Risk-Retention Proposal Crushes CLO Market in Europe

 

A policy fight is threatening the recovery of collateralized loan obligations in Europe.

The debate is very familiar to U.S. bankers and regulators: who should keep 'skin in the game,' and how much, when loans are packaged and sold?

A draft paper released by the European Banking Authority two weeks ago calls into question what had been a common interpretation of the requirement for sponsors to retain a 5% economic interest in CLO deals. Participants understood that a third party could have this exposure, as long as the interests of this third party were aligned with those of the sponsor.

This interpretation made it easier for smaller CLO managers to bring new deals to market. Now that it has been called into question, the pipeline that some estimate could have reached $7.8 billion in volume by yearend is virtually shut, at least temporarily.

"The EBA consultation has already had a negative effect in stopping or slowing transactions in the pipeline,"says James Waddington, a partner in the London office of law firm Dechert. "This is unfortunate since these CLO transactions were beginning to provide additional liquidity to the European loan market where banks have been somewhat constrained, including lending to small- and medium-sized businesses."

The CLO market's performance matters to banks because they invest in and market CLOs, and CLOs also invest in loans syndicated by banks.

The U.S. CLO market has been on a roll. It hit $55 billion last year after slowing during the financial crisis, and some have said it could reach $70 billion this year.

The revival of the European market began just a few months ago. Three European managed CLOs have been completed this year, all before the draft paper's publication. Predictions for more are currently being rethought.

The current draft "casts a shadow over new European CLO 2.0 deals in the pipeline, or even recently issued ones, where risk retention regulation was set to be addressed by a third-party 'anchor' investor-retention mechanism," Deutsche Bank analysts said in a May 24 report. "This avenue appears to have been blocked now. It would be significantly challenging for CLO managers to put their capital to meet the risk retention requirement given the lean balance sheets they typically operate on."

Waddington agrees. "The problem is that most asset managers are fairly thinly capitalized and cannot purchase and hold on their balance sheet 5% of every deal," he says. There might be a silver lining though as "the rules do allow financing, which may help to a degree."

What exactly does the EBA consultation paper say that has put such a damper on issuance?

The May 22 draft paper essentially re-writes the current interpretation of risk retention that the EBA's predecessor, the Committee of European Banking Supervisors, previously published in December 2010.

The EBA previously allowed some leeway in terms of who retained the risk. According to law firm Milbank's May 29 client alert, previously, the EBA had considered that in some instances, such as managed CLOs, where the "originate-to-distribute" risks were remote, a party whose interest was seen as most aligned with investors can fulfill the retention requirement.

To accommodate this, the EBA had previously allowed the asset manager or the most subordinated investor in a CLO to be the retainer of risk, even though those entities were not original lenders, originators or sponsors.

The draft is proposing to eliminate these concessions and allow only those entities that actually met technical definitions of "original lender," "originator" or "sponsor" to be the retainer in a securitized transaction with no exceptions.

CLO asset managers that are investment firms would be considered as a retaining entity, Dechert said. However, the application of risk retention to non-balance sheet CLOs is unnecessary and misguided, experts said.

"Risk retention was a policy response to perceived abuses in originate-to distribute and lack of 'skin-in-the-game,' leading to alleged moral hazard," says Paul Forrester, a banking and finance partner at law firm Mayer Brown.

Non-balance sheet CLOs acquire their underlying collateral in secondary markets and do not originate, he says. If that were the case, no risk retention is justified or should be required. In syndicated credit facilities, the arranging or agent bank will often hold a material interest in the related loans and this is real risk retention, but is not considered in European capital requirements or in the U.S. counterpart proposals.

Although the EBA draft paper seems to have halted the recovery of the European CLO market, Milbank lawyers said that the European finance industry has a history of innovation and adaptation to the demands of new regulation.

To be sure, the market has not shut down completely. The Carlyle Group priced a $392.7 million deal last week, according to a person familiar with the deal. Dubbed Carlyle Global Market Strategies Euro CLO, it consists of three floating-rate and two fixed-rated tranches rated by Standard & Poor's.

Yet market sources had suggested that a total of 15 to 20 European managed CLOs pegged at nearly $8 billion in principal amount might have closed this year, according to Milbank. "In light of the consultation paper, this prediction now looks overly optimistic as there is certain to be a hiatus while transactions pause to adapt to, and await finalization of, the new regulatory environment."

The EBA has requested comments on the consultation paper by Aug. 22 and will organize an open public hearing on the proposals on July 22. A final proposal is scheduled to be submitted to theEuropean Commission by Jan. 1.

This story originally appeared on leveragedfinancenews.com

 

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