REALWorld Law

Real estate finance

Trading of debt

Is secured debt traded between lenders? If so, how is a transfer of the debt to another lender effected?

UK - England and Wales UK - England and Wales

UK - England and Wales

Debt is commonly traded between lenders. Syndicated lending documentation has, to a large extent, become standardized on the terms incorporated in facility agreements produced by a trade body known as the European Loan Market Association (LMA). These are then negotiated between the parties. In particular, there are two specific English law governed LMA Real Estate Finance standard facility agreement template documents:  an investment loan facility agreement and a development loan facility agreement. Each of these is in general use in syndicated transactions in the real estate market in the UK and allows for free transferability of debt between lenders with the security being held on their behalf by a security agent (acting as trustee for the changing pool of lenders from time to time) and the debt being administered by a facility agent.  Bilateral loan facility agreements and non-LMA documents usually contain equivalent transfer provisions to those in the LMA documents. However, the ability of lenders to transfer debt to other lenders is a matter for negotiation on a transaction by transaction basis.

In addition, there are several ways of transferring debt being:

  • novation: the whole of the loan and the lender's obligations are transferred to the transferee;
  • assignment: the loan is assigned to the transferee, but this cannot be used to transfer an undrawn commitment (which would have to be dealt with by way of novation);
  • sub-participation: the economic benefit of the loan is transferred to the transferee but this does not affect the original loan contract between the original lender and the borrower. The original lender remains the lender of record and the buyer of the debt takes the credit risk not only on the borrower but the original lender; and
  • synthetic arrangements: the economic risks of debt can also be traded using derivatives and insurance policies.