Barry Sternlicht
Analyst · KBW. Please go ahead
Thanks, Jeff. Thanks, Rina. Good morning, everyone. I can make my comments short. I say that but I always talk too long. But this morning, I'm going to do that.The overall environment is interesting out there. The property markets continue to have great strength, both in the United States and in Europe, particularly the office, industrial and multifamily markets, where we've seen accelerating rent growth across our own portfolio and our equity books outside of the REIT.The two asset classes that remains somewhat challenged to our retail in the hotel space. Hotels, primarily because of overbuilding more than a lack of demand. And the supply in multi-family actually remains fairly handleable or benign. I wouldn't say it's totally benign, but it's -- there's more net absorption in every market than there is construction, say, the Northeast.There are pockets of problems, New York City, high-end residential, as you know, the West Coast, San Francisco. And we are worried, increasingly nervous about the impact of a democratic victory and raising rates on -- tax rates on the wealthy in cities like San Francisco and like New York, which would cause an exodus of wealth. And of relying -- ultimately, the burden of carrying the social services of these blue states will fall an ever shrinking population, albeit a negative cycle, reinforcing cycle. It's beginning to impact our lending thoughts, because you really want to be long expensive building at a low cap rate in New York City of tenants like JPMorgan decide to hop -- skip town.And you're seeing that reflected in the lack of strength of the housing markets in and around New York City, in particular, and in all the blue states with the removal of the deductions of taxes, but I think we can all assume that with democratic victory, there's no chance taxes aren't going up on the rich and some capacity.So what you're seeing also is tremendous volatility in interest rates, much more so in the last couple of years. two days ago, the tenure was 160 something, and this morning, it's closing on two. It doesn't really impact us at all, but it's interesting to see the uncertainty in the markets, the melt up of the stock market. Are we just concluding our LP conferences on our equity funds. And I referenced to beyond meat chart where stock may turn 20% off its IPO. And now, it's down by two-thirds from its IPO.Just because the market's rising, don't mean they have to stay in that position. Clearly, equity markets are ignoring the prospects of a far left victory at the moment. And at some point in the next 12 months, they may reassess that depending on what happens in the political arena.So staying closer to us, I mean, we're very comfortable that our loans -- our LTVs will probably dropped on assets that we're lending to because of the rise in rents across pretty much of the country, in most major office markets. Also, if the economy weakens rates we will stay low, and I think they're driven right now more off of European condition than they are off the U.S. condition.And in Europe, Germany is probably focused on some fiscal stimulus to raise their -- pull them out of the manufacturing slowdown, and they've been quite the laggards when you look at the competitive landscape of what governments have done across the country, what the Japanese have done, what the Chinese have done, what the Americas have done. Clearly, the German or the ECB has done far less in fiscal stimulus and the rest of the world. And their economy is kind of showing the impact of that double-wall of that and also the Chinese trade negotiations and their dependence on foreign trade, which is so much different than our economy here.But I think that means that if Germany would have get going, it probably pulls U.S. rates higher even if the U.S. economy slows, since I believe we're funding our -- we're pricing off of the bonds. So coming back to us, we've never been stronger. And we have, as Jeff mentioned, $8.5 billion of undrawn facilities, ample cash on our balance sheet, our multiple credit business lines are functioning really well. Really excited about the growth in the resi book and the quality of what we're doing, the returns that we're getting.And we are moving to hold more of that paper than we had in the past. Increase our on-balance sheet rather than securitizing all of it, because the yields are in excess of what we can return in our commercial lending segment. And the risk, we believe, is at least as good or maybe better.The energy Infrastructure business has actually cost us probably in excess of $0.10 and growing this year in year-over-year earnings. Primarily because, as Jeff mentioned, we shut down originations. We have a facility for -- a two-year facility when we bought the company from GE, but the loans are five-year loans, and we don't mismatch maturity. So we basically said we're going to wait.So the team put together these two financing lines that are of longer duration, now we can comfortably make these loans, and we're off to the races where the book has never been bigger. We'll hit or exceed. I expect our origination goals in that business and will add accretively to our earnings next year and going forward. So pretty excited about having a broken wing business contribute and start flapping its swing and helping us go into interaction. The property book is beyond belief good, particularly our multifamily assets. So they are –we don't know what to do with them. I mean, there's – we have this more than $500 million gain. And cash and cash yields that are 14%, 15% and only going up.So we could harvest them. We don't know how to replace them. And would it require – there was, let's say, $800 million of embedded gain or capital and gain coming back to us from the sale of those assets. At our leverage ratio, that's another $4 billion, $5 billion of that loans we have to make. And the average duration of our loans is short. These assets will live forever. So we'd have to put $4 billion at every two years, in three years.It's a high burden on top of the six or so, five or six will originate this year. And we did notice, by the way, and Jeff mentioned, Rina mentioned it, and it's something I actually just caught on to, is that our largest competitor does everything on balance sheet, and we do these A notes. And so our volumes are understated, because if we actually did finance the company the way they finance their company, our loan book would look at $11 billion, not the $7 billion, $7 billion, $9 billion that you see. And so the number of originations might look different, too. So it's really – it's just the way we presented ourselves, and we're going to correct that going forward, because it's really an $11 billion book.The thing we also don't do in scale, we don't finance ourselves and there's a material portion of our competitors' book is loans to themselves even though they're quite large. It's not a bad thing. I'm not saying it's a bad thing it's just a different philosophy. And we've, on occasion, done it in very small numbers, way back when, probably seven years ago. There was a 13% mezz, I think it was a $250 million position, the $200 million to $250 million of Mammoth Mountain, which we owned. We sold a piece of it off to Apollo and took the 49% loan. That asset sold for $810 million. Our last call exposure was $250 million. So when there's just stupid paper available. We have occasionally done it, but in a very small scale. Certainly 100th of the size of what our competitors done.And I think the other interesting thing in the book is the $90 billion servicing portfolio, all new. And I will mention B pieces because some of our peers – we are the best player in servicing. So we should be the biggest player in B pieces, right? We're not. We don't really think it's a tremendous business. It's insurance that's mispriced, not bad. Works in all market, but it's not going to be a very core business for us. And so we always participate. I think we're fastest six in BP's purchases, Jeff, something like that. And then we cherry-pick the ones we want to buy, particularly the ones where we're contributor to the pool and pretty much move on from that.So I don't have any other comments, I think. The company is doing quite well. We've completed a three-year plan. We're quite sanguine on our future. We are looking at things to buy and have tried and failed. But Chris is genius in the sky. So, there'll be other things we'll be looking at in the future.So with that, I'm going to stop. Thank you.