How Commercial Lenders Look At Servicing Differently Than Residential Providers

Commercial property not only provides excellent diversification within your portfolio but the lending that goes along with it is very different to what you might have experienced if you are used to residential. Tim Russell explains the difference.

How Commercial Lenders Look At Servicing Differently Than Residential Providers
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Since APRA imposed sweeping changes to the residential lending Market in 2015, home loan approvals have dropped significantly. The abs recently reported total home loan approvals have fallen by 13.6% year-on-year and within that drop; investment loans have slid 20.5%.

One of the major contributors to this drop in lending has been the policy changes that all APRA regulated banks have imposed. Before the changes, most lenders would assess a new loan with an interest rate buffer of 7.5%, but any loans a customer had with other lenders would be assessed based on what the actual repayments were.

What happens now is that all loans that an individual holds are assessed at 7.5%. And for an investor with say, four investment properties, this pretty much means their borrowing capacity has halved overnight.

However, it’s worth pointing out that commercial lenders, who are not governed by APRA look at servicing in an entirely different way.

Interest Cover Ratio (ICR)


IRC is the bank term that commercial lenders like to talk about when looking at servicing. Lenders will require that the rental income must cover the interest repayments by a specific ratio – most use 1.5.

For example, if you had a $500,000 loan with an interest rate of 5%, that would equate to $25,000 in annual interest. In that situation, if the ICR was assessed at 1.5, rental income would need to be $37,500.

If we presume that a commercial property generates a 6% yield, then taking that $37,500 and dividing it by 6% will give a value of $625,000 – pretty reasonable!

Now, of course, I'm simplistic in my explanation and commercial lenders will stress test a few other variables by this gives you the genesis of how they look at servicing.

The other key thing that separates commercial lenders from residential is if the rental income vs. interest cover produces a satisfactory ratio, then the lender is not really that concerned with the personal income of the applicant and other liabilities that they might have. They’ll still want to know, but they take a “does it make sense” approach, as opposed to the very black and white, “all boxes must be ticked” view that a residential lender would take.

So in a time where it seems the compliance, red tape pendulum has swung too much over the wrong way, it is important to know that other options are out there if you as an investor have reached a sticking point with your portfolio.

Commercial property not only provides great diversification within your portfolio but the lending that goes along with it is very different to what you might have experienced if you are used to residential.

 

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