KBRA Assigns Preliminary Ratings to FREMF 2025-K169 and Freddie Mac Structured Pass-Through Certificate Series K-169
24 Feb 2025 | New York
KBRA is pleased to announce the assignment of preliminary ratings to four classes of FREMF Series 2025-K169 mortgage pass-through certificates and three classes of Freddie-Mac structured pass-through certificates (SPCs), Series K-169. FREMF 2025-K169 is a $1.14 billion CMBS multi-borrower transaction. Freddie Mac will guarantee six classes of certificates issued in the underlying Series 2025-K169 securitization and will deposit the guaranteed underlying certificates into a separate trust that will issue the SPCs.
The underlying transaction is collateralized by 59 fixed-rate multifamily mortgage loans. The loans have principal balances that range from $882,000 to $124.7 million. The largest loan in the pool, The Linc (10.9%), has an in-trust principal balance of $124.7 million and is secured by a Class-A, high-rise multifamily complex located in the Long Island City neighborhood of Queens, New York. The five largest loans represent 39.1% of the cut-off date balance and also include Corso Atlanta (9.5%), Zerzura (7.4%), Circa 2020 (6.0%), and The Flin (5.3%). The assets are located in 26 states, with the three largest concentrations in Ohio (14.1%), New York (14.1%), and Georgia (13.7%).
KBRA’s analysis of the underlying transaction incorporated our CMBS Multi-Borrower rating process that begins with our analysts’ evaluation of the underlying collateral properties’ financial and operating performance, which is used to determine KBRA’s estimate of sustainable net cash flow (KNCF) and KBRA value using our North American CMBS Property Evaluation Methodology. KBRA’s weighted average KNCF for the portfolio is 7.8% less than the issuer’s NCF. KBRA capitalization rates were applied to each asset’s KNCF to derive individual property values that, on an aggregate basis, were 42.9% less than third-party appraisal values. The weighted average KBRA capitalization rate for the transaction is 8.64%. The KBRA credit model deploys rent and occupancy stresses, probability of default regressions, and loss-given default calculations to determine losses for each collateral loan, which are then used to assign our credit ratings.
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