REALWorld Law

Real estate finance

Types of security

What sort of security is typically created or entered into by an investor who is borrowing to acquire or develop real estate?

Italy

Italy

Italian law formally recognises only specific types of contractual security which grant preferential rights in favour of a creditor over the assets of the grantor. The main kind of security typically granted in the context of a real estate financing is the following:

1. ‘ipoteca’: a mortgage in respect of immovable property (land and buildings) and certain classes of registered movable property (cars, ships, aircrafts). A mortgage must be executed by a written deed before a Notary public and it must be deposited and registered with the competent Land Registry (Conservatoria dei Registri Immobiliari) to be validly created;

2. ’pegno’: a pledge in respect of movable property, receivables or other assets. For example, it is common for the shareholder(s) in a borrower company to grant a pledge over the shares in the financed propco or, for borrowers, to grant a pledge over, inter alia, each bank account held by the borrower itself in relation to the relevant transaction;

3.‘privilegio speciale’ (under Article 46 of the Decree No. 385 of 1 September 1993 of the Republic of Italy (‘Banking Law’): a floating charge over present and future movable properties (not registered in a public registry), belonging to a company, in order to secure debt claims under a medium or long-term financing (with a duration exceeding 18 months) granted by authorised banking entities. The classes of goods which can be subject to a privilegio speciale are:

  • present or future equipment, plant and machinery, concessions and fixed assets;
  • raw materials, works-in-progress, finished goods, livestock and merchandise;
  • goods purchased in any manner with the proceeds of the relevant financing; and
  • present or future receivables arising from sales of the assets and goods above specified

4. ‘cessione di crediti in garanzia’: an assignment of claims by way of security is not technically a security, but an absolute transfer of title. In the context of a real estate financing transaction, an assignment by way of security typically concerns all rights and receivables arising from insurance policies, occupational leases and/or construction contracts (in the case of real estate development).

Under any such scheme, the debtor(s) of the assignor typically continue to pay to the borrower the amounts due to it until an event of default occurs, and the assignor undertakes to channel any relevant proceeds on a bank account pledged in favour of the lender.

The security mentioned above can be created by separate security documents or within the loan agreement itself (except for the security that must be executed by a written deed before a Notary public). The market standard for structured transactions, however, usually provides for separate documents.