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CMBS

Latest news

Latest news

Deutsche Bank predicts $155bn of private sector CMBS
◆ Data centres: crunch time for Europe's capital markets ◆ How AI is changing capital markets work... ◆ ... and hiring
Single asset, single borrower deals drove the US CMBS market in 2025, particularly on New York City collateral as office attendance rose. With interest rates predicted to fall further in 2026, market participants are looking forward to a greater variety of deals on commercial real estate from other cities and sectors, writes Pooja Sarkar

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  • Bondholders across all tranches of the Opera Finance (CMH) commercial mortgage securitization will meet this week to discuss a number of restructuring proposals on the underlying debt.
  • Bondholders across all tranches of the Opera Finance (CMH) commercial mortgage securitisation will meet this week to discuss a number of restructuring proposals on the underlying debt.
  • January proved to be as tricky as expected for European CMBS loan maturities, with 72% of loans failing to meet their obligations, according to rating agency Standard & Poor’s. The number of loans in delinquency or special servicing is at an all-time high as a result.
  • ABN Amro has launched and retained a new issue of residential mortgage-backed securities from its Goldfish Master Issuer program, which securitizes Dutch home loans guaranteed under the government’s National Hypotheek Garantie program.
  • UPP, the UK company that develops and manages student housing, sold a £382m debut bond on Thursday, secured on its properties at six English universities.
  • The loan backing the Vanwall Finance CMBS — securitised by Deutsche Bank and Barclays in 2006 on a portfolio of Toys ‘R’ Us retail and distribution units in the UK — is expected to be refinanced by a group of unidentified lenders ahead of the April maturity date.
  • Intu Properties, the UK’s biggest shopping centre owner, which has just changed its name from Capital Shopping Centres, is setting up a new secured debt issuance programme to refinance four of its malls.
  • Three U.K. commercial mortgage securitizations which have the British Broadcasting Corporation as an underlying tenant have seen their ratings slashed by Moody’s Investors Service following the rating agency’s downgrade of the U.K. government sovereign last week from AAA to Aa1.
  • Intu Properties, the U.K.’s biggest shopping center owner, which has just changed its name from Capital Shopping Centres, is setting up a new secured debt issuance program to refinance four of its malls.