Real estate: Colony corners FDIC fire sales

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Real estate: Colony corners FDIC fire sales

Having purchased 6,200 individual CRE loans with an unpaid principal balance of $6.2 billion over the past three years, Colony Capital continues to dominate the FDIC’s structured sales programme, which offers subsidized financing to institutional investors seeking access to the distressed loans languishing on the balance sheets of failed banks. Since the programme began in May 2008, Colony and other real estate specialists, such as Starwood Property Trust and Rialto Capital Management, have taken down more than 32,000 loans in 18 structured transactions with an unpaid principal balance of $21 billion, according to the FDIC. In its latest transaction, Colony bought a 40% equity stake in 758 sub- and non-performing loans with a book value of $607 million. As with all other asset sales under the FDIC programme, the agency finances 50% of the initial capital outlay for the bidder with a seven-year interest free loan. According to Todd Sammann, principal at Colony, although Colony has acquired some particularly impaired construction and land loans from the FDIC for as little as 20 cents on the dollar, most of its purchases have cost between 50 and 75 cents.

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