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Data Analysis: Commercial Real Estate Troubles Threaten U.S. Banks

A graphic of warning signs

The U.S. banking system is on a precipice as exposures to commercial real estate grow and banks grapple with high interest rates, according to an analysis by a finance professor at 爱妃传媒.


By amber bonefont | 3/10/2025

The U.S. banking system is on a precipice as exposures to commercial real estate grow and banks grapple with high interest rates, according to an analysis by a finance professor at 爱妃传媒.

Of the 158 largest banks, 59 in the country are facing exposures to commercial real estate greater than 300% of their total equity capital, as reported in the fourth quarter 2024 regulatory data and shown by the .

The banks most at risk are Flagstar Bank, Zion Bancorp, Valley National Bank, Synovus Bank, Umpqua Bank and Old National Bank, each of which has more than $50 billion in total assets, an analysis of the screener shows.

鈥淩egulators have been putting pressure on banks to reduce their exposures. However, it鈥檚 a very difficult thing to do without sending a signal of weakness to the market and creating more problems,鈥 said , Ph.D., 聽Lynn Eminent Scholar Chaired Professor of Finance in 爱妃传媒鈥檚 . 鈥淭o get around this, many banks are 鈥榚xtending and pretending鈥 by restructuring their loans.鈥

The , a part of聽the , measures the risk to exposure from commercial real estate at the 158 largest banks in the country with more than $10 billion in total assets. Using publicly available data released quarterly from the Federal Financial Institutions Examination Council (FFIEC) Central Data Repository, Cole calculates each bank鈥檚 total CRE exposure as a percentage of the bank鈥檚 total equity. Bank regulators view any ratio over 300% as excess exposure to CRE, which puts the bank at greater risk of failure.

Troubled debt restructuring for commercial construction, multifamily, owner-occupied and owner-non-occupied mortgages tripled since 2023. They reached $18 billion in the fourth quarter of 2024, up from $6 billion in Q2 2023, according to data from the FFIEC. While non-owner occupied nonfarm, non-residential accounts for more than half of these amounts, there is also serious deterioration in multifamily and commercial construction loans.

鈥淏anks choose to extend these loans, hoping interest rates might drop. While the Fed did cut rates,鈥 Cole said. 鈥淚f a loan is maturing from five years ago in today鈥檚 rate environment, rather than refinance it with today鈥檚 terms, they will restructure the loan under the same terms from five years ago for another year. This all depends on interest rates falling, which is not likely to happen this year.鈥

聽Among banks of any size, 1,788 have total CRE exposures greater than 300%, up from 1,697 in Q3; 1,077 have exposures greater than 400%, up from 971 in Q3; 504 have exposures greater than 500%, up from 426 in Q3; 216 have exposures greater than 600%, up from 166 in Q3.

For comparison, the aggregate industry total CRE exposure is 132% of the total, unchanged from the third quarter of 2024.

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