Real Estate
Getting Deep Into Real Estate Credit At Palisades Group

One of the presumed takeaways from the 2008 financial crash was the need for lenders, if they are wise, to have a firm grasp of the fixed income assets they originate and service. A US firm that specializes in this area talks to this publication.
One of the lessons that was (hopefully) learned from the
sub-prime mortgage crash was that lenders needed more incentive
pressure to monitor the loans they lent out. With the supposed
benefits of modern technology, there are surely fewer excuses for
credit investors not to have deep detail at their fingertips.
The Palisades
Group, an alternative asset manager in the US residential
credit market, sources construction and property rehabilitation
loans through a national network of lending partners. Its
investment personnel review each asset before buying it and
oversees all post-acquisition credit and risk management
activities. It is a labor-intensive job. But the value-add of all
that work is considerable, particularly as rising interest rates
affect forms of real estate, the firm has told Family Wealth
Report.
“We take a high-touch approach to credit risk management,” Jack
Macdowell, Palisades' chief investment officer, said.
The potential opportunities are huge: US residential real estate
is a $13 trillion market, he said. That figure compares to a
$10.3 trillion corporate bond market and estimated $1.5 trillion
private credit market.
This market produces new loans to the order of $2 to $4+ trillion
per year.
With interest rates rising to curb inflation, the shift inevitably revives memories of what happened in the run up to the financial crash of 2008, such as the implosion of the sub-prime mortgage market in the US and its knock-on impact around the world. Real estate investment remains a major asset allocation item for wealth managers. Within the family offices space, for example, there's been a trend of more direct investment into property, both commercial and residential, in recent years. This throws up the question of what resources firms can draw on to do the deep due diligence and monitoring necessary to manage risks.
Shining a light
With some parts of the mortgage-backed securities (MBS) market,
there’s limited information available to end investors about the
underlying assets. Palisades is about shining a light on these
assets, he continued.
“We want to add value by going one layer deeper [than the norm]
by buying and owning these loans themselves. This is complete
transparency. It allows us to make real-time decisions that
influence performance of the underlying investment at the loan,
borrower, and property level,” he said.
Founded in 2012, Palisades, which since that year has managed $25
billion of loans and real estate, invests in, and actively
manages, residential loans and real estate-related strategies. It
runs a mix of residential loans and real estate with a notional
balance of about $10.1 billion, with underlying properties
located in the US, Europe and Latin America.
From distress to complexity
When the firm started – about four years after the financial
hurricane hit property and financial markets around the world – a
large chunk of its attention focused on distressed
assets.
One point that arose from the sub-prime wreckage was that
originators of loans often had no incentive to look too deep into
what they were selling, or to whom. “That did not always lead to
optimum outcomes for the investor,” Macdowell, with masterful
understatement, said.
“To build an ability to manage thousands of loans was a lot of
work. Some firms have outsourced this to Palisades and that’s how
we got started. Initially, Palisades was a sub-advisor to large
institutions and big family offices,” he said. “These folks with
tons of capital want access but don’t have the infrastructure to
manage large complex portfolios of residential loans.”
In its early days, Palisades focused on distressed loans, but as
the years rolled by opportunities in that sector tapered off
around 2016/17 and the business concentrated more on performing
loans. Palisades now runs a series of private residential credit
funds.
The firm doesn’t try to guess macro-economic policy or broad
financial market moves. Instead, its focus on credit risk
fundamentals means that it can provide value in different
conditions, Macdowell said.
In supply-demand terms, the US real estate market is
“under-supplied,” and the environment has shifted markedly
from 2008, he said. The enactment of the Dodd-Frank financial
regulations more than a decade ago have also removed some of the
practices and abuses that had contributed to the crash, Macdowell
continued. Today, there are historically high levels of home
equity, loan-to-value ratios are healthy, mortgage-related debt
service obligations relative to disposable incomes and vacancy
rates for owner-occupied housing are each at historically low
levels, and the majority of loans are 30-year fixed with low
interest rates, all signs of a healthy housing market from a
credit standpoint.
Palisades likes short-duration property loans, such as 12- to
24-month loans, where loan-to-value ratios (LTVs) are around 65
per cent. This can deliver 300 to 400 basis points above
non-agency loan products, he said.
To run these portfolios requires constant monitoring, Macdowell
said.
Regionally, Palisades is no longer as constructive about the
Pacific Northwest region, given concerns such as people migrating
from certain coastal cities experiencing economic and social
disruption, he said.
“Certain areas have fallen out of favor with our investment
committee, however, each neighborhood is unique and we tend to
avoid making broad geographic investment decisions,” he said.
“While a lot of people have moved to Florida, home price
pressures and major increases in property insurance cost are
anticipated to curtail recent demographic trends.
Artificial
Inevitably, FWR asked Macdowell whether AI/machine
learning will help with the number crunching and analytical
chores caused by having to examine thousands of individual loan
deals across the US.
“We are really focused on finding ways of bringing AI into our
data science environment,” he replied. “We have a huge data set
of proprietary information that we are seeking to ring-fence and
begin analyzing with AI soon.”
Stori Analytics is one of the firm’s technology applications that
currently uses machine learning algorithms to identify key risk
factors embedded in large text communication data sets between
residential mortgage servicers and borrowers. The firm is working
on enhancing Stori with an AI overlay which to his knowledge
would be a first of its kind in the real estate credit area,
Macdowell added.