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Debt Desk

Podcast af Jeff Bechtel

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Daily briefing with Morning Brief-style national news plus commercial real estate debt and multifamily market coverage. Deals, SOFR and Treasury curve context, CMBS, debt funds, Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, and HUD execution. Produced by Jeff Bechtel.

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episode Debt Desk — Debt Desk for May 22: Economic Pressure in Washington, a Five-Handle Long Bond, and Multifamily Capital Still Finding a Lane cover

Debt Desk — Debt Desk for May 22: Economic Pressure in Washington, a Five-Handle Long Bond, and Multifamily Capital Still Finding a Lane

Good morning. It is Friday, May 22, 2026, and this is Debt Desk. National We start with the national backdrop, because the macro tone still is not separating cleanly from the financing tone. The Associated Press reported early Friday that President Trump is heading to a competitive district in New York to campaign around last year’s tax law while a new AP-NORC poll shows only about one-third of U.S. adults approve of his handling of the economy. That matters beyond politics. If the administration is out selling the economy this aggressively, it tells you the growth and cost-of-living narrative still feels fragile. For lenders and borrowers, fragile confidence usually means slower decision-making and more sensitivity to rate moves. The second story is one of the more revealing reversals of the week. AP reported Thursday that Trump abruptly pulled back from signing a planned executive order on artificial intelligence after deciding the measure might slow the United States in the global AI race. That is not just a technology story. It reaches into data-center development, power demand, transmission planning, cybersecurity spending, and the geography of new digital infrastructure. The pause keeps the buildout story alive, but it also preserves policy uncertainty around how that buildout gets regulated. The third national thread comes from immigration enforcement, and it is less about one prosecution than about the legal stress around the broader crackdown. AP reported Thursday night that federal prosecutors in Chicago dropped the remaining charges against four activists tied to last year’s immigration enforcement protests after a judge scrutinized allegations of grand jury misconduct. That does not change the administration’s direction on immigration, but it does underscore how contested the enforcement push remains inside the courts as well as on the street. We have also had recent New York courthouse-arrest disputes and repeated judicial scrutiny of arrest practices. Put together, it is a reminder that immigration is still producing real institutional friction among federal prosecutors, enforcement agencies, local advocates, and judges. The fourth story is narrower, but it still says something important about Washington. AP reported Wednesday that Republican senators were considering dropping a proposed one billion dollars in White House security money tied in part to President Trump’s ballroom project because the votes were not there. The read-through is broader. Even when the White House is pressing a favored project, Republicans are still showing real sensitivity to cost and internal vote counts. For markets, that matters because the fiscal story remains messy, not settled. So the national picture this morning looks like this: the White House is trying to defend its economic story as public skepticism rises, AI policy is still being rewritten in real time, immigration enforcement remains a legal and political flashpoint, and internal Republican budget discipline still looks uneven. None of that guarantees a worse rates day. But it does explain why investors are still inclined to keep some premium in the long end and why financing desks are still operating with caution instead of optimism. Debt Desk Now let’s turn to the debt markets, where the rate picture is still the cleanest way to understand borrower behavior. The latest official Treasury curve available at run time is the U.S. Treasury’s May 21 close. It showed the 2-year at 4.08 percent, the 5-year at 4.25 percent, the 10-year at 4.57 percent, and the 30-year at 5.10 percent. The latest published SOFR reading I could verify at run time was 3.50 percent for May 20, according to New York Fed data carried by FRED and updated on May 21. Those numbers still describe a market with two different messages depending on where you sit in the stack. Start with the front end. A 2-year Treasury at 4.08 percent says the market is not pricing a rapid slide to easier short-term money. Then move to the 5-year at 4.25 percent. That middle of the curve is still expensive enough to compress proceeds and force harder conversations around leverage for owners who would rather avoid taking full 10-year or longer duration. The 10-year at 4.57 percent remains the benchmark everyone quotes, but this morning the 30-year at 5.10 percent is still doing more of the actual work. A long bond above 5 percent tells you duration still carries a real penalty. Life companies, pension-style capital, and any lender that has to think hard about long liability matching are not being invited to loosen up by that number. They are being told to stay selective, stay disciplined, and make sure every basis point of spread is attached to collateral they really want. The slope of the curve reinforces that point. The spread from the 2-year to the 10-year is roughly 49 basis points, and the spread from the 5-year to the 30-year is roughly 85 basis points. That is a usable curve, but not a friendly one. It says long money still wants compensation and that permanent fixed-rate debt is still the part of the stack most likely to feel heavy. That is why SOFR still matters, even after the market’s attention shifted back toward the Treasury long end. At 3.50 percent on the latest published print, floating debt still starts meaningfully below a fixed-rate execution built off a 10-year in the mid-4s or a 30-year just above 5. But that does not make floating debt cheap. Once you add spread, reserves, extension uncertainty, and cap economics, bridge still requires conviction. It simply remains, for many borrowers, the less painful choice compared with locking a long fixed coupon at today’s duration levels. Execution tone across lender groups still tracks that divide. Recent CBRE data cited by GlobeSt showed first-quarter 2026 CRE lending rose to a five-year high, but the composition of that capital stack changed sharply. Alternative lenders, including debt funds and mortgage REITs, took 53 percent of volume, up from 19 percent a year earlier, while banks fell to 22 percent, life companies to 17 percent, and CMBS to 8 percent of non-agency volume. That is one of the most important market facts right now. Capital is available, but it is not being distributed evenly. Banks are still lending, especially where there is relationship value, moderate leverage, and clean sponsorship. But they are not behaving like the broad solution for every business plan. Life companies are still relevant, particularly on top-tier stabilized multifamily and industrial, yet the 30-year is keeping them disciplined. CMBS remains open for large, institutional, well-explained deals, but it is not in the mood to forgive ambiguity. Debt funds are still the group most willing to solve for complexity, future funding, transitional risk, and speed, and they are still charging accordingly. That pricing split still shows up in spread talk. Commercial Observer reported in April that life company 10-year quotes had narrowed to roughly 170 basis points over the benchmark at moderate leverage, while conduit CMBS pricing was hovering near 250 basis points over the benchmark. In other words, the absolute coupon problem today is not just spread. It is spread sitting on top of a Treasury curve that has become expensive all over again. You can see the market still functioning in actual transactions. Commercial Observer reported on May 21 that Dwight Capital closed a $114 million HUD 221(d)(4) substantial rehabilitation loan to convert 100 East Wisconsin Avenue in downtown Milwaukee into a 373-unit apartment project. That is a meaningful deal on its own, and it carries a bigger message. HUD-backed conversion financing is still real, even in a market where plenty of owners complain that execution is too hard. When a transaction that size closes, it tells you that adaptive reuse and agency-style patience can still beat a hostile conventional financing environment. There was also another smaller but useful multifamily signal this week in Newark. Connect CRE reported on May 20 that Drew Capital arranged $16.25 million of construction financing through Trevian Capital for a 77-unit multifamily project in the University Heights neighborhood. Nobody is going to confuse that with a blockbuster institutional refinance, but that is exactly why it matters. It shows the lower-middle and regional part of the apartment capital stack is still moving too, especially when the deal size, sponsorship, and market fit line up with a lender that wants the risk. Multifamily remains the clearest lane for fresh debt flow, but it is not a frictionless lane. GlobeSt reported Thursday that newly built multifamily is being repriced by capital rotation and by a refinancing wave tied to the heavy use of five-year loans over the last several years. That is an important continuity story. A lot of apartment owners chose shorter paper to preserve flexibility and capture better coupons. Now those maturities are bunching up in 2025 and 2026, which means even good assets are walking into a more difficult refinancing math problem than they expected when those loans were originated. That is also why agency execution still matters so much. Fannie Mae’s multifamily monthly business volumes report shows $17.1 billion of 2026 volume through April 30. Freddie Mac’s multifamily issuance calendar, updated May 15, still shows a steady programmatic machine, including K-5621 projected at $855 million for the week of May 18 and K-7661 projected at $997 million for the week of May 26. Those are evidence that agency-backed securitization remains one of the most repeatable apartment finance channels in the market. HUD and FHA remain relevant for a similar reason, even if the process is slower. The Milwaukee conversion loan is the freshest proof point, but the broader message is that government-backed execution still offers something balance-sheet lenders cannot always match in a volatile rate market: duration, structure, and a real takeout lane when private fixed-rate capital feels expensive. The CMBS market still tells the other side of the story. Trepp reported on May 12 that the overall CMBS special servicing rate rose to 11.38 percent in its April 2026 report, driven mainly by office transfers, while multifamily special servicing also moved higher. Trepp also said May private-label CMBS hard maturities total about $2.57 billion, with office still carrying a concentrated share of the pressure. So yes, securitized finance is still open. But it is open in a market that remembers exactly where the older stress sits, and office is still the property type forcing everyone to stay honest. That tension between fresh execution and legacy distress is really the whole story. New apartment financing still gets done. Selective construction debt still gets done. HUD and agencies still give borrowers real options. But older office stress, refinancing walls, and a long bond above 5 percent keep the market segmented. Here is the concise markets snapshot. The latest official Treasury close available at run time was 4.08 percent on the 2-year, 4.25 percent on the 5-year, 4.57 percent on the 10-year, and 5.10 percent on the 30-year. The latest published SOFR print I could verify was 3.50 percent for May 20. U.S. stocks finished Thursday modestly higher after another oil reversal, while Brent crude had earlier spiked above $109 before sliding back, a reminder that energy remains the quickest route to another rates scare. In credit, debt funds continue to carry the most flexibility, agencies remain the most dependable multifamily lane, HUD still matters where patience can be monetized, and CMBS remains workable but selective. One thing to watch today is whether the 30-year Treasury can stay near 5.10 instead of grinding higher again. If the long bond stabilizes here, permanent lenders can keep their pencils relatively steady and more borrowers may decide to transact. If oil, fiscal politics, or policy noise push the long end back up, the market is likely to lean even harder toward bridge, agency, HUD, and shorter-duration structures rather than full-term fixed-rate executions. The bottom line this morning is that capital is still available, but it is still rewarding clarity over ambition. The national backdrop remains noisy enough to keep investors cautious. The Treasury curve remains steep enough at the long end to keep duration expensive. And multifamily still has the widest menu of financing options, even as owners work through a growing wave of five-year maturities and a market that is willing to lend, but not willing to pretend risk has disappeared.

I går - 16 min
episode Debt Desk — Debt Desk for May 21: Washington Tightens Up, The Curve Steepens Again, and Multifamily Keeps Drawing Capital cover

Debt Desk — Debt Desk for May 21: Washington Tightens Up, The Curve Steepens Again, and Multifamily Keeps Drawing Capital

Good morning. It is Thursday, May 21, 2026, and this is Debt Desk. National We begin with Washington, where lawmakers are trying to narrow the room for fresh geopolitical shock even as markets are still pricing the possibility of it. The Associated Press reported late Wednesday that the House approved legislation meant to block President Trump from taking military action against Iran without congressional authorization. The bill still faces a harder path beyond the House, but the signal matters. Congress is not treating Middle East risk as a distant headline anymore. It is treating it as something that could hit oil, inflation expectations, federal power, and market confidence all at once. For the bond market, that matters because every new Iran headline is now being filtered through the question of whether the long end needs to price more risk premium. The second story also comes out of Washington, but this time it is about the administration’s ability to secure support at home. AP reported Wednesday evening that House Republicans dropped a White House-backed plan to provide more than one billion dollars for presidential security improvements, including a proposed ballroom project, after resistance from conservatives and budget hawks. That is a narrower story on its face, but it speaks to a wider issue investors keep watching. Even when the White House is pressing its own priorities, fiscal politics are still messy, internal party discipline is still inconsistent, and there is still very little evidence that Washington is moving toward a cleaner budget narrative. Markets do not need another dramatic fiscal event to stay cautious. They only need more proof that policy execution remains uneven. A third story is a reminder that the domestic legal and immigration backdrop remains volatile as well. AP reported Wednesday that federal agents arrested an immigrant outside a courtroom in New York City after his immigration case was dismissed, a move that immediately drew condemnation from immigrant advocates and local officials. The individual story is serious on its own terms, but the broader market relevance is that immigration enforcement is again becoming a sharper institutional conflict among federal agencies, local governments, and the courts. That kind of friction does not directly set loan coupons, but it does reinforce the sense that political volatility is staying high even apart from foreign policy. The fourth story is more technological than political, but the market angle is real. Reuters reported Wednesday that President Trump signed an executive order intended to strengthen U.S. leadership in artificial intelligence and cybersecurity. Any White House effort tying AI development to national security will attract capital-market attention because it reaches into power demand, data-center development, grid resilience, and federal procurement priorities. This is the kind of national story that can turn into a property and infrastructure story faster than it first appears. Put together, the national picture this morning is not a panic story. It is a pressure story. Congress is trying to constrain Iran risk. Fiscal politics inside the House still look fractured. Immigration enforcement is generating new courtroom confrontation. And the administration is leaning harder into AI and cybersecurity as strategic priorities. None of those stories alone closes the lending window. But together they help explain why duration is still priced defensively and why lenders still want more certainty before they stretch. Debt Desk Now let’s turn to the debt markets, where the shape of the Treasury curve remains the single best shorthand for borrower behavior. The latest officially available Treasury curve at run time is the May 20 close from the U.S. Treasury. It showed the 2-year at 4.00 percent, the 5-year at 4.20 percent, the 10-year at 4.56 percent, and the 30-year at 5.09 percent. The latest available overnight SOFR print at run time is 3.51 percent for May 19. Those numbers tell a very specific story. The front end has not fallen enough to promise fast Fed relief, the belly of the curve is still expensive enough to hurt intermediate fixed-rate execution, and the long bond is still carrying a five-handle. That is why borrowers continue to think in terms of structure first and headline rate second. Start with the 2-year at 4.00 percent. That is the market saying short-term funding is no longer in emergency territory, but it is also not low enough to make floating-rate debt feel easy. Then move to the 5-year at 4.20 percent, which is where a lot of intermediate financing starts to feel uncomfortably expensive for sponsors hoping to bridge to a refinance without giving up too much current cash flow. The 10-year at 4.56 percent is the benchmark everyone quotes, but the 30-year at 5.09 percent is still the more important read for long-duration capital. Life companies, pension-backed capital, and anyone who has to think hard about duration are still looking at a long bond with a five in front of it. What matters just as much as the absolute level is the slope. The spread from the 2-year to the 10-year is about 56 basis points. The spread from the 5-year to the 30-year is about 89 basis points. That is not a curve telling you long-term money wants to get aggressive. It is a curve telling you that term premium remains real, that duration still carries a penalty, and that fixed-rate permanent debt will keep feeling heavier than many sponsors would prefer. That is why SOFR remains part of the story even though the market obsession has shifted toward Treasury duration. At 3.51 percent on the latest published print, overnight SOFR is not low, but it is noticeably less punitive than locking fixed-rate debt against a 10-year in the mid-fours and a 30-year just above five. In practical terms, bridge debt is still expensive, but for many borrowers it remains easier to justify than a long fixed coupon that bakes in today’s duration premium all at once. Execution tone across lender buckets still reflects that tradeoff. Banks are lending, but only selectively, and mostly where the sponsorship is strong, leverage is moderate, and the exit story is credible. Bank OZK’s construction financing for stronger apartment projects remains a useful signal for that lane. Life companies are still open as well, but they remain disciplined because the long end has given them no reason to loosen up. They can still win on top-quality multifamily and industrial, but the bar for stretching on leverage or weaker transitional stories remains high. CMBS is open too, but the split between fresh execution and older-vintage stress remains one of the defining facts of the market. Trepp’s latest CMBS data show the overall special-servicing rate at 11.38 percent in March, with office still doing most of the damage. Trepp also said private-label CMBS loans facing hard maturity in May total about $2.57 billion, again with office carrying a disproportionate share of the pressure. So yes, securitized capital is functioning. But it is functioning in a market that still remembers exactly where the problem assets are. Debt funds remain the part of the capital stack willing to solve complexity, future funding, and higher leverage, but they are still charging for it. Recent multifamily market reporting shows spreads for debt-fund construction and bridge executions generally holding well above bank money, especially where a sponsor needs flexibility, future advances, or a business plan that a regulated lender would rather not own. The core point has not changed. Debt funds are active because they are flexible, and they are expensive because flexibility is still scarce. On actual deals getting done, apartments continue to provide the cleanest proof that the market is still open. Multi-Housing News reported on May 19 that Hudson Bay Capital and BRP Companies secured a $165 million Bank OZK construction loan for the second phase of a Long Island City project totaling 363 units. That is still one of the better read-throughs this week for selective bank construction appetite. It says banks will still show up when the sponsor, market, and product line up cleanly enough. Multi-Housing News also reported on May 19 that Hillpointe closed a $67 million Trez Capital loan for a 330-unit Tampa project. That is a different lender bucket and a different message. It reinforces that debt funds are still willing to back multifamily growth stories where sponsors value speed and flexibility, even if the price is meaningfully wider than prime bank paper. And on the refinancing side, Multi-Housing News reported on May 19 that Naftali Group and Access Industries obtained a $374 million refinancing from Blackstone for Williamsburg Wharf in Brooklyn. Large urban apartment refinancings like that matter because they show scale lenders are still prepared to write big checks for institutional-quality collateral even when the broader rate backdrop feels unforgiving. For multifamily more broadly, agencies still look like the most dependable lane when sponsors prioritize certainty of execution. Fannie Mae’s multifamily business volume page shows 2026 activity at $17.1 billion through April 30. That is not just a statistic. It is evidence that the agency channel is still carrying real flow while other parts of the market remain segmented by duration pain and credit selectivity. Freddie Mac is sending a similar message through deal flow. Freddie’s capital-markets calendar shows another large K-Deal on deck, with K-766 sized at just under one billion dollars and expected to settle in late May. That matters because it reinforces that agency-backed securitization remains liquid and programmatic at a time when private-label CMBS is still working through legacy office stress. For apartment owners, that is a meaningful distinction. The agency machine is not just open. It is visible, repeatable, and easier to underwrite around. HUD and FHA remain relevant for a related reason. They are slower than some balance-sheet or bridge lenders, but in a market where the long end is still making permanent debt painful, the value of durable leverage and long amortization becomes easier to defend. Recent HUD guidance aimed at reducing some environmental-review friction under the MAP Guide does not change the whole process overnight, but it does fit the broader theme. Government-backed execution is still trying to become slightly easier at exactly the moment borrowers want reliability more than novelty. The multifamily CMBS read is a little more mixed. Apartments remain one of the more financeable property types, and new issuance is still getting done, but the broader securitized market is still carrying the weight of older distress. That is why multifamily borrowers with clean rent rolls and straightforward sponsorship can still find CMBS receptivity, while anything that looks ambiguous on cash flow, lease-up, or refinance durability gets scrutinized much harder. Stepping back, the lender map this morning still breaks into very clear lanes. Banks can win the relationship-driven construction or bridge deal with conservative leverage. Life companies can win the best stabilized permanent loan. CMBS can win the institutional fixed-rate execution when the collateral is clean enough. Debt funds can win the more complex or higher-leverage assignment. Agencies can win the certainty-of-execution apartment deal. HUD can win the borrower who values duration and durability over speed. The market is not shut. It is segmented with almost no mercy. That segmentation is exactly why term structure matters more than a single benchmark headline. If the 10-year were falling on its own, borrowers might feel like the whole system was easing. But the 2-year is still high enough to limit optimism, the 5-year is still expensive enough to compress proceeds, and the 30-year is still high enough to keep duration lenders defensive. The curve is doing the rationing. Here is the concise markets snapshot. The latest official Treasury close available at run time was 4.00 percent on the 2-year, 4.20 percent on the 5-year, 4.56 percent on the 10-year, and 5.09 percent on the 30-year. The latest available overnight SOFR print was 3.51 percent for May 19. The twos-tens spread remains positively sloped, the fives-thirties spread still tells you long money is demanding compensation, and multifamily remains the clearest source of fresh financing flow. CMBS is still open, but it is selective. Banks and life companies are still lending, but neither group is signaling a sudden willingness to ignore structure risk. One thing to watch today is whether Washington’s effort to limit unilateral military action against Iran actually cools the long end, or whether markets keep trading the issue as unresolved geopolitical risk anyway. If the 30-year can hold around 5.09 instead of drifting back toward the highs from earlier in the week, permanent lenders should keep their pencils relatively stable. If the long bond backs up again, expect more borrowers to stay in bridge, agency, or HUD lanes and delay the decision to lock fixed-rate debt. The bottom line this morning is that capital is still available, but duration is still expensive, certainty is still being rewarded, and multifamily still has the widest financing options. National headlines are feeding volatility at the margin. The curve is translating that volatility into real borrowing costs. And lenders are still deciding, deal by deal, which risks they are willing to own and which ones they will leave for someone else in the stack.

21. maj 2026 - 15 min
episode Debt Desk — Debt Desk for May 20: Iran in the Senate, California Fire Pressure, and a Curve That Still Punishes Duration cover

Debt Desk — Debt Desk for May 20: Iran in the Senate, California Fire Pressure, and a Curve That Still Punishes Duration

Good morning. It is Wednesday, May 20, 2026, and this is Debt Desk. We begin with the national picture, and this morning the lead story is that Washington is trying to put a legal fence around the Iran risk even as the market is still trading the possibility of another escalation. The Associated Press reported overnight that the Senate advanced legislation to block President Trump from taking military action against Iran without congressional approval. That does not mean the geopolitical risk is gone. It means lawmakers are signaling that the market has moved from a theoretical foreign-policy concern into a live constitutional and fiscal concern. For investors, that distinction matters. The issue is no longer just whether there is another strike headline. It is whether every new Middle East development now hits oil, inflation expectations, and Treasury term premium at the same time. The second story stays in Washington, where the administration’s new compensation vehicle for Trump allies is becoming a bigger institutional fight. AP reported this morning that Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche is facing sharp questions over the nearly $1.8 billion Anti-Weaponization Fund tied to the settlement of Trump’s IRS lawsuit. The political optics are obvious, but the market implication is the more important part for us. Investors are seeing another example of executive action colliding with congressional oversight, legal scrutiny, and concerns about how federal money is being used. That kind of clash does not move a cap rate by itself, but it does reinforce the broader sense that policy risk and fiscal credibility remain part of the backdrop. The third story is the aftermath of the deadly shooting at the Islamic Center of San Diego. AP’s latest reporting says investigators are still working through motive details after two teenage gunmen killed three men at the mosque before killing themselves, with the case being treated as a hate crime. It remains first and foremost a human tragedy. But it also adds to the feeling that domestic instability is not receding at a moment when markets are already balancing geopolitical risk, inflation sensitivity, and legal-political stress. The fourth story is out of Southern California, where AP reported early today that the Gifford Fire has surged across thousands of acres and is now forcing evacuations and putting pressure on parts of Santa Barbara and San Luis Obispo counties. Wildfire headlines are local stories until they are not. They affect insurance markets, municipal resilience planning, utility exposure, and the broader conversation around property risk. In a real estate capital markets context, every major fire story is also a reminder that physical risk is no longer a side topic. It is increasingly part of underwriting. Put those stories together and the national setup this morning is fairly clear. Washington is trying to keep Iran from becoming a wider military event while also fighting over the scope of presidential power at home. A hate-crime investigation in San Diego is still unfolding. California is dealing with another fast-moving wildfire. The common thread is not that all of these stories are identical. It is that they all add uncertainty, and uncertainty is exactly what rate-sensitive lenders and borrowers have the least patience for. Now let’s turn to the Debt Desk. Start with rates, because this is still a market where the shape of the Treasury curve tells you almost everything about borrower psychology. The latest officially verified U.S. Treasury curve available at run time is the May 19, 2026 table. It showed the 2-year at 4.02 percent, the 5-year at 4.23 percent, the 10-year at 4.57 percent, and the 30-year at 5.10 percent. That is a modest easing from the prior day’s highs, but it is not a friendly curve. It still says front-end relief is limited, intermediate fixed-rate debt is expensive, and long-duration capital remains defensive. The 2-year at 4.02 tells you the market still does not believe the Fed is about to rescue borrowers quickly. The 5-year at 4.23 is where a lot of intermediate-duration commercial pricing really starts to hurt. The 10-year at 4.57 remains the benchmark everyone quotes, but the 30-year at 5.10 is the real governor on life company behavior and on the psychology around long-term permanent debt. Once the long bond is still carrying a five-handle, lenders that depend on duration do not have much room to be generous. That is why the SOFR story matters so much right now. The latest published overnight SOFR print for May 19 was 3.53 percent. So floating-rate borrowers are living in a very different world from fixed-rate borrowers. SOFR is no longer the emergency headline it was at the peak of the hiking cycle. Treasury duration is the bigger pain point. In plain English, bridge debt is not cheap, but it can still look more workable than locking an expensive long-term coupon against a 10-year near 4.6 and a 30-year above 5. This is where the execution tone by lender bucket becomes more important than the headline level of rates. Banks are still open, but they are being selective and relationship-driven. They want cleaner stories, lower leverage, and assets that can survive a tougher refinance window later. Life companies are still very much in the market, but the curve is forcing discipline. They can win on top-tier multifamily, industrial, or grocery-anchored retail where cash flow is stable and sponsor quality is unquestioned. But they are not going to stretch just because borrowers want a lower coupon. CMBS is still functioning, but the split between new execution and legacy stress is still one of the defining facts of this market. Trepp’s May reporting shows $2.57 billion of private-label CMBS balance facing hard maturity in May, with office still the biggest pressure point. Trepp also reported that the overall CMBS special-servicing rate rose to 11.38 percent in March, driven mainly by office transfers. That means securitized lending is still available for quality collateral, but nobody should confuse new issuance capability with broad forgiveness for older assets that were underwritten into a very different rate regime. Debt funds remain the flexible capital in the stack, and that flexibility still comes with a price. Multi-Housing News reported this week that debt-fund pricing for higher-leverage multifamily construction is still landing around the mid-300s over SOFR, while banks can come in materially tighter when they like the sponsorship, market, and leverage. That spread differential matters. It tells you the market is still charging for complexity, future funding obligations, and business-plan risk. It also explains why debt funds continue to own so much of the bridge, construction, and structured-credit conversation. As for deals actually getting done, the clearest evidence this week is still coming from apartments and apartment-adjacent development, because that remains the deepest lane in commercial real estate finance. Multi-Housing News reported that Hudson Bay Capital and BRP Companies landed $165 million in construction financing from Bank OZK for phase two of a 363-unit project in Long Island City. That is a useful read-through for the broader CRE market. Bank construction debt is still available when the sponsor, submarket, and execution story are all credible. The same pattern showed up in Tampa, where Multi-Housing News reported that Hillpointe closed a $67 million loan from Trez Capital for a 330-unit project. That is a debt-fund execution, not a bank execution, and that distinction matters. It reinforces the idea that capital is available across the stack, but different lenders are solving for different parts of the risk spectrum. And on the permanent side, Multi-Housing News reported that Naftali Group and Access Industries secured a $374 million refinancing from Blackstone for the Williamsburg Wharf project in Brooklyn. That is a big-ticket refinance in a market where borrowers still need scale lenders willing to underwrite sponsorship, location, and lease-up confidence rather than just screen against headline rate discomfort. When a loan like that clears, it is a reminder that institutional capital is still willing to write large checks when the collateral tells the right story. For multifamily specifically, this is still an agency-and-optionality market. Fannie Mae’s multifamily monthly business volumes page shows 2026 new business volume of $23.0 billion through April. Freddie Mac’s recent underwriting update emphasized certainty of execution and faster preliminary screening on complete submissions. That combination matters because many borrowers are not just hunting for the lowest rate. They are hunting for dependability. In a volatile Treasury market, dependability is part of the price. HUD and FHA are still part of that same conversation, especially for owners who value duration and refinance durability over speed. Multi-Housing News reported this week, citing Walker & Dunlop research, that HUD is gaining relevance as borrowers look for long-term certainty in an unstable rate environment. That argument lines up with HUD’s May 4 mortgagee letter, which trimmed environmental-review friction in parts of the MAP Guide. In other words, the policy setup is slowly getting more execution-friendly at the same time the rate backdrop is keeping demand for durable financing high. The CMBS read-through for apartments is more nuanced. The public market is still open, but multifamily is not completely insulated from broader credit stress. Trepp said first-quarter CMBS issuance stayed solid this year, yet servicing pressure remains elevated in older vintages and problem office loans still dominate the stress narrative. For apartment borrowers, the practical takeaway is that securitized capital is still a real outlet, but the market is rewarding clean collateral and punishing anything that looks remotely ambiguous. Stepping back, the commercial real estate lending map this morning is pretty easy to describe. Banks can still win the clean relationship deal. Life companies can still win the top-shelf stabilized deal. CMBS can still win the financeable institutional deal. Debt funds can still win the complicated deal. Agencies can still win the certainty-of-execution deal. HUD can still win the duration-and-protection deal. The market is not closed. It is just extremely segmented. That segmentation is why Treasury term structure matters more than any single benchmark headline. If the 10-year were the whole story, borrowers could at least anchor around one familiar number. But the real problem is that the 2-year is still too high to promise near-term relief, the 5-year is still expensive enough to pressure intermediate coupons, and the 30-year is still elevated enough to keep long-duration lenders disciplined. The curve is sending the same message from multiple angles: capital exists, but it is being rationed by risk tolerance and by duration sensitivity. Here is the concise markets snapshot. The latest official Treasury curve at run time was 4.02 percent on the 2-year, 4.23 percent on the 5-year, 4.57 percent on the 10-year, and 5.10 percent on the 30-year. Overnight SOFR for May 19 was 3.53 percent. The long end has eased only slightly from Monday’s stress, which means fixed-rate execution is still under pressure even though floating-rate benchmarks are more manageable. Multifamily remains the clearest source of fresh loan flow. CMBS remains open but selective. And lender competition is strongest only where the collateral story is exceptionally clean. One thing to watch today is whether the Senate’s move on Iran helps keep oil and inflation expectations from re-accelerating, because that is the fastest route to a calmer long end. If the 30-year Treasury can stay closer to 5.10 than 5.20, permanent lending desks can keep quoting with some stability. If geopolitical headlines push the long bond back up again, more borrowers will keep favoring bridge, agency, and HUD lanes rather than lock a fixed-rate execution they may regret. The bottom line this morning is that the debt market is still open, but it is charging more for uncertainty than for leverage. National headlines are feeding macro volatility. Macro volatility is feeding the curve. And the curve is deciding which lenders can be aggressive, which borrowers can refinance, and which business plans still need a more flexible capital stack.

20. maj 2026 - 14 min
episode Debt Desk — Debt Desk for May 19: Iran Pause, Washington Shockwaves, and a Long End That Still Won’t Let Up cover

Debt Desk — Debt Desk for May 19: Iran Pause, Washington Shockwaves, and a Long End That Still Won’t Let Up

Good morning. It is Tuesday, May 19, 2026, and this is Debt Desk. We begin with the national picture, and this morning the biggest headline is that the White House is trying to lower the temperature with Iran without convincing markets that the danger has actually passed. The Associated Press reported late Monday that President Trump said he had called off a planned Tuesday strike on Iran after Gulf allies asked for more time for serious negotiations. That gives traders a short-term off-ramp from the most immediate escalation scenario, but it does not remove the core risk. Oil is still elevated, shipping risk through the Strait of Hormuz is still central to the inflation story, and bond investors have been trading as if geopolitics can still feed directly into financing costs. The second story is in Washington, where the Justice Department’s new compensation fund for Trump allies is already becoming a major political and legal flashpoint. AP reported Tuesday morning that Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche is heading to Capitol Hill under pressure over the administration’s plan for a $1.776 billion Anti-Weaponization Fund tied to the settlement of Trump’s IRS lawsuit. Whether you view that as restitution or as an extraordinary use of federal power, it is now one more reminder that political risk in Washington is not abstract. It keeps bleeding into fiscal credibility, institutional confidence, and the broader tone around federal policy. The third story is the deadly shooting at the Islamic Center of San Diego. AP reported that two teenage gunmen killed three men at the mosque on Monday before killing themselves, and authorities are investigating it as a hate crime. The story matters first as a human tragedy, but it also matters because it sharpens the sense that domestic instability is not easing. In a market already balancing foreign-policy risk, inflation pressure and legal-political volatility, this becomes part of the broader backdrop of unease. The fourth story is from the Supreme Court. AP reported Monday that the justices sent a closely watched Native American voting-rights case back to lower courts, reopening scrutiny of an appeals court ruling that said only the federal government can sue under a key section of the Voting Rights Act. The legal nuance matters less to markets than the bigger signal: election law and civil-rights enforcement are moving back toward the center of the national conversation, and those fights are still arriving through the courts in real time. And then there is the China follow-through story we have been tracking. AP reported Monday that China has agreed to boost purchases of U.S. beef and poultry after the Trump-Xi summit, with the White House saying the new arrangement carries an annualized pace of $17 billion for 2026 and then that same level for 2027 and 2028. That gives the administration a concrete talking point after the summit, but markets still want proof that implementation will hold. So the continuity point remains the same: a headline is not the same thing as durable follow-through. Put those stories together and the national setup this morning is pretty clear. The White House is trying to prevent a wider Iran escalation. Washington has opened another fight over the use of federal power. A hate-crime investigation is unfolding in San Diego. The Supreme Court is keeping voting-rights disputes alive. And the administration is still trying to show tangible gains from the China trip. That is the macro atmosphere commercial real estate lenders and borrowers are waking up to. Now let’s turn to the Debt Desk. Start with rates, because the rate story is still the fastest way to understand whether a deal gets quoted, re-cut, or paused. The latest officially verified Treasury curve available at run time is the U.S. Treasury table for May 18, 2026. It showed the 2-year at 4.07 percent, the 5-year at 4.27 percent, the 10-year at 4.61 percent, and the 30-year at 5.14 percent. That curve matters because it is not just high. It is high in the parts of the market that most directly shape real estate debt execution. The 2-year at 4.07 says the market still does not expect easy front-end relief any time soon. The 5-year at 4.27 matters because that part of the curve often tracks where intermediate-duration fixed-rate commercial debt really starts to feel expensive to borrowers. The 10-year at 4.61 is the benchmark everybody quotes, but the 30-year at 5.14 is the part that keeps life companies and other duration-sensitive lenders disciplined. Once the long bond is parked above 5 percent, permanent fixed-rate capital is still available, but it is not being offered with much generosity. Reuters reporting carried through Monday’s selloff reinforced that point. Treasury yields pushed higher on inflation and energy concerns, with the 10-year touching about 4.63 percent at the highs before easing back somewhat. The message for commercial real estate is straightforward. Even when the market is not panicking, it is still repricing duration risk. Borrowers do not need a Fed surprise to feel tighter conditions. A stubborn long end does the job all by itself. That is why SOFR still matters even without pretending floating-rate debt is a free pass. Floating-rate structures remain a practical bridge for construction, transitional business plans and deals that need flexibility, but the all-in answer still depends on spread, reserves, cap costs and exit confidence. In other words, floating debt can buy time, but it does not magically make today’s capital stack cheap. The freshest deal flow in multifamily and adjacent credit keeps telling the same story. Multi-Housing News reported on May 18 that Friedman Real Estate acquired the 368-unit Village Club of Rochester Hills in suburban Detroit with a $32 million permanent loan from Associated Bank. That is not a headline trophy transaction, but it is an important signal. Regional-bank permanent lending is still there for straightforward apartment product with a clean story and moderate risk. The same day, Multi-Housing News reported that Allen Morris secured a $43 million construction loan from Affinius Capital and Axonic Capital for the second phase of its Bayside project in Sarasota. That is another useful data point because it shows construction finance is still open when sponsorship is credible and the project can support the lender’s underwrite. More importantly, it shows the market mix you keep hearing in conversations: banks are active on the cleaner end, while private capital remains central where flexibility and construction expertise matter more. That broader tone is consistent with what Multi-Housing News highlighted Monday from the Mortgage Bankers Association’s annual origination volume summation. Total commercial real estate mortgage borrowing and lending was estimated at $706 billion in 2025, up 40 percent from 2024, with multifamily representing the biggest property-type bucket at $413 billion. Depositories led the capital stack, followed by the agencies, then private-label CMBS, life companies and investor-driven lenders. That is an important reminder for this morning’s market. Capital is available, but it is being allocated through a lender mix that still rewards quality, clarity and asset selection. Now narrow the lens further to execution tone across lender buckets. Banks remain open, but mostly for relationships, lower leverage and assets that can survive a tougher refinance market later. The Friedman loan is the kind of transaction that still fits that box. Life companies remain in the game, but the long end is making them choose their spots carefully. When the 30-year Treasury is sitting around 5.14, life-company coupons are rarely going to feel borrower-friendly unless the asset is top-tier and stabilized. CMBS is still functioning, but it remains a bifurcated market. The market can clear quality collateral, yet the stress in legacy paper is not gone. Trepp’s May hard-maturity snapshot, published earlier this month, showed $2.57 billion of private-label CMBS balance facing hard maturity in May, with office driving the concentration. Trepp also said in its April 2026 special-servicing report, published last week, that the overall special-servicing rate rose to 11.38 percent in March, driven mainly by office transfers. So the CMBS message this morning is that conduit and single-asset execution still exist, but nobody should mistake that for broad forgiveness on older office risk. Debt funds remain the flexible part of the capital stack, especially in multifamily development, bridge and structured situations. That continues to line up with the construction-finance commentary published by Multi-Housing News last week, which described debt-fund quotes around the mid-300s over SOFR for higher-leverage construction deals, with cleaner bank executions materially tighter. That spread is the market talking. If the business plan is simple, banks can still compete. If the deal needs speed, future funding, structure or complexity tolerance, debt funds are still earning their keep. For multifamily specifically, the agencies continue to anchor the permanent-finance conversation. Fannie Mae’s multifamily monthly business volumes page, updated this month, shows 2026 new business volumes of $10.4 billion in January, $3.0 billion in February, $3.7 billion in March and $5.9 billion in April, for a year-to-date total of $23.0 billion through April. That matters because it confirms the agency lane is not theoretical. It is active. Freddie Mac’s late-April underwriting update tells a similar story from a different angle. The company emphasized certainty of execution, including its three-ten-three process for targeted affordable housing and a quicker timetable for preliminary underwriting outputs on complete submissions. Borrowers care about that because in a market where the long end can move against you in a single session, speed and clarity are part of pricing. HUD and FHA also deserve real attention this week. Multi-Housing News reported Monday, citing Walker & Dunlop research, that HUD is becoming a more central part of multifamily finance as borrowers prioritize long-term certainty, refinance durability and protection from rate volatility. That strategic argument lines up with HUD’s own May 4 mortgagee letter, which updated environmental requirements in the MAP Guide as part of a broader effort to reduce unnecessary friction around multifamily FHA execution. The combination matters. Borrowers looking for duration, amortization and defensiveness still have reasons to keep HUD on the board. So what does all of this mean for the market this morning? It means deals are still getting done, but the market is charging a premium for ambiguity. If the property is stabilized, the leverage is reasonable and the sponsor is credible, banks and agencies can still move. If the asset is institutional and the story is clean, life companies and CMBS are still viable. If the deal needs flexibility, structure or construction tolerance, debt funds remain essential. And if a borrower wants long-duration protection more than headline cheapness, HUD and FHA still have a strong argument. Here is the concise markets snapshot. The latest verified Treasury curve from the official May 18 Treasury table was 4.07 percent on the 2-year, 4.27 on the 5-year, 4.61 on the 10-year and 5.14 on the 30-year. Monday trading showed the market still pressing against higher long-end yields as oil and geopolitical risk kept inflation worries alive. Multifamily remains the deepest lending lane in commercial real estate. Regional-bank permanent debt is still showing up on straightforward apartment deals. Construction finance is still available through a bank-plus-debt-fund mix. CMBS is open, but legacy office stress remains a live issue. And the agencies are still doing the most to preserve continuity in the apartment market. One thing to watch today is whether the combination of an Iran pause and a still-heavy long end actually gives lenders enough comfort to hold spreads where they are, or whether another weak Treasury session pushes fixed-rate executions wider again. If the 30-year can settle down, the market keeps a workable window for clean permanent debt. If it cannot, more borrowers will stay in the floating-rate, bridge, agency or HUD lanes a little longer. The bottom line this morning is that the debt market is open, but it is still operating with very little patience. National news is feeding the rate story. The rate story is shaping lender behavior. And across commercial real estate, especially multifamily, capital is still available for borrowers who can show discipline, realistic leverage and a plan that works even if the long end refuses to cooperate.

19. maj 2026 - 15 min
episode Debt Desk — Debt Desk for May 18: China Follow-Through, a Fresh Bond Rout, and a Debt Market Still Pricing for Discipline cover

Debt Desk — Debt Desk for May 18: China Follow-Through, a Fresh Bond Rout, and a Debt Market Still Pricing for Discipline

Good morning. It is Monday, May 18, 2026, and this is Debt Desk. We begin with the national picture, and this morning the first story is the first real test of what, exactly, came out of President Trump’s trip to Beijing. The Associated Press reported overnight that the White House says China has agreed to boost purchases of U.S. agricultural products including beef and poultry, with the administration framing the arrangement as a concrete economic win after the Trump-Xi summit. On its face, that matters because it gives the market something tangible to point to after several days of vague claims about better relations. But the reason investors are not fully relaxing is that Reuters reported Saturday that China’s commerce ministry described the summit deals as preliminary. So this is progress, but it is still conditional progress. The market now has to decide whether this was the start of a real thaw or just the start of another negotiation. That uncertainty runs straight into the second national story, which is Taiwan. AP reported Sunday that Taiwan’s president publicly defended arms purchases from the United States after Trump described future arms sales as a negotiating chip with China. Reuters also reported over the weekend that Taiwan pressed its case for continued U.S. weapons support after Trump said he had not yet decided on a major new package. This matters because it tells you the summit did not actually remove one of the market’s biggest geopolitical overhangs. It may have lowered the temperature, but it did not settle the central security question. For markets, the read-through is simple: any headline that turns Taiwan back into an active flashpoint can quickly put a risk premium right back into oil, the dollar, and the long end of the Treasury curve. That brings us to the third story, which is the one bond traders care about most this morning. AP reported Monday that world shares retreated and oil prices rose after Trump warned that the Iran clock is ticking. Reuters said Monday that the global bond selloff deepened as higher energy prices fed inflation fears, with the U.S. 10-year Treasury yield reaching roughly 4.63 percent and the 30-year pushing to about 5.16 percent in overnight trading. That is the key macro fact to carry into the week. Borrowers do not need a new Fed move to feel tighter conditions. If oil climbs, inflation expectations firm, and the long end keeps backing up, financing gets harder in real time. The fourth national story is more domestic, but it matters for anyone who follows housing policy. AP reported Friday that the Trump administration is preparing a proposal to bar mixed-status families from public housing, reviving a policy fight from the first Trump term. The direct market effect is limited for private credit today, but the broader significance is real. Housing affordability, immigration, and federal support policy are now increasingly tangled together in Washington. For apartment owners, lenders, and agency-watchers, it is another sign that housing policy is not moving to the background. It is moving closer to center stage. Put those stories together and the national backdrop this morning is pretty clear. The White House is trying to show deliverables from the China trip, but the follow-through still looks fragile. Taiwan risk is still unresolved. Oil is back to driving inflation anxiety. And housing policy is becoming a more active federal battleground again. That is the atmosphere debt markets are walking into today. Now let’s turn to the Debt Desk. Start with rates, because rates are still the cleanest summary of whether a deal can close and on what terms. The latest official Treasury curve available at run time remains the Treasury and Federal Reserve data carrying May 14 closes, published Friday, May 15: 4.00 percent on the 2-year, 4.13 percent on the 5-year, 4.47 percent on the 10-year, and 5.02 percent on the 30-year. By early Monday overseas trading, Reuters said the selloff had extended, with the 2-year near 4.10 percent, the 10-year around 4.63 percent, and the 30-year around 5.16 percent. The latest official SOFR publication available at run time remained in the high-3.5 to roughly 3.6 percent range, so floating-rate debt is still available, but not cheap once spread, reserves, and cap economics are layered in. That full term structure matters more than the headline 10-year alone. The 2-year near 4 percent tells you the market still does not believe policy is about to get easy in a hurry. The 5-year in the low 4s matters because that part of the curve often maps most directly into how intermediate-duration commercial mortgage coupons actually feel in the real world. The 10-year is still the benchmark everybody quotes. But the 30-year staying around or above 5 percent is the part of the curve that keeps permanent capital cautious. When the long bond is there, life companies and other duration-sensitive lenders are not being invited into a generous mood. They are being reminded to stay selective. So the story this morning is not just that yields are higher. It is that money is expensive across the curve, and expensive in a way that changes lender behavior. Banks can still lend, but they want clean sponsorship, modest leverage, and assets they can explain to credit. Life companies still want top-quality stabilized product, but the long end is making fixed-rate execution uncomfortable. CMBS is open, especially for institutional-quality collateral with a very clear story, but it is not in the mood to rescue weak assumptions. Debt funds remain the flexible part of the capital stack, which is exactly why they keep winning the messy assignments. That lender mix still shows up in the broader market data. GlobeSt reported May 12, citing CBRE first-quarter figures, that commercial real estate lending hit its highest level in five years, but with alternative lenders doing more of the work. Average commercial spreads tightened to 181 basis points, multifamily spreads tightened to 136 basis points, and debt funds plus mortgage REITs took the majority share while banks, life companies, and CMBS all gave up share year over year. That is a very useful signal because it tells you two things at once. First, capital is available. Second, the capital doing the most work is still the capital most willing to price complexity. CMBS is the best example of the market’s split personality. Commercial Observer reported late last week that Brookfield and Qatar Investment Authority closed a $1.9 billion CMBS refinancing at 2 Manhattan West. In the same reporting cycle, the market was also reminded that the $647.5 million loan at 20 Times Square returned to special servicing after missing its maturity. That contrast is still the right way to describe office debt in 2026. Trophy, institutional, easy-to-underwrite assets can still clear in size. Legacy assets tied to weaker leasing, weaker cash flow, or weaker market confidence are still running straight into maturity pressure. Trepp’s latest maturity coverage reinforces that point. The firm reported last week that about $2.57 billion of private-label CMBS balance faces hard maturity in May, with office still driving the concentration. That matters even for borrowers outside office, because it tells you how much servicing energy and risk bandwidth the market is already consuming. When lenders and bond buyers are staring at an office-heavy maturity wall, they do not get more forgiving on everything else. They get more discriminating. Now narrow the lens to multifamily, because apartments remain the deepest financing lane in commercial real estate even with the long end acting badly. The freshest operating message in multifamily is not that debt is cheap. It is that debt is still there for the right story. Multi-Housing News reported May 15 that The Dermot Company secured a $355 million refinancing for 21 West End Avenue in Manhattan through Mizuho Americas and New York State Homes and Community Renewal. That is an important data point because it is a large, real gateway-market refinance getting done in a rate environment that still makes many people talk as if permanent debt has shut. It has not shut. It is selective. The same outlet reported that Rabina and New Blueprint Partners secured $75 million of floating-rate construction debt for phase one of The VIC in Vancouver, Washington. That also fits the current playbook. Construction financing still clears, but usually in structures that preserve flexibility and assume a later handoff into permanent capital once lease-up is further along. In other words, the market is still willing to finance apartments, but it prefers to solve one risk at a time. Commercial Observer gave another useful apartment read last week with KeyBank’s $54 million refinance for Lakeview at Westpark outside Houston. That loan turned floating-rate bridge exposure into longer-duration HUD-linked financing through a housing finance corporation structure. That matters because it is exactly the kind of transaction sophisticated borrowers keep looking for right now. If the long end is uncomfortable and floating debt still carries real all-in cost, then duration, amortization, and certainty become valuable products in their own right. Debt-fund pricing continues to tell the same story about execution tone. Multi-Housing News reported May 14 that recent multifamily construction quotes included debt-fund executions around 335 to 350 basis points over SOFR, depending on leverage, with some bank construction quotes for cleaner deals landing closer to the low 200s over SOFR. That spread between lender buckets is the market speaking clearly. If the deal is clean and leverage is moderate, banks can still be competitive. If the deal needs flexibility, higher leverage, future funding, or speed, debt funds are still the natural home. Agency liquidity remains one of the big reasons the apartment market is functioning better than most of CRE. Fannie Mae’s multifamily monthly business volumes report, crawled this weekend and reflecting first-quarter activity, still showed $17.1 billion of 2026 new multifamily business through March. Freddie Mac’s most recent multifamily updates have emphasized underwriting consistency and close certainty across product types, which is exactly what borrowers want when the bond market is moving against them. The agency message is not that everything is easy. It is that there is still a dependable takeout lane for apartments when sponsors can meet underwriting. HUD and FHA are also worth keeping high on the board this week. HUD announced on May 4 that it is streamlining environmental review requirements for multifamily FHA-insured financing by removing or revising several outdated provisions in the MAP Guide. That is not the kind of announcement that instantly changes coupons, but it does matter at the margin. In a market where borrowers are still willing to trade speed for duration, leverage, and amortization, any reduction in friction can support more volume. So what does all of this mean for execution tone this morning? Banks remain open, but mostly for lower leverage and cleaner narratives. Life companies are still relevant, but the 30-year Treasury is making them work harder to win deals. CMBS can absolutely fund size and quality, yet remains unforgiving on legacy stress. Debt funds are still the most flexible source of capital, which is why they keep taking share. Agencies remain the strongest multifamily permanent channel. HUD and FHA stay highly relevant for borrowers who want defensive structure and can tolerate process. Here is the concise markets snapshot. The latest official Treasury curve available at run time carried May 14 closes at 4.00 percent on the 2-year, 4.13 on the 5-year, 4.47 on the 10-year, and 5.02 on the 30-year. By early Monday trading, Reuters said the 2-year was near 4.10, the 10-year near 4.63, and the 30-year near 5.16 as the oil-driven bond selloff extended. SOFR remained around the high-3.5 to roughly 3.6 percent range in the latest official publications. In credit, multifamily still has the broadest lender bench, debt funds are still doing the most flexible work, trophy CMBS can still clear, and stressed legacy office is still the part of the market everyone is watching most closely. One thing to watch today is whether the long end stabilizes once New York is fully open, or whether the overnight move becomes the day’s new baseline. If the 30-year Treasury stays pinned around 5.15, permanent fixed-rate execution is going to remain uncomfortable and more borrowers will keep leaning on floating-rate bridges, agency takeouts, recap structures, or HUD-style duration plays. If the long end gives back some of that move, the market may keep a workable financing window open for clean multifamily and top-tier institutional assets. But right now, that outcome depends on oil, geopolitics, and whether bond investors decide the inflation scare has gone far enough. The bottom line this morning is that the debt market is still functioning, but it is functioning with very little patience for ambiguity. National news is still feeding the rates story. The rates story is still feeding the lender-selection story. And in commercial real estate, especially multifamily, capital is still available for borrowers who show up with moderate leverage, credible sponsorship, and a business plan that does not require the bond market to suddenly get kinder than it wants to be.

18. maj 2026 - 16 min
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