The multifamily debt market is recalibrating.
After the exuberant underwriting and aggressive capital deployment of 2021, the sector is now working through the back end of that cycle. Many transitional assets financed during that period have reached maturity without achieving full stabilization. The result is a growing cohort of owners who are not chasing upside or liquidity, but simply buying time.
That reality explains the sharp resurgence of collateralized loan obligation lending.
According to Moody’s, CLO issuance nearly tripled in 2025, reaching approximately $19.7 billion, with more than two thirds of that volume tied to multifamily assets. This was the most active year for CLOs since the 2021 peak, when issuance exceeded $40 billion during the strongest multifamily transaction year on record.
This is not speculative capital flooding the market. It is defensive, transitional capital designed to bridge assets through an uneven recovery.
CLOs Are Filling a Structural Gap, Not Chasing Yield
CLOs are fundamentally different from permanent capital and even traditional CMBS execution. These are floating rate, actively managed pools of transitional loans underwritten on future performance, not trailing results.
That distinction matters.
For properties mid renovation, in lease up, or recovering from rent compression, CLOs offer flexibility that balance sheet lenders and agencies simply cannot. They allow sponsors to fund remaining capital plans, absorb near term volatility, and extend runway until stabilization is achievable.
In today’s market, many borrowers are not seeking proceeds. They are seeking neutrality. Extend the loan. Preserve equity. Stay alive through the cycle.
Rate Dynamics Are Quietly Favoring Floating Rate Structures
The macro backdrop is also supportive.
While the 10 year Treasury has remained range bound and directionally uncertain, floating rate benchmarks have already begun to decline. SOFR has moved meaningfully lower over recent months, improving debt service coverage for existing bridge borrowers and making floating rate execution more palatable for new originations.
In a market where rate visibility is limited, borrowers are prioritizing adaptability over certainty.
CLOs provide that optionality.
Sun Belt Reality Check: Supply Shock First, Recovery Later
Nowhere is this more evident than in the Sun Belt.
Markets like Austin, Phoenix, and Atlanta absorbed years of aggressive multifamily deliveries, compressing rents and straining floating rate loans originated at peak valuations.
In Austin, reported rent declines approaching thirty percent are forcing sponsors into survival mode. Concessions are elevated. Lease ups are slower. Refinancing windows are narrower.
Yet the forward signal is constructive.
Multifamily starts have fallen to their lowest levels since 2020, according to U.S. Census Bureau data. New supply is decelerating. Stabilization is a timing issue, not a thesis failure.
CLO capital is effectively underwriting that timing mismatch.
Banks Are Stepping Back. Private Credit Is Stepping In.
Another structural tailwind is regulatory.
As Basel III capital requirements continue to constrain bank balance sheets, traditional lenders are increasingly allocating capital to private credit platforms rather than originating transitional real estate loans directly. Those private lenders, in turn, are heavy users of the CLO market to scale origination and manage duration risk.
This is not a temporary substitution. It is a structural shift in how transitional real estate risk is warehoused and distributed.
Expect private credit and CLO issuance to remain a central feature of the multifamily financing landscape.
What This Means for Sponsors and Investors
The takeaway is straightforward.
CLOs are not a return to 2021 excess. They are a market response to incomplete business plans, delayed stabilization, and a slower than expected rent recovery.
For experienced sponsors with credible execution plans, CLO financing can be an effective tool to bridge assets through the remainder of the cycle. For weaker sponsors or overly optimistic projections, it can just as easily defer, not solve, underlying issues.
As always, structure matters. Timing matters. Lender selection matters.
In a choppy market, survival capital is just as strategic as growth capital. The sponsors who understand that distinction will be the ones positioned to capitalize when the next cycle fully emerges.
If you are navigating a transitional asset, evaluating refinance risk, or reassessing capital stack options in today’s environment, this is precisely where disciplined, relationship driven debt advisory creates real value.
Navigating Today’s Market
John Morelli and his team of expert capital advisors are dedicated to guiding you through evolving market dynamics with expert insight, deep capabilities, and tailored financing solutions. Whether you’re exploring options with banks, agencies such as Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, and HUD, or debt funds, our team is here to help you secure the best possible terms for your commercial real estate financing.
Ready to discuss your next financing opportunity? Contact us or schedule a consultation today for expert guidance.
