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    Hotel lenders seek properties in leisure markets

    Hotel lending will be solid going forward because of pent-up demand and signs of recovery in the sector. Lenders have been cautious the past few years, and there has not been any in-place cash flow to underwrite. Rising rates could actually help hotel financing as these assets have been trading at higher cap rates than More

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    Student housing makes the grade

    After a few years of caution, borrowers will see more available capital for student housing deals going forward. Capital providers will be drawn to the healthy enrollment trends and strong fundamentals in the space. Lenders will target experienced student housing sponsors that are buying or own existing properties that are walkable to campus — ideally More

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    Student housing lenders target Southeast, Southwest and Sunbelt markets

    Borrowers will see ample available capital for student housing and watch for some traditional multifamily lenders to enter the game this year. There will be a flight to quality, and lenders will target top-tier markets with strong fundamentals and schools with healthy enrollment trends. Anticipate a slight decrease in agency lending volume, as alternative conventional More

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    Most active land lenders for June 2022

    (2022 projected origination volume and preferences) Axos BankVolume: $300MOriginated ~$150M so far this year; $750K-$250M loans for all land deals; 12- to 24-month terms with extensions; 6%-7% rates; nationwide  Hankey CapitalVolume: $200MOriginated $75M so far this year; $5M-$150M loans for infill land zoned for high-demand uses such as housing; one- to three-year terms; 7.5%-9% rates; More

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    Deal of the Week: Transitional housing in Brooklyn

    The nearly 100-year-old Black Veterans Association Building serves as a three-story transitional housing property for veterans in Brooklyn, N.Y. This is a clear win for AVANA’s Extensia Financial and the community as the Black Veterans for Social Justice (BVSJ) can continue to operate from the location providing program services assisting military personnel to help them More

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    Retail lending and investing rebounds after pandemic

    There will be ample liquidity for retail financing throughout the second half of the year. Lender appetite has rebounded and sales and foot traffic are back to more normal levels. Watch for many lenders to shift focus to retail, as pricing and cap rates offer more NOI coverage than the other asset types. Grocery-anchored retail More

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    Dealmaker databank for the week of June 20

    American Street Capital121 W. Wacker Drive, Unit 2206Chicago, IL 60601Igor Zhizhin, Principal/Founder(312) 224-1390izhizhin@amstcap.com ASC worked on a $28.9M multifamily bridge loan in Santa Rosa, Calif., at 75% LTC. Zhizhin also worked on a $4.6M multifamily bridge loan in Atlanta at 84% LTC, a $4.2M multifamily bridge loan in Champaign, Ill., at 85% LTC and a More

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    Letter from the Editor: Never a dull moment

    Commercial real estate lending had a very busy start to the year; however, changes in the market could slow things down during the second half of 2022. Lenders and borrowers have plenty on their minds with worries about inflation, rising rates, changes in cap rates and issues in Ukraine. Even the Supreme Court’s possible decision More

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    Lenders assemble construction programs

    The construction lending market is as healthy as it has ever been and is expected to remain strong for at least the next two years. This strength will continue as long as vacancy rates remain historically low, particularly in the multifamily and industrial sectors. However, financing costs have increased dramatically, between the added interest and More

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    Editor’s pick: Most active bridge lenders

    (2022 projected origination volume and preferences) Thorofare CapitalVolume: $1BOriginated $350M so far this year; $15M-$100M loans for industrial/warehouse, grocery-anchored retail, cold storage, low/mid-rise office, data centers, BFR, multifamily, for-sale condos, single-tenant net-leased properties; six-month to two-year terms; SOFR+ 600-650 bps rates; Phoenix, Denver, Southern CA, Boston, Portland, Ore., Dallas, Austin, Miami, Atlanta, Salt Lake City, More

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    Despite numerous hurdles, lending activity was on the rise in Q1

    Inflation, rising rates and the war in Ukraine did not slow down commercial real estate lending during the first quarter of 2022, according to CBRE’s recent Lending Momentum Index. The index, which tracks the pace of CBRE-originated commercial loan closings in the U.S., increased by 69% year-over-year and 5.5% quarter-over-quarter. According to the firm’s Lender More

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