Read this: a $500 million state program reportedly helped generate more than $8 billion in local economic impact—an example of how public funds can change a deal’s math.
Indiana capital stack means the layered mix of senior debt, mezzanine loans, preferred equity, and common equity that funds a real estate project. This guide previews how modern debt tools and Indiana-specific incentives can be stacked to make projects pencil in a higher-rate environment.
We set practical expectations for sponsors, developers, and capital partners to evaluate financing in disciplined sequence. You will learn how rate assumptions, interest carry mechanics, and timing of public funds can turn a viable deal into an unfinanceable one.
Previewed public gap-fillers include READI (and a proposed READI 2.0), TIF, redevelopment tax credits, and infrastructure approaches. The underwriting lens centers on NOI durability, cap-rate realism, lender constraints, and how taxes can change net proceeds from “free money.”
This piece is for CRE developers, mixed-use sponsors, municipalities, and investors working in the state. After reading, you will better judge structure, funding options, and which documentation and valuation support protect the stack.
Key Takeaways
- Public programs can reshape returns—timing matters as much as size.
- Layer debt and equity in a disciplined sequence to limit sponsor risk.
- Underwrite on realistic NOI and cap-rate assumptions for lender buy-in.
- Watch tax effects: incentives can change net income and cash flow.
- Strong documentation and valuation support reduce funding friction.
- Compare senior debt, mezzanine, preferred, and common equity by cost and control.
How a CRE Capital Stack Works in Practice for Indiana Deals
Begin any deal analysis by sizing the senior loan; subordinate capital answers the ‘last dollars in’ question. That top-down approach helps sponsors see where risk and cost concentrate.
What belongs in the stack: senior debt sets the maximum loan amount. Mezzanine and preferred equity fill feasibility gaps. Common equity supplies sponsor upside and absorbs first loss.

Why design matters with higher rates
Higher borrowing rates and rising costs push the break-even point up. Interest carry and inflated contingency needs mean the last dollars often come from pricier subordinate capital.
Key underwriting terms to master
NOI, cap rate, LTV, and DSCR directly constrain leverage and proceeds. A small rate change can lower DSCR and cut loan size, forcing more equity or mezzanine.
- Map senior loan first — size by DSCR and LTV limits.
- Price mezzanine vs. preferred: mezz often demands higher yield and tighter covenants.
- Reconcile lender underwriting with investor return targets early.
“Structure decisions compound over time — align terms before entitlements.”
Indiana Capital Stack: State, Regional, and Local Funding Tools to Layer Into a Deal
A well-timed infusion of state funds can change the math on a tough development pro forma.

READI basics: READI 1.0 deployed $500 million of state funding via the IEDC and generated outsized local impact. READI 2.0 is proposed as state-only funds, removing ARPA constraints and widening eligibility. That shift makes more projects — especially mixed-use and infrastructure — eligible without federal compliance headaches.
What READI 2.0 tends to fund
READI categories map cleanly to real estate use cases:
- Quality of place: housing, mixed-use, water/sewer, broadband.
- Quality of life: parks, trails, cultural assets.
- Quality of opportunity: entrepreneurship hubs and childcare supports.
Regional alignment and timing
Seventeen regions set priorities; start outreach now with county economic development and IEDC contacts. Summer plans, fall regional visits, and Q4 allocations create timing risk.
“Begin regional conversations early — local buy-in is often the gating item.”
Complementary tools: TIF districts, Redevelopment Tax Credits, and build‑operate‑transfer structures can fill infrastructure and basis gaps. Underwrite public awards conservatively and keep a back-up capital plan so the deal remains financeable if awards slip.
Debt Financing Options and Capital Stack Tools That Move the Needle
Smart funding choices can shave months and millions from a development’s interest bill. Pick a structure early — panels often flag a 6–8 month decision window before bond execution.

Construction-to-perm vs. draw-down mechanics
Construction-to-perm provides one, converted loan and predictable long-term terms. That can simplify lender approval for 17–18 year private placements.
Draw-down funding spreads disbursements, lowering interest carry during build and reducing negative arbitrage. It also tightens contingency stress and protects DSCR during lease-up.
Tax-exempt bonds as a senior anchor
Tax-exempt proceeds can form the senior layer for qualifying housing and mixed-use projects. Sponsors must confirm bonding eligibility early with bond counsel and lenders to lock terms and the amount of exempt debt.
Cash-collateralized bond structures
- Issue bonds and escrow proceeds during construction.
- Invest escrow in Treasury-type instruments.
- Use a separate taxable construction loan on a bank draw schedule.
Positive arbitrage of roughly 50–65 bps has been cited, which can produce meaningful earnings (e.g., ~$2.5M over ~36 months). Expect higher legal, rating, and operational costs.
Rate environment and the post-25% test impact
Flat or inverted yield curves change whether reinvestment spreads help. Model scenarios for the next 4–6 months before you lock a structure.
The post-25% test shrinks the tax-exempt slice and can add taxable construction capital. On a ~$50M deal, that may mean $10–15M more taxable debt and roughly $500k–$750k extra interest carry.
Cost of complexity: weigh added counsel, underwriting, issuance fees, and management burden against incremental proceeds or earnings before choosing a path.
Taxes, Compliance, and Risk Management When You Add Government Funds and Complex Debt
When government grants arrive before stabilization, they can create taxable income the project can’t yet pay for.
Upfront tax risk: non-dilutive public funds may be treated as income on receipt. That creates a timing mismatch when operations are not yet producing cash.
Plan to coordinate draws, partnership allocations, and construction cash flow so the stack stays solvent through lease-up.

Bonus depreciation and timing
Bonus depreciation phases down through 2027 under current law. Placed-in-service dates, cost segregation, and capex scheduling change after-tax returns materially.
Managing extra earnings
Cash-collateralized bonds and escrow returns can create extra income. Syndicators may lower equity pricing to remain yield-neutral.
A common workaround is allocating that taxable income to a tax-exempt partner, but governance and compliance must be documented.
Cap-rate reality checks and diligence
The recent self-storage recorded-price anomaly shows why lenders should reconcile recorded consideration with income-based values.
- Verify recorded prices against third-party appraisals and assessor income approaches.
- Run implied cap-rate analysis versus market rates and stabilized NOI.
- Document conservative assumptions in sources-and-uses and loan covenants.
Risk controls: conservative valuations, transparent legal form, and clear allocation rules protect all parties and keep the deal financeable.
Conclusion
Successful deals start by proving income and valuation, then layering funding to fit that foundation. Validate NOI and cap assumptions first, size senior debt second, then add subordinate capital and incentives so underwriting remains clean.
Timing matters: early outreach to regional and county partners protects schedules and reduces last‑minute gaps when state programs award funds.
Choose the right debt structure — construction-to-perm, draw-down, or bond/cash-collateralized — only after modeling rate and cost scenarios and weighing the added legal and operational expenses.
Remember tax and valuation effects: structure choices create income timing issues and can change investor outcomes when markets reprice.
Next steps: align with local priorities, stress-test multiple rate scenarios, confirm legal/tax treatment early, and document assumptions so capital partners can underwrite quickly. For a practical reference, see our capital strategy guide.



