Structured finance is back, and with it comes all of the due diligence requirements, including the often misunderstood Probable Maximum Loss Report. Credit officers and underwriters need to understand a few basics about the Probable Maximum Loss Report to meaningfully use these reports as an underwriting tool.
The goal of the process of rating buildings for seismic risk is to protect your portfolio and downstream investors from a double helping of seismic risk. The PML Report cannot completely eliminate risk from a seismic event—we don’t report the distance of the asset to a nuclear reactor—but the PML will fail buildings that are at greatest risk during an earthquake. Note lenders that don’t require PMLs might find that their portfolio suffers from adverse selection; essentially getting a double helping of seismic risk. To use the Probable Maximum Loss Report well a lender needs consistency. If you are going to measure anything, you want to do it by the same method every time. So here are four basic steps to get consistency.
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June 22, 2026
Partner has named Frederick Ellington, AIA, LEED AP, as Technical Director in its Construction Services division. With 30+ years of experience, he strengthens the firm's construction risk management, due diligence, and project advisory capabilities for commercial real estate clients.

May 27, 2026
Capital planning in commercial real estate has entered a new phase. In addition to traditional lifecycle replacements, managers now face a growing set of capital needs driven by energy ordinances, decarbonization goals, and climate risk. These drivers are no longer peripheral considerations; they are central to how capital plans are developed, prioritized, and executed.

June 05, 2026
Partner Property Consultants, the European subsidiary of Partner Engineering & Science, Inc. (Partner ESI), announces that Antoine Yeprem joined the company in June 2026 as Senior Consultant, Real Estate Due Diligence, in Germany.




