ISA Briefing: Banks, rates and the impact on property

Silicon Valley Bank (SVB) and Signature Bank failed. Regulators hastily arranged the sale of Credit Suisse to UBS. Concerns spread about numerous other small and major global banks including Deutsche Bank. Recent events have raised fears that the global economy is in for a credit crunch of unknown magnitude and duration. As we release our first LaSalle Macro Quarterly (LMQ), a revamp of our long-standing “macro indicators deck,” banking sector strains represent the number one macro risk we are assessing.  The proximate cause of each recent bank failure was deposit flight, a drain from the liabilities side of the bank balance sheet. This is fundamentally not a toxic assets problem of the sort that banks faced in the Global Financial Crisis (GFC). Rather, it is a liquidity issue that can be addressed by temporary emergency funding from central banks. But solvency, the greater concern for banks in the longer run is closely tied to the duration of the asset book.  When investors in interest rate-sensitive assets refer to duration, they typically mean the change in value associated with a change in risk-free rates. SVB failed, in large part, due to a perception that it had sustained severe losses on riskless (but long-duration) US Treasuries and near-riskless agency mortgage-backed securities as these assets had mechanically repriced in the higher interest rate environment.  Just as there was a mechanical element to the initiation of this crisis, there is a mechanical feedback loop that can help the crisis partially self-resolve. As worries around bank solvency, credit conditions and the real economy spread, expectations for policy rates fell, causing long-duration assets to once more increase in price, shoring up balance sheets.  As a result, there has been a 360-degree round trip in interest rate forward curves between the beginning of February and the end of March. At first, curves shifted upward due to spiking inflation data, before falling substantially as banking systems came under pressure, followed by a return to the status quo as resolution measures stabilized markets and inflation seized the attention of policymakers and investors once again. As a result of this volatility in rate expectations, the MOVE index of bond option volatility has reached the highest levels since the GFC.  There are many media, economic and financial industry sources to turn to for a deeper discussion of the underpinnings of the recent financial sector instability, or to track the daily news flow and the resulting volatility. Our focus is on the practical considerations for investors in property. We have identified four key recommendations for how real estate investors can assess risks and manage through volatility.  Contributors: Brian Klinksiek Global Head of Research and Strategy Dominic Silman, PhD Europe Head of Debt and Value-add Capital Research and Strategy Zuhaib Butt Director of Investment Risk Strategy and Management

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