Surprising fact: after a historic rate-hike cycle, fund flows are improving and many lenders report a clear “turning point” in liquidity as of 9/24/2025.
Creative capital stacks describe how sponsors blend senior debt, mezzanine, and preferred equity to bridge valuation gaps and ease refinancing risk. This approach has grown in popularity in commercial real estate as pricing and underwriting shift with early-cycle recovery dynamics.
This report ties those structures to a macro backdrop of rate normalization and returning liquidity. You will see practical analysis of proceeds, cost of capital, covenants, intercreditor terms, control rights, and downside protection.
What to expect: clear comparisons of senior, mezz, and pref tranches, trade-offs in structure, and U.S. deal execution examples. The piece uses recent research and named examples to ground the view and avoid pure theory.
How to use this report: follow Sections 2–6 for cycle signals, fundraising and liquidity, senior debt, mezz/pref detail, and final execution takeaways.
Key Takeaways
- Creative stacks help bridge valuation gaps and manage refinancing risk.
- Early signs of recovery are shifting pricing and fund flows.
- Trade-offs focus on proceeds, cost, covenants, and control rights.
- U.S. deal examples and research anchor practical guidance.
- Sections map a clear roadmap for structuring and execution.
Why Creative Capital Stacks Matter in the Post-Rate Hike Cycle
When financing costs outpace income growth, plain-vanilla loans often fall short and creative layering fills the gap. Sponsors now balance higher coupons and tighter leverage with a more cautious underwriting view.

Turning-point signals across fundamentals
Office lease availability has edged down over the past year, giving lenders some comfort on occupancy trends.
Industrial pressure eased as speculative construction slowed, and U.S. multifamily vacancy has begun to decline. These shifts help shift lender posture from defensive to selective growth.
Debt markets reengage
Debt markets showing more term sheets and a wider lender universe matters: new loan origination rose 30%+ YoY in 1H 2025, which increases execution certainty for sponsors.
Sales activity and price stabilization
As sales volume rises and price declines level off across major properties, mezzanine and preferred providers can underwrite to a steadier value path. That reduces extension risk and narrows bid-ask spreads.
“In this phase, creative stacking is about matching risk capital to clear business-plan milestones.”
- Practical takeaway: use layered debt and preferred equity to bridge timing and refinance windows rather than to obscure underwriting shortfalls.
CRE Capital Markets in 2025: Fundraising and Liquidity Trends Shaping Deal Structures
Fundraising momentum in 2025 is reshaping how sponsors price deals and allocate risk across structures.
$86B of private fund closings through August implies a $129B year-end pace, up 38% from 2024. That flow is tangible liquidity, not just optimism, and it feeds transaction and refinancing pipelines.
Largest closes matter: Brookfield’s $16B and Carlyle’s $9B signal renewed institutional conviction and larger checks for sponsors with scale and track records.

Blackstone BREIT’s $1.1B in Q2 2025 shows improving sentiment in perpetual vehicles, while U.S. REIT unsecured debt issuance reached $48B trailing 12 months. That reopening helps set spreads and benchmark pricing across debt providers.
Equity issuance stays muted as many shares trade below net asset value, keeping private funds and preferred equity relevant for recap and acquisition financing.
- Structuring lens: when public equity is dilutive but public debt is open, sponsors lean debt-heavy and reserve a mezz/pref pocket to meet lender leverage limits.
“Sponsors should underwrite multiple capital sources and keep optionality to raise capital quickly when windows open.”
Senior Debt: Pricing, Underwriting, and Where Lending Is Returning
Senior lending is coming back, but only where cash flow, sponsorship, and collateral align. Underwriters now apply tighter leverage ceilings, higher DSCR and debt-yield tests, and explicit reserve lines.
Those tests often cut proceeds below legacy payoffs. That forces buyers to accept higher cap rates or layer additional capital to meet return targets.

How underwriting changes affect proceeds and net income sensitivity
Smaller revenue misses now have bigger consequences. A 3–5% NOI dip can breach covenants, lower refinance proceeds, or trigger reserve draws.
Conservative cash-flow modeling and robust stress tests are essential to avoid covenant breaches and preserve refinancing optionality.
Where senior lending returns first
Lending activity is strongest for stabilized multifamily and industrial properties, and for sponsors with strong track records. Office remains nuanced and often needs extra structure.
Private debt funds are a key source of debt capital. In 2025, funds targeting North American real estate raised over $20B YTD, and Blackstone’s $8B debt fund close shows scale and willingness to bridge maturities.
- Structuring options: senior stretch to increase proceeds when cash flow supports it.
- Senior + future funding or earnouts to link additional proceeds to performance.
- Senior + mezzanine to preserve flexibility while meeting lenders’ leverage limits.
“Senior debt still offers priority returns, but investors demand stronger covenants, reporting, and reserves.”
For sponsors, choose the structure that balances proceeds and refinancing flexibility. For investors, senior paper provides income with downside protection—if underwriting and controls are tight.
Mezzanine and Preferred Equity: Filling the Gap Between Debt and Equity
Mezzanine loans and preferred equity now serve as pragmatic gap-fillers when senior lending tightens.

Gap math for acquisitions and refinancings: when senior proceeds fall short, mezzanine or preferred equity covers the shortfall without forcing a sale or over-diluting common equity.
When to choose mezzanine vs. preferred
- Cost of funds: mezz debt often has higher cash interest; pref equity may offer accrued returns or IRR hurdles.
- Control & timing: pref equity gives investor protections with lighter control than equity; mezz has fixed maturity and cure mechanics.
- Stress behavior: PIK, cash traps, and step-in rights change outcomes under stress and affect investor appetite.
Sector and execution notes
Multifamily and industrial remain the most competitive sectors for mezz and pref. Data-focused funds (Blue Owl, Principal) are driving bespoke equity solutions for large-scale projects.
Practical steps: run senior and mezz/pref processes in parallel, model downside refinance paths, and agree intercreditor terms early to prevent last-minute repricing.
Conclusion
As liquidity nudges back into the real estate pipeline, layered financing has shifted from niche tactic to practical execution tool.
Fundraising and loan origination improved in 1H 2025, with origination up 30%+ YoY and data through 9/24/2025 showing steadier pricing. That ‘why now’ signal supports using senior, mezzanine, and preferred tranches together to close transactions.
Senior lenders are returning selectively; proceeds and tighter covenants still create shortfalls. Mezzanine and preferred equity fill those gaps while preserving sponsor control, provided intercreditor terms and downside protections are clear.
Actionable takeaways: underwrite multiple exit paths, build extension and future-funding options, and match the stack to sector-specific risk such as lease roll and capex. Investors and firms that insist on transparent reporting and governance will find the best risk-adjusted outcomes.
Editorial note: reported fundraising and issuance reflect past-period research and should be validated with current data. Any website references and cookies belong in standard disclosure and analytics language, not investment advice.



