Geopolitical Shocks & Market Volatility – CREFC Investor Forums Share Markets Updates
March 31, 2026
The CMBS and CRE CLO markets, which entered 2026 with significant momentum, have transitioned into a period of uncertainty. The escalation of conflict in the Middle East has recalibrated investor expectations and introduced a fresh layer of volatility into what was previously a normalizing market.
Market Sentiment & Macro Impact
The late-March "geopolitical shock" has triggered a classic "flight to quality," characterized by wider pricing on new deals and a marked increase in investor caution.
- The "Iran War" Effect: Market participants are closely monitoring the 5-year and 10-year Treasury yields, which have surged approximately 50 bps in the past month. Unlike the reactions seen during the Ukraine Invasion or "Liberation Day," the S&P 500 has seen a more measured drop of approximately 7%, suggesting the market may be pricing in a quicker resolution—though many bond investors remain skeptical of this optimism.
- Refinancing Friction: The sudden rate spike has created immediate friction for active deal pipelines. Borrowers may be reluctant to close loans at current levels, and some loans are being reworked to adjust for higher rates.
- Bifurcation: There is a divide in liquidity. While "trophy" assets like data centers remain resilient, we are seeing "credit dispersion" in the secondary market, where distressed sectors like Class B office and retail are widening significantly more than industrial assets.
Sector-Specific Performance
- Conduit CMBS. Conduit products have recently "underperformed" relative to SASB and CLO structures as macro volatility rattles pricing.
- Spreads: Benchmark AAA LCF (Last Cash Flow) spreads have widened from S +72 bps in early Q1 to the mid-80s by late March.
- B-Piece Resilience: Feedback from the B-Piece Forum suggests that while yields tend to lag the broader market, buyers are reacting by "removing the marginal loan" from pools rather than just requiring wider yields. The mezz market remains a "deal-by-deal" environment with highly varied outcomes.
- Single-Asset Single-Borrower (SASB). SASB remains the dominant force, accounting for nearly 75% of total private-label issuance.
- Selectivity & Pauses: The market is open but more selective. Some SASB deals have been put on pause due to wider pricing. Investors are pushing back on AAA and BBB tranches, leading to deal delays when initial "test" pricing fails to find traction.
- Data Center Strength: High-conviction sectors continue to drive volume, however, even these "gold standard" assets are seeing a shift toward shorter-term structures to navigate the current rate environment.
- CRE CLOs. The CRE CLO market has seen a massive resurgence, with issuance reaching $11.2 billion by early March (up 34% YoY).
- Collateral Shift: Multifamily remains the backbone (~70%), while office exposure has cratered to less than 3%.
- Relative-Value Play: Interestingly, some investors are reportedly selling senior AAA CRE CLOs to pivot into Corporate CLO dislocations (driven by recent AI/Software sector news) as a total return play.
Asset Class Nuance: The Impact of Oil and AI
- Hotel Sector: Rising oil prices are expected to create a "K-shaped" recovery. Select-service hotels and those catering to lower-end demographics are viewed with increased concern as higher fuel costs squeeze consumer discretionary spending.
- Office & AI: While the Iran war has taken center stage, underlying anxiety regarding AI’s impact on long-term office employment remains a background headwind, adding to the structural uncertainty of the sector.
Capital Flow Observations
What’s Next. An Emerging Theme among Participants Is the Potential for "Capital Rotation." As noise increases in Private Credit (where asset values are perceived to be at "top-quartile" levels), there is an expectation that capital may flow into Real Estate Credit, where valuations are seen as having hit "bottom-quartile" levels, providing a more attractive entry point.
Bottom Line: The market remains open for transactions with strong fundamentals and realistic pricing expectations. However, for "tougher" deals or those with structural question marks, the current geopolitical environment has triggered a "wait-and-see" approach.
Contact Rohit Narayanan (rnarayanan@crefc.org) with any questions.
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