Secondary Lenders In The CRE Sector Are Playing A Growing Role As Loans Become Due And Banks Retreat

The origin of the phrase “cash is king” is hard to trace but is believed to have reached the height of its cultural zeitgeist around 1987. It’s as true today as it was then, especially in the real estate market. 

With a slight alteration to “capital is king,” 2023 is poised to be a year where that capital is increasingly coming from secondary lenders, especially in the commercial real estate (CRE) space.

CRE investors are also now turning toward the relative certainty of real estate debt as a popular alternative investment class, according to a new survey by CBRE

But a more significant issue for CRE owners and investors is that banks, the primary funding source, are drastically slowing their lending as they hunt for more deposits to match loan originations. 

Miami-based BridgeInvest is a private real estate lender with more than $1.3 billion financed over the past decade and focuses predominantly on CRE customers in the multifamily, industrial, student housing, build-to-rent and retail sectors. 

Horn’s company fills the gap when commercial mortgage-backed securities (CMBS) loans come due, and CRE investors find it much harder to get an extension. 

But Horn also adds that BridgeInvest is most focused on customers seeing loans in the rent-to-own, student housing and multifamily sectors because “there is still a housing crisis in this country.”

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