Starwood European Real Estate Finance Ltd (SWEF) 25 July 2019  NOT FOR RELEASE, DISTRIBUTION OR PUBLICATION, IN WHOLE OR IN PART, DIRECTLY OR INDIRECTLY, TO U.S. PERSONS OR IN, INTO OR FROM THE UNITED STATES, AUSTRALIA, CANADA, SOUTH AFRICA, JAPAN, NEW ZEALAND OR ANY JURISDICTION WHERE TO DO SO WOULD CONSTITUTE A VIOLATION OF THE RELEVANT LAWS OR REGULATIONS OF SUCH JURISDICTION  Starwood European Real Estate Finance Limited: Quarterly Factsheet Publication  Starwood European Real Estate Finance Limited (the "Company") announces that the factsheet for the second quarter ended on 30 June 2019 is available at:  www.starwoodeuropeanfinance.com  Extracted text of the commentary is set out below:  Investment Portfolio at 30 June 2019 As at 30 June 2019, the Group had 17 investments and commitments of £478.9 million as follows: Â
 Dividend On 24 July 2019 the Directors declared a dividend in respect of the second quarter of 1.625 pence per Ordinary Share payable on 30 August 2019 to shareholders on the register at 2 August 2019.   Placing On 7 May 2019, the Company announced that it was seeking to issue up to 38,200,000 new ordinary shares of no par value at 104.75 pence per share. On 13 May 2019 the Company announced that the Placing was oversubscribed and a scaling back exercise was undertaken such that the targeted gross proceeds of £40.0 million were raised.  Second Quarter Portfolio Activity The following portfolio activity occurred in the second quarter of 2019: Â
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 The Group also received £29.6 million of partial loan prepayments as a result of asset sales within the respective property portfolios.  The Group used the proceeds of amortisation, the Irish School repayment and available cash and further drawings on its revolving credit facility to fund the new loans. The proceeds of the placing of new equity were used to partially repay the Group's revolving credit facilities.  Following this portfolio activity, the Group remained substantially fully invested at 30 June 2019 with drawings of £18.0 million (net of cash) on its £114 million credit facilities and £31.9 million of unfunded commitments.  Review of first half investment activity  The table below summarises the new commitments made and repayments received in the first six months of 2015 to 2019. Â
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 The Group also received a relatively low amount of repayments in the first half of 2019.  However, since the end of the second quarter, the following repayments have been received:
With these repayments factored in, the repayment percentage for the first seven months of the year is approximately 27 per cent of the loan book at the beginning of the year.  In a normal year, we expect 30-40 per cent of the portfolio to repay on average but some years may be materially higher or lower than the average. It is difficult to accurately predict the repayment intention of borrowers as they execute on their business plans but we will continue to closely monitor this throughout the second half in order to try to minimise any potential cash drag from repayments.  The Group continues to see strong opportunities to deploy capital in our target markets. The Investment Adviser has a number of transactions under review which present solid risk adjusted returns.  Reported Returns Reported returns have fallen in the second quarter from 7.3 per cent to 7.2 per cent unlevered, and from 7.8 per cent to 7.4 per cent levered. We would expect the levered returns to increase as the loans in execution are funded and further leverage is used for the loan portfolio.  In addition to this and as previously explained, the simplified way in which the annual return is presented does lead to the returns being a conservative estimate at any point in time. The following items enhance the actual returns achieved:
 The above three upsides to quoted returns are not incorporated in the gross levered yield of 7.4 per cent as they are not guaranteed to occur, are difficult to forecast accurately and to incorporate them could overstate the expected return. However, we expect these to continue to provide an enhancement to the quoted levels of return going forward although the levels of this enhancement may vary depending on when the loans repay versus contractual maturity, the level of prepayment protection and the shape of the sterling-euro forward curve.  Over the life of the Company to date, we have experienced, on average, an enhancement of 0.63 percentage points from prepayments and one-off fees when loans repay and we expect the pick up on foreign exchange to be in excess of 1 percentage point.  Finally, the Group maintains a dividend reserve to ensure that it can maintain a stable dividend during periods where modest leverage or cash drag can temporarily lower returns due to the timing of new loans and repayments.    Market Commentary  2019 has seen slower volumes in the commercial real estate market in Europe. According to BNP Real Estate total  investment volumes for the first quarter of 2019 were EUR43 billion which is 21 per cent lower than in the same period in 2018. The average hides different situations across the different cities.  In London, Brexit uncertainties have not hit volumes much more than the average with London volume broadly in line with the European average at 23 per cent lower than last year. Germany's big markets outside of Berlin were down significantly with Munich, Frankfurt and Hamburg down 77 per cent, 67 per cent and 61 per cent respectively. Hot markets included Milan, Berlin and Madrid where investors are anticipating tight markets and strong rental growth potential were up 91 per cent, 78 per cent and 12 per cent respectively. Volume data for the second quarter was not available at the time of writing but discussions with a number of market participants suggest a similar trend is expected for the second quarter.  Increased expectations of further rate cuts and quantitative easing has driven asset pricing across the board.  Investors were already expecting the ECB to supply fresh monetary stimulus to help alleviate the ongoing economic stress within the region and the nomination of the International Monetary Fund's Christine Lagarde to be the next ECB president has raised expectations of continued loosening monetary policy. The EUR interest rate curve has significantly flattened so now the 5 year swap is now in line with 3 month EURIBOR at -33 basis points. Government bond yields have continued to push down with all European 2 year sovereign debt now yielding negative returns and with German 10 year bonds having yielded as low as -0.4 per cent in recent days. Even peripheral European debt such as Portugal and Greece is trading at significantly lower yields than in recent years. Greek 10 year bonds have priced almost as tight as at 2 per cent having been almost 20 per cent in 2016 and Portugal is now at 0.3 per cent versus over 4.4 per cent just 18 months ago.  With low asset yields we have seen increased formation of lower priced debt funds and direct investing by insurance companies and pension funds in more vanilla senior commercial real estate debt as an alternative for sovereign and corporate bonds.  Insurance companies such as Axa and Allianz have been expanding their senior commercial real estate lending strategies and we are seeing some new players with similar mandates emerging. We have also seen good pricing on the two recent CMBS issuances with Morgan Stanley's Eos (European Loan Conduit No. 35) pricing at a blended 137 bps over EURIBOR for a 58.7 per cent Note to Value ("NTV") and Goldman and CA-CIB's cold storage securitisation pricing at 184 bps over LIBOR for a 65.2 per cent NTV.  For other types of alternate lenders there have been a mixed bag of results. Lendy, a peer to peer lender making small property loans was put into administration in May after issues on its loan book including a reported 66 per cent of loans past due as of late 2018.  Funding Circle, which makes small business loans, recently reported the tougher lending criteria it was imposing would halve its expected revenue growth for 2019. The FCA has increased regulation in the space with investors no longer be able to put more than 10 per cent of their investable assets into peer to peer lending and another part of the new rules is the introduction of an appropriateness test for investors that considers a client's knowledge and experience of peer to peer lending. In better news, Lendinvest which provides a variety of property finance has successfully completed its first securitisation. We have also seen varied fortunes for the challenger banks. Oaknorth appears to be doing well having grown its total loan book 160 per cent in a year to £2.2 billion and with new commercial development loans as large as £60 million reported. Meanwhile fellow challenger bank Metro has had issues with its loan book having announced it had been miscategorising the risk-weightings for a large numbers of its loans when working out how much capital it needed to protect against losses, which has led to reports of weakened investor and customer confidence and a new capital raise in May.  On the UK residential side, London peaked in 2014 and according to Savills as a whole the prime central London market has fallen 19.4 per cent in sterling terms between June 2014 and the end of the first quarter of 2019. The second quarter saw a return to positive house price appreciation in London with the Nationwide reporting a 0.6 per cent quarter on quarter growth in the second quarter of 2019.  Across the market as a whole, the number of surveyors reporting rises in the amount of new enquiries and new instructions both increased significantly in May. This has reversed a downward trend seen since the summer of last year. Both metrics are still negative meaning that the majority of surveyors are still reporting falling numbers of enquiries and instructions but with a smaller majority this month. For the parts of the market that attract high proportions of international buyers the continued devaluation of sterling means that foreign buyers denominated in USD, EUR and RMB currencies are viewing the all-in discount from peak as especially attractive in their domestic currency basis.  As we have commented in recent factsheets, the market for UK retail debt is yet to settle. According to Property Week the market will be tested with two of the largest and highest quality retail assets in the UK a refinancing of the £750 million Westfield Stratford CMBS coming due in November this year and Intu reported to be looking at a refinancing of £1 billion of debt secured by the Trafford Centre. It will be an interesting test of sentiment to the sector to follow the progress of the refinancing of these very high profile assets over the coming months.   Share Price / NAV at 30 June 2019 Â
 Key Portfolio Statistics at 30 June 2019 Â
 (1) The unlevered annualised total return is calculated on amounts outstanding at the reporting date, excluding undrawn commitments, and assuming all drawn loans are outstanding for the full contractual term. 14 of the loans are floating rate (partially or in whole and some with floors) and returns are based on an assumed profile for future interbank rates but the actual rate received may be higher or lower. Calculated only on amounts funded at the reporting date and excluding committed amounts (but including commitment fees) and excluding cash un-invested. The calculation also excludes the origination fee payable to the Investment Manager. (2)The levered annualised total return is calculated as per the unlevered return but takes into account the amount of net leverage in the Group and the cost of that leverage at current LIBOR/EURIBOR. (3) LTV to Group last £ means the percentage which the total loan drawn less any amortisation received to date (when aggregated with any other indebtedness ranking alongside and/or senior to it) bears to the market value determined by the last formal lender valuation received by the reporting date. LTV to first Group £ means the starting point of the loan to value range of the loans drawn (when aggregated with any other indebtedness ranking senior to it). For development projects the calculation includes the total facility available and is calculated against the assumed market value on completion of the relevant project.   ÂÂ
*excludes any permitted extensions. Note that borrowers may elect to repay loans before contractual maturity. Â
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*the currency split refers to the underlying loan currency, however the capital on all non-sterling exposure is hedged back to sterling.  For further information, please contact:  Apex Fund and Corporate Services (Guernsey) Limited as Company Secretary - 01481 735879 Dave Taylor  Starwood Capital - 020 7016 3655 Duncan MacPherson  Stifel Nicolaus Europe Limited - 020 7710 7600 Neil Winward Mark Bloomfield Gaudi Le Roux  Notes:  Starwood European Real Estate Finance Limited is an investment company listed on the premium segment of the main market of the London Stock Exchange with an investment objective to provide Shareholders with regular dividends and an attractive total return while limiting downside risk, through the origination, execution, acquisition and servicing of a diversified portfolio of real estate debt investments in the UK and the wider European Union's internal market. www.starwoodeuropeanfinance.com.  The Company is the largest London-listed vehicle to provide investors with pure play exposure to real estate lending.  The Group's assets are managed by Starwood European Finance Partners Limited, an indirect wholly-owned subsidiary of the Starwood Capital Group.  |
ISIN: | GG00B79WC100 |
Category Code: | MSCM |
TIDM: | SWEF |
LEI Code: | 5493004YMVUQ9Z7JGZ50 |
Sequence No.: | 14538 |
EQS News ID: | 846207 |
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