CRE Portfolio Management Analyst Questions

I just started this position as an analyst at a large co. and need some help understanding how this fits in the grand scheme of things. More so starting off in this position in comparison to a credit analyst for example. How is portfolio management seen by the rest of the departments in Commercial Real Estate Finance? Does this provide me with good experience that would be transferable to other positions within the industry? Please Help

13 Comments
 

I doubt RE guys look down upon a debt guy from WF or JP

However, speaking upon PM in lending.. I have heard it is boring as shit. Basically monitoring the portfolio and checking to see if the DSCR moved .000000001

 

Credit Analysts work with the originations, underwriters, etc on deals. This is the area of lending you want to be in for the best exit ops to owners/developers/etc

Portfolio Management is the monitoring of the current loans on the banks/life cos balance sheet.

 
Best Response

What do you mean by portfolio management? Are you working as an analyst to a portfolio manager that sets the strategy for a portfolio and reviews deals that originators are pitching, or do you mean asset management where you are handling borrower requests and tracking the performance of the portfolio?

If it is the former, where you are an analyst to a portfolio manager/investment committee member and decides if a deal gets done, then you are working for the person that truly makes all of the decisions. Those groups tend to be very small (usually just a PM and an analyst). If you happen to be that analyst, good for you; you should be learning as much as you can from that person because to get there, they most likely have had a pretty interesting career.

If it is the latter, then I will say that there is generally this preconceived notion that debt asset managers are somehow lesser than others in the field. The thought is something along the lines of "the PM set the strategy, the originator went and reeled it in, and the asset manager is just there to babysit it." I'm in debt asset management for a large life company and really it is more like "the PM planned the party, the originator threw it, and the asset manager will bail everyone out of jail, bribe the judge to expunge everyone's record, clean up the party hall, AND bake cookies."

That said, everything you learn is definitely transferable to other positions in the industry. Mostly, you learn what not to do when you become an originator or what not to let your originators pull on you when you are a true PM.

 

Thanks for the great reply, yes I work under the portfolio manager. My responsibilities include maintenance of the database and variety of reporting. From what I am taking away we manage the loans while other departments originate them fund and close them. It is definitely back office. As I work towards my CFA would sticking with this department help in the long run?

 

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