OREANDA-NEWS. Fitch Ratings has assigned the following ratings and Rating Outlooks to the Wells Fargo Bank N. A. Commercial Mortgage Pass Through Securities, Series 2016-C35.

--$47,834,000 class A-1 'AAAsf'; Outlook Stable;

--$58,672,000 class A-2 'AAAsf'; Outlook Stable;

--$265,000,000 class A-3 'AAAsf'; Outlook Stable;

--$227,377,000c class A-4 'AAAsf'; Outlook Stable;

--$67,132,000 class A-SB 'AAAsf'; Outlook Stable;

--$69,045,000 class A-S 'AAAsf'; Outlook Stable;

--$785,060,000b class X-A 'AAAsf'; Outlook Stable;

--$49,865,000 class B 'AA-sf'; Outlook Stable;

--$48,587,000 class C 'A-sf'; Outlook Stable;

--$50,000,000ac class A-4FL 'AAAsf'; Outlook Stable;

--$0ac class A-4FX 'AAAsf'; Outlook Stable;

--$56,258,000ab class X-D 'BBB-sf'; Outlook Stable;

--$56,258,000a class D 'BBB-sf'; Outlook Stable;

--$21,736,000a class E 'BBsf'; Outlook Stable;

--$11,508,000a class F 'Bsf'; Outlook Stable.

(a) Privately placed and pursuant to Rule 144A.

(b) Notional amount and interest-only.

(c) The aggregate initial balance of class A-4, A-4FL, and A-4FX certificates will be $277,377,000. Under certain circumstances, holders of the Class A-4FL Certificates may exchange all or a portion of their certificates for an equal certificate amount of the Class A-4FX Certificates having the same Pass-Through Rate as the Class A-4FX regular interest.

Fitch does not rate the $98,452,000 class X-B certificates or the $49,865,609 class G certificates.

Since Fitch issued its expected ratings on July 12, 2016, the balance of the class A-4 has decreased from $277,377,000 to $227,377,000. The $50,000,000 class A-4FL certificates and $0 class A-4FX certificates were added to the structure. The classes above reflect the final ratings and deal structure.

The certificates represent the beneficial ownership interest in the trust, primary assets of which are 102 loans secured by 140 commercial properties having an aggregate principal balance of approximately $1.02 billion as of the cut-off date. The loans were contributed to the trust by Rialto Mortgage Finance, LLC, Barclays Bank PLC, Wells Fargo Bank, National Association, UBS Real Estate Securities Inc., C-III Commercial Mortgage LLC, National Cooperative Bank, N. A., and Basis Real Estate Capital II, LLC.

Fitch reviewed a comprehensive sample of the transaction's collateral including site inspections on 65.0% of the properties by balance, cash flow analysis of 73.3%, and asset summary reviews on 73.3% of the pool.

KEY RATING DRIVERS

Higher Leverage than Recent Transactions: The pool's Fitch weighted average DSCR and LTV are 1.32x and 105.2%, respectively. However, excluding co-op and credit opinion collateral, the pool's weighted average Fitch DSCR and LTV are 1.12x and 112.2%, respectively. This is higher than other recent Fitch-rated transactions. The 2015 and YTD 2016 averages Fitch LTVs were 109.3% and 107.5%, respectively. The 2015 and YTD 2016 averages Fitch DSCRs were 1.18x and 1.17x, respectively.

Co-Op Collateral: The pool contains 11 loans (5.6% of the pool) secured by multifamily co-ops; 10 are in the New York City metro area and one is in New Haven, CT. The weighted average Fitch DSCR and LTV of the co-op collateral in this transaction as rentals are 4.17x and 47.1%, respectively.

Pool Concentration Better than Recent Deals: The top 10 loans comprise 40.4% of the pool, which is below the YTD 2016 and 2015 averages of 55.4% and 49.3%, respectively. Additionally, the loan concentration index (LCI) and sponsor concentration index (SCI) are 250 and 265, respectively, well below the YTD 2016 LCI and SCI averages of 428 and 491 and the 2015 LCI and SCI averages of 367 and 410, respectively.

RATING SENSITIVITIES

For this transaction, Fitch's net cash flow (NCF) was 16.1% below the most recent year's net operating income (NOI); for properties for which a full-year NOI was provided, excluding properties that were stabilizing during this period. Unanticipated further declines in property-level NCF could result in higher defaults and loss severities on defaulted loans and in potential rating actions on the certificates.

Fitch evaluated the sensitivity of the ratings assigned to WFCM 2016-C35 certificates and found that the transaction displays average sensitivity to further declines in NCF. In a scenario in which NCF declined a further 20% from Fitch's NCF, a downgrade of the junior 'AAAsf' certificates to 'A-sf' could result. In a more severe scenario, in which NCF declined a further 30% from Fitch's NCF, a downgrade of the junior 'AAAsf' certificates to 'BBB-sf' could result. The presale report includes a detailed explanation of additional stresses and sensitivities on pages 10 - 11.