Commercial Mortgage Securities Association

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

CMSA, or the Commercial Mortgage Securities Association, is an international trade organization for the commercial real estate capital markets. The CMSA is headquartered in the heart of New York City's financial district at 30 Broad Street. The Commercial Mortgage Securities Association comprises 400 member firms representing more than 3,000 individuals.

[edit] The Commercial Mortgage-backed Securities Industry

Commercial mortgage-backed securities are bonds offered to investors that are collateralized by a pool of commercial mortgage loans from which all of the principal and interest paid on those mortgages flows to investors. To create these investment vehicles, mortgage loans of varying dollar amounts, property type, and location —and containing a myriad of individualized terms and conditions — are pooled and transferred to a trust. Bonds then are issued backed by the pool of assets held in the trust. Those bonds vary in yield (the amount of return on the bonds), duration (the length of time before the bond is expected to be paid off), and payment priority (the order in which investors are paid a return on their investment). Borrowers, lenders, and investors all benefit from CMBS.

Borrowers often benefit via access both to larger pools of capital than would otherwise be available in traditional lending markets and to lower interest rates. Lenders benefit from CMBS because the securitization enables them to access the capital markets with their loan products and to obtain new bonds to make new loans. Investors benefit because CMBS creates a potentially attractive and credit-worthy investment vehicle that caters to their desired risk profile, investment term, and yield.

[edit] See also

[edit] External links

  • CMBS.org, the official Commercial Mortgage Securities Association website
  • CMBS.org, Factual Background: The Commercial Mortgage-Backed Securities Industry