Debt Desk
Good morning. It is Tuesday, May 26, 2026, and this is Debt Desk. National We will start with the wider national picture, because the tone this morning still feels like a post-holiday reopen with a lot of unfinished business. Washington is carrying legal risk, spending risk, and weather risk all at once, and none of that makes for a cleaner handoff into credit markets. The first national story is the latest turn in the immigration detention fight. The Associated Press published a fresh report overnight looking at how immigration judges in Tacoma, Washington had already been operating in a way that anticipated the Trump administration’s no-bond push for immigrants in custody. The AP framed that local history as part of a much bigger national legal conflict after the administration recently took a setback in federal appeals court, and the piece underlined how likely this issue now is to keep moving toward a broader judicial showdown. The reason that matters beyond politics is that immigration policy is showing up less as a one-off headline and more as a continuing force shaping labor mobility, household formation, and employer planning. For housing, apartments, and local growth assumptions, that is not background noise. It has become part of the underwriting environment. The second national story is the Republican fight over the anti-weaponization fund, which is still hanging over the broader immigration spending package. Reuters reported on May 23 that resistance inside the party to the president’s proposed $1.776 billion fund set up a confrontation that helped stall momentum behind the larger $72 billion enforcement bill before lawmakers left town for Memorial Day. That matters because it shows the fiscal agenda remains noisy even when one party controls the levers. It also tells lenders and borrowers something practical. If Washington cannot move controversial funding cleanly even on legislation leadership cares about, then the market has to assume more delay, more tactical messaging, and less straight-line policy certainty heading into summer. The third story is weather, and it is worth taking seriously this morning. The National Weather Service’s severe storm outlook issued early today warns that a new round of severe weather is setting up across parts of the central United States, with damaging winds, large hail, and tornado risk back in play. On a normal day that would mostly be a local and regional operations story. In late May, with travel moving again after the holiday and insurance, power, and logistics systems already stretched in many markets, it is also an economic story. Severe weather risk does not need to become a national catastrophe to matter. It can slow transportation, interrupt construction schedules, disrupt retail and industrial activity, and reinforce the already elevated focus on insurance costs in both housing and commercial real estate. So the national backdrop this morning is not dramatic in one single direction. It is just uneasy. Immigration policy remains legally unsettled but economically relevant. Congressional Republicans are still fighting over a politically toxic spending item. And weather risk is back in the center of the country just as the week really begins. That combination does not guarantee volatility, but it does keep the macro mood guarded. Debt Desk That brings us to rates, and the rates message is still the same at a high level even though the exact prints have shifted a little. Front-end borrowing costs have eased compared with earlier in the month, but longer-dated money is still expensive enough to force real compromises on leverage and duration. Using the latest official Treasury print available at run time, the Treasury’s daily yield curve for Friday, May 22, the 2-year closed at 4.13 percent, the 5-year at 4.27 percent, the 10-year at 4.56 percent, and the 30-year at 5.07 percent. Because of the holiday calendar and the New York Fed publication schedule, the latest published SOFR print available at run time was 3.51 percent for Thursday, May 21, as carried by FRED from the New York Fed release. The shape of that curve still matters as much as the level. Twos to tens were about 43 basis points positive, and fives to thirties were about 80 basis points positive. That is a decent amount of steepness, and it means the market is still charging up for certainty as borrowers move farther out the curve. Shorter floating-rate exposure is not exactly comfortable, but it is becoming more tolerable. Long fixed-rate money, by contrast, still asks borrowers to absorb a materially higher all-in cost if they want to lock today and move on. That split between SOFR and the long end is exactly why commercial real estate financing still feels fragmented. GlobeSt, citing NAIOP’s first-quarter debt market survey based on Altus Group data, described the lending market this month as split between falling SOFR and higher Treasury yields. That is the right description. Floating structures have gotten a little breathing room at the same time permanent debt still feels heavy. So borrowers are not solving one problem. They are choosing which problem they prefer. For banks, the message remains selective willingness rather than broad reopening. A recent GlobeSt summary of the Federal Reserve’s Senior Loan Officer Opinion Survey said bank optimism around commercial real estate is fading as lenders adjust to new credit risks. That fits the deal market. Banks can still show up for the right construction and multifamily stories, but they are not stretching just because the calendar says another cycle should have started by now. Sponsorship, basis, and exit visibility are still doing most of the work. For life companies, the market is not sending a volume-for-volume’s-sake signal. CRED iQ’s April spread work said 10-year commercial mortgage spreads had tightened across major property sectors, while life company 10-year quotes were around 170 basis points over the benchmark at roughly 50 to 65 percent loan to value and CMBS conduit pricing was closer to 250 over. The takeaway there is important. Spread compression has helped. Execution is better than it was a year ago. But when the 10-year Treasury itself is sitting in the mid-4s and the 30-year is above 5, even a disciplined spread still produces a meaningful coupon. Life company money is available, but it still looks like it wants cleaner leverage, stronger assets, and borrowers who can live with lower proceeds. CMBS is open, but it is open with discipline. CRED iQ’s conduit underwriting work earlier this year showed coupon compression in recent deals and still-solid debt-yield discipline. Trepp’s latest delinquency and special-servicing updates tell the other side of the story. Trepp said the overall CMBS delinquency rate for April 2026 was 7.54 percent, while multifamily delinquency rose to 7.71 percent. Trepp also said the overall CMBS special-servicing rate increased to 11.38 percent, driven mainly by office transfers, even as multifamily stress remained elevated. In other words, the securitized market is functioning in two directions at once. New issue can clear when collateral is clean and structure makes sense. Legacy distress is still very much alive, especially where maturities, weak cash flow, or old assumptions have collided with today’s cost of capital. Debt funds still matter because they are the part of the market most comfortable living in the gap between those two worlds. CBRE’s first-quarter lending momentum work, cited by MBA Newslink on May 19, said investment volume rose 19 percent year over year to $117 billion, with greater origination volumes, bigger average loan sizes, relatively stable spreads, and improved loan-to-value ratios. That is supportive, but it does not mean conventional lenders are covering the whole field. Private credit remains essential for transitional multifamily, recapitalizations, and situations where borrowers need flexibility more than headline-tight pricing. The tone there still feels asset-specific and structure-specific, not broadly aggressive. Now let’s talk about what is actually getting financed. The freshest multifamily financing signal that still feels important this week remains Milwaukee. Commercial Observer reported on May 21 that Dwight Capital closed a $114 million HUD 221(d)(4) loan to convert 100 East Wisconsin Avenue into 373 apartments. The publication said it was the largest multifamily HUD loan in Wisconsin history and the biggest financing approved by HUD’s Midwest office. The bigger point is not just the size. It is that HUD remains one of the few channels that can still solve for duration, proceeds, and execution certainty on complicated adaptive-reuse multifamily deals while conventional permanent debt is still expensive. That Milwaukee transaction also says something broader about where capital still has conviction. Multifamily, especially when there is a clear rehabilitation story or a clean path to stabilization, continues to attract better lender engagement than most other asset classes. It is not cheap money. But it is money that still wants to work when the collateral is understandable and the business plan is believable. The agency side reinforces that point. Freddie Mac’s current issuance calendar shows K-7661 projected at $997 million for the announcement week of May 26, following K-5621 at $855 million for the week of May 18. That pipeline matters because it shows the securitization machine for apartments remains active even with the long end still expensive. If agency issuance is still orderly in a week like this, that is usually one of the best signs that multifamily financing remains the most reliable major lane in the market. Fannie Mae’s first-quarter financial highlights point in the same direction. Fannie said first-quarter 2026 multifamily acquisition volume was $17.1 billion and that the business financed roughly 110,000 units, with the multifamily book of business growing to more than $542 billion. Those figures matter less as a backward-looking trophy case than as evidence that the agencies still have the balance sheet, mandate, and market position to keep apartment liquidity moving even when other lenders are more selective. HUD and FHA still deserve separate attention here because they are doing more than filling a niche. They are increasingly serving as the duration valve for borrowers who cannot make conventional debt pencil at the long end of the curve. That can mean office-to-residential conversions like Milwaukee, but it can also mean recapitalizations and permanent takeouts for sponsors trying to replace shorter bridge exposure with something more durable. In this rate environment, that option is strategically valuable. On the multifamily credit side, the tone is still constructive but not carefree. MBA said commercial and multifamily originations were up 52 percent year over year in the first quarter, which confirms that deals are getting done again. But MBA also said first-quarter delinquency rates for commercial-property loans increased to 4.02 percent, with some of the larger short-term increases coming in multifamily, office, and health care. That matters because it reminds us there are really two apartment markets right now. There is the new-money market, where agencies, HUD, selective banks, and private credit can still execute. And there is the maturing-loan market, where some owners are still trying to refinance yesterday’s basis with today’s debt costs. That is where the markets snapshot comes in. This morning’s snapshot is concise. The latest official Treasury curve still says short money is manageable but not cheap, and long money is still expensive enough to pressure leverage. A 2-year at 4.13 percent and a published SOFR print of 3.51 percent tell you floating costs are no longer worsening at the pace they were earlier this month. A 10-year at 4.56 percent and a 30-year at 5.07 percent tell you permanent fixed-rate execution still comes with a real duration tax. For commercial real estate borrowers, that usually translates into a few clear behaviors. Some keep leaning into floating-rate structures because the carry is easier to stomach than a mid-6 or higher fixed coupon. Some move toward agencies and HUD because those channels can still stretch term and support proceeds. Some accept lower leverage and bring in more equity because waiting for a perfect rate window is no longer a strategy. And some assets, especially weaker legacy product, still have to live in workout territory even while the best apartments keep finding capital. One thing to watch next is whether this week’s agency pipeline and the first post-holiday read on Treasury trading confirm that the market can hold this balance. If the long end stays roughly where it is and SOFR remains soft, multifamily should keep capturing the cleanest executions in the debt market. If the 10-year and 30-year back up again, expect even more borrowers to favor shorter-duration fixes, agency structures, and HUD paths while conventional permanent debt gets harder to clear. That is the setup for this Tuesday morning. Washington still feels noisy, the curve still feels expensive, and multifamily still has the deepest bench of willing capital even as the rest of commercial real estate keeps financing one carefully underwritten deal at a time.
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