Data Analysis: Rising CRE Exposure May Spur Bank Mergers

More than 60 of the largest banks in the country have increased risk due to their excessively high exposures to commercial real estate, according to a data analysis from a banking and finance expert at Florida Atlantic University.
More than 60 of the largest banks in the country have increased risk due to their excessively high exposures to commercial real estate, according to a data analysis from a banking and finance expert at Florida Atlantic University.
Some of the 62 banks, particularly those with lower capital such as Flagstar Bank, Live Oak and First Foundation, also run a higher risk of being forced by regulators to merge with a larger and healthier bank, according to the second quarter 2024 regulatory data report and shown by the U.S. Banks’ Exposure to Risk from Commercial Real Estate Screener produced by FAU’s College of Business.
“We have already seen some of these banks, like Silicon Valley, merged into larger banks like J.P. Morgan. This doesn’t bode well for our banking system as it becomes more concentrated and less competitive,” said Rebel Cole, Ph.D., Lynn Eminent Scholar Chaired Professor of Finance in FAU’s College of Business. “As these banks are considered ‘too big to fail,’ no one thinks regulators will let them go under during a recession. This destroys the confidence of depositors, especially uninsured depositors, in these smaller banks, who disproportionately fund small-business loans, and they provide credit to other areas in the economy where the big banks simply do not.”
The U.S. Banks’ Exposure to Risk from Commercial Real Estate Screener, a part of the Banking Initiative in the College of Business, measures the risk from excessive exposures to commercial real estate at the 155 largest banks in the country with more than $10 billion in assets. Using publicly available data released quarterly by the Federal Financial Institutions Examination Council (FFIEC) Central Data Repository, Cole calculates each bank’s total CRE exposure as a percentage of the bank’s total equity. Bank regulators view any ratio over 300% as excess exposure to CRE, which puts the bank at greater risk of failure.
Among the 4,594 banks of any size, including smaller banks, 1,849 have total CRE exposures greater than 300%; 1,096 have exposures greater than 400%; 536 have exposures greater than 500%; and 293 have exposures greater than 600%.
For comparison, the Q2 2024 industry-average benchmark for total CRE exposure was 138% of total equity.
“Regulators for some reason exclude certain types of commercial mortgages when calculating CRE exposures, which seriously understates the risk facing certain banks,” Cole said. “They split commercial mortgages into owner-occupied and non-owner occupied, and do not count owner-occupied CRE, claiming that such mortgages are less risky than non-owner-occupied CRE mortgages.”
-FAU-
Latest Research
- FAU Engineering Receives $1.5M to Launch Ubicquia Innovation CenterThe Ubicquia Innovation Center for Intelligent Infrastructure will drive sensor, AI and analytics innovation to digitize and monitor infrastructure across utility, municipal, commercial and industrial sectors.
- BEPI Poll: Half of Floridians Consider Leaving Over Cost of LivingThe majority of Floridians are hanging on to the "American Dream," but rising housing costs and everyday expenses make it difficult to achieve, according to a new poll from Florida Atlantic University's BEPI.
- 'Frazzled' Fruit Flies Help Unravel How Neural Circuits Stay WiredFAU scientists have discovered that the protein Frazzled (DCC in humans) fine-tunes neuron connections, keeping signals fast and precise - key to a fruit fly's rapid escape reflex and healthy nervous system.
- FAU Innovation Pilot Awards Drive Faculty Research from Lab to MarketThe FAU pilot program offers $500 to $15,000 in seed funding to help researchers turn early discoveries into market-ready technologies, fostering prototypes, industry partnerships and real-world impact.
- Nearly 70 FAU Faculty Named Among World's Top 2% of ScientistsNearly 70 FAU faculty are ranked among the world's top 2% of scientists by Stanford-Elsevier, recognizing their global research impact across 22 fields and 174 subfields from engineering to humanities.
- FAU Researchers Make Great 'Strides' in Gait Analysis TechnologyA first-of-its-kind study explored whether more accessible technologies such as a 3D depth camera could accurately measure how people walk, offering a practical alternative to traditional gait analysis tools.


