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Commerzbank nears $5 billion sale of Spanish property loans - sources

By Alexander Hübner and Sarah White

FRANKFURT/MADRID (Reuters) - Germany's Commerzbank is finalising the sale of Spanish property loans to U.S. investors for up to 3.9 billion euros ($5.4 billion / 3.1 billion pounds), sources said, in what would be one of the biggest deals of its kind since Spain's 2008 real estate crash.

JPMorgan and private equity firm Lone Star have been picked as the winning bidders for the portfolio - in a deal codenamed "Project Octopus" - the three sources close to the matter said on Tuesday, adding that the deal had yet to be formally signed.

"The main parts of the agreement are already done ... the final closing will be in the coming weeks," one of the sources said.

Commerzbank, Lone Star and JPMorgan declined to comment.

The portfolio is one of the largest sold in the wake of Spain's real estate market collapse in 2008. House prices have fallen around 40 percent since then, hurting banks exposed to the sector and pushing some Spanish lenders into state bailouts.

Foreign investors have flocked to Spain in search of real estate bargains, but many banks were initially reluctant to sell at big discounts, and large portfolio auctions have been rare.

In the past year, however, more deals have emerged as Spanish banks, and some in other countries, have booked hefty provisions against losses and are in a stronger position to sell loan portfolios at discounts.

Investors such as Blackstone and Cerberus Capital Management have also‎ started buying real estate management divisions from banks, to help them manage the loans and housing.

Commerzbank, Germany's second-biggest lender, is taking advantage of the renewed appetite for the Spanish real estate market as it cleans up its finances, but it will still have to sell the package at a discount, the sources said.

The sale price is between 3.7 billion euros and 3.9 billion euros, two of the financial sources told Reuters.

The loans had a face value of between 4 billion and 4.5 billion euros when Commerzbank took them on, sources have previously said.


ATTRACTIVE

The sale of the "Octopus" portfolio should pave the way for more disposals of packages of loans and properties, bankers in Madrid said, adding that some deals had been held up because investors were focusing on this one.

The Commerzbank package was particularly attractive for buyers as it includes loans backed by commercial buildings such as hotels and shopping centres, rather than the residential mortgages banks usually try to shift. The loans include ones to the luxury Ritz hotel in Madrid, for example.

That helped it draw offers from banks as well as funds, and JPMorgan was up against bidders including Deutsche Bank. Banks were attracted by the performing loans in the portfolio, sources have said.

The package is made up of about 1 billion euros in non-performing debt, while the remainder is about 3.3 billion euros in performing loans.

One of the sources said that Lone Star would also be taking on a team of roughly 25 people from Commerzbank as part of the deal, to help manage the loans.

Spanish newspaper Expansion reported earlier on Tuesday that a deal was in the offing, citing a sale price of 3.5 billion euros.

Meanwhile, Spain's rescued Catalunya Banc, which the state is set to start auctioning off this week, is in the market with a 7-billion-euro package of mortgages, split between soured loans and performing ones.

The government is looking at ways to help smooth that sale with state funds, sources have said.


(Additional reporting by Robert Hetz in Madrid; Writing by Jonathan Gould; Editing by Pravin Char)