-

KBRA Releases Research – CMBS Loan Performance Trends: November 2022

NEW YORK--(BUSINESS WIRE)--KBRA releases a report on U.S. commercial mortgage-backed securities (CMBS) loan performance trends observed in the November 2022 servicer reporting period. The delinquency rate among KBRA-rated U.S. CMBS trended up by 11 basis points (bps) in November 2022 to 2.89% after remaining relatively unchanged between August and October. This increase in the delinquency rate is partly driven by a meaningful amount of loans that have been unable to pay off at maturity. Of the $1.3 billion of loans that became newly delinquent this month, over 50% were reported as nonperforming matured balloons. In addition, of the $693 million transferred to the special servicer this reporting period, nearly 70% identified imminent or actual maturity default as the reason.

As stated in CMBS 2023 Sector Outlook: Continued Uncertainty, KBRA expects a modest rise in CMBS delinquencies through 2023 due to the current interest rate environment and economic uncertainty, as more loans may transfer to special servicing—particularly those nearing their maturity date. In this report, KBRA provides observations across our $319.2 billion rated universe of U.S. private label CMBS including conduits, single-asset single borrower, and large loan transactions.

The combined percentage of delinquent and/or specially serviced loans increased to 4.69% in November, up 24 bps from last month. Notably, multifamily saw its delinquency rate increase by 148 bps to 2.73%. The relatively larger increase in multifamily was driven up as the total balance of specially serviced or delinquent multifamily loans rose to $1.1 billion from $525.1 million. Two loans accounted for most of the increase: Parkhill City (PKHL 2021-MF), which reported as 30 days delinquent for the first time, and the $343.6 million Veritas Multifamily Portfolio Pool (GSMS 2021-RENT), which transferred to special servicing after it failed to extend or pay off at its initial November 2022 maturity. KBRA has placed various classes of GSMS 2021-RENT on Watch Downgrade (for details, see the press release).

Click here to view the report.

Related Publications

About KBRA

KBRA is a full-service credit rating agency registered in the U.S., the EU, and the UK, and is designated to provide structured finance ratings in Canada. KBRA’s ratings can be used by investors for regulatory capital purposes in multiple jurisdictions.

Contacts

Contacts
Catherine Liu, Associate, CMBS Ratings Surveillance
+1 (646) 731-1313
catherine.liu@kbra.com

Roy Chun, Senior Managing Director, CMBS Ratings Surveillance
+1 (646) 731-2376
roy.chun@kbra.com

Business Development Contact
Michele Patterson, Managing Director
+1 (646) 731-2397
michele.patterson@kbra.com

KBRA

Details
Headquarters: New York City, New York
CEO: Jim Nadler
Employees: 400+
Organization: PRI

Release Versions

Contacts

Contacts
Catherine Liu, Associate, CMBS Ratings Surveillance
+1 (646) 731-1313
catherine.liu@kbra.com

Roy Chun, Senior Managing Director, CMBS Ratings Surveillance
+1 (646) 731-2376
roy.chun@kbra.com

Business Development Contact
Michele Patterson, Managing Director
+1 (646) 731-2397
michele.patterson@kbra.com

More News From KBRA

KBRA Assigns Preliminary Ratings to BX 2026-PURE4

NEW YORK--(BUSINESS WIRE)--KBRA is pleased to announce the assignment of preliminary ratings to four classes of BX 2026-PURE4, a Canadian CMBS single-borrower securitization. The collateral for the transaction is a CAD 473.4 million floating-rate, interest-only mortgage loan secured by the borrowers’ fee simple interests in eight industrial assets totaling 1.9 million sf, located in the Canadian province of Ontario. As of February 2026, the portfolio was 97.4% leased to 38 tenants. The loan is...

KBRA Releases Research – Metro-Level CRE Loan Distress: Bifurcated Performance

NEW YORK--(BUSINESS WIRE)--KBRA releases research The U.S. private-label CMBS loan distress rate entered double-digit territory in January 2026. However, although the distress rate, which includes both loans 30+ days delinquent and those that are current but specially serviced, continues to rise, the pace of increase has moderated. From January 2024 to January 2025, the distress rate climbed 250 basis points (bps) to 9.7% from 7.2%. In the following 12 months, the rate increased only 70 bps to...

KBRA Releases Research — Residential Solar ABS: Performance Divergence Between Loan and Lease Structures

NEW YORK--(BUSINESS WIRE)--KBRA releases a research report that examines the structural differences between solar loan and lease collateral, compares securitized credit performance, and analyzes the drivers of divergence. The residential solar ABS sector has experienced a meaningful bifurcation in performance between loan-backed and lease-backed transactions. While both structures are exposed to consumer credit and energy market dynamics, solar loan ABS transactions have experienced weakening c...
Back to Newsroom