DEBT & EQUITY FINANCE
Debt & Equity Finance
Commercial real estate debt and equity financing involves sourcing capital for property acquisitions, refinancing, and recapitalizations. The right capital structure significantly impacts investment returns, operational flexibility, and financial risk.
How It Works
- Capital Needs Assessment: Determine loan amount, timeline, and capital structure requirements based on property type and investment strategy.
- Lender & Investor Sourcing: Identify appropriate debt and equity sources (banks, insurance companies, CMBS lenders, private equity, joint venture partners) that match your deal parameters.
- Term Sheet Negotiation: Structure favorable financing terms including loan amount, interest rate, amortization, prepayment penalties, and equity structure.
- Underwriting Support: Provide lender/investor underwriting information including financial statements, market analysis, property appraisals, and business plans.
- Closing Coordination: Manage final documentation, title work, and funding coordination through closing.
Decision Drivers
- Loan-to-Value (LTV) ratios and equity contribution requirements
- Debt Service Coverage Ratio (DSCR) and lender requirements
- Fixed vs. floating interest rates and rate environment
- Prepayment penalties and refinancing flexibility
- Recourse vs. non-recourse financing and personal guarantee requirements
The ARCA Approach
ARCA brings deep lender relationships across traditional and alternative sources, sophisticated cross-collateralization and recapitalization expertise, DCF valuation and cash flow analysis capabilities, and creative structuring solutions for complex deals.
Frequently Asked Questions
What types of commercial real estate loans are available?
Options include conventional bank loans, CMBS (Commercial Mortgage-Backed Securities) financing, insurance company loans, SBA loans, hard money/bridge loans, and mezzanine financing. Lender choice depends on property type, borrower profile, loan amount, and timeline.
How do I refinance a commercial property?
Refinancing begins with property valuation and financial analysis to determine refinancing potential. Borrowers then identify lenders, complete underwriting, secure loan approval, and execute closing. Refinancing typically takes 60-120 days. Refinance opportunities commonly appear when cap rates decline or property performance improves.
What is the current interest rate environment for commercial loans?
Commercial loan rates vary by lender, property type, loan structure, and market conditions. Current rates depend on Federal Reserve policy, market competition, and borrower creditworthiness. Consulting with active lenders provides market-current pricing for your specific deal.
Related Questions → Read FAQs on debt vs. equity financing, LTV & mezzanine debt




