Banking, Lending and Real Estate


Book Description

This book deals directly with the risk/return multiple trade-offs coming out of the closely intertwined relationship between banking and real estate. The authors explore how banks could embrace a more proactive approach to make the most of their, mostly ‘long only’, exposure to real estate, and create positive spillover effects on their real estate counterparts and the sector as a whole. It provides a "state of the art" representation and analysis of the strategies that best practices in banking are adopting to manage these issues and plan for a new set of interrelations, driving a "virtuous circle" as opposed to the current one. Banking, Lending and Real Estate is built on the academic knowhow and professional expertise of the authors, who have been researching, writing and working on this joint topic for over a decade. With its pragmatic approach, it allows the reader to capture which leading hedge active and holistic approaches are available today and proven to treat, for example, the banks’ overexposure to this asset class; to manage "unlikely to pay" and sub-performing positions; and to optimize the recovery value coming from the work out of real estate related NPL (and underlying assets). Case studies and relevant examples are provided, leveraging on the authors’ experience in consulting projects in the EMEA region and from working with global, regional and domestic banks and the real estate players acting across its value chain. This book will appeal to both academics and business practitioners within the banking, financial services and real estate sectors, as well as professionals from financial and strategic/industrial advisory working in those fields.







The Handbook of Real Estate Lending


Book Description

In The Handbook of Real Estate Lending, mortgage banking expert Kathleen Sindell, Ph.D., provides a must-have real estate loan management reference book and introduces the Lending Solutions Decision Support Program. This program assists you in organizing and consolidating mortgage loan information, allowing you to effectively track current loans while accurately analyzing each real estate loan's strengths and weaknesses before you commit your bank's assets. Readers who review and implement this program will be able to calculate a numerical risk score for each loan in the portfolio that can be compared to your optimal baseline; complete meaningful monthly problem loan reports, each with a blueprint of the most effective, complete action plan possible; make unbiased and error-free loan assessments based on a new knowledge acquisition process; create comprehensive analyses of each loan's strengths and weaknesses; prepare graphs that show each loan's performance trends; forecast potential loan performance and quantitatively relate your judgments of future loan trends; and deliver pro-active, instead of re-active, action plans that demonstrate why your recommendation is the best one possible.




Property Boom and Banking Bust


Book Description

A fascinating analysis of the critical role commercial property investment played in the economic boom and bust during the global financial crisis The unprecedented financial boom stretching from the mid-1990s through 2008 ultimately led to the deepest recession in modern times and one of the slowest economic recoveries in history. It also resulted in the emergence of the draconian austerity policies that have swept across Europe in recent years. Property Boom and Banking Bust offers an expert insight into the complex property market dynamics that contributed to the Great Financial Crisis of 2008 and its devastating economic consequences. It is the first book to focus on a woefully underreported dimension of the crisis, namely, the significant role that lending on commercial property development played in the crisis. Among other key topics, the authors explore the philosophical and behavioral factors that propelled irresponsible bank lending and the property boom; how it led to the downfall of the banks; the impact of the credit crunch on the real estate industry generally in the wake of the financial crisis; the catastrophic effects the property bust had on property investors, both large and small; and how the financial institutions have sought to recover in the wake of the financial crisis. Provides valuable insights into what happened in previous booms and busts, particularly in the 1970s and 1980s, and how they compare with the most recent one Offers an expert assessment of the consequences of the global financial crisis for the banking system and the commercial property industry Examines strategies banks have used to recover their positions and manage the overhang of indebtedness and bad property assets Addresses strategies the real estate industry have used to recover from the collapse in property values Written in an accessible style, and featuring numerous insider case accounts from property bankers, Property Boom and Banking Bust disentangles the complex, tightly-woven factors that led to the Great Financial Crisis of 2008, while offering powerful lessons for property industry professionals on how to avoid having history repeat itself.




Commercial Real Estate Lending


Book Description

The Office of the Comptroller of the Currency's (OCC) Comptroller's Handbook booklet, “Commercial Real Estate Lending,” provides guidance for bank examiners and bankers on commercial real estate (CRE) lending activities. For the purposes of this booklet, CRE lending comprises acquisition, development, and construction (ADC) financing and the financing of income-producing real estate. Income-producing real estate comprises real estate held for lease to third parties and nonresidential real estate that is occupied by its owner or a related party.







National Bank Real Estate Loans


Book Description




Introduction to Commercial Real Estate Loans


Book Description

This book WILL give you an understanding of Commercial Real Estate Loans. It breaks down the complexity of the industry into easy-to-understand terms and is an EASY read. As a wise man once said, if you can't explain it to a six-year-old, you don't understand it yourself. This book is packed with easy-to-understand content and IS INTENDED to be a thin book. After all, who wants to fall asleep with another textbook?After walking you through the basics of commercial real estate (CRE), you'll dive right into CRE finance. You'll learn about the typical loan structure, the primary drivers of financing, what to expect throughout the loan process, and more about other common loan types. It contains examples and footnotes throughout, as well as what are considered to be "Industry Standards." As an added bonus, the book includes a supplement useful to anyone considering a commercial real estate loan: a financing questionnaire containing questions to ask your lender.This book will provide you with a foundation and the basic knowledge of CRE finance (i.e. loans). These basics are the core to CRE financing. There's no need to spends years or thousands of dollars on education. This book will give you the meat of CRE finance. It will give you the foundation you're after whether you're a real estate broker, lender, investor, business owner, student, or just plain curious.




Commercial Real Estate Practices


Book Description




Financing California Real Estate


Book Description

California was at the epicentre of the collapse of the real estate market in 2008, which had a devastating effect on the world economy. Taking this diverse and powerful state as a case study, this book presents a financial history of the property business, from the time Spanish Missions were established to the Great Recession. Financing California Real Estate provides the history of expansions and contractions in the real estate market, and describes factors in the state and nation which may have triggered changes in the direction of growth in real estate lending. It explores how financial institutions which provided funding for building and buying homes changed over time, from the establishment of Spanish Missions in 1769, to the Gold Rush, to rail transportation, all the way through to the real estate bubble that peaked in 2005. Using detailed information on financial institutions to explain the changing nature of the real estate market, this book ultimately suggests an alternative theory for what led to the Great Recession. This book will be of interest to researchers working in the area of real estate cycles in the economy, historians interested in the economy of California, and financial historians.