The securities are backed by a single, seven-year, fixed-rate loan to entities of hedge-fund manager Fortress Investment Group LLC. The loan is secured by payments flowing from 44 office and industrial properties in Florida, and cash flows related to a 351-mile railway corridor and land parcels adjacent to that corridor. This unusual type of security--commercial-mortgage backed securities are typically backed by leases on properties such as offices and hotels--may also have pushed up the returns investors demanded despite the portfolio's otherwise conservative structure, with loan-to-value ratios averaging 50%.I'm a little perplexed about why the first successful CMBS deal not to utilize the Fed program would be so non-vanilla. Although the Journal speculates that this might have made investors demand more spread, I'm not entirely sure. Investors might have liked that there was some diversification through non-commercial real estate driven cash flows that will result from the leasing of fiber-optic cables, land and billboards along that corridor. Heck, I might prefer that to Florida commercial real estate, even with 50% loan-to-value ratios. Of course, I suspect that the rating agencies also demanded a healthy amount of credit enhancement (cushioning for collateral losses) to achieve AAA-ratings.
This article available online at:
http://www.theatlantic.com/business/archive/2009/12/a-commercial-mortgage-backed-security-deal-succeeds/31570/
