses ventes et ses bénéfices – augmente le dividende -Le 20 février 2025 à 09:01

    February 19, 2025

    UK fraud office probes $36m cryptocurrency collapse

    November 20, 2025
    Weekly Top

    Gold, Silver Rate Today LIVE: COMEX silver crashes 35% from record high, gold nosedives 15%; CME raises margin money

    January 30, 2026

    Canara Bank plans to raise Rs 4,000 crore via tier-2 bonds

    January 30, 2026

    Engineers rethink motor design using liquid metal

    January 30, 2026
    Editor's Pick

    As Malaysia’s fintech market grows up, Razorpay Curlec shifts focus to depth and scale

    December 20, 2025

    Ether and Bitcoin ETFs see continued outflows, led by Grayscale: JPMorgan By Investing.com

    August 12, 2024

    Scaramucci: ‘I Agree With Every Single Thing’ Trump Has Said On Bitcoin

    July 28, 2024
    © 2026 Invest Intellect
    • Contact us
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms and Conditions

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.