Statista estimates the value of the commercial real estate market will reach $24.67 trillion in 2023. According to the Deloitte Center for Financial Services 2024 industry outlook, half the industry expects the cost of capital and capital availability to worsen through next year. Couple that with the $1.5 trillion wall of debt maturing before the end of 2025 and it’s easy to understand the trepidation in the market today.
But we’ve been here before.
The credit team at Peachtree Group has completed hundreds of transactions worth north of $15 billion. In our collective careers, we have seen borrowers navigate unstable markets, such as what we are experiencing today, in a variety of different ways.
Here are five tips for borrowers trying to navigate today’s difficult market, and secure funding for their project.
Acknowledging your Situation
It has been a borrower’s market for several years now, and this is not one of them. Do not forsake the term sheet in your hand – the Fed has raised interest rates 11 times since March of 2022. Spending too much time on turns of a term sheet might leave you losing any spread concessions to increases in the benchmark or, even worse – lenders deciding to pull terms altogether. If you have an offer from someone you trust, you might want to take it.
Grass Isn't Always Greener
On existing projects, your current lender is most likely your best friend. A lender willing to give you an extension is gold in this market. Getting additional terms out of your current lender is likely the least costly option, even if it comes with fees and a rate increase – it likely is still significantly less costly than what the current market will give you. However, I hope that you have been a good borrower – up to date on deliverables, communicative about the status of your project, etc. – make no mistake, the bank is doing you a favor, don't give credit committee a reason to say no.
Have you Considered CPACE
Being one of the largest CPACE originators in the country, Peachtree has seen a significant increase in pipeline looking to apply proceeds retroactively. Properties are eligible for CPACE up to 3 years after certificate of occupancy in approved municipalities and proceeds can generally be up to 35% of stabilized value. It’s a source of capital that has become more interesting to first mortgage lenders as the proceeds could be used to paydown your first mortgage and size a new interest reserve.
Try to Pay for your Overages and Carry Upfront
We pride ourselves on being lenders who want to be part of the solution when a deal has a budget bust or stabilization is taking longer than anticipated. However, I always encourage borrowers to size up their budget contingencies (i.e., 7% vs. 5%) or structure additional interest reserves. Yes, it will increase your initial capitalization, but your lender will pick up 60-70% of that cost in the loan funding. It may mean more work on the initial capital raise, but it's usually less costly than going back to your lender and/or equity mid-project to get additional capital.
Communication, Honesty and Transparency are Key
Lenders have access to data and information. They ultimately will discover the truth; it might as well come from you. This includes prior credit aberrations or issues and accurate property performance information. We have capital specifically for lending on special situations – there are a lot of deal-level risks that can be mitigated, but lack of trust with sponsorship is not one of them.
In uncertain times, hope for the best but prepare for the worst. Peachtree is an experienced capital partner who understands commercial real estate's nuances. With funding options limited from traditional lenders, our team has the lending solutions, financial capacity, and expertise to close complex transactions in today's challenging capital market environment.
We are available to discuss your lending options that meet your business objectives. Visit us at www.peachtreegroup.com.
Daniel Siegel is president and principal of Peachtree's commercial real estate lending group.
Before joining Peachtree, he was with Ardent Companies as managing director and the head of high-yield investments leading the company’s debt investments. Prior to that, Daniel was vice president of acquisitions at Rialto Capital, overseeing the distressed loan acquisitions platform. During his tenure at Rialto, Daniel directly oversaw the acquisition of commercial real estate loans on domestic and international opportunities. Additionally, he developed the firm’s small balance loan acquisition platform and led the company’s first European acquisition.
Daniel has a bachelor’s degree in finance from Tulane University. Contact him at dsiegel@peachtreegroup.com.
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Lea el artículo completo en CommercialObserver.com

Peachtree Group contrata a Billy Gilchrist como vicepresidente sénior de Originations
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ATLANTA (22 de septiembre de 2025) - Peachtree Group («Peachtree»), una importante firma de inversiones inmobiliarias comerciales que supervisa una cartera diversificada de más de 8 000 millones de dólares, anunció la contratación de Billy Gilchrist como vicepresidente sénior, originaciones. En este cargo, Gilchrist será responsable de originar inversiones comerciales en bienes raíces y hoteles en todo el mundo La plataforma de préstamos de Peachtree.
Gilchrist aporta a Peachtree más de una década de experiencia de liderazgo en finanzas, bienes raíces y hospitalidad. Tiene una trayectoria comprobada en la ejecución de adquisiciones a gran escala, nuevas construcciones y proyectos de mejoras de capital por un total de más de 400 millones de dólares. Su experiencia abarca la estructuración de deuda, la captación de capital y la gestión de activos, lo que lo convierte en una sólida incorporación a la plataforma crediticia de la empresa.
«La amplia experiencia de Billy en finanzas e bienes raíces, combinada con su capacidad para estructurar transacciones complejas y fomentar relaciones sólidas, serán fundamentales a medida que sigamos ampliando nuestra plataforma de préstamos», dijo Jared Schlosser, director de originaciones y CPACE de Peachtree. «Su nombramiento refleja nuestro compromiso de ampliar nuestras capacidades de creación con líderes que aporten tanto una visión estratégica como una experiencia práctica».
Antes de unirse a Peachtree, Gilchrist se desempeñó como director financiero y de inversiones de ARK, donde supervisó la estrategia de inversión, la planificación financiera y las operaciones. Anteriormente, ocupó cargos ejecutivos sénior en Hotel Development & Management Group, donde desempeñó un papel decisivo a la hora de impulsar la cartera de desarrollo, las adquisiciones y la participación de los inversores de la empresa. Al principio de su carrera, ocupó cargos en Insight Credit Union y BB&T, administrando carteras de crédito y relaciones con pequeñas empresas.
Gilchrist obtuvo una maestría en emprendimiento en la Escuela de Posgrado de Negocios Hough de la Universidad de Florida y una licenciatura en finanzas en la Facultad de Negocios de Warrington de la Universidad de Florida.

Observador comercial: Goldman Sachs y Peachtree proporcionan 126 millones de dólares de refinanciación para su cartera hotelera

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Peachtree Group (junto con Goldman Sachs) otorgó un préstamo a tres años garantizado por el Belamar Hotel Manhattan Beach, que forma parte de la marca Hilton en Manhattan Beach, California.