Commercial Mortgage Loan Types - Mezzanine Loans, More Than Just 2nd
Mortgages
Many people, even some experienced commercial real estate
developers, mistakenly believe that a mezzanine loan is simply a 2nd
position commercial mortgage loan against a commercial property. It
is not, mezzanine financing is a highly sophisticated form of
lending that requires specialized business and banking
knowledge.
Many acquisition and development projects require additional
financing beyond a traditional first mortgage. The simplest, fastest
and least expensive method of borrowing in these situations is to
have the seller or another lender write a traditional 2nd mortgage.
Unfortunately, especially in today's era of tightened credit, 2nd
position liens are often impossible, due to an equity shortage, or
disallowed by mortgage covenants mandated by the 1st position
holder. The-fact-is that there are many scenarios where the option
of a simple 2nd is just not available. These scenarios give rise to
what's known as mezzanine lending.
Unlike a mortgage, a mezzanine loan is not a lien against a piece
of commercial real estate. It is a loan secured by the assets of a
business entity. A title search will not turn up mezzanine loans
because they are not attached to a properties ownership documents.
In this way they do not violate any provisions of a 1st mortgage
that precludes a 2nd.
With the cooperation of the borrower, a mezzanine lender sets up
a single purpose, business entity, such as an LLC or a Trust. Title
and ownership of the target real estate and corresponding businesses
are placed in the entity so the whole project is owned by the new
company. The company is run by the borrower. The actual mezzanine
loan is made to the company but is also personally guaranteed by the
principle borrowers. The loan is secured by the assets of the
company (the real estate and its operations) and allows the lender
to take over full ownership and operations in the event of
default.
Although simple in concept, mezzanine lending is complex and
difficult in practice. Attorneys for both the borrower and the
lender must be very involved in drafting the provisions of the loan
and making sure the new entity is properly set up and maintained.
Borrowers want their rights protected while lenders need to make
sure their security interest in the firm and, indirectly, the real
estate is legally binding. Often the real estate, the borrower and
the lender are domiciled in different States making the whole
enterprise subject to interstate commerce regulations and further
complicating the loan.
The legal and closing costs as-well-as maintenance costs
associated with mezzanine loans are extremely high compared to
conventional lending. For this reason mezzanine financing structures
are wholly inappropriate for small deals. It's very difficult to
make mezzanine capital cost effective in projects worth under
$10MM.
Mezzanine loans certainly have their place; their loan volume can
be counted in the tens of billions of dollars. When they're needed
and when done correctly they are true deal savers. A partnership
with a mezzanine lender can be an invaluable resource to a developer
or commercial real estate investor. However, investors and
developers need to understand exactly what a mezzanine loan is and
be ready for the costs that come with them.
MasterPlan Capital LLC - Commercial Mortgage
Loans - Privately Funded - Equity
Financing - Asset Management - EZ Online
Application - Quick Answers - Fast
Closings.
Glenn Fydenkevez is President of MasterPlan
Capital LLC. He is a 20+ year veteran of the financial
services industry and has served as an officer at one of the
world's largest investment
banks.