Discussion paper

DP19663 Extend-and-Pretend in the U.S. CRE Market

We show that banks “extended-and-pretended” their impaired CRE mortgages in the post-pandemic period to avoid writing off their capital, leading to credit misallocation and a buildup of financial fragility. We detect this behavior using loan-level supervisory data on maturity extensions, bank assessment of credit risk, and realized defaults for loans to property owners and REITs. Extend-and-pretend crowds out new credit provision, leading to a 4.8–5.3% drop in CRE mortgage origination since 2022:Q1 and fuels the amount of CRE mortgages maturing in the near term. As of 2023:Q4, this “maturity wall” represents 27% of bank capital.

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Citation

Crosignani, M and S Prazad (2024), ‘DP19663 Extend-and-Pretend in the U.S. CRE Market‘, CEPR Discussion Paper No. 19663. CEPR Press, Paris & London. https://cepr.org/publications/dp19663