Originally posted by: halik
Originally posted by: K1052
Originally posted by: halik
Originally posted by: K1052
We're not concerned with the entire commercial RE market in the whole country. We are concerned with these particular assets in their particular locations equipped to produce autos. Detroit (for example) has a vast tracts of industrial RE that the city would probably give you if you paid the tax liens.
I've got access to some Real Capital Analytics though work.
Here's $/sqft prices in detroit. Note that office space is up since mid-2007 and industrial is down some 30-35%. Still nowhere near 71% decline, which is why the creditors prefer the collateral.
office
industrial
One of my buddies works for a debt side hedge fund, I'll see if I can have him shoot me a graph of what Chrysler CDS were trading for the past couple months. That should put an end to all this conspiracy nonsense.
You yourself admitted personal knowledge that Ford, despite trying, has been unable to unload most of their plants. That's a clear concession that these assets are worth even less than the going average rates for their property category. So now we're going to dump a bunch more nearly identical assets into the same stagnant part of the market and pretend their values won't be affected?
Without knowing more specifics about the CDS transactions (who bought what, when, and for how much) it's going to be impossible to really get a handle on that situation until later. It definitely makes for a hell of a motivation though given the odds the bankruptcy court won't come back with a more favorable figure for the holdouts.
Yeah,
what I said implies that the market value of the plants was known in 2007 (ACH did manage to sell two or three and handed one back to ford) based on comps (ie precedent transaction).
In any case, both cerberus and debt side funds KNOW how to value collateral, they make living investing in secured debt.
When those bonds were revolved in 2007, the value of collateral was for all practical purposes equal the face value of the issue. Cerberus's incentive to do that is to minimize the interest they have to pay (the more collateral, the less interest needed), debt side funds' incentive is so they don't get burned in bankruptcy (aka make sure the collateral is worth what cerberus says its work...part of due diligence).