Surprising fact: a one-point tweak in deal structure can change project returns by 5–8% or more, often exceeding savings from cost-cutting.
This section opens a real, execution-focused case study showing how a sponsor assembled an efficient capital stack for a commercial asset. We explain why the chosen design mattered as much as the property itself.
Capital Stack Advisors, a boutique mortgage banking and advisory firm, guided the sponsor with a client-first approach. The narrative covers debt, equity, and structured solutions and shows how small changes to the capital and financing mix altered covenants, refinance paths, and sponsor control.
Readers will get a repeatable, beginning-to-end blueprint rooted in underwriting, lender relationships, and real-world timelines. Expect an execution lens that favors a clean, transparent structure investors and lenders can evaluate quickly.
Key Takeaways
- Efficient capital stack balances cost, control, and certainty.
- Design choices directly affect returns and refinance options.
- Integrated advisory work speeds close and reduces execution risk.
- Use mezzanine or structured gap tools when senior debt falls short.
- Long-term lender relationships expand viable financing pathways.
Deal Snapshot: Sponsor Objectives in Arizona Commercial Real Estate
Faced with a crowded market and rising rates, the sponsor prioritized certainty and speed over the lowest available price.
Transaction context. This deal was a speculative industrial development where timing and capital availability shaped the financing approach. JLL Capital Markets’ prior work on a Casa Grande project signaled lender appetite for logistics product during the period.

Market backdrop and timing
Lender interest in speculative industrial lifted equity and construction options. The sponsor tracked market signals and chose when to lock financing to limit rate risk.
What efficient meant for this sponsor
The sponsor’s objectives focused on three items: target leverage, an acceptable all-in cost of capital, and speed to close. Flexibility for leasing risk and a clean refinance path were also required.
| Baseline metric | Target | Why it mattered |
|---|---|---|
| Leverage | 65% LTC | Balanced return with lender comfort |
| Close timeline | 90 days | Captured favorable market window |
| All-in cost | Mid-teens IRR hurdle | Underwrites sponsor growth and investor returns |
| Capital mix | Senior loan + JV equity (+optional mezz) | Reduced re-trade risk and preserved control |
The sponsor’s prior experience and multi-year performance gave lenders confidence. The advising firm translated these objectives into financeable terms early, which removed surprises and set decision points: senior loan type, JV equity need, and whether a structured layer was required.
Capital Stack Fundamentals for Commercial Properties
A clear funding plan starts by defining each layer of capital and the problem it solves for the asset.
Core layers of the stack: senior debt, equity, and structured capital
Senior debt anchors the financing with the lowest cost of capital and sets tests like DSCR, debt yield, and reserves. These terms improve lender certainty but can restrict operating flexibility.
Sponsor and JV equity absorbs project risk and aligns incentives. The choice between common, preferred, or JV economics changes control rights, dilution, and the sponsor’s upside.
Structured capital, including mezzanine and other gap tools, fills shortfalls when senior proceeds and equity commitments fall short. These layers add cost but protect closing timelines and sizing.
How capital structure drives long-term value in commercial real estate
Design matters: maturity profiles, covenant tightness, and refinancing paths determine whether a property can reach stabilization and achieve an exit.
“Cheap capital that delays close or tightens covenants can erode returns more than a slightly pricier, cleaner financing.”
A practical evaluation framework weighs cost, certainty, complexity, intercreditor terms, and exit optionality. Sponsors that present a simple, transparent stack win faster decisions and fewer conditions.

For a deeper guide on structuring financing and capital solutions, see this practical primer.
Designing the Arizona Capital Stack for the Transaction
The team started by matching the business plan to a senior financing approach that prioritized execution speed and clear exit metrics.
Senior debt selection: construction loan versus bridge financing
Construction loans provided draw schedules, budget controls, and inspection milestones. They fit when the budget and timeline were fixed.
Bridge loans offered term flexibility and simpler covenants. The sponsor chose bridge when leasing pace needed a short-term hold before takeout.
Joint venture equity as a growth lever
JV equity increased capacity while preserving sponsor bandwidth and upside. Governance was tight: limited approvals and clear economics kept decisions fast.
Mezzanine financing and structured capital for gap funding
Mezzanine sat junior to the senior loan and reduced sponsor dilution. Its cost was higher, but it preserved close certainty and improved leverage when senior proceeds were short.
Refinance planning: bridge-to-takeout strategy
The sponsor underwrote the refinance early using DSCR targets and stabilization milestones. This bridge-to-takeout strategy avoided maturity stress and made the eventual refinance executable.
Adding C-PACE without complicating the stack
CSA coordinated C-PACE to integrate with the construction loan and contractor schedules. “CSA helped us add C-PACE financing to our construction loan without turning the capital stack into a puzzle,” a sponsor recalled in testimony.
“The pre-close bridge strategy and lender coordination set up a seamless takeout and reduced re-trade risk.”
| Layer | Primary function | Trade-off | When to use |
|---|---|---|---|
| Senior (construction/bridge) | Funds build/short-term hold | Budget control vs. covenant flexibility | When timeline or leasing dictates |
| JV equity | Growth capital, sponsor bandwidth | Reduced dilution vs. shared governance | To scale projects while preserving sponsor upside |
| Mezzanine / structured | Gap funding, close certainty | Higher cost, junior claim | When senior + equity fall short |
| C-PACE | Energy-long term financing | Special tax obligations; document coordination | When efficiency upgrades add value and cash flow |
Execution Playbook: From Underwriting to Closing
Execution begins when underwriting translates sponsor goals into a clear, time-bound financing roadmap.
Client-first strategy
The firm’s advisory team turned sponsor objectives into a prioritized plan. Certainty of closing came before chasing the lowest theoretical rate.
Outcome: simpler covenants, staged budgets, and a single closing window aligned to the sponsor’s leasing timeline.
Integrated expertise workflow
Appraisal, underwriting, negotiation, and closing ran on one shared tracker. That reduced handoff lag and lowered condition backlogs.

Lender outreach & third-party coordination
Relationship-driven sourcing created competitive tension among lenders and widened funding pathways.
Alex Ades managed reports and municipal steps while Simon Ruskin kept internal schedules tight. Strategic oversight from Shia Fishman and the managing director ensured timely decisions.
Documentation and scheduling discipline
Teams used a single source of truth, weekly cadences, and a closing checklist to track thresholds and triggers.
| Stage | Owner | Key deliverable |
|---|---|---|
| Appraisal & underwriting | Originator / advisory | Underwrite memo, risk table |
| Lender outreach | Managing director | Term sheet comparator |
| Third-party coordination | Alex Ades | Permits, reports, title clearances |
| Closing & ops | Operations Manager | Condition tracker, wire schedule |
“They set a high bar for execution and communication.”
Replicable playbook: weekly updates, one conditions list, proactive lender engagement, and contingency tasks for common closing risks.
Results and What Sponsors Can Replicate
Clear outcomes from disciplined execution turned a complex financing into a repeatable playbook.
What sponsors achieved: higher certainty of funding, a cleaner transaction structure that reduced friction among capital providers, and on-time delivery against closing and project schedules.

Investor and lender confidence signals
Investors and lenders responded positively to a coherent narrative and conservative underwriting assumptions. Transparent uses of proceeds and a verifiable performance record shortened diligence cycles.
“A clear story and measurable milestones transformed the deal from speculation into a financeable business plan.”
How the performance narrative was packaged
The sponsor translated leasing, budget, and timeline assumptions into simple milestones with owners, advisors, and lender sign-offs. This made responsibilities and triggers easy to audit and track.
Practical strategy takeaways
- Align objectives early: agree on leverage and exit assumptions before lender outreach.
- Pick the senior product that matches the plan: construction or bridge should mirror timing and risk.
- Use equity strategically: JV equity can preserve upside while sharing execution risk.
- Add structured layers only to simplify execution: mezzanine or similar tools should reduce—not add—closing risk.
Checklist to protect value
Maintain clean financials, organized documentation, and a proactive lender reporting cadence to preserve long-term value.
Bottom line: design the financing to win execution first, then trim cost. Missed timelines erase pricing wins more quickly than modestly higher rates.
For a faster close playbook, see our guidance on fast-track commercial financing.
Conclusion
Clear alignment mattered most.
This case shows how aligning sponsor goals with practical financing tools produced a durable, financeable outcome. The efficient capital stack blended senior debt, JV equity, and a measured structured layer to protect timing and returns.
Optimize for certainty, simplicity, and flexibility before chasing marginal pricing gains. Choose the right senior product, size equity realistically, use mezzanine or gap tools only when needed, and set a refinance path early.
Execution proved the differentiator: tidy documentation, disciplined schedules, and coordinated third parties cut closing risk and sped decisions. Those practices strengthened lender and investor confidence and preserved upside while limiting downside.
Capital Stack Advisors is a boutique advisory firm that helps sponsors turn plans into action with customized debt and equity solutions and long-term lender relationships. As market conditions shift, sponsors who adapt capital strategies quickly without breaking structure will win.



