Commercial mortgage expert Todd Tretsky: Explains Non-recourse loans, Bad Boy Care-outs
from Self Directed Accounts.
Finding a non-recourse commercial real estate loan is far
more legally sophisticated than merely finding a commercial lender
"foolish enough" to make a commercial loan to a borrower who wants to
reserve the right to simply walk away from his obligation. Sometimes there are important legal reasons
why a commercial loan simply must be a non-recourse loan. We'll discuss some of these important legal
reasons further below.
A non-recourse
commercial real estate loan is a loan that is NOT personally guaranteed by the
borrower. If the real estate investment
goes bad, the borrower can usually simply walk away from the property.
There are around seven to ten common exceptions, known as
carve-outs, to this basic rule. If the
borrower commits certain Bad Boy Acts - fraud, intentional waste (taking a
sledgehammer to the walls), toxic contamination, placing a second mortgage on
the property without permission, failure to maintain fire insurance on the
property, failure to pay the real estate taxes, misappropriation of a
condemnation award or any fire insurance proceeds, or certain criminal acts by
the borrower - then many non-recourse commercial loans becomes a full-recourse
loans. The borrower becomes personally
liable.
However, absent the commission of some Bad Boy Act by the
borrower, a commercial lender cannot come back after the borrower for a
deficiency suffered as a result of making a non-recourse commercial real estate
loan. A deficiency is a loan loss left
over after the property is sold in foreclosure.
Obviously commercial lenders are not crazy about the idea of
making non-recourse commercial loans. In
fact, since the Great Recession the vast majority of all commercial banks
making portfolio commercial loans today absolutely insist on a personal
guarantee by the borrower.
A portfolio commercial loan is a commercial loan that the
lender intends to keep in its own portfolio, as opposed to a commercial loan
that the lender intends to later sell off in the secondary market. CMBS lenders and ABS lenders (subprime
commercial lenders who sell their scratch-and-dent commercial loans to Wall
Street pools) are examples of commercial lenders who are not portfolio lenders.
Bottom line: Since
the vast majority of all commercial loans made today are made by commercial
banks and credit unions, non-recourse commercial lenders are fairly rare. If you happen to meet a commercial
correspondent lender CRE-Finance - who is willing to make a non-recourse
commercial loan, be sure to make a note of it.
Okay, so when is it legally necessary for a commercial loan
to be non-recourse?
1.Let's suppose you own a commercial property in your
IRA. You may not legally personally guarantee
your commercial loan from the bank without running afoul of the IRS. Personally guaranteeing your IRA's commercial
loan, in the opinion of the IRS, lowers the interest rate to your IRA and is a
form of disallowed contribution. (Code Section 4975(c)(1)(B))
2.Commercial loans to Tenant-in-Common (TIC) investments
must be non-recourse; otherwise the investments lose their tax-deferred
qualification.
3.Certain irrevocable trusts have a trustee who is separate
from the beneficiary, such as a family attorney serving as the trustee for the
minor child of a deceased client. If a
balloon payment comes due on a commercial property owned by the irrevocable
trust, the trustee certainly isn't going to be willing to guarantee some
$800,000 new commercial loan.
Call CRE-Finance to help you with this very complex type of
financing. We have been doing it for over 20 years.
You can reach Todd Direct at 212-851-6926 or
tt@cre-finance.com