---
name: managing-commercial-real-estate-lending
language: en
description: Structures CRE loan underwriting with property valuation, cash flow analysis, and environmental review. Use when underwriting CRE loans, analyzing property cash flows, or evaluating loan collateral.
tags:
  - management
  - commercial-banking
  - valuation
metadata:
  author: casemark
  practice_areas:
    - Commercial Banking
    - Trade Finance
    - Lending
  document_types:
    - Management Report
  skill_modes:
    - Management
    - Coordination
---
# Managing Commercial Real Estate Lending

## When To Use

- Underwriting a new CRE loan (acquisition, refinance, or construction)
- Evaluating an existing borrower's request for modification or extension
- Conducting annual or triggered loan review on a CRE portfolio credit
- Assessing collateral adequacy after appraisal update or market shift
- Preparing a credit memo or loan committee presentation for CRE exposure

## Inputs To Gather

- **Property information**: Address, property type (office, retail, industrial, multifamily, hospitality, special-purpose), gross/net leasable area, year built, recent capital improvements
- **Rent roll**: Tenant names, lease start/expiration dates, base rent, CAM/NNN reimbursements, renewal options, tenant credit quality
- **Operating statements**: Trailing 12-month and 2–3 years historical income/expense (include management fees, reserves, real estate taxes, insurance)
- **Appraisal or broker opinion of value**: As-is value, as-stabilized value (if applicable), cap rate applied, comparable sales
- **Borrower/sponsor financials**: Personal financial statement, global cash flow schedule, liquidity, net worth, CRE experience, contingent liabilities
- **Environmental reports**: Phase I ESA at minimum; Phase II if RECs identified [VERIFY: lender policy on Phase II triggers]
- **Loan request terms**: Requested amount, LTV, amortization, interest rate structure (fixed/floating), term, recourse/non-recourse, prepayment provisions
- **Market data**: Submarket vacancy, absorption trends, comparable rental rates, planned supply pipeline

## Workflow

1. **Screen the deal against policy limits**
   - Confirm property type is within appetite; check concentration limits by geography, property type, and single-borrower exposure
   - Validate loan size against hold limits and participation/syndication strategy
   - Flag any policy exceptions early (e.g., LTV above guideline, speculative construction) [VERIFY: institution-specific lending policy thresholds]

2. **Analyze property cash flow**
   - Reconstruct net operating income (NOI): start with effective gross income, deduct vacancy/credit loss (use market vacancy if higher than actual), deduct operating expenses
   - Stress-test NOI: model rent rollover risk at expiration, apply expense growth, test downside vacancy scenarios
   - Calculate debt service coverage ratio (DSCR) on both actual and stressed NOI — minimum thresholds typically 1.20x–1.35x depending on property type [VERIFY: lender DSCR floors by asset class]
   - For construction loans, evaluate projected stabilized NOI and lease-up timeline

3. **Assess collateral value and LTV**
   - Review appraisal methodology (income approach, sales comparison, cost approach); reconcile with internal underwriting assumptions
   - Determine appropriate LTV — typical maximums: 75% stabilized, 65–70% construction [VERIFY: regulatory and policy LTV limits]
   - If value appears aggressive, request additional comparables or order a review appraisal
   - Confirm compliance with interagency appraisal guidelines (transactions over $500K for regulated institutions) [VERIFY: current appraisal threshold per regulatory guidance]

4. **Evaluate borrower/sponsor strength**
   - Compute sponsor global cash flow: aggregate income from all sources minus debt service on all obligations
   - Assess liquidity relative to loan size and unfunded commitments; note reliance on projected income vs. verified sources
   - Review CRE track record — prior projects of similar type/scale, any history of defaults or modifications
   - Determine guaranty structure: full recourse, partial recourse, or non-recourse with carve-outs (bad-boy guarantees)

5. **Complete environmental and insurance review**
   - Confirm Phase I ESA is current (typically within 180 days of closing, with reliance letter to lender) [VERIFY: lender-specific shelf life requirements]
   - If recognized environmental conditions exist, determine remediation cost estimates and require escrow or insurance coverage
   - Verify insurance requirements: property/casualty, liability, flood (if in SFHA), builder's risk (construction), business interruption for income-producing collateral

6. **Structure loan terms and covenants**
   - Set LTV, DSCR, and debt yield triggers for cash sweep, lockbox activation, or default
   - Define reserve requirements: tax/insurance escrows, replacement reserves (typically $0.15–$0.30/SF for commercial), TI/LC reserves for office/retail
   - Specify reporting covenants: annual operating statements, rent rolls (quarterly for larger credits), borrower financial statements, insurance certificates
   - Address prepayment provisions: yield maintenance, defeasance, or step-down penalties based on capital markets execution

7. **Prepare credit memo and recommendation**
   - Summarize deal structure, risk rating recommendation, key strengths and mitigants
   - Present sensitivity analysis: DSCR and LTV under base, downside, and severe stress scenarios
   - Identify exceptions to policy with justification
   - State clear recommendation: approve, approve with conditions, or decline

## Output

A structured CRE credit memo or loan review report containing:

- **Executive summary**: Loan amount, property, sponsor, purpose, recommended risk rating
- **Property and market analysis**: Property description, tenant summary, submarket conditions
- **Cash flow underwriting**: Reconstructed NOI, DSCR at actual and stressed levels, debt yield
- **Collateral analysis**: Appraised value, LTV, valuation methodology assessment
- **Sponsor analysis**: Net worth, liquidity, global cash flow, experience
- **Environmental/insurance status**: Phase I findings, insurance adequacy
- **Loan structure**: Terms, covenants, reserves, guaranty
- **Risk assessment**: Key risks with mitigants, sensitivity table, policy exceptions
- **Recommendation**: Approval terms or decline rationale

## Quality Checks

- NOI reconstruction ties to source operating statements; any adjustments are explained and justified
- DSCR and LTV calculations are independently verifiable from stated inputs
- Rent roll expiration schedule is current and accounts for all major tenants
- Appraisal date is within acceptable window; cap rate is consistent with market comparables
- Sponsor financial data is dated within 90 days of underwriting [VERIFY: lender staleness policy]
- Environmental report has lender reliance letter and is within shelf-life requirements
- All policy exceptions are explicitly identified with compensating factors
- Stress scenarios test at least one turn of vacancy increase and 50–100 bps cap rate expansion
- Risk rating is consistent with institution's rating framework and supported by quantitative metrics
