Bad-Boy Carve-Outs

Definition: Bad-boy carve-outs are exceptions to a non-recourse loan that make the borrower or guarantor personally liable if specific prohibited acts occur. They come in two tiers: loss carve-outs, where the guarantor owes the lender's actual losses from acts like fraud, misappropriation of rents, or environmental contamination, and full-recourse triggers, where events such as a voluntary bankruptcy filing or an unauthorized transfer convert the entire loan balance into a personal obligation.

Bad-Boy Carve-Outs in Practice

A sponsor holds a $20,000,000 non-recourse CMBS loan. Facing maturity default, the sponsor files a voluntary bankruptcy to stall foreclosure. That filing is a full-recourse trigger: the springing guaranty converts the entire $20,000,000 balance, plus the lender's enforcement costs, into a personal liability of the guarantor. Had the violation instead been $350,000 of misapplied insurance proceeds, a loss carve-out, the guarantor would owe that $350,000, not the full balance.

Bad-Boy Carve-Outs: What the Market Actually Requires

Carve-outs exist because non-recourse lending only works if the borrower cannot loot or sabotage the collateral. The market splits them into two tiers. Loss recourse items make the guarantor liable for the lender's actual damages from specific acts: fraud or material misrepresentation, misapplication of rents, insurance or condemnation proceeds, physical waste, environmental contamination, and unpaid taxes. Full-recourse triggers convert the entire loan balance into a personal obligation, classically a voluntary bankruptcy filing, collusion in an involuntary filing, unauthorized transfers of the property or controlling equity, and violations of the single-purpose-entity covenants.

Enforcement is not theoretical. Courts have enforced springing guarantees to their letter, including full-balance liability for technical SPE violations and for insolvency-based triggers in aggressively drafted documents. That is why the negotiation matters: push SPE violations from the full-recourse tier down to loss recourse, insist on knowledge and materiality qualifiers on the fraud items, make sure an involuntary bankruptcy filed by a third party is not a trigger unless the borrower colluded, and strike any trigger keyed to mere insolvency, which can spring at exactly the moment a sponsor is trying to negotiate a workout.

Flexibility varies by capital source. CMBS documents are the strictest and effectively non-negotiable after closing, because the loan is serviced under a pooling agreement that no one can amend; the negotiation window is before rate lock or never. Life companies and agency lenders run standard forms but accept reasonable sponsor edits. Debt funds vary widely. The most common self-inflicted wound comes after a default: rents collected once the loan is in default belong to the lender, and using them for anything other than the property and the debt is misapplication of funds, which means personal liability on an otherwise clean file.

Why It Matters for Your Loan

Carve-outs are the fine print that decides whether non-recourse means anything. A sponsor who signs an aggressive springing guaranty has personally guaranteed against every path a distressed deal naturally wants to take, including bankruptcy protection. Reviewing and negotiating carve-outs before rate lock costs little; discovering them during a workout costs everything. Commercial Lending Solutions flags aggressive carve-out language in term sheets and steers sponsors toward capital sources whose standard forms match their risk tolerance.

Bad-Boy Carve-Outs: FAQ

Loss carve-outs cover acts that damage the lender in a measurable amount: fraud or misrepresentation, misapplied rents or insurance proceeds, waste, environmental contamination, and unpaid taxes, with the guarantor owing the actual loss. Full-recourse triggers cover acts that attack the loan structure itself: a voluntary bankruptcy filing, collusion in an involuntary one, transferring the property or controlling equity without consent, and violating single-purpose-entity covenants. The first tier costs you the damage; the second tier costs you the whole loan.
Yes, but only before closing, and the window varies by lender. CMBS carve-outs must be settled before rate lock because the securitized documents cannot be amended later. Life companies and agencies accept reasonable edits to their standard forms. The highest-value asks: move SPE violations from full recourse to loss recourse, add knowledge and materiality qualifiers, exclude involuntary bankruptcies absent collusion, and eliminate insolvency as a standalone trigger. Experienced counsel and a broker who knows each lender's form pay for themselves here.


Put This Knowledge to Work

Understanding Bad-Boy Carve-Outs is step one. Commercial Lending Solutions structures deals around these numbers every day, across 1,000+ lenders. Free deal review, response within 24 hours.

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