Forum Spotlight: Alternative Lenders and High Yield Investors
January 7, 2025
Samir Tejpaul (Chair), Samantha Rotchford (Chair-Elect) and Rachel Hunter-Goldman (Chair Elect) make up the Leadership Working Group for CREFC’s Alternative Lenders and High Yield Investors Forum. This working group sets agendas and priorities for the Forum and represents their constituencies on CREFC’s Policy Committee.
Why it matters: Each industry Forum addresses issues critical to their business sector and works to achieve solutions that serve a common purpose.
CREFC works closely with Forum leaders and members to:
- Ensure all voices are heard,
- Assist in finding consensus amidst disparate and converging views,
- Share those views when appropriate with regulators and legislators, utilizing CREFC’s experienced Government Relations Team and our CEO Lisa Pendergast,
- Develop new best practices and monitor old ones.
What they’re saying: There have been significant opportunities for high yield investors and alternative lending platforms, including bridge and mezzanine loans, preferred equity, and special/distressed situations.
By the numbers: Market trends that impacted this constituency last year include:
- Floating rate coupons tightened ~160 basis points due to:
- Spread compression of 50-75 basis points (depending on property type and quality)
- One-month SOFR rate falling nearly 80 basis points
- Participants expect further spread tightening amidst heightened investment-sales activity.
- “De-bankification” accelerated in 2024 as bank balance sheet lenders remained on the sidelines:
- Banks provided fewer direct loans and focused more on structured finance (repo / note-on-note / participations / syndications) due to better capital treatment.
- For now, direct lending in the bank market is not expected to return to pre-COVID levels.
- As long as that dynamic persists, alternative lenders will continue to gain market share.
- The construction financing pipeline has slowed materially as buyers and sellers of land re-assess yield-on-cost (YoC) requirements to attract LP capital.
- Student housing and data centers have filled the void, while industrial and multifamily development has slowed.
- The bridge lending pipeline improved moderately with several construction loans originated between 2020-2023 nearing completion and requiring bridge financing for take-out.
- Existing borrowers of bridge financing returned to the marketplace to source “bridge-to-bridge” financing vs. taking on fixed-rate debt as they awaited Fed rate cuts, the results of the presidential election, and any new policies from the incoming administration.
- Competition in the “lower-yielding” and “lighter-transition” bridge space is robust, further driving down spreads going into 2025.
What’s Next?
- Forum leaders will present an update on their Forum at the upcoming CREFC conference in Miami.
- Planning is in full swing for CREFC’s High Yield, Distressed Assets & Servicing Conference on March 4, in New York.
- Soon after, the chairs will seek nominations for the next Chair-Elect to join their leadership slate.
To join the Alternative Lenders and High Yield Investors Forum, please register here.
Contact Rohit Narayanan (RNarayanan@crefc.org) for Forum-related questions.
The information provided herein is general in nature and for educational purposes only. CRE Finance Council makes no representations as to the accuracy, completeness, timeliness, validity, usefulness, or suitability of the information provided. The information should not be relied upon or interpreted as legal, financial, tax, accounting, investment, commercial or other advice, and CRE Finance Council disclaims all liability for any such reliance. © 2025 CRE Finance Council. All rights reserved.