Debt Desk

Debt Desk — Debt Desk Morning Brief for June 26, 2026

14 min · 26. kesä 2026
jakson Debt Desk — Debt Desk Morning Brief for June 26, 2026 kansikuva

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Good morning. It is Friday, June 26th, and this is Debt Desk. Before we get into commercial real estate and multifamily debt, here is the broader morning brief. The national backdrop this morning is being set by the courts, by inflation, and by the fact that immigration policy keeps landing back in front of the Supreme Court. The first headline to know is a fresh election ruling out of Boston. The Associated Press reported that a federal judge halted President Trump’s executive order that aimed to create a federal voter list and limit who could receive a mail ballot. The practical takeaway is that the administration’s effort to pull election machinery closer to Washington just ran into another constitutional wall. For markets and for business planning, that matters less because of the voting mechanics themselves and more because it is another reminder that aggressive executive actions are still meeting legal friction before they can become operating reality. The second headline is the one with the clearest direct economic read. AP reported that the Federal Reserve’s preferred inflation gauge rose 4.1 percent in May from a year earlier, the highest annual reading in three years. Core inflation also moved higher, and the report reinforced the idea that the Fed is still dealing with an inflation problem, not a cooling economy that obviously justifies easier policy. That matters to this audience because every stubborn inflation print pushes rate-cut hopes further out and keeps financing conversations anchored to a higher-for-longer base case. Even when Treasury yields improve for a day or two, borrowers still have to price around the reality that policy relief is not arriving quickly. A third national story came from the Supreme Court, which handed the administration another immigration win. AP reported that the justices allowed the government to end temporary protected status for Haitians and Syrians, while also clearing the way for the administration to potentially revive a restrictive asylum metering policy at the southern border. Put simply, immigration enforcement is still moving through the courts in big, consequential pieces, and the White House is still winning enough of those fights to keep labor, housing demand, and local political pressure as active policy themes through the summer. For cities, employers, and apartment owners, immigration policy is not abstract politics. It affects labor availability, household formation, shelter systems, and local spending. Then there is New York, where another corruption case widened around the old Eric Adams orbit. AP reported that Frank Carone, Adams’s former chief of staff, was arrested Wednesday in a federal bribery case tied to a migrant shelter contract. Prosecutors say he helped steer business to a hotel that had already been rejected by city social services. The significance here is not just scandal fatigue. It is that one of the biggest urban stress stories of the last two years, migrant sheltering, keeps bleeding into procurement, public trust, and city operating risk. That does not immediately reset municipal credit, but it does keep the spotlight on governance quality in a city that remains central to U.S. real estate capital markets. So the broad morning brief is fairly straightforward. Courts are still setting the boundaries of presidential power. Inflation is still hot enough to keep the Fed defensive. Immigration policy is still a live legal and economic driver. And major city governance stories are still producing fresh legal fallout. That is the national setting for today’s debt conversation. Now let’s move into Debt Desk. The first thing to know this morning is that the long end of the Treasury market improved again on the latest official print, but not enough to declare victory on borrowing costs. Using the verified Treasury data for June 25, the 2-year closed at 4.09 percent, the 5-year at 4.15 percent, the 10-year at 4.40 percent, and the 30-year at 4.86 percent. The latest official SOFR print is 3.62 percent for June 24. That combination is useful, but it is still a mixed setup. The front end remains restrictive enough to make floating debt expensive, while the long bond is still high enough that fixed-rate coupons are not exactly easy money. The shape of the curve matters as much as the level. The 2-year and 5-year are sitting fairly close together, which tells you the market is not pricing a clean, fast easing cycle. Then the curve steepens out as you move toward the 10-year and especially the 30-year, which means duration still carries a real cost. For borrowers, that creates two different pressure points at once. Bridge debt is still painful unless there is a strong leasing, construction, or repositioning catalyst. Permanent debt is more appealing than it was a few weeks ago, but not so cheap that sponsors can ignore debt service, proceeds, and refinance gaps. That is why execution still feels selective even when the market tone sounds a little better. You can see that selectivity in the deals that are actually getting done. Commercial Observer reported Thursday that Apollo, Affinius Capital, and RXR assembled a $785 million debt-and-equity package for 175 Third Street at Gowanus Wharf in Brooklyn. The project is expected to deliver 1,100 housing units and an 85,000-square-foot Life Time fitness center. This is exactly the kind of transaction worth paying attention to because it is large, complicated, and institutionally sponsored. A capital stack like that does not come together because money is loose. It comes together because high-conviction capital still wants scale, location, and a business plan it can defend. The debt fund lane remains one of the clearest channels for transactions that require execution tolerance rather than plain-vanilla underwriting. Commercial Observer’s June 23 report on S3 Capital’s $102 million construction loan for the Press Building office-to-residential conversion in Hell’s Kitchen still matters this morning because it is a clean example of where private credit keeps winning. Conversions ask lenders to get comfortable with cost risk, timing risk, and lease-up uncertainty all at once. Banks can do some of that. CMBS usually does not want to. Debt funds can, if the pricing and sponsorship make sense. That is why this lane continues to belong to private credit. Banks, meanwhile, are still lending, but the tone remains relationship-heavy and highly selective. On the multifamily side, Commercial Observer reported that Capital One provided a $96.2 million letter of credit to support construction of the 300-unit Edgemere Commons B2 affordable housing project in Far Rockaway. This is not the same as saying banks are back in full force for every market-rate construction deal. It is saying they are still showing up where there is policy support, structured credit enhancement, and a clear public-private framework. In other words, banks are open, but they still want explainable risk. That same tone carries into conventional apartment refinancings. Commercial Observer reported this week that Mesa West Capital provided $82.5 million to refinance Olin Fields, a 352-unit apartment community outside Seattle, using a five-year nonrecourse loan. The point here is not just that one refinance closed. It is that lenders are still willing to provide durable takeout capital for stabilized or near-stabilized housing assets when the sponsor has already done the operating work. In this market, a refinance without drama is its own signal that credit is functioning. HUD and FHA remain part of that functioning credit picture. Commercial Observer also reported this week that Dwight Capital refinanced a newly built multifamily project in Oregon City with $39 million of HUD-backed debt. That matters because the HUD lane continues to solve a specific problem in this market: borrowers who need longer-term, government-backed proceeds and are willing to trade speed for certainty. FHA execution is never the quickest route, but when proceeds matter more than velocity, it keeps earning a place in the stack. The agencies still set the benchmark for clean multifamily execution. Freddie Mac’s latest issuance calendar shows K-7671 scheduled in the week of June 22 with a projected issuance size of about $965 million in a seven-year conventional fixed-rate deal. Fannie Mae on June 17 announced that multifamily bulk deliveries are now eligible for resecuritization, which is a technical change but an important one because it adds flexibility and liquidity around agency-backed apartment paper. The bottom line is the same one we keep coming back to: if a multifamily asset is clean enough to fit the agency box, the GSEs are still forcing the rest of the market to compete harder on spread, leverage, or speed. CMBS is still open, but the tone remains split between new issuance and old-book stress. The freshest deal-specific reminder came from Washington. Commercial Observer reported Thursday that the $102 million CMBS loan backed by 425 Eye Street NW, a Department of Veterans Affairs office building, transferred to special servicing for imminent monetary default. That is not just another office problem headline. It is a reminder that legacy office exposure keeps shaping how investors and lenders think about securitized credit, even when multifamily and select industrial or mixed-use assets are still trading and financing. The broader CMBS data tell the same story. Trepp’s latest monthly updates show the overall CMBS delinquency rate at 7.55 percent for May and the special servicing rate at 10.86 percent. Those are not catastrophic numbers by themselves, but they are elevated enough to keep securitized lenders disciplined. When the legacy book still carries that much stress, new CMBS execution can happen, but spreads do not magically compress and underwriting does not suddenly get generous. That is the execution map this morning. Debt funds are still most competitive where the story involves complexity, repositioning, or conversion. Banks are still active, especially where sponsorship, policy support, or relationship value is obvious. Agencies remain the cleanest multifamily outlet for borrowers who fit the box. HUD and FHA stay relevant for proceeds-driven refinancings. CMBS is functioning, but the office overhang keeps discipline in the system. And life companies, by inference from where fresh deals are and are not printing this week, still appear most focused on lower-leverage, high-quality assets where duration and balance-sheet certainty matter more than maximum proceeds. For multifamily specifically, the market continues to look better than the broader CRE debt conversation, but only because the asset class can still offer multiple versions of clarity. Stabilized suburban apartments can refinance. Affordable housing can still attract bank and public support. Lease-up deals can still reach debt funds when the path to occupancy is believable. Agency-eligible product still has a deep buyer and lender base. What lenders are rewarding is not optimism. They are rewarding visibility. The concise markets snapshot this morning is this. Treasury yields improved modestly on the latest official June 25 curve, especially versus the levels borrowers were wrestling with earlier in the month, but the 30-year at 4.86 percent still keeps long-duration fixed-rate debt expensive. SOFR at 3.62 percent means carry remains heavy for floating-rate borrowers. Inflation at 4.1 percent on the Fed’s preferred gauge argues against near-term policy relief. Credit is available, but it is being allocated to basis, sponsorship, and business plans that can withstand a still-costly rate environment. One thing to watch today is whether better long-end Treasury levels actually turn into more late-month rate locks, especially for multifamily refinancings and larger institutional permanent loans. If the 10-year can hold around 4.40 percent and borrowers believe the long bond is stabilizing, you should see more conversations move from committee to commitment. If inflation becomes the dominant macro takeaway and yields back up again, a lot of those same borrowers will keep waiting, and waiting remains one of the market’s biggest forms of nonexecution. That is the setup for this Friday morning. The message is simple: there is capital in the market, but it still wants discipline, clarity, and an asset story that survives higher-for-longer rates. I’ll see you Monday.

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jakson Debt Desk — Debt Desk Morning Brief for June 28, 2026 kansikuva

Debt Desk — Debt Desk Morning Brief for June 28, 2026

Good morning. It is Sunday, June 28th, and this is Debt Desk. Before we get into commercial real estate and multifamily debt, here is the broader morning brief. The national setup this morning feels more fragile than calm. Flooding in Kentucky has turned deadly, the U.S. confrontation with Iran has widened across the Gulf, inflation is still running hot enough to keep the Federal Reserve boxed in, and the wildfire picture in the Mountain West has become more severe heading into the holiday stretch. None of those stories lives in a silo. Together they shape consumer confidence, fuel prices, insurance pressure, and the financing backdrop that debt markets have to absorb. The first headline is the human one out of Kentucky. The Associated Press reported early Sunday that heavy rain and flash flooding left at least seven people dead as creeks rose, roads washed out, and rescue crews continued searching through the night. The immediate story is loss and disruption, but there is a second-order economic angle that matters for this audience. Repeated severe-weather events are no longer occasional background noise. They are an operating reality for insurers, municipalities, utilities, and lenders trying to understand physical-risk exposure at the property level. If these disasters keep clustering, the cost of resilience keeps moving higher too. The second story is the macro one, and it remains the cleanest line into rates. AP’s latest economy coverage said the Fed’s preferred inflation gauge rose 4.1 percent in May from a year earlier, the hottest annual pace in three years. Markets do not need a speech from the Fed to understand what that means. A print like that keeps higher-for-longer alive. It keeps any easy call for rapid rate cuts off the table. And it reminds borrowers that even when Treasury yields back off for a day or two, the broader policy regime is still restrictive until inflation actually breaks. Another story that moved sharply overnight is the widening Gulf conflict. AP reported Sunday that Iran struck sites in Bahrain and Kuwait after the latest U.S. attacks, expanding the confrontation around one of the world’s most important energy and shipping corridors. For a debt and real estate audience, the transmission mechanism matters more than the military choreography. If this persists, the risk runs through oil, diesel, jet fuel, freight costs, and inflation expectations. That is how a foreign-policy shock turns into a domestic cost-of-capital story. The fourth headline comes from the Mountain West. AP reported Sunday that a wildfire burning on the Colorado-Utah border killed two firefighters and continued to challenge crews in dangerous conditions. We talked yesterday about fire weather and holiday restrictions. This morning the story is more severe. Beyond the tragedy itself, the business implication is that wildfire is still migrating from seasonal hazard to structural underwriting issue. For property owners, it touches insurance availability, utility exposure, operating reserves, and ultimately valuations in high-risk areas. Taken together, the national picture is fairly direct this morning. Weather risk is rising. Geopolitical tension is feeding the inflation conversation through energy and shipping. Inflation itself is still uncomfortably hot. And the country is moving into a holiday week with a macro backdrop that does not leave much room for complacency. Now let’s move into Debt Desk. The first thing to know this morning is that the latest official rates still describe a market that is open, but not forgiving. Using the verified Treasury check for Friday, June 26, the 2-year closed at 4.07 percent, the 5-year at 4.12 percent, the 10-year at 4.38 percent, and the 30-year at 4.87 percent. The latest official SOFR print is 3.64 percent for June 25. Because it is Sunday, those remain the latest available official prints as of run time. That curve still tells a nuanced story. The front end is elevated enough to keep floating-rate debt expensive. The 5-year sitting only slightly above the 2-year says the market still does not believe a fast easing cycle is around the corner. Then you move farther out and the 10-year to 30-year steepening reminds you that longer duration still carries a real cost. So while the 10-year under four and a half percent looks more manageable than some of the higher prints borrowers fought earlier this month, the full term structure still argues for discipline. Bridge debt is expensive to carry, and long fixed-rate debt is available, but it is not cheap capital. SOFR reinforces the same point. At 3.64 percent, the benchmark is not making life easier for anyone who still needs time to stabilize a property, finish a construction cycle, or ride out a lease-up. Floating-rate business plans can still work, but the carry has to be earned with real NOI growth, a clean refinance path, or both. The market is no longer paying sponsors to wait for a better day. You can see that discipline in the deals that actually got done late this week. Commercial Observer reported June 26 that CP Group and Rialto Capital Management secured a $56.4 million C-PACE loan from Peachtree Group for the former CNN Center repositioning in Atlanta. That is a useful signal because it shows transitional deals are still financeable, but increasingly through specialized capital rather than plain-vanilla bank construction debt. Adaptive reuse and repositioning stories can close, yet the capital stack often has to be tailored around efficiency upgrades, longer timelines, and narrower lender mandates. Commercial Observer also reported June 25 that S3 Capital provided $101 million of construction financing for a luxury resort community near Orlando. That deal fits the same larger pattern. When a project needs speed, complexity tolerance, and certainty of execution, private credit is still the most consistent lane. Debt funds are not winning by being cheap. They are winning by being willing to underwrite business-plan risk that banks and many securitized lenders still prefer to avoid. That lines up with the freshest Trepp tone on the lending market. Trepp wrote late this week that spreads are compressing in parts of CRE credit, but not uniformly, and that office still requires meaningfully tighter structure than other asset types. In practice, that means banks remain present but selective. They want sponsorship, low leverage, cleaner stories, and often existing client relationships. Life companies still look best positioned for stabilized, lower-leverage assets where duration certainty matters and where the borrower can live with proceeds that are more conservative than peak-cycle expectations. CMBS is functioning, but it is still very much a market with guardrails. Commercial Observer’s latest look at office financing underscores that point. The publication noted that office debt is still pricing in the mid-5s and above, with debt yields often around 10 percent and leverage generally in the fifty to fifty-five percent range when deals do clear. That is not a shut market. It is a cautious one. Execution exists for strong sponsors and defensible cash flow, but the capital stack still reflects skepticism toward office risk and longer-duration uncertainty. So the CRE debt read this morning is not that money is unavailable. It is that each lender cohort is sticking to its lane. Banks will compete for clean balance-sheet loans. Life companies remain selective and disciplined. CMBS is open, but it is not a loose market and it is still carrying office baggage. Debt funds remain critical for business plans that need flexibility, transitional tolerance, or faster certainty than regulated lenders want to provide. Now to multifamily, where the financing backdrop still looks healthier than the broader CRE debt market, even if it is far from easy. The most visible late-week apartment construction signal came out of South Florida. Commercial Observer reported June 26 that North American Development Group secured a $120 million construction loan for a rental project near Delray Beach. That matters because it reinforces the capital hierarchy we have been watching for months. Lenders still want multifamily exposure in growth markets, especially when demographics and land position are easy to underwrite. Housing can still win real construction dollars. It just has to come with a location story lenders believe in. There was also a practical refinance signal out of the Pacific Northwest. Commercial Observer reported June 24 that Mesa West Capital provided an $82.5 million five-year nonrecourse refinance for Olin Fields, a 352-unit apartment community outside Seattle. That is not the loudest headline in the market, but it is an important one. It says stabilized apartments can still get meaningful refinance proceeds from nonbank capital when operations are credible and sponsorship is clean. For owners navigating loan maturities, that matters more than abstract sentiment. On the agency side, Multi-Housing News reported June 26 that The Connor Group financed its acquisition of Hurstbourne Estates in Louisville with a $38.2 million Freddie Mac loan originated by CBRE Capital Markets. That is exactly the kind of transaction that keeps showing where the GSEs still matter most. When an apartment deal fits the box, Freddie remains a dependable execution channel for straightforward acquisitions and refinancings. Fannie Mae still looks constructive as well. Its latest official release on June 26 was the monthly summary, coming shortly after its June 17 announcement that certain multifamily bulk-delivery mortgage-backed securities are now eligible for resecuritization. Those are plumbing stories more than flashy front-page loan headlines, but plumbing matters in this market. Borrowers care about certainty, liquidity, and exit optionality. Every signal that the agency machine is keeping securitization channels functional helps reinforce that multifamily still has a deeper permanent-capital bench than most other property types. HUD and FHA continue to matter for the borrowers whose problem is not speed but proceeds and durability. Connect CRE reported June 26 that Dwight Capital closed a $39 million HUD 223(f) refinance for Timberview Apartments in Oregon City, Oregon. The proceeds are being used to retire bridge debt and fund reserves, which is exactly why this channel stays relevant. FHA execution is slower than many private alternatives, but for borrowers trying to replace expensive short-term debt with long-duration insured financing, it remains one of the more practical solutions in the market. The CMBS angle in multifamily is a little more indirect right now. The conduit market is open, but the fresh tone still skews toward shorter-duration structures and more conservative underwriting, especially because legacy office stress remains part of the investor conversation. That leaves apartment borrowers with agency eligibility in a strong relative position. CMBS can compete, particularly for assets that fall outside agency boxes, but it is not automatically the first call when Freddie, Fannie, or HUD can offer a cleaner path to proceeds and stability. Debt funds still have a meaningful role on the apartment side too, especially for lease-up, construction, and near-stabilization situations. They remain the capital providers most willing to bridge timing gaps between today’s property performance and tomorrow’s permanent financing. But that bridge is still expensive. With SOFR at 3.64 percent and no obvious fast-easing story from the inflation data, the handoff from debt-fund capital to agency or other permanent debt remains one of the most important transitions in the multifamily market. The concise markets snapshot this morning is this. The latest official Treasury curve for June 26 still shows a front end and long end that both keep borrowers honest, with the 2-year at 4.07 percent, the 5-year at 4.12 percent, the 10-year at 4.38 percent, and the 30-year at 4.87 percent. SOFR at 3.64 percent keeps floating-rate carry heavy. Private credit is still the most reliable execution source for complexity. Banks and life companies are lending, but selectively. Agencies and HUD remain crucial in multifamily because they still offer the cleanest path to durable permanent debt for many borrowers. One thing to watch next is whether the combination of slightly friendlier intermediate Treasury levels and the start of the holiday week produces a burst of rate locks and closings before attention thins out. If it does, we should see more straightforward multifamily refinancings and a few more stabilized CRE loans print quickly. If inflation and Gulf tension push energy prices or yields higher again, the market is likely to stay in the same pattern we have been describing: fund the best stories, structure around the rest, and keep charging borrowers for uncertainty. That is the setup for this Sunday morning. The market is open, but conviction still has to be earned.

28. kesä 202615 min
jakson Debt Desk — Debt Desk Morning Brief for June 27, 2026 kansikuva

Debt Desk — Debt Desk Morning Brief for June 27, 2026

Good morning. It is Saturday, June 27th, and this is Debt Desk. Before we get into commercial real estate and multifamily debt, here is the broader morning brief. The national picture this morning starts with a reminder that Washington is still moving on several tracks at once. Courts are setting limits on executive power, inflation is keeping the cost conversation alive, the weather story in the West is turning more dangerous as the holiday week approaches, and U.S. military action in the Gulf has added another layer of uncertainty around trade, fuel, and risk sentiment. The first headline to know is a fresh court setback for the administration on election rules. The Associated Press reported Friday that a federal judge halted President Trump’s executive order that sought to create a federal voter list and narrow access to mail ballots. That matters because it keeps election administration largely in the hands of states just as the midterm cycle gets closer, but it also matters because it continues a pattern the market has had to relearn over and over again this year. Big executive actions can create instant headlines, but they do not become operating reality until they survive the courts. For businesses, lenders, and anyone underwriting policy risk, legal friction is still a real part of the national backdrop. The second headline is the one with the cleanest economic read-through. AP’s latest economy coverage said the Fed’s preferred inflation gauge rose 4.1 percent in May from a year earlier, the hottest annual reading in three years. That is not just a consumer story. It is a financing story, a cap-rate story, and a confidence story. Every time inflation reasserts itself, the path to lower borrowing costs gets pushed further out. It tells borrowers that even when Treasury yields ease for a session or two, the broader policy regime is still higher for longer unless the inflation trend breaks in a convincing way. Another major headline comes from the West, where wildfire risk is escalating quickly. AP reported Friday that dangerous hot, dry, and windy conditions are hampering firefighters and prompting fireworks restrictions in Utah as the Cottonwood Fire grows and other states face red-flag conditions. The direct human story matters first, but there is also a broader economic angle. A severe fire setup going into the July Fourth period affects travel, utilities, insurance, and local operating risk all at once. The next story is international, but it lands squarely in the national briefing because it touches U.S. military action and global shipping. AP reported Friday that the United States struck Iranian missile, drone, and radar sites after a drone attack on a cargo ship in the Strait of Hormuz. For this audience, the immediate takeaway is not geopolitics in the abstract. It is that the world’s most important energy and shipping chokepoint is back in focus. If tension there persists, it can feed directly into fuel costs, inflation expectations, freight behavior, and risk appetite across credit markets. Then there is the continuing immigration and labor story. AP’s follow-up reporting Friday showed fear spreading through Haitian communities after this week’s Supreme Court ruling allowing the administration to end temporary protected status for Haitians and Syrians. This is a continuation story, but it remains active because the legal ruling is now turning into a labor and housing story on the ground. For employers, cities, and apartment owners, the implication is straightforward. Immigration policy is still feeding directly into household formation, workforce supply, and local demand patterns. So the national backdrop this morning is fairly clear. The courts are still acting as a check on executive action. Inflation is still too hot for comfort. Weather risk is rising into a major holiday week. Middle East tensions are back in the macro conversation through shipping and fuel. And immigration policy remains an active economic input, not just a political headline. Now let’s move into Debt Desk. The first thing to know this morning is that the latest official rate backdrop improved modestly again, but not enough to materially change the financing conversation. Using verified U.S. Treasury data for Friday, June 26, the 2-year closed at 4.07 percent, the 5-year at 4.12 percent, the 10-year at 4.38 percent, and the 30-year at 4.87 percent. The latest official SOFR print is 3.64 percent for June 25. Because it is Saturday, those are the latest available official prints as of run time. The curve is doing a few things at once. The front end is still elevated enough to keep floating-rate debt expensive. The 5-year is only a touch above the 2-year, which tells you the market still does not see a fast or easy easing cycle. Then the curve steepens meaningfully as you move into the 10-year and especially the 30-year, which means duration still costs real money. So yes, the 10-year looks a bit friendlier than some of the levels borrowers were fighting earlier this month, but the broader term structure still argues for discipline. Bridge debt remains a carry problem. Long fixed-rate debt remains available, but not cheap. SOFR is part of that story too. At 3.64 percent, the benchmark has edged up from the 3.62 percent print we were discussing yesterday. That is not a dramatic move by itself, but it reinforces the larger point. Floating-rate borrowers are still paying for time. If a business plan needs twelve to twenty-four months of lease-up, construction, or repositioning before permanent takeout, that carry still has to be earned somewhere in the capital stack. You can see how lenders are responding in the deals that actually cleared this week. Commercial Observer reported Friday that North American Development Group secured a $120 million construction loan for a multifamily development on agricultural land near Delray Beach, Florida. This is a useful deal because it speaks to what still gets funded in volume. Housing-linked projects in strong-growth Florida submarkets can still attract real construction dollars, but they need a location story and a use case lenders can defend. Money is available for rental housing. It is just not being handed out casually. Another fresh transaction worth watching came from Atlanta. Commercial Observer reported that CP Group and Rialto Capital Management secured a $56.4 million C-PACE loan from Peachtree for the repositioning of the former CNN Center. This is not traditional bank construction debt, and that is the point. Creative capital is still meeting transitional business plans, but the stack is more specialized than it would have been in a cheaper-rate cycle. Borrowers are piecing together execution through channels that reward energy retrofits, adaptive reuse, and well-defined repositioning plans. Private credit still looks like the clearest lane for heavier execution risk. Commercial Observer’s late-week report on S3 Capital’s $101 million construction loan for a luxury resort community near Orlando fits the same broader pattern we have been discussing. When a project calls for complexity, timing risk, and certainty more than bargain pricing, debt funds and private lenders remain the most willing to step in. That does not mean the capital is loose. It means private credit is still being paid to absorb uncertainty that banks and securitized lenders would rather avoid. On lending tone, the freshest read from Trepp is useful. Trepp wrote Friday that CRE lending spreads are compressing, but not uniformly, and that balance-sheet lenders are competing hardest for safer low-leverage deals while the relative premium on office remains wider. That lines up with what the actual deal tape is showing. Banks are present, but they are still choosy. They want sponsorship, lower leverage, cleaner stories, and often relationship value. Life companies, by inference from where fresh execution is and is not showing up, still look focused on exactly the sort of lower-leverage, stabilized product where duration certainty matters more than maximum proceeds. Debt funds remain the execution lenders. And CMBS is functioning, but still with real guardrails. The CMBS story remains split between fresh issuance capacity and legacy stress. Commercial Observer reported this week that the $102 million loan on 425 Eye Street Northwest in Washington transferred to special servicing for imminent monetary default after the VA lease situation deteriorated. That is an ongoing story from the tracker, and it still matters because it captures the office overhang in one clean headline. Meanwhile, Trepp’s latest monthly data show the overall CMBS delinquency rate at 7.55 percent for May and the special servicing rate at 10.86 percent. Trepp also noted this week that five-year conduit loans have become the market’s default setting more often than the traditional 10-year template. In plain English, securitized credit is open, but borrowers are favoring shorter-duration fixed-rate executions when that better fits today’s rate uncertainty. For commercial real estate debt more broadly, the message this morning is that execution exists, but every lender cohort is still behaving according to its lane. Banks are competing for clean balance-sheet loans. Life companies appear disciplined and selective. CMBS is open but structurally cautious, with office baggage still shaping sentiment. Debt funds remain critical where timing, complexity, or transitional risk make plain-vanilla capital hard to win. Now to multifamily, where the market still looks healthier than the broader CRE debt universe, even if it is not exactly easy. The freshest apartment financing headline came from Florida as well. The NADG construction loan near Delray Beach is fundamentally a multifamily confidence vote. It suggests lenders still want exposure to rental housing in growth corridors, especially when the pipeline story is clear and the project can be underwritten against durable demographic demand. There were also two practical refinancing signals this week that still matter as we head into the weekend. Commercial Observer reported that Mesa West Capital provided an $82.5 million five-year nonrecourse refinance for Olin Fields, a 352-unit apartment community outside Seattle. That is not a flashy capital-markets story, but it is an important one. It says stabilized apartments can still get refinance proceeds from nonbank lenders when sponsorship and operations are credible. On the agency side, Multi-Housing News reported Friday that The Connor Group financed its $51.8 million acquisition of Hurstbourne Estates in Louisville with a $38.2 million Freddie Mac loan originated by CBRE Capital Markets. That is the kind of plain-language reminder the market needs right now. Freddie Mac is still very much in the game for clean apartment executions, and when an asset fits the box, the agency channel continues to offer a dependable takeout lane. Fannie Mae remains active as well, although the freshest official item is more about capital-markets plumbing than a single headline loan. Fannie Mae announced on June 17 that certain multifamily bulk-delivery mortgage-backed securities are now eligible for resecuritization, and on Friday it released its May monthly summary. Neither item changes a borrower’s coupon overnight, but together they reinforce that the agency market is still trying to preserve liquidity and flexibility. In a market where borrowers care as much about certainty as they do about spread, that matters. HUD and FHA also remain relevant, especially for borrowers willing to trade speed for proceeds and durability. Connect CRE reported Friday that Dwight Capital closed a $39 million HUD 223(f) refinance for Timberview Apartments in Oregon City, Oregon. The proceeds are being used to retire bridge debt and set up reserves, which is exactly why this channel keeps showing up in the conversation. FHA execution is not the fastest route, but it is still one of the more practical answers for borrowers moving from transitional debt into longer-term insured financing. CMBS in multifamily remains more nuanced. The broader securitized market is open, but the real signal for apartments is less about trophy issuance headlines and more about relative positioning. As long as investors are still digesting legacy office stress and five-year conduit structures remain the preferred format, apartment borrowers with agency eligibility still have a strong reason to stay in the GSE lane. CMBS can compete, but it is not automatically the first choice for clean multifamily when Freddie and Fannie are still providing dependable executions. Debt funds also remain important on the apartment side, especially for lease-up and near-stabilization situations. We have seen that recently in build-to-rent and adaptive reuse, and it continues to be the part of the market where sponsors can buy time when agency or bank proceeds are not there yet. But that time is expensive, and with SOFR still elevated, the handoff from private credit to permanent debt remains one of the most important transitions in the market. The concise markets snapshot this morning is this. The latest official Treasury curve for June 26 shows modest relief in the belly of the curve, with the 10-year at 4.38 percent, but the 30-year at 4.87 percent still keeps long fixed-rate debt expensive. SOFR at 3.64 percent keeps floating-rate carry heavy. Inflation at 4.1 percent argues against a quick policy pivot. Capital is available across banks, debt funds, agencies, and CMBS, but it is being rationed toward quality, clarity, and business plans that can survive a still-costly base-rate environment. One thing to watch next is whether borrowers use this slightly better Treasury setup to lock deals before month-end and before the holiday week drains market attention. If they do, we should see more straightforward multifamily refinancings and a few more institutional permanent loans come over the line. If inflation and geopolitics push yields or credit caution back up, then the market is likely to keep doing what it has done for much of this year: fund good stories, delay marginal ones, and leave a lot of sponsors waiting for a cleaner window that still has not fully arrived. That is the setup for this Saturday morning. The market is open, but it is still charging borrowers for uncertainty.

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jakson Debt Desk — Debt Desk Morning Brief for June 26, 2026 kansikuva

Debt Desk — Debt Desk Morning Brief for June 26, 2026

Good morning. It is Friday, June 26th, and this is Debt Desk. Before we get into commercial real estate and multifamily debt, here is the broader morning brief. The national backdrop this morning is being set by the courts, by inflation, and by the fact that immigration policy keeps landing back in front of the Supreme Court. The first headline to know is a fresh election ruling out of Boston. The Associated Press reported that a federal judge halted President Trump’s executive order that aimed to create a federal voter list and limit who could receive a mail ballot. The practical takeaway is that the administration’s effort to pull election machinery closer to Washington just ran into another constitutional wall. For markets and for business planning, that matters less because of the voting mechanics themselves and more because it is another reminder that aggressive executive actions are still meeting legal friction before they can become operating reality. The second headline is the one with the clearest direct economic read. AP reported that the Federal Reserve’s preferred inflation gauge rose 4.1 percent in May from a year earlier, the highest annual reading in three years. Core inflation also moved higher, and the report reinforced the idea that the Fed is still dealing with an inflation problem, not a cooling economy that obviously justifies easier policy. That matters to this audience because every stubborn inflation print pushes rate-cut hopes further out and keeps financing conversations anchored to a higher-for-longer base case. Even when Treasury yields improve for a day or two, borrowers still have to price around the reality that policy relief is not arriving quickly. A third national story came from the Supreme Court, which handed the administration another immigration win. AP reported that the justices allowed the government to end temporary protected status for Haitians and Syrians, while also clearing the way for the administration to potentially revive a restrictive asylum metering policy at the southern border. Put simply, immigration enforcement is still moving through the courts in big, consequential pieces, and the White House is still winning enough of those fights to keep labor, housing demand, and local political pressure as active policy themes through the summer. For cities, employers, and apartment owners, immigration policy is not abstract politics. It affects labor availability, household formation, shelter systems, and local spending. Then there is New York, where another corruption case widened around the old Eric Adams orbit. AP reported that Frank Carone, Adams’s former chief of staff, was arrested Wednesday in a federal bribery case tied to a migrant shelter contract. Prosecutors say he helped steer business to a hotel that had already been rejected by city social services. The significance here is not just scandal fatigue. It is that one of the biggest urban stress stories of the last two years, migrant sheltering, keeps bleeding into procurement, public trust, and city operating risk. That does not immediately reset municipal credit, but it does keep the spotlight on governance quality in a city that remains central to U.S. real estate capital markets. So the broad morning brief is fairly straightforward. Courts are still setting the boundaries of presidential power. Inflation is still hot enough to keep the Fed defensive. Immigration policy is still a live legal and economic driver. And major city governance stories are still producing fresh legal fallout. That is the national setting for today’s debt conversation. Now let’s move into Debt Desk. The first thing to know this morning is that the long end of the Treasury market improved again on the latest official print, but not enough to declare victory on borrowing costs. Using the verified Treasury data for June 25, the 2-year closed at 4.09 percent, the 5-year at 4.15 percent, the 10-year at 4.40 percent, and the 30-year at 4.86 percent. The latest official SOFR print is 3.62 percent for June 24. That combination is useful, but it is still a mixed setup. The front end remains restrictive enough to make floating debt expensive, while the long bond is still high enough that fixed-rate coupons are not exactly easy money. The shape of the curve matters as much as the level. The 2-year and 5-year are sitting fairly close together, which tells you the market is not pricing a clean, fast easing cycle. Then the curve steepens out as you move toward the 10-year and especially the 30-year, which means duration still carries a real cost. For borrowers, that creates two different pressure points at once. Bridge debt is still painful unless there is a strong leasing, construction, or repositioning catalyst. Permanent debt is more appealing than it was a few weeks ago, but not so cheap that sponsors can ignore debt service, proceeds, and refinance gaps. That is why execution still feels selective even when the market tone sounds a little better. You can see that selectivity in the deals that are actually getting done. Commercial Observer reported Thursday that Apollo, Affinius Capital, and RXR assembled a $785 million debt-and-equity package for 175 Third Street at Gowanus Wharf in Brooklyn. The project is expected to deliver 1,100 housing units and an 85,000-square-foot Life Time fitness center. This is exactly the kind of transaction worth paying attention to because it is large, complicated, and institutionally sponsored. A capital stack like that does not come together because money is loose. It comes together because high-conviction capital still wants scale, location, and a business plan it can defend. The debt fund lane remains one of the clearest channels for transactions that require execution tolerance rather than plain-vanilla underwriting. Commercial Observer’s June 23 report on S3 Capital’s $102 million construction loan for the Press Building office-to-residential conversion in Hell’s Kitchen still matters this morning because it is a clean example of where private credit keeps winning. Conversions ask lenders to get comfortable with cost risk, timing risk, and lease-up uncertainty all at once. Banks can do some of that. CMBS usually does not want to. Debt funds can, if the pricing and sponsorship make sense. That is why this lane continues to belong to private credit. Banks, meanwhile, are still lending, but the tone remains relationship-heavy and highly selective. On the multifamily side, Commercial Observer reported that Capital One provided a $96.2 million letter of credit to support construction of the 300-unit Edgemere Commons B2 affordable housing project in Far Rockaway. This is not the same as saying banks are back in full force for every market-rate construction deal. It is saying they are still showing up where there is policy support, structured credit enhancement, and a clear public-private framework. In other words, banks are open, but they still want explainable risk. That same tone carries into conventional apartment refinancings. Commercial Observer reported this week that Mesa West Capital provided $82.5 million to refinance Olin Fields, a 352-unit apartment community outside Seattle, using a five-year nonrecourse loan. The point here is not just that one refinance closed. It is that lenders are still willing to provide durable takeout capital for stabilized or near-stabilized housing assets when the sponsor has already done the operating work. In this market, a refinance without drama is its own signal that credit is functioning. HUD and FHA remain part of that functioning credit picture. Commercial Observer also reported this week that Dwight Capital refinanced a newly built multifamily project in Oregon City with $39 million of HUD-backed debt. That matters because the HUD lane continues to solve a specific problem in this market: borrowers who need longer-term, government-backed proceeds and are willing to trade speed for certainty. FHA execution is never the quickest route, but when proceeds matter more than velocity, it keeps earning a place in the stack. The agencies still set the benchmark for clean multifamily execution. Freddie Mac’s latest issuance calendar shows K-7671 scheduled in the week of June 22 with a projected issuance size of about $965 million in a seven-year conventional fixed-rate deal. Fannie Mae on June 17 announced that multifamily bulk deliveries are now eligible for resecuritization, which is a technical change but an important one because it adds flexibility and liquidity around agency-backed apartment paper. The bottom line is the same one we keep coming back to: if a multifamily asset is clean enough to fit the agency box, the GSEs are still forcing the rest of the market to compete harder on spread, leverage, or speed. CMBS is still open, but the tone remains split between new issuance and old-book stress. The freshest deal-specific reminder came from Washington. Commercial Observer reported Thursday that the $102 million CMBS loan backed by 425 Eye Street NW, a Department of Veterans Affairs office building, transferred to special servicing for imminent monetary default. That is not just another office problem headline. It is a reminder that legacy office exposure keeps shaping how investors and lenders think about securitized credit, even when multifamily and select industrial or mixed-use assets are still trading and financing. The broader CMBS data tell the same story. Trepp’s latest monthly updates show the overall CMBS delinquency rate at 7.55 percent for May and the special servicing rate at 10.86 percent. Those are not catastrophic numbers by themselves, but they are elevated enough to keep securitized lenders disciplined. When the legacy book still carries that much stress, new CMBS execution can happen, but spreads do not magically compress and underwriting does not suddenly get generous. That is the execution map this morning. Debt funds are still most competitive where the story involves complexity, repositioning, or conversion. Banks are still active, especially where sponsorship, policy support, or relationship value is obvious. Agencies remain the cleanest multifamily outlet for borrowers who fit the box. HUD and FHA stay relevant for proceeds-driven refinancings. CMBS is functioning, but the office overhang keeps discipline in the system. And life companies, by inference from where fresh deals are and are not printing this week, still appear most focused on lower-leverage, high-quality assets where duration and balance-sheet certainty matter more than maximum proceeds. For multifamily specifically, the market continues to look better than the broader CRE debt conversation, but only because the asset class can still offer multiple versions of clarity. Stabilized suburban apartments can refinance. Affordable housing can still attract bank and public support. Lease-up deals can still reach debt funds when the path to occupancy is believable. Agency-eligible product still has a deep buyer and lender base. What lenders are rewarding is not optimism. They are rewarding visibility. The concise markets snapshot this morning is this. Treasury yields improved modestly on the latest official June 25 curve, especially versus the levels borrowers were wrestling with earlier in the month, but the 30-year at 4.86 percent still keeps long-duration fixed-rate debt expensive. SOFR at 3.62 percent means carry remains heavy for floating-rate borrowers. Inflation at 4.1 percent on the Fed’s preferred gauge argues against near-term policy relief. Credit is available, but it is being allocated to basis, sponsorship, and business plans that can withstand a still-costly rate environment. One thing to watch today is whether better long-end Treasury levels actually turn into more late-month rate locks, especially for multifamily refinancings and larger institutional permanent loans. If the 10-year can hold around 4.40 percent and borrowers believe the long bond is stabilizing, you should see more conversations move from committee to commitment. If inflation becomes the dominant macro takeaway and yields back up again, a lot of those same borrowers will keep waiting, and waiting remains one of the market’s biggest forms of nonexecution. That is the setup for this Friday morning. The message is simple: there is capital in the market, but it still wants discipline, clarity, and an asset story that survives higher-for-longer rates. I’ll see you Monday.

26. kesä 202614 min
jakson Debt Desk — Debt Desk Morning Brief for June 25, 2026 kansikuva

Debt Desk — Debt Desk Morning Brief for June 25, 2026

Good morning. It is Thursday, June 25th, and this is Debt Desk. Before we get into commercial real estate and multifamily debt, here is the broader morning brief. The national backdrop this morning is still being shaped by courts, energy policy and another round of political stress inside Washington. One of the clearest fresh rulings came Wednesday, when the Associated Press reported that a federal judge permanently blocked most of the administration’s executive order on elections, including the push to require documentary proof of citizenship when people register to vote. The practical read is that election administration is staying with the states and Congress unless higher courts say otherwise, and that keeps another major administration initiative tied up in litigation right as the political calendar gets louder. Washington also spent the day dealing with the fallout from the Iran fight. AP reported late Wednesday that Senate Republicans, after being berated by President Trump at the Capitol, held another vote on war powers and defeated a second effort to restrain the administration’s military posture. That matters beyond foreign policy because it tells you Congress is still spending time and political capital on national security arguments that compete directly with domestic economic and affordability messaging. When Washington’s bandwidth gets pulled in two directions at once, markets usually assume policy execution gets messier, not cleaner. A third headline worth watching comes out of New York. AP reported Wednesday that Frank Carone, the former chief of staff to ex-New York Mayor Eric Adams, was arrested in a federal bribery case tied to a migrant shelter contract. It is another reminder that the migrant shelter story is no longer just a budget and humanitarian issue. It is also a procurement and governance story, and that matters for state and local issuers, service providers and anyone watching municipal operating pressure in large cities. Then there is the energy file, which is getting more complicated rather than less. AP reported that California intends to sue the administration over a deal that would unwind a major offshore wind project, while the administration separately announced $17.5 billion in loans for 10 new large nuclear reactors. The big picture is not simply that one energy source wins and another loses. It is that the U.S. power buildout is getting more politically directional, more capital intensive and more uneven by region. That has obvious implications for data center demand, industrial development and long-duration infrastructure underwriting. So the morning brief is this: the legal system is still redrawing the limits of executive power in real time, Capitol Hill is still burning attention on security fights, and infrastructure capital is being pushed toward a more selective map. None of that directly prices a multifamily loan this morning, but all of it shapes risk appetite, business confidence and regional growth assumptions. Now let’s move into Debt Desk. The first thing to know today is that the rates backdrop improved at the long end. The latest official Treasury curve from June 24 shows the 2-year at 4.11 percent, the 5-year at 4.17 percent, the 10-year at 4.41 percent and the 30-year at 4.86 percent. The latest official SOFR print available at run time is 3.62 percent for June 23. That combination matters. The front end is still restrictive enough to keep floating debt expensive, but the move lower in the 10-year and 30-year gives permanent lenders and term borrowers a little more room than they had at the start of the week. The shape of that curve is doing real work. With the 2-year only modestly below the 5-year, and the 30-year still well above the 10-year, borrowers are not just dealing with an absolute rate problem. They are dealing with a term-structure problem. Short-duration bridge debt still carries enough cost that it needs a very clear use case, while longer-duration fixed-rate executions still have to overcome a 30-year benchmark that remains close enough to 5 percent to keep coupons elevated. In plain English, the market is open, but the math still has to be earned. You can see that in the deal tape. Commercial Observer reported today that Apollo, Affinius Capital and RXR put together $785 million of debt and equity for 175 Third Street at Gowanus Wharf in Brooklyn, a project expected to deliver 1,100 housing units plus an 85,000-square-foot Life Time fitness center. That is not a marginal signal. That is a large, complex capital stack getting assembled in a market where nobody is pretending capital is easy. It tells you well-positioned sponsors can still raise serious money for scale projects when the location, program and sponsorship line up. The debt fund lane is still very much alive where the business plan is transitional or execution-heavy. Commercial Observer’s June 23 report on S3 Capital’s $102 million loan for the Press Building office-to-residential conversion in Hell’s Kitchen is still relevant this morning because it reinforces the same point we have been seeing for weeks: conversions remain one of the clearest places where debt funds can price complexity faster than the traditional market. If you need flexibility, lease-up tolerance or comfort with adaptive reuse risk, that lane is still being led by nonbank lenders. Banks, meanwhile, are lending, but they are choosing their spots. Commercial Observer reported June 22 that Helaba provided about $112 million for the redevelopment of the former JCPenney headquarters campus in Plano into apartments. That was already a useful sign that select banks will still back multifamily development for proven sponsors. Today it reads even more clearly against the softer Treasury backdrop: relationship banks are not reopening the floodgates, but they will still fund high-conviction construction with a legible exit. The same selective tone shows up in multifamily refinancing. Commercial Observer reported today that Mesa West Capital provided $82.5 million to refinance Olin Fields, a 352-unit apartment community outside Seattle, with a five-year nonrecourse loan. That is an important print because it shows lenders are still willing to support assets that have already gone through operational work and now need durable refinance proceeds, not rescue capital. In this market, a clean refinance is its own form of confidence signal. There is also fresh evidence that affordable and public-private execution remains active. Commercial Observer reported Wednesday that Capital One closed a $96.2 million letter of credit to support the Edgemere Commons B2 affordable housing project in Far Rockaway. That is a reminder that capital formation is still available for housing with municipal and policy support, even while purely market-rate executions remain more rate-sensitive. On HUD and FHA, the strongest fresh item this morning is a closing rather than a policy bulletin. Commercial Observer reported Wednesday that Dwight Capital refinanced a newly built multifamily development in Oregon City with $39 million of HUD-backed debt. That matters because the HUD lane still offers something many borrowers want right now: longer-duration proceeds tied to a government credit framework rather than a risk-on securitization market. It does not move fast enough for every deal, but when a borrower can wait for it, HUD still solves a real problem. Agency liquidity also remains an anchor. Freddie Mac’s latest multifamily issuance calendar, published June 18, shows K-7671 on the week of June 22 with a projected issuance size of about $965 million for a seven-year conventional fixed-rate deal. Fannie Mae on June 17 said bulk-delivery multifamily MBS are now eligible for resecuritization, extending another liquidity tool inside the agency channel. That is not flashy on air, but it matters in the market because it improves capital flexibility around stabilized apartment paper. The big takeaway is unchanged: if you have clean, agency-eligible multifamily, the GSEs still set the execution standard everyone else has to beat. That agency advantage is especially important because borrowers are still trying to solve for proceeds, not just coupon. A small move lower in Treasurys helps, but a lot of refinance conversations still come down to who can deliver leverage without forcing a painful equity check. That is why agency executions keep winning attention whenever the asset is stabilized enough to fit the box. In a market like this, reliability and certainty of proceeds can be just as valuable as headline spread. CMBS remains open, but it is still carrying a split message. The fresh headline is not a new conduit triumph. It is stress inside the legacy book. Commercial Observer reported Wednesday that a D.C. Department of Veterans Affairs office loan entered special servicing. That is a deal-specific reminder that office trouble has not gone away just because new loans are printing elsewhere. On the broader market data, the latest Trepp monthly report, published June 1, showed the CMBS delinquency rate up one basis point in May to 7.55 percent, while Trepp’s June 10 special servicing update showed the overall special servicing rate down to 10.86 percent. Put together, that says the CMBS market is still functioning, but it is functioning with a workout overhang. That matters for execution tone. Banks are still being selective and relationship-driven. Debt funds still own the more complex bridge, conversion and late-stage business-plan trades. CMBS is available, but legacy pain keeps underwriting disciplined. Life company appetite, by inference from the current deal mix rather than a specific fresh closing in the last 24 hours, still looks most competitive for lower-leverage, stabilized borrowers who want duration and can live with a conservative box. Nobody is lending blindly, but multiple lanes are open if the asset and exit story are real. For multifamily specifically, the tape remains healthier than the broader CRE conversation. Commercial Observer’s June 23 report on Peachtree Group’s $43.5 million bridge loan for the completion and lease-up of Seahaven Apartments in Panama City Beach still matters because it shows bridge lenders will keep financing the last mile when the lease-up path is credible. Layer that with Mesa West in Seattle, Helaba in Plano, Capital One in Far Rockaway and Dwight’s HUD-backed Oregon refinance, and the pattern is pretty consistent. Multifamily is still getting financed across the capital stack, but every lender category wants a different version of certainty. The concise market snapshot this morning is this. Treasury yields improved on June 24, especially at the 10-year and 30-year points, which modestly helps fixed-rate execution. SOFR at 3.62 percent still keeps floating-rate debt expensive enough that bridge only makes sense with a clear catalyst. Debt funds remain active in conversions and transitional assets. Banks are still committing on strong sponsors and highly explainable deals. Agencies remain the benchmark for stabilized apartments. HUD is steady and useful for borrowers who can match its process. CMBS is open, but nobody can ignore the continuing distress pipeline. The market mood behind those facts is cautiously constructive. There is more evidence of execution than there was earlier in the year, but not more forgiveness. Lenders are rewarding basis, sponsorship and clarity. Borrowers who need the market to make a heroic assumption are still struggling. Borrowers who can show near-term stabilization, durable cash flow or a clean public-private capital story are still finding money. One thing to watch today is whether this lower long-end Treasury print turns into actual late-month lock activity. If the 10-year can hold near 4.41 percent and the 30-year stays under 4.90 percent, more permanent debt conversations should move from exploratory to executable. If the long end backs up again, especially without relief in SOFR, a lot of borrowers will go back to waiting, and waiting is still one of the market’s most common forms of nonexecution. That is the setup for this Thursday morning. The message is straightforward: capital is there, but it is going only to deals that can explain the whole path from today’s rate environment to tomorrow’s exit. I’ll see you tomorrow.

25. kesä 202613 min
jakson Debt Desk — Debt Desk Morning Brief for June 24, 2026 kansikuva

Debt Desk — Debt Desk Morning Brief for June 24, 2026

Good morning. It is Wednesday, June 24th, and this is Debt Desk. Before we get into commercial real estate and multifamily debt, here is the broader morning brief. Markets are coming in with a slightly calmer tone, but not a clean one. The rates backdrop is still doing real work in every financing conversation. The latest official Treasury curve at run time is June 23rd, with the 2-year at 4.16 percent, the 5-year at 4.27 percent, the 10-year at 4.50 percent, and the 30-year at 4.94 percent. The latest official SOFR print is June 22nd at 3.61 percent. That leaves a curve that is still high enough to pressure refinance math, but not so disorderly that deals have stopped. It is a market that will fund, but it wants a reason. In the national picture this morning, one of the cleanest developments is another court setback for the administration’s immigration strategy. AP reports that a federal judge barred immigration arrests at immigration courthouses nationwide, saying the government did not provide a lawful or reasoned basis for changing long-standing protections. The practical market read is not about the courthouse itself. It is that major policy fights are still being redirected through the courts, which keeps legal uncertainty elevated for employers, local governments, and any sector tied to labor mobility. That was followed by another fresh immigration ruling, this one from the D.C. Circuit. AP reports a federal appeals court allowed the administration to resume an expanded use of expedited deportations beyond the border region. So within the same news cycle, one court narrows an enforcement tool and another reopens a different one. The macro takeaway is continued policy volatility rather than a settled direction, and that matters because volatility tends to keep business decision-makers cautious even when there is no immediate economic shock. Election administration is also back in focus. AP reports a federal judge dismissed the Justice Department’s lawsuit seeking detailed voter data from Maryland, including sensitive personal information that the administration said it needed for list maintenance and citizenship checks. That decision lands just after the separate ruling blocking use of the revamped SAVE database for voter citizenship screening. Put together, it suggests the administration’s election-related data strategy is running into increasing resistance in court, and that is likely to remain a live political and legal story through the rest of the week. Another headline worth watching sits at the intersection of AI, national security, and procurement. Reuters, citing the Associated Press, reports that Anthropic’s Mythos model identified vulnerabilities in classified U.S. government systems during a testing exercise. The immediate significance is not that one model found flaws. It is that AI red-teaming against sensitive federal systems is moving from theory into disclosed real-world testing. That is likely to drive more scrutiny of federal cyber spending, vendor selection, and the speed at which agencies adopt commercial AI tools. So the national backdrop this morning is a familiar 2026 mix: courts are shaping policy in real time, election administration remains contested, and technology risk is moving closer to the center of Washington decision-making. None of that is directly a property story, but all of it feeds the financing environment by influencing business confidence, labor assumptions, and risk pricing. Now let’s shift into Debt Desk. The first thing to understand this morning is that the rate picture is still restrictive, but it has become manageable enough for credible borrowers to transact. With the 2-year at 4.16 and the 10-year at 4.50, front-end funding costs are no longer the only issue. The long end matters again because permanent debt buyers are looking beyond the 10-year and pricing in a 30-year Treasury that is still sitting just under 5 percent. For borrowers, that means the hurdle is not simply whether rates are high. It is whether the whole term structure lets a deal clear with acceptable leverage and debt service coverage. SOFR at 3.61 percent keeps floating-rate execution workable for short-duration business, but not cheap. That still favors borrowers who can point to a quick lease-up, a near-term conversion event, or an obvious bridge-to-agency or bridge-to-sale path. It is much less forgiving for assets that need time and capital at the same moment. You can see that in the deal mix. Commercial Observer reports today that S3 Capital provided $102 million of construction financing for Hershy Silberstein’s office-to-residential conversion of the Press Building in Hell’s Kitchen. That is exactly the kind of transaction that tells you where debt funds still have an edge. It is transitional, it is execution-heavy, and it requires comfort with a business plan that many traditional lenders would rather not underwrite from scratch. When a debt fund is showing up there, it is not just because the project exists. It is because the market still rewards lenders willing to finance complexity. The same pattern showed up earlier this week in Hawaii, where Commercial Observer reported that X-Caliber Rural Capital and CastleGreen Finance closed a combined $431 million senior loan and C-PACE package for the Coco Palms Resort redevelopment in Kauai. That is another reminder that structured capital remains available for large, messy redevelopments, but usually through specialized channels rather than plain-vanilla bank balance sheet lending. The bank read, by contrast, is selective but not absent. Commercial Observer reported that Helaba supplied a $111.5 million construction loan to StreetLights Residential and Pritzker Realty Group for the apartment redevelopment of the former JCPenney headquarters campus in Plano. That tells you banks will still fund multifamily construction when the sponsor is proven, the market is legible, and the story is strong enough to survive today’s carry. It does not mean broad bank risk appetite is back. It means relationship-driven, high-conviction construction lending is still getting over the line. On the CMBS side, the market is open, but the legacy book keeps flashing warning lights. Commercial Observer, citing CRED iQ, reported that the overall CMBS distress rate rose to 11.86 percent in May, with special servicing at 11.25 percent and delinquency at 9.53 percent. That is not a new-issue shutdown story, but it is a clear signal that old problems are still accumulating even while new executions are happening. The practical implication is that conduit lenders can compete on the right asset, yet they are doing it with conservative assumptions because the workout pipeline remains full. That same CRED iQ coverage from earlier this quarter showed 10-year CRE loan spreads tightening over the past year, with multifamily leading the move. And Commercial Observer’s June cap-rate analysis put average Freddie Mac multifamily coupons around 4.98 percent versus roughly 6.44 percent for conduit multifamily, a gap of about 145 basis points. Put those pieces together and the tone is fairly clear. Agencies still own best execution on stabilized apartment collateral. CMBS can work, especially for scale and standardization, but it usually is not winning a straight beauty contest against agency paper. Debt funds are strongest where the asset needs transformation. Banks will pick their spots. Life companies, by inference, remain most competitive on lower-leverage, stabilized product where duration and sponsorship line up cleanly. That inference matters because borrowers keep asking the same question: who is really lending? The answer this morning is that everyone is lending a little, but almost nobody is lending indiscriminately. In multifamily specifically, the transaction tape is still healthier than the broader CRE conversation might suggest. Commercial Observer reports today that Peachtree Group originated a $43.5 million bridge loan for the final phase and lease-up of Seahaven Apartments in Panama City Beach. Again, that is bridge capital doing exactly what bridge capital is supposed to do: finishing a nearly complete project and carrying it toward stabilization rather than forcing a premature permanent execution. That fits with the Plano construction loan from Helaba, and together those two deals tell you the multifamily market still has a live funding lane for both construction and late-stage lease-up, provided the borrower can show clear absorption and an achievable exit. Agency capital remains the most important stabilizer. Freddie Mac’s latest issuance calendar, dated June 18th, shows K-7671 on the week of June 22nd with a projected issuance size of roughly $965 million for a seven-year conventional fixed-rate deal. That is not just a calendar item. It is evidence that agency securitization liquidity is still showing up on schedule at meaningful size. When that machine keeps running, it sets the benchmark for the rest of the apartment debt market. On the Fannie Mae side, the most relevant fresh update is not a splashy loan closing but a capital-markets rule change. Fannie Mae announced on June 17th that bulk-delivery multifamily MBS are now eligible for resecuritization, adding another liquidity tool inside the agency ecosystem. Earlier in the month, Fannie also issued Lender Letter 26-03 with updated multifamily loan documents that become mandatory for confirmed commitment dates on or after June 30th. Neither item is a headline-grabbing rate move, but both matter because they show the agency channel still refining process and liquidity rather than pulling back. There is also a useful competitive signal from market share. Commercial Observer reported on June 1st that Walker & Dunlop led the Fannie Mae multifamily lending market year to date with $2.18 billion across 110 loans through mid-May, while the top 10 originators captured about 78 percent of total volume. In plain English, agency lending is active, but concentrated. Borrowers still have access, yet execution quality depends heavily on getting in front of lenders and intermediaries that know how to move within a crowded channel. For HUD and FHA, there is not a meaningful fresh policy headline in the last 24 hours. That absence is its own form of information. The HUD-insured lane still matters, especially for affordable and long-duration multifamily refinancing, but there has not been a late-June program change significant enough to reprice the market this morning. So for now, HUD and FHA remain steady rather than catalytic. The concise market snapshot is this. Treasurys eased modestly from the June 22nd spike, but the curve remains elevated enough to punish weak refinance stories. SOFR is still high enough that floating debt must have a clear use case. Banks are lending selectively on strong sponsors and understandable construction. Debt funds are carrying conversions, bridge, and heavier business plans. Agencies remain the best execution for stabilized multifamily. CMBS is open, but legacy distress keeps underwriting disciplined. That also means sponsors with dry powder and clean basis are still in position to act, while marginal borrowers remain stuck negotiating structure instead of price. One thing to watch today is whether borrowers use this slightly calmer rates tape to lock late-month executions, or whether they continue to wait for more relief that may not come. If June 23rd Treasury levels hold and the market keeps digesting policy headlines without another risk-off move, we could see a small burst of rate locks and agency traction before month-end. If the long end backs up again, especially if the 30-year moves decisively above 5 percent, that window narrows quickly. That is the setup for this Wednesday morning. The headlines are noisy, but the debt market message is pretty simple: capital is available, yet it is highly conditional, and the borrowers getting paid are the ones who can explain not just the asset, but the exit. I’ll see you tomorrow.

24. kesä 202614 min