Skip to content

Related Stories

  • Picture of residential neighborhood in midtown New York

    How Will Higher Rates Affect Upcoming CMBS Maturities and COVID Impacted Loans?

    In this article, Moody’s Analytics analysts review how higher interest rates have increased the 2nd quarter CMBS new issuance minimum debt yield to 7.12%. In contrast, 29% of ~$77.8 billion of COVID-19 affected loans have a debt yield less than 6%. This piece focuses the analysis on CMBS loans that mature before year end and creates an estimate that $7.7 billion in CMBS loans may fail to mature. If these loans are extended, the existing coupon is significantly lower than the ~6% market coupon required on a new loan, so the related CMBS bond extensions will decrease investors’ returns.

  • Eco-environmentally friendly green energy of sustainable development of solar power plant

    Reading the 2021 CRE Tea Leaves to Predict 2022 Securitization Volume

    Experts dig into 2021 CRE loan securitization data to analyze market evolution and examine what may happen in 2022.

  • Cityscape

    CMBS Newsflash: COVID-19 and CMBS Delinquencies

    Read the commercial real estate delinquencies due to COVID-19 for the retail and hotel sectors backed by data from Moody’s Analytics REIS and CMBS teams.