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CMSA Applauds House 'Retention' Amendment to Financial Reform Bill

NEW YORK - 
      Commercial Mortgage Securities Association today applauds Reps. John 
      Adler (D-NJ), John Campbell (R-CA), Dennis Moore (D-KS) and Gary Miller 
      (R-CA) for working on an amendment offered by Reps. Walt Minnick (D-ID) 
      and Melissa Bean (D-IL) to the House Financial Services Committee
Posted : Thu, 19 Nov 2009 19:24:35 GMT
Author : Commercial Mortgage Securities Association
Category : Press Release
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NEW YORK - (Business Wire) Commercial Mortgage Securities Association today applauds Reps. John Adler (D-NJ), John Campbell (R-CA), Dennis Moore (D-KS) and Gary Miller (R-CA) for working on an amendment offered by Reps. Walt Minnick (D-ID) and Melissa Bean (D-IL) to the House Financial Services Committee financial regulatory reform bill that passed the Committee unanimously and would support a recovery in the commercial mortgage-backed securities market and the overall commercial real estate sector.

The amendment reduces the maximum are tention' (or 'skin in the game') requirement from 10% to 5% and includes language that would customize retention provisions to reflect the unique nature of the commercial mortgage-backed securities market, which utilizes a third-party investor who purchases the first-loss position and re-underwrites all loans during the pre-issuance period. CMSA has urged policymakers to structure retention provisions carefully in order to maintain and strengthen the safeguards that exist in the CMBS market by explicitly recognizing the important role of third-party investors who purchase the first-loss position and perform due diligence.

CMSA is strongly encouraged by the House Committee’s approval of the Minnick amendment that would not preclude retention by the originator/issuer, but instead grant additional flexibility to allow a third-party investor to satisfy the retention requirement. If market participants choose to utilize this method, the third-party purchaser would be obligated to retain the associated credit risk for its first-loss position in those asset-backed securities.

The retention issue – which has been a top priority for CMSA – is of particular concern in light of new accounting standards, FAS 166 and 167, which could result in significantly less credit availability. In this regard, the House Committee also approved another amendment – offered by Rep. Scott Garrett (R-NJ) and supported by CMSA – that would require the Federal Reserve and financial regulators to examine the combined impact of new are tention' requirements and accounting standards on credit availability, and to report to Congress with specific recommendations prior to any rulemaking on the retention.

“Considering the challenges facing commercial real estate, these reforms must provide certainty and confidence for all market participants to help kickstart the lending markets,” said Patrick C. Sargent, President, CMSA. “Tailoring retention language to support, rather than impede, the CMBS market is absolutely critical to recovery efforts in commercial real estate and our overall economy.”

“We urge financial policymakers in Washington to maintain and strengthen safeguards in the CMBS market by structuring the skin-in-the-game requirement to incorporate third-party investors who purchase the first-loss position, perform due diligence and retain this risk,” he said.

The overall legislation, known as the Financial Stability Improvement Act of 2009 (H.R. 3996), is expected to move to the House floor in December after the House Financial Services Committee completes its consideration today.

CMSA regularly advocates on behalf of its Members who support the commercial real estate finance industry. For additional information on CMSA’s involvement in 2009 Financial Regulatory Reform proposals, please see its white paper, which urges reform proposals be customized to reflect key differences in markets or visit CMSA’s website.

About CMSA

Commercial Mortgage Securities Association, the international trade association dedicated to promoting the ongoing strength, liquidity and viability of commercial real estate capital market finance, acts as a legislative and regulatory advocate, playing a vital role in setting industry standards for the global commercial mortgage markets. Unlike many trade organizations, CMSA is a collective voice, representing the full range of the industry’s market participants: large money-center and investment banks, rating agencies, insurance companies, traders, B-piece buyers and investors. With more than 300 member companies globally, and with a presence in Europe, Japan and North America, CMSA is dedicated to insightful, forward-thinking research and industry initiatives that encourage vision, innovation and continuous professional growth for market participants. CMSA is committed to being responsive to its members, providing them with a culture of collaboration, collegiality, open and inclusive dialogue, consensus building and respect for diverse views.

CMSA
Kenneth Reed, 212-589-0961
kreed@cmsaglobal.org


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