KBRA Assigns Preliminary Ratings to Velocity Commercial Capital 2026-2 (VCC 2026-2)
7 May 2026 | New York
KBRA assigns preliminary ratings to 12 classes of Velocity Commercial Capital 2026-2 (VCC 2026-2) mortgage-backed certificates.
VCC 2026-2 is a $414.5 million securitization collateralized by 1,108 small balance commercial loans secured by mortgages on 1,202 residential rental or commercial real estate (CRE) properties. The pool is comprised of 1,108 fixed-rate loans with an average outstanding principal balance of $374,094 and range from $22,500 (<0.1%) to $12.5 million (3.0%). The weighted average appraisal loan-to-value (LTV) ratio and FICO score for the pool are 60.5% and 691, respectively.
The underlying properties are located in or near 208 Core Based Statistical Areas (CBSAs) across 41 states plus the District of Columbia. The top-three CBSAs represent 31.6% of the portfolio and include New York-Newark-Jersey City, NY-NJ-PA (18.1%), Los Angeles-Long Beach-Anaheim, CA (7.8%), and Miami-Fort Lauderdale-West Palm Beach, FL (5.6%). The three largest state exposures represent 38.0% of the portfolio and consist of California (15.4%), Florida (11.4%), and New York (11.2%).
KBRA relied on its RMBS and CMBS methodologies to analyze the transaction. In doing so, KBRA divided the pool into two distinct loan groupings, as follows: Sub-pool 1 (688 loans, 39.7% of the total pool balance) is comprised of Investor 1-4 loans. Sub-pool 2 (420 loans, 60.3%) consists of loans secured by commercial real estate assets. This sub-pool is largely comprised of office properties (64 assets, 11.6%), retail properties (90 assets, 10.6%), mixed-use properties (98 assets, 9.9%), industrial properties (50 assets, 9.6%), multifamily properties (43 assets, 6.3%), automotive properties (28 assets, 3.6%), cooperative properties (one asset, 3.0%), commercial condominiums (33 asset, 2.4%), hotel properties (four assets, 2.0%), self-storage properties (four assets, 0.9%), daycare facilities (four assets, 0.3%), and a hospital/veterinarian property (one asset, 0.1%). KBRA reclassified the mixed-use and commercial condominium property types to each asset’s respective core use and classified automotive service properties as retail for our analysis.
The RMBS and CMBS portfolio credit model results were combined, on a WA basis, to determine KBRA’s modeled expected losses at each rating category and reflect the quality of the collateral, diligence, and information quality relative to typical RMBS and CMBS transactions. The losses were subsequently incorporated into our cash flow modeling, which was used to evaluate the transaction’s credit enhancement levels in the context of its modified pro rata structure.
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