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The CRE Finance Council Announces Its 2026 Class of ‘20 Under 40’

June 3, 2026

CREFC recognizes rising leaders helping shape the future of commercial real estate finance

 

The CRE Finance Council (CREFC), the trade association representing the over $6 trillion commercial and multifamily real estate finance industry, today announced its 2026 class of accomplished ‘20 Under 40’ honorees. Each year, CREFC’s ‘20 Under 40’ program recognizes outstanding young commercial real estate finance professionals who are reshaping the industry through their ideas, leadership, and execution. The recipients will be recognized at CREFC’s Annual Conference in New York City next week.

This year’s recipients have come of age during one of the most demanding and rapidly evolving market environments in recent memory. They have navigated market dislocation, embraced new technologies, and brought increasingly sophisticated analytical and operational expertise to every corner of the business. Their work is helping to shape the future direction of the commercial real estate finance industry.

The honorees contribute across every segment of CRE finance, including balance-sheet and securitized lending, bond investing, private debt and equity, loan servicing, credit ratings, and advisory services. In addition to their professional accomplishments, many are active participants in CREFC committees, events, mentorship efforts, and industry initiatives, helping ensure CREFC’s Young Professionals (YP) programming remains relevant, engaging, and impactful for the next generation of industry leaders.

The members of CREFC’s 2026 ‘20 Under 40’ class have already distinguished themselves as exceptional professionals and emerging leaders within commercial real estate finance,” said Lisa Pendergast, President and CEO of CREFC. “They have built their careers during a period defined by market volatility, shifting capital flows, and rapid industry transformation, yet they continue to bring fresh thinking, innovation, and leadership to the market.”

Pendergast added, “Their contributions extend well beyond their day-to-day roles. Through their active engagement with CREFC and the broader industry, these professionals are helping strengthen the future of CRE finance and shape the next generation of industry leadership.”

CREFC’s annual ‘20 Under 40’ awards are part of the organization’s ongoing commitment to supporting and recognizing emerging leaders in commercial real estate finance through education, mentorship, networking, and professional development opportunities.
  
2026 ‘20 Under 40’ Honorees

KAREN ANZALONE
Partner
Katten Muchin Rosenmann LLP
  
KATIE BASKIN
Associate
McGuireWoods LLP
  
SEAN BASTIAN
Senior Director, Capital Markets | Institutional Advisory
Walker & Dunlop
  
RAVI BELSARE
Principal
Apollo Global Management
  
STEVEN BERNSTEIN
Managing Director
Harbor Group International
  
DARREN BREDA
Managing Director
Affinius Capital
  
ZACHARY CION
Managing Director
Hudson Bay Capital
  
JONATHAN COHEN
Senior Director
MONTICELLOAM, LLC
  
MARCELLO CRICCO-LIZZA
Managing Director, Principal, and Head of CRE Lending
Balbec Capital LP
  
ALLISON DELONG
Managing Director
Greystone Servicing Company LLC
  
MICHAEL DILLON
Vice President, CMBS Trading & Analytics
Prime Finance Partners
  
SANG KIM
Director, Investments
Lionheart Strategic Management
  
DANIEL LIM
Investment Director
AustralianSuper
  
ALISON MACKENZIE
Senior Associate
King & Spalding LLP
  
NEEL MUNOT
Senior Director, CMBS
Kroll Bond Rating Agency
  
GABRIELLE NEISS
Commercial Bank Counsel
Capital One
  
CHRISTOPHER PRATT
Director
JLL Capital Markets
  
SAMANTHA ROTCHFORD
Managing Director
BDT & MSD Partners
  
WILL STILES
Director
Citi
  
SAMIR TEJPAUL
Head of Investments
Madison Realty Capital

To learn more about CREFC’s 2026 class of ‘20 Under 40’ recipients, click here. For questions, please contact Danielle Nathan

Contact 

Danielle Nathan
Senior Director, Education
646.884.7579
dnathan@crefc.org
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. © 2026 CRE Finance Council. All rights reserved.
The CRE Finance Council Announces Its 2026 Class of ‘20 Under 40’
June 03, 2026
The CRE Finance Council (CREFC), the trade association representing the over $6 trillion commercial and multifamily real estate finance industry, today announced its 2026 class of accomplished ‘20 Under 40’ honorees.

News

The CRE Finance Council Announces Its 2026 Class of ‘20 Under 40’

 

CREFC recognizes rising leaders helping shape the future of commercial real estate finance

NEW YORK, NY — June 3, 2026 — The CRE Finance Council (CREFC), the trade association representing the over $6 trillion commercial and multifamily real estate finance industry, today announced its 2026 class of accomplished ‘20 Under 40’ honorees. Each year, CREFC’s ‘20 Under 40’ program recognizes outstanding young commercial real estate finance professionals who are reshaping the industry through their ideas, leadership, and execution. The recipients will be recognized at CREFC’s Annual Conference in New York City next week.

This year’s recipients have come of age during one of the most demanding and rapidly evolving market environments in recent memory. They have navigated market dislocation, embraced new technologies, and brought increasingly sophisticated analytical and operational expertise to every corner of the business. Their work is helping to shape the future direction of the commercial real estate finance industry.

The honorees contribute across every segment of CRE finance, including balance-sheet and securitized lending, bond investing, private debt and equity, loan servicing, credit ratings, and advisory services. In addition to their professional accomplishments, many are active participants in CREFC committees, events, mentorship efforts, and industry initiatives, helping ensure CREFC’s Young Professionals (YP) programming remains relevant, engaging, and impactful for the next generation of industry leaders.

“The members of CREFC’s 2026 ‘20 Under 40’ class have already distinguished themselves as exceptional professionals and emerging leaders within commercial real estate finance,” said Lisa Pendergast, President and CEO of CREFC. “They have built their careers during a period defined by market volatility, shifting capital flows, and rapid industry transformation, yet they continue to bring fresh thinking, innovation, and leadership to the market.”

Pendergast added, “Their contributions extend well beyond their day-to-day roles. Through their active engagement with CREFC and the broader industry, these professionals are helping strengthen the future of CRE finance and shape the next generation of industry leadership.”

CREFC’s annual ‘20 Under 40’ awards are part of the organization’s ongoing commitment to supporting and recognizing emerging leaders in commercial real estate finance through education, mentorship, networking, and professional development opportunities.

2026 ‘20 Under 40’ Honorees

KAREN ANZALONE
Partner
Katten Muchin Rosenmann LLP

KATIE BASKIN
Associate
McGuireWoods LLP

SEAN BASTIAN
Senior Director, Capital Markets | Institutional Advisory
Walker & Dunlop

RAVI BELSARE
Principal
Apollo Global Management

STEVEN BERNSTEIN
Managing Director
Harbor Group International

DARREN BREDA
Managing Director
Affinius Capital

ZACHARY CION
Managing Director
Hudson Bay Capital

JONATHAN COHEN
Senior Director
Monticelloam, LLC 

MARCELLO CRICCO-LIZZA
Managing Director, Principal, and Head of CRE Lending
Balbec Capital LP

ALLISON DELONG
Managing Director
Greystone Servicing Company LLC

MICHAEL DILLON
Vice President, CMBS Trading & Analytics
Prime Finance Partners

SANG KIM
Director, Investments
Lionheart Strategic Management

DANIEL LIM
Investment Director
AustralianSuper

ALISON MACKENZIE
Senior Associate
King & Spalding LLP

NEEL MUNOT
Senior Director, CMBS
Kroll Bond Rating Agency

GABRIELLE NEISS
Commercial Bank Counsel
Capital One

CHRISTOPHER PRATT
Director
JLL Capital Markets

SAMANTHA ROTCHFORD
Managing Director
BDT & MSD Partners

WILL STILES
Director
Citi

SAMIR TEJPAUL
Head of Investments
Madison Realty Capital

To learn more about CREFC’s 2026 class of ‘20 Under 40’ recipients, click here.

About CREFC
The CRE Finance Council (CREFC) is the trade association for the over $6 trillion commercial real estate finance industry with a membership that includes more than 400 companies and 19,000 individuals. Member firms include balance sheet and securitized lenders, loan and bond investors, private equity firms, servicers, rating agencies, and borrowers. For over 30 years, CREFC has promoted liquidity, transparency, and efficiency in the commercial real estate finance markets, and acted as a legislative and regulatory advocate for the industry, playing a vital role in setting market standards and best practices, and providing education for market participants. For more information, visit www.crefc.org.

Contact:
Mary Beth Ryan
Senior Director, Communications
646-884-7567
mryan@crefc.org

Contact  

Mary Beth Ryan
Senior Director,
Communications
646.884.7567
mryan@crefc.org
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. © 2026 CRE Finance Council. All rights reserved.
The CRE Finance Council Announces Its 2026 Class of ‘20 Under 40’
June 03, 2026
The CRE Finance Council (CREFC) announced its 2026 class of accomplished ‘20 Under 40’ honorees.

News

CREFC GSE / Multifamily Lenders Forum Update

June 2, 2026 

On May 20, the CREFC GSE / Multifamily Lenders Forum convened an executive roundtable dinner in Washington, D.C. Hosted by CREFC CEO and President Lisa Pendergast, the event brought together prominent business leaders from across the GSE and multifamily sectors for an open-forum exchange.

Senior representatives from Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac — as well as Barclays, Cantor Fitzgerald, CBRE, Citi, JPMorgan Chase, PGIM, Regions Bank, Walker & Dunlop, and Wells Fargo — engaged in high-level discussions on housing affordability and evaluating the market impact of the recently released Basel regulatory capital proposal on agency bond buyers.

GSE Forum leadership is now turning its focus to the upcoming CREFC Annual Conference in New York City starting this Sunday. At the conference, each forum will deliver a comprehensive market briefing of the current state of their market sectors. Today, we focus on the GSE / Multifamily Lenders Forum Panel, scheduled for Monday, June 8, at 11:30 AM EST.

Moderator:

  • Lee Green, Managing Director, Wells Fargo

Panelists:

  • Yahli Becker, Senior Managing Director, Head of Agency CMBS, Cantor Fitzgerald
  • Jeff Berenbaum, Head of CMBS Research, Citigroup Global Markets
  • Jason Griest, Vice President, Multifamily Capital Markets Securitization, Freddie Mac
  • David Haynes, Head of Agency Trading, CBRE Capital Markets
  • Matthew Jones, CFA, Chief Investment Officer – Credit Investments, Harbor Group

Key Discussion Highlights:

  • Market Fundamentals: Agency CMBS market trends, supply pipelines, vacancy rates, rent growth trajectories, and the overall NOI outlook.
  • Origination Dynamics: Expected loan production volumes and the evolving multifamily lending environment.
  • Investor Sentiment: Credit investor and borrower perspectives on asset valuation, market resilience, and current investor sales trends.

To join the CREFC GSE/Multifamily Lenders Forum, please click here.

Contact Rohit Narayanan (RNarayanan@crefc.org) with any questions.

Contact 

Rohit Narayanan
Managing Director,
Industry Initiatives
646.884.7569
rnarayanan@crefc.org
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. © 2026 CRE Finance Council. All rights reserved.
CREFC GSE / Multifamily Lenders Forum Update
June 02, 2026
On May 20, the CREFC GSE / Multifamily Lenders Forum convened an executive roundtable dinner in Washington, D.C. Hosted by CREFC CEO and President Lisa Pendergast.

News

Reconciliation Update

June 2, 2026

The Senate delayed its action on Reconciliation 2.0 amid concerns over the Department of Justice’s establishment of a fund to provide payments to claimants harmed by the weaponization of government under previous administrations. 

Why it matters: Reconciliation 2.0 is narrowly focused on funding ICE and the Customs and Border Patrol (CBP) through the end of the Trump administration. Congress had the goal of enacting the funding by June 1. 

  • The $1.776 billion Weaponization Fund was established as part of a settlement of President Trump’s $10 billion lawsuit against the IRS for the leak of his tax returns in the first Trump administration. 
  • The fund would be overseen by a board of five presidential appointees and provide monetary payments to applicants harmed by government action. 
  • Senate Republicans were highly critical of the fund during a meeting with the Acting Attorney General. 
  • The announcement landed shortly before a key vote series on reconciliation known as a Senate Vote-a-Rama. The vote series allows Senators to offer unlimited amendments to the reconciliation bill. 

Senate leadership postponed the vote series because the fund could have been stripped through the amendment process, which would have put Senators at odds with the White House. 

  • GOP leadership prefers to negotiate guardrails or acceptable management of the fund rather than put its members in a difficult position of opposing the President or supporting a politically unpopular position. 
  • The Senate and the White House have been at odds over a $1 billion request in the reconciliation bill to fund “East Wing Improvements,” tagged as the White House ballroom renovation. The Senate parliamentarian threw out that provision, as it was unlikely to survive in the Senate or House versions. 

The development is a major setback for the reconciliation process and will delay other legislative actions in the Senate as leadership works out a solution. 

Contact David McCarthy (dmccarthy@crefc.org) with questions.

Contact 

David McCarthy
Managing Director,
Chief Lobbyist, Head of Legislative Affairs
202.448.0855
dmccarthy@crefc.org
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. © 2026 CRE Finance Council. All rights reserved.
Reconciliation Update
June 02, 2026
The Senate delayed its action on Reconciliation 2.0 amid concerns over the Department of Justice’s establishment of a fund to provide payments to claimants harmed by the weaponization of government under previous administrations.

News

Trump Wary GOP Senators 

June 2, 2026

President Donald Trump has demonstrated again that his influence over Republican primary voters remains unmatched. He has challenged and beaten members in both the House and Senate for perceived disloyalty to him over the past few weeks.

Trump-backed candidates ended the political careers of two longtime Republican senators. Trump separately helped push a third toward the exit last summer.

  • Texas: Attorney General Ken Paxton defeated Sen. John Cornyn in a stunning primary upset after securing Trump's endorsement. 
  • Louisiana: Sen. Bill Cassidy lost renomination after years of strained relations with the president following his impeachment vote. 
  • North Carolina: Sen. Thom Tillis opted against seeking reelection last summer after Trump publicly threatened to support a primary challenger.

Why it matters: These outcomes are a powerful reminder that Trump remains the dominant force within the Republican Party. Very few elected Republicans are likely to miss this lesson. 

However, governing is different from campaigning. The members who lost their primaries will continue serving in the Senate for the remainder of this Congress and do not have political futures that depend on demonstrating loyalty to the president.

  • This reality creates a potentially uncomfortable dynamic for the White House, which still faces major legislative battles over its agenda in Reconciliation 2.0, judicial appointments, appropriations, and government funding this fall.
  • Recent reporting has already identified what some observers are calling a Republican "wounded bear caucus"; i.e., retiring or departing senators who are more willing to challenge the administration when they disagree with its positions. 

Cornyn, Cassidy and Tillis sit squarely in the wounded bear caucus, while other Senators (McConnell, Collins, and Murkowski) may vote against Trump as well. As we detail below, if they remain unified, the six of them could effectively stall the GOP agenda in the Senate.

Senator Mitch McConnell (R-KY) is retiring and voted against multiple Trump cabinet picks last year; there could be more to come as he has no reason to help Trump during his final six months in Congress.

Sens. Lisa Murkowski (R-AK) & Susan Collins (R-ME) both voted to convict President Trump on impeachment charges in 2021, and may be emboldened to vote against him moving forward. 

  • Sen. Collins is running for re-election in a tough race against presumptive Democratic nominee Graham Platner and needs to show her blue leaning state why voters should give her another term in Congress. Votes against Trump could help her make the case to be re-elected.
  • Sen. Murkowski is up for re-election in 2028 and may not feel the need to vote with Trump, as he has not been shy about his frustrations with her in the past. The political headwinds against President Trump (who is currently sitting with a 34 % approval rating) could further embolden her to take votes against him as she gears up for another campaign.

The president won the primaries. Whether he can maintain the Senate coalition necessary to enact the rest of his agenda before the midterms remains a more complicated question.

The bottom line: Trump's success in reshaping the Republican Party may come with a governing cost. By proving he can remove dissenters from future Republican positions, he may also have created a group of senators who feel little obligation to support him in the present.

Contact James Montfort (jmontfort@crefc.org) with any questions.

Contact 

James Montfort
Manager,
Government Relations
202.448.0857
jmontfort@crefc.org
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. © 2026 CRE Finance Council. All rights reserved.
Trump Wary GOP Senators
June 02, 2026
President Donald Trump has demonstrated again that his influence over Republican primary voters remains unmatched.

News

SFR/BTR Bill Update: Senate Says “Still Work to Be Done” on Housing Bill

June 2, 2026

The House version of the 21st Century ROAD to Housing Act (H.R. 6644) faces an unclear path to enactment in the Senate. 

  • Both versions include a ban on large institutional investors purchasing single-family rentals (SFR). 
  • The version passed by the House on May 20 removed the seven-year build-to-rent (BTR) divestment requirement, but it largely mirrors the Senate-passed language. 
  • CREFC continues to push for changes to avoid impacts on multifamily rental properties, including BTR. Click here for CREFC’s statement.

Why it matters: The House and Senate have been passing and sending back different versions of house bills over the past year. 

  • Since January, the White House has demanded any legislation include bans on institutional investors owning single-family homes. 
  • The House introduced amended legislation on May 13 that included significant and meaningful changes to the SFR position that would have limited unintended impacts on BTR and multifamily housing. 
  • However, the House abruptly changed the language to mirror the Senate version they day before the vote after negotiating with the White House. 
  • The House passed its latest version on May 20 by 396-13 The Senate passed its latest version on March 12 by 89-9.

What they’re saying: The House bill includes key community banking bills championed by Financial Services Committee Chairman French Hill (R-AR) and Ranking Member Maxine Waters (D-CA), among other tweaks to the housing legislation. 

  • Ahead of the House vote, the White House issued a Statement of Administrative Procedure supporting the bill and saying if it were to pass both chambers, staff would recommend that President Trump sign it. 
  • Senate Banking Chairman (R-SC) and Ranking Member Elizabeth Warren (D-MA) said in a statement that there is “still work to be done” with the House and White House on getting a housing bill that can pass the Senate. Warren has so far opposed the community banking bills. 

Go deeper: While the opposition to the legislation has largely focused on the seven-year BTR divestment requirement, CREFC remains concerned with other aspects of the language that could impact multifamily or other excluded property types. 

  • The single-family definition could still include multiple detached or townhome structures on a single-tax parcel. 
  • Exemptions in the bill for servicers and creditor REO properties may still limit the resale of SFR and BTR portfolios.
  • Although Treasury can issue regulation, the law goes into effect 180 days after enactment—with or without regulation. 

Beyond the SFR provisions, the House also made changes to a Senate drafting error that would have lowered HUD FHA multifamily loan limits. The new language updates them as originally intended and establishes a new inflation adjustment metric. 

Contact David McCarthy (dmccarthy@crefc.org) with questions.

Contact 

David McCarthy
Managing Director,
Chief Lobbyist, Head of Legislative Affairs
202.448.0855
dmccarthy@crefc.org
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. © 2026 CRE Finance Council. All rights reserved.
SFR/BTR Bill Update: Senate Says “Still Work to Be Done” on Housing Bill
June 02, 2026
The House version of the 21st Century ROAD to Housing Act (H.R. 6644) faces an unclear path to enactment in the Senate.

News

CRE Securitized Debt Update

June 2, 2026 

Private-Label CMBS and CRE CLOs

Three transactions totaling $2.6 billion priced last week:

  1. INCREF 2026-FL2, a $1.239 billion managed CRE CLO sponsored by Invesco Commercial Real Estate Finance Investments. The pool comprises 36 collateral interests secured by 103 properties across 18 states, with a 30-month reinvestment period. Fitch classifies the collateral as multifamily (65.1%), industrial (22.5%), industrial outdoor storage/other (7.5%), mixed-use (3.3%), and self-storage (1.6%); top states are Texas (17.2%), New York (13.9%), and Florida (9.5%). The largest exposure is the Ares Student Housing Portfolio, a portion of a $274.9 million loan secured by a seven-property, 5,288-bed student-housing portfolio sponsored by Ares Management and Timberline Real Estate Ventures.
  2. JPMF1 2026-FX1, a $734.2 million conduit and MF1's first conduit offering, the first all-multifamily conduit since 2022. The deal is backed by 17 fixed-rate, five-year loans on 24 properties across 12 states, split between multifamily (91.8%) and manufactured housing (8.2%). The largest loan is a $71 million portion of a $171 million loan on Lightwell, a 218-unit Brooklyn apartment building. Other top loans include Addison Ridge in Fayetteville, NC; a Chicago-area manufactured-housing portfolio, and Beverly Apartment Homes in San Bernardino, CA. The transaction carried 30% top-tranche subordination, with MF1 serving as both B-piece buyer and risk-retention sponsor.
  3. BCMT1 2026-MF, a $629 million SASB backed by a floating-rate, interest-only loan to Bridge Investment Group to refinance 11 garden-style apartment complexes totaling 4,956 market-rate units across six states. The portfolio is 89.1% occupied, with top markets in Dallas/Fort Worth, Atlanta, and Las Vegas. The loan carries a two-year initial term plus three one-year extensions. Proceeds retire $469.4 million of existing debt, cover closing costs, and return ~$152.8 million to Bridge. Blackstone Real Estate Income Trust took the horizontal risk-retention piece.

By the numbers: YTD 2026 private-label CMBS and CRE CLO issuance totals $79.5 billion, up 17% from the $68 billion for same-period 2025.

Spreads Hold Steady

  • Conduit AAA and A-S spreads were unchanged at +70 and +100, respectively.
  • Conduit AA and A spreads were unchanged at +130 and +175, respectively.
  • Conduit BBB- spreads were unchanged at +415.
  • SASB AAA spreads were unchanged in a range of +89 to +125, depending on property type.
  • CRE CLO AAA and BBB- spreads were unchanged at +140/+145 (static/managed) and +315/+340 (static/managed), respectively.

Agency CMBS

  • Agency issuance totaled $1.3 billion last week, comprising a $996.9 million Freddie K transaction, $244.9 million in Fannie DUS, and $96.7 million in Ginnie Mae Project Loan transactions.
  • Agency issuance YTD-2026 totaled $72.5 billion, 32% higher than the $55 billion recorded for same-period 2025.

Contact Raj Aidasani (raidasani@crefc.org) with any questions.

Contact 

Raj Aidasani
Managing Director, Research
646.884.7566
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. © 2026 CRE Finance Council. All rights reserved.
CRE Securitized Debt Update
June 02, 2026
Three transactions totaling $2.6 billion priced last week.

News

Economy, the Fed, and Rates…

June 2, 2026 

Economic Data & Labor Market

  • April PCE confirmed the inflation problem is sticky, but the monthly core print was less bad than CPI/PPI. Headline PCE rose 3.8% YoY, the highest since 2023, while core PCE rose 3.3% YoY. Monthly headline PCE rose about 0.4%, and core rose about 0.24%, below the hotter CPI/PPI signal. The better monthly core print does not give the Fed an all-clear: three- and six-month annualized core PCE are still running near 3.8%, gasoline, chips, and software remain pressure points, and April’s housing jump reflected a one-time data artifact.
  • Consumers are still spending, but the cushion is thinning fast. Real personal spending rose only 0.1% in April, while inflation-adjusted disposable income fell 0.5% for a third straight monthly decline. The saving rate fell to 2.6%, the lowest since 2022. Conference Board confidence slipped to 93.1, and two-thirds of respondents said they were cutting spending because of rising prices. The read-through is K-shaped: higher-income households are still supported by equity-market wealth, while lower-income households are feeling pressure from gasoline, food, and debt service.
  • Q1 GDP was revised down, and the mix looks less comfortable. First-quarter GDP was revised to 1.6% annualized from the initial 2.0%, reflecting weaker inventory investment and consumer spending. Corporate profits rose only 0.9% after a 6.0% Q4 gain. The economy is still expanding, but less strongly than the first estimate suggested.
  • Labor is not breaking, but the next print matters. Bloomberg Economics expects May payrolls of 95k, down from 115k in April, with unemployment holding at 4.3%. Job openings are expected to rise modestly to 6.95 million, and claims remain below year-earlier levels. The labor market is good enough to keep the Fed from cutting, but not strong enough to absorb unlimited oil, rate, and real-income pressure.
  • AI is still showing up as demand before productivity. Central bankers spent the week debating the effects of AI on labor and inflation. New York Fed President Williams was relatively optimistic about productivity and employment, but St. Louis Fed President Musalem pushed back: data-center buildout, electricity demand, memory chips, and AI-company equity gains are today’s demand pressures. The productivity payoff may arrive later; the near-term impulse is capex, power demand, and input inflation.

Federal Reserve Policy & the Warsh Transition

  • The Fed is not ready to hike, but the easing bias is under pressure. Daly said policy is “in a good place” and there is “no urgency” to adjust. Kashkari said it is premature to conclude rates need to rise, but the Fed must keep all options open. Paulson framed inflation as a series of shocks rather than a structural regime change. The committee’s base case is still hold, but the language has shifted from “cuts eventually” toward “show us inflation is contained.”
  • The Warsh test is whether he can sound hawkish enough without overcommitting. Warsh’s first FOMC meeting is June 16-17. MarketWatch’s useful framing: the highest-risk scenario for hikes is not an explosive new oil spike, but a prolonged Iran stalemate that keeps energy elevated without breaking growth. That is the worst Fed setup: not weak enough to cut, not cool enough to ignore inflation.
  • Market pricing is less extreme after oil fell, but still nowhere near a clean cut path. Roughly 15 bps of residual hike pricing remains in year-end swaps, which Citi expects to fade if a U.S.-Iran deal is finalized. Deutsche Bank lifted its year-end 10-year forecast to 4.70%, arguing the Fed is done cutting and on hold near neutral. The 2-year Treasury at 4.00% remains above the Fed’s 3.75% upper target bound, signaling that markets still assign real weight to a prolonged hold or hike risk.
  • The bond market may have already done part of the Fed’s work. Bloomberg Economics estimates that the roughly 50 bp rise in the 10-year yield since the Iran war began included about 35 bps of term premium, with a tightening effect equivalent to roughly 75 bps of Fed hikes. That helps explain why Warsh may not need to force a rate increase immediately: higher long rates have already tightened financial conditions.
  • The balance-sheet issue is a slow-burn risk. Bloomberg Intelligence argues Warsh is more likely to shorten the Fed’s Treasury portfolio passively than to sell assets outright. Ending Fed add-ons to longer Treasuries and reinvesting maturities into bills would, over time, reduce duration support for the long end. That is not a near-term shock, but it is a term-premium risk for long-duration assets.

Treasury Yields & Bond Markets

  • Treasuries rallied on the week, but the level is still restrictive. Per Bloomberg, the 2-year fell to 4.00% from 4.12%, the 10-year fell to 4.44% from 4.56%, and the 30-year fell to 4.97% from 5.06%. The move was real relief from the mid-May peak, driven by lower oil prices and hopes of a ceasefire. But a 10-year at 4.44% and a 30-year near 5% still keep borrowing costs elevated.
  • The long end remains the pressure point. The 30-year is below its recent high but still just under 5%, and the fiscal discussion has become mainstream. Bill Gross argues long Treasuries remain expensive given fiscal deficits, trade deficits, weak-dollar risk, and CBO projections that public debt rises from 101% of GDP in 2026 to 120% in 2036. Fortune’s angle is blunter: with roughly $39 trillion of federal debt, modestly higher yields can materially worsen interest expense.
  • Bond vigilante talk is no longer theoretical. The FT’s bond-market commentary captures the tone: inflation, defense spending, green-energy spending, and higher debt service are colliding just as investors are demanding more compensation for duration. The exact trigger is hard to identify, but the preconditions are now visible.

Dollar, Commodities & Market Dynamics

  • Oil relief drove the week’s risk-on tone, but the macro variable is still Hormuz. WTI fell to roughly $88, and Brent traded below $93 on renewed hopes for a U.S.-Iran ceasefire extension. Bloomberg reported that equities and Treasuries rallied as investors anticipated some restoration of oil flows. But the deal was not final, and the market remains headline-dependent.
  • Equities are leaning on AI and earnings, not macro comfort. The S&P 500 posted a ninth straight weekly gain, and the Nasdaq continued to benefit from AI momentum. The risk is that equity strength is masking weaker consumer fundamentals and higher discount rates.
  • Dollar direction is now tied to whether the U.S. economy cracks. Bloomberg Intelligence’s FX framing is straightforward: escalation supports the dollar through risk aversion and higher oil; peace headlines support risk appetite and dollar weakness. But for a durable bearish-dollar path, the U.S. growth narrative likely has to weaken. So far, the consumer is slowing, not breaking.
  • AI cost inflation is becoming a corporate-margin issue. Bloomberg Opinion’s piece on finance-industry AI adoption is useful because it reframes AI from free productivity magic to a real cost line. Demand for compute is raising prices, firms are considering in-house models for cheaper tasks, and AI spending may drive cost cuts elsewhere. That matters for finance, professional services, and office-using employment.

CRE Finance Market Implications

  • The rate shock has already tightened financial conditions for CRE. Bloomberg Economics’ “75 bp Fed hike equivalent” framing matters for real estate: long rates have already delivered some of the tightening the Fed might otherwise have imposed. That shows up directly in debt yields, loan proceeds, DSCRs, rate locks, and exit cap-rate assumptions.
  • Construction and operating-cost pressure is easing only at the margin. Lower oil helps, but PCE is still showing pass-through into gasoline, goods, software, and energy-linked categories, while prior PPI data showed pressure in freight and transportation costs. For development, the stress remains materials, FF&E, utilities, contractor pricing, and financing. For operating assets, the stress is CAM, food service, logistics, and tenant margins.
  • Data centers remain the clearest CRE demand engine, but the benefit is narrow. AI-linked spending supports data centers, power infrastructure, electrical equipment, and logistics demand. But the same AI boom is also raising power, chip, software, and construction costs. Broader CRE does not automatically benefit from the AI trade; non-data-center development and transitional assets still need selective lenders.
  • Consumer-sensitive property types need more stress-testing. The saving rate at 2.6%, real disposable income down for three straight months, and consumer spending increasingly supported by wealth effects are not, by themselves, recession signals. They are warning signs for discretionary retail, restaurants, lodging, and travel-linked assets if the equity or labor markets soften.

Sources: Financial Times; Bloomberg; Bloomberg Economics; Bloomberg Intelligence; Bloomberg Opinion; MarketWatch; Fortune; BEA; Conference Board; Federal Reserve officials; Citi; Deutsche Bank; CBO; Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget.

You can download CREFC's one-page MarketMetrics, which includes statistics covering the economy and the CRE debt capital markets, here.

Contact Raj Aidasani (raidasani@crefc.org) with any questions.

Contact 

Raj Aidasani
Managing Director, Research
646.884.7566
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. © 2026 CRE Finance Council. All rights reserved.
Economy, the Fed, and Rates…
June 02, 2026
April PCE confirmed the inflation problem is sticky, but the monthly core print was less bad than CPI/PPI.

News

Servicing Sessions at Next Week’s Annual Conference

June 2, 2026

Our Annual Conference in New York next week is full of servicing related content. Here are some of the highlights:

Servicer Forum – Monday June 8th 10:30 – 11:15 AM

After the Monday morning keynote presentation, stick around for a lively discussion with the CREFC Servicer Forum leadership. Key topics on the current agenda include:

  • Negotiating Loan Workouts 
    • Challenges associated with maturity-driven stress vs. operating distress
  • Providing investor transparency without compromising negotiation leverage with the borrower
  • Addressing evolving investor expectations and the various interests across the capital stack
  • General Servicing
    • The evolution of loan documentation and servicing agreement language
    • Coordination between Master and Special Servicers
    • New trends observed amidst heavy influx of new servicers in the CMBS market

Joint CRE CLO and IRP Meeting – Monday June 8th — 12:30 to 1:30 PM

Grab a boxed lunch and join the joint CRE CLO and IRP meeting. Join CRE CLO industry colleagues and the IRP committee leadership to discuss the Collateral Manager Data Report (CMDR) implementation and proposed additions, servicer financial reporting standards for future CRE CLOs, and an update regarding the finalization of IRP V8.5 and potential upcoming initiatives.

Downstream Impact on the Servicing Playbook Panel – Tuesday June 9th 3:45 – 4:30 PM

Tuesday afternoon’s panel “In the Thick of It – Downstream Impact on the Servicing Playbook” will provide valuable perspectives from master servicers, special servicers, rating agencies, and investors regarding servicing issues. 

Current hot topics to be discussed include:

  • Servicer advancing
    • Non-recoverability
    • SASB vs. conduit
    • Potential effect on workout strategies
  • Investors’ desire for more information regarding workout plans, appraisal reductions, and loan performance 
  • Pooling and Servicing Agreement innovations to address various servicing pinch points
Look for our next Spotlight on Servicing article later this month for an in-depth recap of these issues and other servicing hot topics.

 

Contact 

Rohit Narayanan
Managing Director,
Industry Initiatives
646.884.7569
rnarayanan@crefc.org
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. © 2026 CRE Finance Council. All rights reserved.
Servicing Sessions at Next Week’s Annual Conference
June 02, 2026
Our Annual Conference in New York next week is full of servicing related content.

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