Peachtree集团推出2.5亿美元的特殊情况基金,以利用酒店市场的混乱局面
亚特兰大(2025 年 7 月 21 日) -领先的垂直整合商业房地产投资平台Peachtree集团(“Peachtree”)今天宣布推出其Peachtree特殊情况基金,这是一只2.5亿美元的基金,旨在释放定价错误的高质量酒店和其他商业房地产资产的价值,这是由于当今资本市场流动性不足而不是基本面造成的。
Peachtree董事总经理兼首席执行官格雷格·弗里德曼表示:“我们认为,未来12至18个月将提供自全球金融危机以来我们所见过的一些最具吸引力的风险调整机会。”“随着酒店空间和其他商业房地产行业资产负债表压力和再融资障碍的加剧,Peachtree处于独特的地位,可以将资本部署到最需要的地方,提供诱人的回报,同时为赞助商和贷款人提供真正的解决方案。”
随着近1万亿美元的商业房地产贷款将于2025年到期,酒店承受的再融资和资本支出负担最大,Peachtree的特殊情况基金有望介入传统资本的回落。
由于利率居高不下和流动性紧缩,许多在零利率时代为房产融资的酒店和商业房地产所有者现在面临着资本缺口。Peachtree的策略通过提供创造性的下行保护资本解决方案来重新定位资产和释放嵌入式价值,从而弥合了这一差距。
弗里德曼说:“该基金旨在利用混乱而不是混乱。”“我们的目标是受资本结构影响的不是系统性因素而是受资本结构影响的高质量资产,我们正在以十多年来定义Peachtree声誉的速度、创造力和执行确定性来做到这一点。”
特殊情况基金的目标是介于增值和机会主义之间的投资,将诱人的上行潜力与有意义的下行保护相结合。核心策略包括:
· 场外收购:保护表现不佳或定价错误的酒店以及部分多户住宅、学生住房、自助仓储和其他商业地产行业,以进行重新定位和稳定。
· 优先股和混合股权解决方案:通过旨在保护基础和提高当前收益率的结构,向需要流动性进行收购、开发或再融资的发起人提供灵活的资本。
· 从贷款人处购买不良资产:通过抵押契约或止赎后交易直接从银行收购资产,通常以未偿贷款余额的折扣价收购资产,且远低于重置成本。
Peachtree的完全整合平台涵盖直接贷款、CPACE融资、开发、收购和资本市场,为不断变化的市场动态提供了独特的视角。与社区和地区银行以及其他利益相关者的长期关系使Peachtree能够在高价值机会进入更广泛的市场之前尽早寻找这些机会。
弗里德曼说:“当赞助商或贷款机构需要快速、可靠的解决方案时,我们是第一次打电话。”“在这种环境下,速度和平仓保证至关重要,尤其是在处理复杂的资本堆和不良票据时。”
该基金的地理重点是全国性的,包括德克萨斯州、佛罗里达州和加利福尼亚州在内的需求基本面强劲且近期定价调整的市场,预计将有大量的交易流量。Peachtree预计将在未来60至90天内进行首次收盘交易,并在首次收盘后的18个月内完成最终收盘价。
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ATLANTA (Oct. 15, 2025) – Peachtree Group (“Peachtree”), a leading commercial real estate investment firm overseeing a diversified portfolio of more than $8 billion, today announced the appointment of Lindsay Monge as executive vice president of asset management. In this role, Monge will oversee the firm’s hospitality and real estate assets, driving performance, strategic planning and value creation across the portfolio.
Monge brings more than two decades of leadership experience in hospitality, real estate investment and operations to Peachtree. Most recently, he served as president of Seaview Investors where he led asset management and daily operations for a portfolio of eight Marriott and Hilton-branded upscale hotels in California. Before this, he spent nearly 16 years at Sunstone Hotel Investors, rising to senior vice president, chief administrative officer, secretary and treasurer, where he oversaw corporate functions and played a pivotal role in managing a $3.9 billion asset base.
“Lindsay’s extensive background leading hotel operations and real estate investment platforms makes him an invaluable addition to our leadership team,” said Greg Friedman, managing principal and CEO of Peachtree. “His experience across public REITs, private equity and owner-operator platforms uniquely positions him to enhance value creation for our investors while strengthening our asset management capabilities.”
His career also includes senior leadership roles at Magna Flow as chief operating officer and at Alpha Wave Investors as chief administrative officer and partner where he directed strategic planning, growth initiatives and asset repositioning strategies. Earlier in his career, Monge held management positions at The Westgate Hotel and began his hospitality career in Hilton’s executive management program at the Waldorf Astoria in New York.
Monge earned an MBA in strategy and leadership from the Drucker School of Management at Claremont Graduate University. He holds a bachelor’s degree in hotel administration from Cornell University’s Nolan School of Hotel Administration. He also completed executive education in the LEAD Business Program at Stanford Graduate School of Business.
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Peachtree Group to Launch Equipment Finance Division, Expanding Credit Capabilities Across Key Sectors

ATLANTA (Oct. 13, 2025) – Peachtree Group (“Peachtree”) announced today the launch of a new equipment finance division, further broadening its credit platform and reinforcing its ability to provide flexible equipment lease financing across industries, including commercial real estate and hospitality.
The division will be led by seasoned executives Brian Shaughnessy and Roger Johnson, who together bring more than 60 years of experience in equipment finance, specialty finance and portfolio acquisitions. They will be joined by experienced industry executive Dennis Shields, further strengthening the team’s depth and expertise. Shields spent the last 15 years with Meridian Leasing, helping to grow its profitable leasing business.
“This launch is more than the start of a new business line. It continues relationships that span more than 15 years,” said Greg Friedman, Peachtree’s managing principal and CEO. “We have known and worked alongside Brian and Roger for well over a decade, watching them build reputations as trusted leaders in equipment finance. Their arrival marks both a reunion and a natural extension of our long-standing ties.”
This new platform represents a progression of Peachtree’s established private credit ecosystem. Many of the firm’s commercial real estate clients also require equipment financing, particularly in hospitality, where Furniture, Fixtures,and Equipment (FF&E) play a critical role in new developments. By building on the firm’s long-standing history and applying proven expertise from its principals’ experience financing essential use equipment, Peachtree is positioned to deliver tailored financing solutions that address client needs across multiple sectors and industries.
The launch highlights Peachtree’s ability to adapt its platform to fill gaps left by traditional lenders while keeping long-term client relationships at the center of its strategy.
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“Large banks continue to pull back from serving small and mid-sized businesses, leaving a significant void in the market,” Friedman said. “Our new platform allows us to step in with creative financing solutions, whether that means helping medical facilities upgrade technology or supporting hotels with FF&E for new developments, so businesses can access the capital they need to grow.”
Shaughnessy, who joins as president and principal of the equipment finance division, is a senior executive with more than 35 years of experience in financial services and investment banking. He was most recently co-founder and CEO of IMT Commercial, an alternative portfolio and asset acquisition and management firm.
Johnson, who will serve as executive vice president and principal, is a 30-year portfolio acquisitions and commercial lending veteran. He has a proven track record of developing profitable relationships with C-suite decision-makers at a wide range of financial institutions. Both Shaughnessy and Johnson founded and grew IMT Commercial Credit into a top 120 equipment finance business.
The new unit will initially focus on financing lease transactions ranging from $500,000 to $10 million with terms generally between 24 and 84 months. By leveraging Peachtree’s established credit expertise, infrastructure and balance sheet strength, the division aims to deliver competitive financing options while ensuring timely funding and long-term client relationships.
“Equipment finance requires a deep understanding of the assets, from valuation to structuring and exit strategies,” said Shaughnessy. “Our team brings decades of specialized knowledge that allows us to evaluate risk effectively and deliver certainty of execution for clients.”
Johnson added,“Leasing involves extensive coordination with clients, vendors and lenders, and our goal is to make the process seamless. Clients can count on us not only to secure financing but also to manage the details that keep projects moving forward.”
“Equipment finance is a relationship-driven business where execution matters,” Shields, senior vice president, said. “Our goal is to combine decades of industry expertise with Peachtree’s deep credit platform to offer reliable, creative solutions to clients who are often underserved in today’s lending environment.”
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Fortune: Commercial real estate’s seismic transformation is creating new winners—and losers— in the property market
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Fortune | There’s no doubt that commercial real estate, and especially the office market, is undergoing a seismic transformation, one that’s not likely to abate any time soon. A boom time of near-zero-interest-rate policy, abundant liquidity, and cap rate compression over the past decade has given way to a perfect storm–a wall of maturing debt, tightened lending conditions, and cratering property values–all amid higher interest rates that show no sign of returning to their pre-2022 lows.
The outlook for the office sector has been particularly negative. It’s a tale of two markets right now: roughly 30% of office buildings account for 90% of the vacancies and may never recover, while the other 70% have the chance to stabilize over time. Either way, the office market finds itself at an inflection point, much like the retail market as mall acquisitions were being financed.