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Announcing BMARK 2025-B41

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A CRED iQ Preliminary Analysis

Deal Overview

The BMARK 2025-B41 CMBS deal is a new issuance securitization for the CMBS market, with a total pooled balance of $631.1 million. The deal is jointly managed by prominent financial institutions including Goldman Sachs, UBS, Citigroup, and Deutsche Bank. The deal is collateralized by 43 loans and secured by 55 properties across a variety of sectors, including multifamily, mixed use, and retail. The strategic geographic distribution of these properties ensures balanced exposure across major markets. The deal’s weighted average loan-to-value (LTV) ratio of 47.1%, and the weighted average mortgage interest rate is 6.38%.

Key Metrics

The loan pool for BMARK 2025-B41 is structured to include a mix of amortizing and interest-only loans, with 28.3% of the mortgage pool having scheduled amortization. The remainder of the pool (71.7%) consists of interest-only payments throughout the loan term, offering investors a steady income stream. The pool boasts a weighted average debt service coverage ratio (DSCR) of 2.68. The weighted average net operating income (NOI) debt yield is 18.8%.

Geography & Property Types

A key strength of the BMARK 2025-B41 CMBS deal is its diverse property type distribution, which enhances portfolio resilience. Multifamily properties constitute 25.1% of the total balance, while mixed use properties account for 21.9% of the balance. The geographic distribution of properties across prime markets, including high-growth areas in New York City, Boston, and Portland, OR.

About CRED iQ

CRED iQ is a market data provider that offers a robust suite of data and software solutions tailored for commercial real estate and finance professionals.

With over $2.3 trillion of CRE loans, CRED iQ delivers instant access to a comprehensive range of financial data and analytics for millions of properties in every market. CRED iQ’s data and analytical capabilities are instrumental in helping investors, lenders and brokers make informed and strategic decisions critical to their business.

THE DATA, INFORMATION AND/OR RELATED MATERAL (“DELIVERABLES”) IS BEING OFFERED AS-IS/WHERE-AS CONDITION. CRED-IQ MAKES NO REPRESENTATION OR WARRANTY AS TO QUALITY OR ACCURACY OF SUCH DELIVERABLES BEING PURCHASED, WHETHER EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, EITHER IN FACT OR BY OPERATION OF LAW, STATUTE, OR OTHERWISE, AND CRED-IQ SPECIFICALLY DISCLAIMS ANY AND ALL IMPLIED OR STATUTORY WARRANTIES INCLUDING WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND OF FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE, TECHNICAL PERFORMANCE, AND NON-INFRINGEMENT. WITHOUT LIMITING THE FOREGOING, YOU AS CUSTOMER ACKNOWLEDGE THAT YOU HAVE NOT AND ARE NOT RELYING UPON ANY IMPLIED WARRANTY OF MERCHANTABILITY OR OF FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE OR OTHERWISE, OR UPON ANY REPRESENTATION OR WARRANTY WHATSOEVER AS TO THE DELIVERABLES  IN ANY REGARDS WHATSOEVER, AND ACKNOWLEDGE  THAT CRED-IQ MAKES NO, AND HEREBY DISCLAIMS ANY, REPRESENTATION, WARRANTY OR GUARANTEE THAT THE PURCHASE, USE OR COMMERCIALIZATION OF ANY DELIVERABLES WILL BE USEFUL TO YOU OR FREE FROM INTERFERENCE. BY ACCEPTANCE OF THE DELIVERABLES, YOU HEREBY RELEASE CRED-IQ AND ITS AFFILIATES AND AGENTS FROM ALL CLAIMS, DAMAGES AND LIABILITY ARISING HEREUNDER.

30 Questions with CRED: Edward Dittmer

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About 30 Questions with CRED

A fireside Q&A with legendary Ed Dittmer.

Quick Background on Ed:

Edward Dittmer, CFA, is a commercial real estate executive with over 25 years of experience in acquisitions, underwriting, portfolio management, CMBS credit ratings, and research.

He began his career at GMAC Commercial Mortgage on August 2, 1999, as an ARM Analyst (1999-2001), later advancing to Senior Risk Consultant (2001-2004). From there, he served as a CMBS Surveillance Analyst at Realpoint LLC (2004-2006), followed by a role as Assistant Vice President – Acquisitions Underwriter and Portfolio Manager at Capmark Investments’ Real Estate Equity Investment Group (2006-2009).

Dittmer then spent eight years at Morningstar Credit Ratings as Senior Vice President and Head of CMBS Credit Risk Services (2010-2018). In 2018, he joined DBRS Morningstar as Senior Vice President, North American CMBS, where he contributed to numerous CMBS ratings, property analysis criteria, and reports on CMBS & CRE CLO deals.

Since 2020, he has also been a Partner at Yonder MHP. Dittmer holds an MBA from The Ohio State University’s Max M. Fisher College of Business (1995-1998), a BA from American University (1991-1994), and attended Bradley University (1990-1991). His skills include CMBS, commercial real estate, real estate economics, valuation, investments, mortgage lending, asset management, portfolio management, project management, and disposition. He retired from DBRS Morningstar in mid-2024 and now lives in Portugal with his wife, Natalia, embracing a new phase of life after a fulfilling career.

1. What do you think of the trends in the office sector?

A lot of the damage in office has been done, but I would just be cautious about deciding that everything is in the past.  We still aren’t through the renewal cycle so you have to keep a watch on what is coming up.  Buyers who have cash are stepping up to acquire good quality properties at significant discounts and those are going to be the players that clean up.  One other note.  I know San Francisco has gotten its share of flack over the past couple of years.  But the AI boom is real.  And it’s not just data centers.  A company with something viable in the AI space can get VC money and they are starting to become the new players in that market.

2. Has the current market caused you to think differently about any property types?

Multifamily was pretty badly overbuilt and the players in the space had some pretty lousy business plans.  So it’s really been beaten up.  But there is still housing demand and one thing has really moved which is the cost to own.  One of my favorite measures is the housing affordability gap, the monthly cost of the monthly payment versus the average rent in various markets and submarket.  Ongoing demand for for-sale housing combined with the higher interest rates have pushed a lot of markets in favor of renting over buying.  I think the next wave of graduates is looking at renting as their only option because it just takes a lot to buy right now.

3. The CRE CLO ecosystem has shown some impressive growth with the demand of shorter-term loans being in heavy demand. How do you think about the CMBS market outlook over the next 12-24 months?

CMBS will be a stable outlet for borrowers to get the cash they need whether they need short-term floating rates or longer-term fixed rates. It makes sense that CLO issuance is back because a lot of players need to get financing and they are willing to make a bet on short-term rates coming down over the next year. I guess I would be concerned if borrowers need to win that bet for their business plan to pan out.  If you like the deal at today’s rates, you’ll be thrilled if they come down over the next couple of years.  But if a deal doesn’t work without rates coming down, then it doesn’t work.  

4. What is keeping you up at night?

Same thing as it always is.  When everything seems to be clicking and the money starts to flow easily, everyone thinks they are the smartest person in the room.  And when you think you can’t screw up, that’s when you start to make mistakes.  And to add a bit to the last question where I talk about betting on interest rates, an old boss of mine used to say “I make investments, I don’t make bets”.  There may be people who are still making bets on one thing or another.

5. Any thoughts with respect to how AI will impact CRE and CRE Finance?

A lot of CMBS could probably use an AI intervention.  But it won’t get one because everyone wants to think they add so much value.  So when a human makes a typo, it’s not a big deal.  If AI makes a mistake, people are screaming “See its not perfect!”  So we will trudge along with voluminous spreadsheets for a while longer.  In the near future, there will be companies that are using AI for client screening and monitoring.  And they’ll probably do a really good job.  They just have to compete with someone who says “My dad built half of this city lending money over an empty apple barrel.”

6. How are you feeling about private credit financing vs. traditional lending.

Traditional CMBS or bank lending?  I think borrowers still chafe at having to produce all of their proprietary information to the markets for CMBS lending.  That whole notion of “the borrower experience” is something that has always been a bit of the thorn in people’s side.  And banks and life companies are often constrained by their own internal credit metrics.  If private credit can fill the gap, that’s a good thing.  They can be flexible, they can work with borrowers to create the right product and be creative. 

7. Can you give us something on the property type that a lot of people are talking about these days, data centers?

I posted not too long ago on my LinkedIn about data centers.  They are here and they are here to stay.  But I do think that we, as an industry, has to become educated on what they are and how they make money.  Last week someone in the UK suggested that people should delete e-mails as a way of conserving water and energy and, of course, that’s not how these things work.

In the way I talked about VC’s throwing money at anything AI and not long ago it was anything with crypto, I think a lot of people will call something a “data center” and hope that people throw money at it.  We also have to come to terms with the costs.  Are consumers going to get saddled with the costs of building out grids to accommodate the power or dealing with outsized water needs? Will communities be ok with that?  Because data centers produce good income and good property tax, but jobs are a lower-level output once they are up and running.

8. Where do you think interest rates will be at year-end?

Short term rates will be marginally lower.  I really think the Fed wants to sit on this because they haven’t seen a big slowdown and the impact of tariffs on prices is yet to be seen.  I personally find it hard to believe there will be no increase in prices and, if that’s the case, I expect longer term yields to remain in the same range.

9. How do we solve the housing crisis? Does the federal government need to play a key role?

How much more of a role should the Federal government play?  It’s got the Federal Home Loan Banks and the agencies which keep lending flowing.  It has low down payments through FHA loans and a lot of first-time homebuyer benefits.  If you want the cost of housing to come down, you’re going to have to build housing.  And you can either get over the angst about sprawl and build homes in the burbs or you can get over the angst about density and build more homes per acre. 

10. Any sense of AI’s impact upon office demand?

Automation didn’t reduce the need for offices over the long term.  It just changed the people in them.  You got rid of typists and put IT techs in their instead.  Some really old buildings couldn’t adapt and being used for low-rent Class C alternatives, being converted to housing, or frankly sitting in foreclosure somewhere.  You’ll probably see something similar where older buildings that are less flexible and scalable physically might not adapt to the types of jobs we will need in 10 years.  They will be the losers. 

11. On a scale of 1-10 what will be the impact of tariffs upon the warehousing segments?

I think for a lot of players it’s been pretty good.  Bonded warehouses near the ports have been sitting on billions of dollars in goods that were imported with the hopes that tariffs will come down so they can release them.  Over the long-term I think you have to believe that consumers will stop buying stuff for distribution centers to go away.  Whether the buy something made in China or Mexico or Wisconsin, modern logistics practices will still require warehouses to get product and supplies from Point A to Point B.  Now if tariffs really take a bite on imports, maybe there will be a bit of a reduction in demand for space near the ports.

12. How will we be thinking about co-working in two year? From a aggregate perspective will this segment see growth in overall square footage?

I have a confession to make.  Five years ago, there was no one on earth who disliked coworking as much as I did.  The players in the space were overhyped, they were amazingly expensive in my mind and I just didn’t see the need for that much. The Covid hit, and instead of sitting in my house, I rented a co-working space in Philly.  And I really enjoyed it.

Now that the space has been pared down, a lot of the companies that are doing it are often connected to leasing brokers instead of competing against them, I kind of like it.  I think there is room for it in the ecosystem.  I think that, priced well, it can really give people that feel of being “at work”. And the way they work with businesses today is a setup for growth into real leased space, rather than managed space.

13. What is your outlook on traditional malls as a potential investment?

I don’t think about them.  Look, I know Macerich just bought a mall.  That’s a decent property that’s in a good corridor and has been re-tenanted to a large extent.  Good on them.  CBL just bough four malls from Washington Prime which, frankly, is picking a corpse clean. But realistically, there are going to be a handful of destination centers that already have owners.  There are going to be hybrid high-end mall/lifestyle centers in the market.  But traditional malls are hard to see as a financeable or investible asset class outside of a handful of exceptions.

14. With Apartment construction at a decade low, how do you feel about multifamily unit pricing trends over the coming 18 months?

Every forecast I see is for some improvement and it’s hard to disagree.  I think for the most part, absorption is going to start improving in a lot of markets where development activity has cratered.  How fast the pricing will come around will probably depend a ton on long-term interest rates.  But I think 2026 will start to bring some measurable improvement for multifamily.

Fun Facts About Ed Dittmer

  1. Favorite food? Grilled ribs, normally I’d say pizza, but it’s been a while since I had a decent pie.
  2. Best Sports movie of all time? Eight men out, I love history and it’s a good historical film.
  3. Name the last three books you read? Ones you didn’t finish don’t count. I’ve been doing a lot of audiobooks in foreign languages just to not lose it.  So last three were 1984, Man in The High Castle, and another Philip K. Dick work called The Three Stigmata of Palmer Eldritch
  4. What is your favorite quote from the movie Airplane? When Kareem breaks the fourth wall and yells at Joey “Listen, kid! I’ve been hearing that crap ever since I was at UCLA. I’m out there busting my buns every night! Tell your old man to drag Walton and Lanier up and down the court for 48 minutes” Its just this wildly unexpected movie moment.
  5. New TV shows have been pretty bad lately. What are your thoughts there? I literally do not have cable TV. I watch some movies.  My wife, who really had no exposure to it, had me watching a 25 hour documentary of the OJ Simpson trial so she could really understand what it was about.
  6. What was your first aol screen name or email? dittmer4.  That was my login at Ohio State for my email and I just rolled it over.
  7. Who’s the best person to follow on Twitter / X? I’m more of a Reddit guy, personally. But if logging into Twitter RadioFreeTom, Tom Nichols, he’s a Russia expert and former professor of military strategy, Noahpinion, Noah Smith, he’s often got some interesting stuff. Other than that, I might search for cat videos to show my wife.
  8. Best Golf Course ever played? I have only played golf once, in Sicklerville, NJ.
  9. Name the person (present, historical or even fiction) you’d love to have dinner with? Julius Caesar, he seemed like a pretty bright guy
  10. What’s the best city in the USA? Chicago is really awesome
  11. What is a really solid life lesson that you’d teach others? Don’t get outworked.  It’s the one thing you can control. You may be outsmarted, but don’t be outworked.
  12. Insta, LinkedIn, twitter, facebook or old school texts or phone calls? Texts.  I don’t have Instagram, I don’t think I’ve sent a tweet in two years, and I may post on Facebook once every three months.
  13. What’s your go-to happy hour drink at a networking event? I’ve only had it once since I stepped away last year, but Sapphire, Club Soda, tall glass, single-shot, lime
  14. What’s your favorite professional sports team?  And then college team? With college, there’s no question, I’m all Ohio State. Pros I’ve got a few loyalties.
  15. Name something you’re secretly proud of that not a lot of people know? My career started as a temp worker at GMAC Commercial Mortgage, doing filing because I couldn’t land a job.  I did ok for a guy that no one thought was worth hiring.
  16. Are you a Swiftie? Like Taylor Swift? I really know very little about her.

About CRED iQ

CRED iQ is a market data provider that offers a robust suite of data and software solutions tailored for commercial real estate and finance professionals.

With over $2.3 trillion of CRE loans, CRED iQ delivers instant access to a comprehensive range of financial data and analytics for millions of properties in every market. CRED iQ’s data and analytical capabilities are instrumental in helping investors, lenders and brokers make informed and strategic decisions critical to their business.

CRE CLO Distress Rate Adds 88 Basis Points in July as Maturities Continue to Grow

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According to CRED iQ’s July 2025 CRE CLO Distress Report, the distress rate—encompassing loans 30+ days delinquent, past maturity, or in special servicing—increased by 88 basis points (BPS) to 11.8% from 10.9% in June. The 88 BPS increase partially offset the 230 BPS decrease in the June print. 

This continues a choppy monthly pattern with downward trending since the peak in March of this year as maturities continue to rise, while pre-maturity delinquencies see a significant month-over-month decline

Delinquency rates, a critical indicator, increased by 82 BPS to 9.2% of all CRE CLO loans in July, while the special servicing rate also increased, albeit more modestly, adding 23 BPS to 6.9%.

$1.2 billion in CRE CLO loans are current, a drop of 377 BPS  to 17.2% following last month’s 660 BPS increase. However, 65.3% of loans have surpassed their maturity dates, with 32.3% classified as “performing matured” (up from 26.5%) and 33.1% as “non-performing matured” (up from 32.8%). Pre-maturity delinquencies shed 478 BPS to 12.9% from 17.7% .

For investors and lenders, the CRE CLO market’s seesaw trends underscore the need for vigilance. Platforms like CRED iQ provide critical insights into loan performance, helping stakeholders navigate risks and seize opportunities in this resilient yet volatile market.

About CRED iQ

CRED iQ is a market data provider that offers a robust suite of data and software solutions tailored for commercial real estate and finance professionals.

With over $2.3 trillion of CRE loans, CRED iQ delivers instant access to a comprehensive range of financial data and analytics for millions of properties in every market. CRED iQ’s data and analytical capabilities are instrumental in helping investors, lenders and brokers make informed and strategic decisions critical to their business.

THE DATA, INFORMATION AND/OR RELATED MATERAL (“DELIVERABLES”) IS BEING OFFERED AS-IS/WHERE-AS CONDITION. CRED-IQ MAKES NO REPRESENTATION OR WARRANTY AS TO QUALITY OR ACCURACY OF SUCH DELIVERABLES BEING PURCHASED, WHETHER EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, EITHER IN FACT OR BY OPERATION OF LAW, STATUTE, OR OTHERWISE, AND CRED-IQ SPECIFICALLY DISCLAIMS ANY AND ALL IMPLIED OR STATUTORY WARRANTIES INCLUDING WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND OF FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE, TECHNICAL PERFORMANCE, AND NON-INFRINGEMENT. WITHOUT LIMITING THE FOREGOING, YOU AS CUSTOMER ACKNOWLEDGE THAT YOU HAVE NOT AND ARE NOT RELYING UPON ANY IMPLIED WARRANTY OF MERCHANTABILITY OR OF FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE OR OTHERWISE, OR UPON ANY REPRESENTATION OR WARRANTY WHATSOEVER AS TO THE DELIVERABLES  IN ANY REGARDS WHATSOEVER, AND ACKNOWLEDGE  THAT CRED-IQ MAKES NO, AND HEREBY DISCLAIMS ANY, REPRESENTATION, WARRANTY OR GUARANTEE THAT THE PURCHASE, USE OR COMMERCIALIZATION OF ANY DELIVERABLES WILL BE USEFUL TO YOU OR FREE FROM INTERFERENCE. BY ACCEPTANCE OF THE DELIVERABLES, YOU HEREBY RELEASE CRED-IQ AND ITS AFFILIATES AND AGENTS FROM ALL CLAIMS, DAMAGES AND LIABILITY ARISING HEREUNDER.

CMBS Distress Rate Adds 32 BPS as the Seesaw Effect Plays Out in CMBS

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CRED iQ’s distress rate, a composite metric capturing loans 30+ days delinquent (or worse) and those in special servicing, came in at 11.1% in the latest reporting period.

The CRED iQ research team analyzed the payment status of approximately $59 billion in distressed CMBS loans. The core objective of our research was to achieve a clear view of the current state of payment status reasons and associated near-term trending.

We wanted to learn more about the underlying data.  Let’s see what they found.

Distress Rate Trends

The commercial mortgage-backed securities (CMBS) distress rate added 32 basis points to 11.1% in July, according to CRED iQ’s latest analysis. This increase follows last month’s 20 BPS decrease, and the previous month’s 70 BPS increase.

The underlying metrics also saw modes increases.  Our delinquency rate increased by 52 basis points to 8.7% and our special service rate added 23 BPS to 10.3%.

Payment Terms

As part of our research, our team explored each payment status reason from a historical perspective. We wanted to understand the trending/evolution of each category dating back to February of 2024. Our team built a heat map which reveals trends for each category, to potential argument current forecasting models.

  • Current Loans: $9.1 billion (15.5%) in loans were current in July, down $327.4 million from the June print of $9.4 billion (16.2%)
  • Late Loans: $3.8 billion (6.4%) of loans are late but not yet delinquent, down from $4.8 billion (8.2%) last month
  • Delinquent Loans: $10.3 billion (17.5%) of loans are 30+ days delinquent, down from $11.7 billion (20.1%) in June
  • Matured Loans: $35.8 billion (60.6%) in CMBS loans have passed their maturity date (up from $32.4 billion last month). Of these, 21.7% are performing (up from 18.5%), while 38.9% are non-performing (up from 37.0%)

Loan Highlight

Two Chatham Center & Garage is a mixed use property consisting of 290,501 SF office property and a 2,284-space parking garage in the greater downtown submarket of Pittsburgh. The asset is backed by a $50.1 million fully amortizing loan that failed to pay off at its July 2025 maturity date, has a performing matured payment status. The loan was added to the servicers watchlist in October 2020 due to low DSCR and occupancy. The asset was 35% occupied with a 1.13 DSCR as of March 2025.

CRED iQ’s Methodology: A Comprehensive Approach

CRED iQ’s distress rate provides a holistic view of CMBS performance by combining delinquency (30+ days past due) and special servicing activity, including both performing and non-performing loans that fail to pay off at maturity. Our analysis focuses on conduit and single-borrower large loan structures, while separately tracking Freddie Mac, Fannie Mae, Ginnie Mae, and CRE CLO metrics. This granular approach ensures CRE professionals have a clear, actionable understanding of market dynamics.

Informed with CRED iQ

As the CRE sector continues to adapt to macroeconomic shifts, CRED iQ’s comprehensive analytics offer a critical resource for decision-makers. For a deeper dive into our data or to discuss how these trends impact your portfolio, contact our team today. Stay tuned for our next update, where we’ll continue to track the metrics driving the CMBS market.

For more information, visit CRED iQ or reach out to our research team.

About CRED iQ

CRED iQ is a market data provider that offers a robust suite of data and software solutions tailored for commercial real estate and finance professionals.

With over $2.3 trillion of CRE loans, CRED iQ delivers instant access to a comprehensive range of financial data and analytics for millions of properties in every market. CRED iQ’s data and analytical capabilities are instrumental in helping investors, lenders and brokers make informed and strategic decisions critical to their business.

THE DATA, INFORMATION AND/OR RELATED MATERAL (“DELIVERABLES”) IS BEING OFFERED AS-IS/WHERE-AS CONDITION. CRED-IQ MAKES NO REPRESENTATION OR WARRANTY AS TO QUALITY OR ACCURACY OF SUCH DELIVERABLES BEING PURCHASED, WHETHER EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, EITHER IN FACT OR BY OPERATION OF LAW, STATUTE, OR OTHERWISE, AND CRED-IQ SPECIFICALLY DISCLAIMS ANY AND ALL IMPLIED OR STATUTORY WARRANTIES INCLUDING WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND OF FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE, TECHNICAL PERFORMANCE, AND NON-INFRINGEMENT. WITHOUT LIMITING THE FOREGOING, YOU AS CUSTOMER ACKNOWLEDGE THAT YOU HAVE NOT AND ARE NOT RELYING UPON ANY IMPLIED WARRANTY OF MERCHANTABILITY OR OF FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE OR OTHERWISE, OR UPON ANY REPRESENTATION OR WARRANTY WHATSOEVER AS TO THE DELIVERABLES  IN ANY REGARDS WHATSOEVER, AND ACKNOWLEDGE  THAT CRED-IQ MAKES NO, AND HEREBY DISCLAIMS ANY, REPRESENTATION, WARRANTY OR GUARANTEE THAT THE PURCHASE, USE OR COMMERCIALIZATION OF ANY DELIVERABLES WILL BE USEFUL TO YOU OR FREE FROM INTERFERENCE. BY ACCEPTANCE OF THE DELIVERABLES, YOU HEREBY RELEASE CRED-IQ AND ITS AFFILIATES AND AGENTS FROM ALL CLAIMS, DAMAGES AND LIABILITY ARISING HEREUNDER.

Freddie Mac Issuers:  Our Mid-Year Rankings

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Building upon our new issuances and loan volumes projections in last week’s research, our team dug a bit deeper with a focus on the Freddie Mac ecosystem.  We wanted to understand the firms behind the new issuances that have hit the market in 2025 YTD. 

It has been a robust year of growth thus far for the agency sectors.  Freddie and Fannie are projected to add ~$9 billion and ~$10 billion respectively this year vs 2024. 

Freddie Mac enjoyed the lowest average interest rate (5.71%) out of all securitized lending sectors so far this year, so we thought that would be the ideal place to start.  

Freddie Mac Issuers:  Mid-Year Rankings

Berkadia Commercial Mortgage takes the top spot with just over $1billion in new issuances thus far in 2025.  JLL Real Estate Capital issued $922.5 million in Freddie Mac Multifamily loans –enough to secure second place in our mid-year rankings. 

Not far behind in third place was CBRE Capital Markets with $882.9 million in new Freddie issues in 2025 YTD.  Newmark and JP Morgan Chase Bank round out the top five with $684.6 million and $472.8 million respectively.

MSA Perspective

It is a tight race for first place between Dallas and New York City metros, with Dallas inching its way to the top spot with $1.63 billion in 2025 YTD Freddie loan balances. The New York metro is right behind Dallas with $1.56 billion.  

The Atlanta metro saw $1.34 billion originations so far this year and are currently in solid control of third place.  Los Angeles and Phoenix rounded out the top 5 with $976.0 million and $918.4 million respectively.

 Sub Property Type

Garden style apartments dominated all other property types with 70.1% of all new issuances collateralized with assets in this category.  Mid-rise at 11.4% was a distant second and high rise rounds out the top 3 at 5%. 

About CRED iQ

CRED iQ is a market data provider that offers a robust suite of data and software solutions tailored for commercial real estate and finance professionals.

With over $2.3 trillion of CRE loans, CRED iQ delivers instant access to a comprehensive range of financial data and analytics for millions of properties in every market. CRED iQ’s data and analytical capabilities are instrumental in helping investors, lenders and brokers make informed and strategic decisions critical to their business.

THE DATA, INFORMATION AND/OR RELATED MATERAL (“DELIVERABLES”) IS BEING OFFERED AS-IS/WHERE-AS CONDITION. CRED-IQ MAKES NO REPRESENTATION OR WARRANTY AS TO QUALITY OR ACCURACY OF SUCH DELIVERABLES BEING PURCHASED, WHETHER EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, EITHER IN FACT OR BY OPERATION OF LAW, STATUTE, OR OTHERWISE, AND CRED-IQ SPECIFICALLY DISCLAIMS ANY AND ALL IMPLIED OR STATUTORY WARRANTIES INCLUDING WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND OF FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE, TECHNICAL PERFORMANCE, AND NON-INFRINGEMENT. WITHOUT LIMITING THE FOREGOING, YOU AS CUSTOMER ACKNOWLEDGE THAT YOU HAVE NOT AND ARE NOT RELYING UPON ANY IMPLIED WARRANTY OF MERCHANTABILITY OR OF FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE OR OTHERWISE, OR UPON ANY REPRESENTATION OR WARRANTY WHATSOEVER AS TO THE DELIVERABLES  IN ANY REGARDS WHATSOEVER, AND ACKNOWLEDGE  THAT CRED-IQ MAKES NO, AND HEREBY DISCLAIMS ANY, REPRESENTATION, WARRANTY OR GUARANTEE THAT THE PURCHASE, USE OR COMMERCIALIZATION OF ANY DELIVERABLES WILL BE USEFUL TO YOU OR FREE FROM INTERFERENCE. BY ACCEPTANCE OF THE DELIVERABLES, YOU HEREBY RELEASE CRED-IQ AND ITS AFFILIATES AND AGENTS FROM ALL CLAIMS, DAMAGES AND LIABILITY ARISING HEREUNDER.

New Issuances and Loan Volumes Projected to Exceed 2024 Levels

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As we have crossed the midpoint of 2025, the CRED iQ research team focused upon the new issuance volumes across the securitized and agency ecosystems.  We wanted to understand 2025 YTD volumes for each deal type, and then projected full year metrics which we can compare to 2024 levels. 

Our analysis covered the CMBS Conduit, CRE CLO, SBLL, Freddie and Fannie Mae loan volumes.  Our projections indicate increased volumes in every category when compared to 2024.  

Projected Issuance Volumes and comparison to 2024

CMBS Conduit                              $35 billion  (versus $32.98B in 2024)

CRE CLO                                      $32.5 billion (versus $8.7B in 2024)

SBLL                                            $90 billion (versus $70.5B in 2024)

Freddie Mac                                  $65 billion (versus $56.2B in 2024)

FannieMae                                    $65 billion (versus $55B in 2024)

CRE CLO loans are projected to notch the largest gains compared to 2024 –nearly quadrupling 2024 volumes.   SBLL is forecasted to issue ~$19.5 billion more loans than in 2024 –landing in second place.  Freddie and Fannie are projected to add ~$9 billion and $10 billion respectively vs 2024. Conduit loans expected to add ~$2 billion more in issuances.

Interest Rate Averages

Interest rate averages varied by loan type for the first six months of 2025:

CMBS Conduit                              6.63%

CRE CLO                                      7.62%

SBLL                                            8.30%

Freddie Mac                                  5.71%

FannieMae                                    5.74% 

About CRED iQ

CRED iQ is a market data provider that offers a robust suite of data and software solutions tailored for commercial real estate and finance professionals.

With over $2.3 trillion of CRE loans, CRED iQ delivers instant access to a comprehensive range of financial data and analytics for millions of properties in every market. CRED iQ’s data and analytical capabilities are instrumental in helping investors, lenders and brokers make informed and strategic decisions critical to their business.

THE DATA, INFORMATION AND/OR RELATED MATERAL (“DELIVERABLES”) IS BEING OFFERED AS-IS/WHERE-AS CONDITION. CRED-IQ MAKES NO REPRESENTATION OR WARRANTY AS TO QUALITY OR ACCURACY OF SUCH DELIVERABLES BEING PURCHASED, WHETHER EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, EITHER IN FACT OR BY OPERATION OF LAW, STATUTE, OR OTHERWISE, AND CRED-IQ SPECIFICALLY DISCLAIMS ANY AND ALL IMPLIED OR STATUTORY WARRANTIES INCLUDING WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND OF FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE, TECHNICAL PERFORMANCE, AND NON-INFRINGEMENT. WITHOUT LIMITING THE FOREGOING, YOU AS CUSTOMER ACKNOWLEDGE THAT YOU HAVE NOT AND ARE NOT RELYING UPON ANY IMPLIED WARRANTY OF MERCHANTABILITY OR OF FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE OR OTHERWISE, OR UPON ANY REPRESENTATION OR WARRANTY WHATSOEVER AS TO THE DELIVERABLES  IN ANY REGARDS WHATSOEVER, AND ACKNOWLEDGE  THAT CRED-IQ MAKES NO, AND HEREBY DISCLAIMS ANY, REPRESENTATION, WARRANTY OR GUARANTEE THAT THE PURCHASE, USE OR COMMERCIALIZATION OF ANY DELIVERABLES WILL BE USEFUL TO YOU OR FREE FROM INTERFERENCE. BY ACCEPTANCE OF THE DELIVERABLES, YOU HEREBY RELEASE CRED-IQ AND ITS AFFILIATES AND AGENTS FROM ALL CLAIMS, DAMAGES AND LIABILITY ARISING HEREUNDER.

Announcing BMARK 2025-V16

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A CRED iQ Preliminary Analysis

Deal Overview

The BMARK 2025-V16 CMBS deal is a new issuance securitization for the CMBS market, with a total pooled balance of $624.7 million. The deal is jointly managed by prominent financial institutions including Citigroup, Goldman Sachs, BMO, Barclays, and Deutsche Bank. The deal is collateralized by 31 loans and secured by 157 properties across a variety of sectors, including mixed use, multifamily, and retail. The strategic geographic distribution of these properties ensures balanced exposure across major markets. The deal’s weighted average loan-to-value (LTV) ratio of 56.4%, and the weighted average mortgage interest rate is 6.28%.

Key Metrics

The loan pool for BMARK 2025-V16 is structured to include a mix of amortizing and interest-only loans, with 2.0% of the mortgage pool having scheduled amortization. The remainder of the pool (98.0%) consists of interest-only payments throughout the loan term, offering investors a steady income stream. The pool boasts a weighted average debt service coverage ratio (DSCR) of 1.93. The weighted average net operating income (NOI) debt yield is 12.5%.

Geography & Property Types

A key strength of the BMARK 2025-V16 CMBS deal is its diverse property type distribution, which enhances portfolio resilience. Mixed Use properties constitute 20.3% of the total balance, while multifamily properties account for 19.1% of the balance. The geographic distribution of the properties across prime markets, including high-growth areas in New York City, Dallas, and Houston.

About CRED iQ

CRED iQ is a market data provider that offers a robust suite of data and software solutions tailored for commercial real estate and finance professionals.

With over $2.3 trillion of CRE loans, CRED iQ delivers instant access to a comprehensive range of financial data and analytics for millions of properties in every market. CRED iQ’s data and analytical capabilities are instrumental in helping investors, lenders and brokers make informed and strategic decisions critical to their business.

THE DATA, INFORMATION AND/OR RELATED MATERAL (“DELIVERABLES”) IS BEING OFFERED AS-IS/WHERE-AS CONDITION. CRED-IQ MAKES NO REPRESENTATION OR WARRANTY AS TO QUALITY OR ACCURACY OF SUCH DELIVERABLES BEING PURCHASED, WHETHER EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, EITHER IN FACT OR BY OPERATION OF LAW, STATUTE, OR OTHERWISE, AND CRED-IQ SPECIFICALLY DISCLAIMS ANY AND ALL IMPLIED OR STATUTORY WARRANTIES INCLUDING WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND OF FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE, TECHNICAL PERFORMANCE, AND NON-INFRINGEMENT. WITHOUT LIMITING THE FOREGOING, YOU AS CUSTOMER ACKNOWLEDGE THAT YOU HAVE NOT AND ARE NOT RELYING UPON ANY IMPLIED WARRANTY OF MERCHANTABILITY OR OF FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE OR OTHERWISE, OR UPON ANY REPRESENTATION OR WARRANTY WHATSOEVER AS TO THE DELIVERABLES  IN ANY REGARDS WHATSOEVER, AND ACKNOWLEDGE  THAT CRED-IQ MAKES NO, AND HEREBY DISCLAIMS ANY, REPRESENTATION, WARRANTY OR GUARANTEE THAT THE PURCHASE, USE OR COMMERCIALIZATION OF ANY DELIVERABLES WILL BE USEFUL TO YOU OR FREE FROM INTERFERENCE. BY ACCEPTANCE OF THE DELIVERABLES, YOU HEREBY RELEASE CRED-IQ AND ITS AFFILIATES AND AGENTS FROM ALL CLAIMS, DAMAGES AND LIABILITY ARISING HEREUNDER.

MarySue Lundy Joins CRED iQ as Director of Sales

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CoStar and Bloomberg Veteran Joins as CRED iQ Growth Accelerates

CRED iQ, a rapidly expanding data and analytics platform specializing in commercial real estate (“CRE”) finance, is excited to announce that MarySue Lundy has joined the company as Director of Sales.

MarySue comes to CRED iQ with extensive and diverse experience in CRE finance. Most recently, MarySue was with CoStar where she served as Senior Sales Executive. Prior to CoStar MarySue served clients at Bloomberg and Fitch.

“MarySue has a stellar reputation, and we are thrilled to welcome her to our team” noted Chris Aronson, Chief Commercial Officer”.

Throughout her career MarySue has forged strong relationships with CMBS Desks, CRE Lenders, Owner/Operators and Institutional Investors.

“MarySue’s relationships and deep knowledge are tremendous assets that will drive value for years to come,” said Michael Haas, Founder and CEO of CRED iQ. “We are so excited to welcome MarySue to CRED iQ as we continue to build our New York team”

“I am honored to be part of CRED iQ. We have a client-focused team that has created an exceptional product. CRED iQ is utilized by some of the most respected in the industry – and this is only the beginning!”

MarySue earned her master’s in finance and marketing from Columbia Business School. She is based in New York City.

About CRED iQ

CRED iQ is a market data provider that offers a robust suite of data and software solutions tailored for commercial real estate and finance professionals.

With over $2.3 trillion of CRE loans, CRED iQ delivers instant access to a comprehensive range of financial data and analytics for millions of properties in every market. CRED iQ’s data and analytical capabilities are instrumental in helping investors, lenders and brokers make informed and strategic decisions critical to their business.

THE DATA, INFORMATION AND/OR RELATED MATERAL (“DELIVERABLES”) IS BEING OFFERED AS-IS/WHERE-AS CONDITION. CRED-IQ MAKES NO REPRESENTATION OR WARRANTY AS TO QUALITY OR ACCURACY OF SUCH DELIVERABLES BEING PURCHASED, WHETHER EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, EITHER IN FACT OR BY OPERATION OF LAW, STATUTE, OR OTHERWISE, AND CRED-IQ SPECIFICALLY DISCLAIMS ANY AND ALL IMPLIED OR STATUTORY WARRANTIES INCLUDING WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND OF FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE, TECHNICAL PERFORMANCE, AND NON-INFRINGEMENT. WITHOUT LIMITING THE FOREGOING, YOU AS CUSTOMER ACKNOWLEDGE THAT YOU HAVE NOT AND ARE NOT RELYING UPON ANY IMPLIED WARRANTY OF MERCHANTABILITY OR OF FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE OR OTHERWISE, OR UPON ANY REPRESENTATION OR WARRANTY WHATSOEVER AS TO THE DELIVERABLES  IN ANY REGARDS WHATSOEVER, AND ACKNOWLEDGE  THAT CRED-IQ MAKES NO, AND HEREBY DISCLAIMS ANY, REPRESENTATION, WARRANTY OR GUARANTEE THAT THE PURCHASE, USE OR COMMERCIALIZATION OF ANY DELIVERABLES WILL BE USEFUL TO YOU OR FREE FROM INTERFERENCE. BY ACCEPTANCE OF THE DELIVERABLES, YOU HEREBY RELEASE CRED-IQ AND ITS AFFILIATES AND AGENTS FROM ALL CLAIMS, DAMAGES AND LIABILITY ARISING HEREUNDER.

Announcing BBCMS 2025-5C36

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A CRED iQ Preliminary Analysis

Deal Overview

The BBCMS 2025-5C36 CMBS deal is a new issuance securitization for the CMBS market, with a total pooled balance of $613.5 million. The deal is jointly managed by prominent financial institutions including Barclays, Citigroup, Deutsche Bank, Societe Generale, and UBS. The deal is collateralized by 31 loans and secured by 163 properties across a variety of sectors, including multifamily, industrial, and mixed use. The strategic geographic distribution of these properties ensures balanced exposure across major markets. The deal’s weighted average loan-to-value (LTV) ratio of 61.1%, and the weighted average mortgage interest rate is 6.54%.

Key Metrics

The loan pool for BBCMS 2025-5C36 is structured to include a mix of amortizing and interest-only loans, with 6.8% of the mortgage pool having scheduled amortization. The remainder of the pool (93.2%) consists of interest-only payments throughout the loan term, offering investors a steady income stream. The pool boasts a weighted average debt service coverage ratio (DSCR) of 1.49. The weighted average net operating income (NOI) debt yield is 10.4%.

Geography & Property Types

A key strength of the BBCMS 2025-5C36 CMBS deal is its diverse property type distribution, which enhances portfolio resilience. Multifamily properties constitute 45.0% of the total balance, while industrial properties account for 10.8% of the balance. The geographic distribution of the properties across prime markets, including high-growth areas in New York City, Los Angeles, and Atlanta.

About CRED iQ

CRED iQ is a market data provider that offers a robust suite of data and software solutions tailored for commercial real estate and finance professionals.

With over $2.3 trillion of CRE loans, CRED iQ delivers instant access to a comprehensive range of financial data and analytics for millions of properties in every market. CRED iQ’s data and analytical capabilities are instrumental in helping investors, lenders and brokers make informed and strategic decisions critical to their business.

THE DATA, INFORMATION AND/OR RELATED MATERAL (“DELIVERABLES”) IS BEING OFFERED AS-IS/WHERE-AS CONDITION. CRED-IQ MAKES NO REPRESENTATION OR WARRANTY AS TO QUALITY OR ACCURACY OF SUCH DELIVERABLES BEING PURCHASED, WHETHER EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, EITHER IN FACT OR BY OPERATION OF LAW, STATUTE, OR OTHERWISE, AND CRED-IQ SPECIFICALLY DISCLAIMS ANY AND ALL IMPLIED OR STATUTORY WARRANTIES INCLUDING WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND OF FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE, TECHNICAL PERFORMANCE, AND NON-INFRINGEMENT. WITHOUT LIMITING THE FOREGOING, YOU AS CUSTOMER ACKNOWLEDGE THAT YOU HAVE NOT AND ARE NOT RELYING UPON ANY IMPLIED WARRANTY OF MERCHANTABILITY OR OF FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE OR OTHERWISE, OR UPON ANY REPRESENTATION OR WARRANTY WHATSOEVER AS TO THE DELIVERABLES  IN ANY REGARDS WHATSOEVER, AND ACKNOWLEDGE  THAT CRED-IQ MAKES NO, AND HEREBY DISCLAIMS ANY, REPRESENTATION, WARRANTY OR GUARANTEE THAT THE PURCHASE, USE OR COMMERCIALIZATION OF ANY DELIVERABLES WILL BE USEFUL TO YOU OR FREE FROM INTERFERENCE. BY ACCEPTANCE OF THE DELIVERABLES, YOU HEREBY RELEASE CRED-IQ AND ITS AFFILIATES AND AGENTS FROM ALL CLAIMS, DAMAGES AND LIABILITY ARISING HEREUNDER.

CRE CLO Distress Rate Drops 230 Basis Points in June

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The commercial real estate collateralized loan obligation (CRE CLO) market is experiencing a turbulent 2025, with distress and delinquency rates reflecting the challenges of a shifting economic landscape. According to CRED iQ’s June 2025 CRE CLO Distress Report, the distress rate—encompassing loans 30+ days delinquent, past maturity, or in special servicing—dropped significantly by 230 basis points (BPS) to 10.9% from 13.2% in May. This follows a volatile pattern, with an 80 BPS rise in May and reductions in three of the past four months, leaving investors questioning the market’s long-term trajectory.

Delinquency rates, a critical indicator, fell 260 BPS to 8.4% in June, while the special servicing rate declined 40 BPS to 6.7%. These improvements are underpinned by a surge in current loans, with 20.9% ($1.4 billion) of CRE CLO loans current, up 660 BPS from $979.3 million in May. However, 59.3% of loans have surpassed their maturity dates, with 26.5% classified as “performing matured” (up from 14.4%) and 32.8% as “non-performing matured” (down from 50%). Pre-maturity delinquencies also eased to 17.7% from 19.1%.

This volatility stems from loans originated in 2021–2022, when low interest rates and high valuations fueled aggressive lending. These floating-rate, three-year loans are now hitting maturity walls in a high-rate environment, complicating refinancing. Borrowers are increasingly relying on extension options or month-to-month arrangements to avoid default, as seen in the case of Harmon at 370 Apartments in Las Vegas. This $91.4 million multifamily loan, with a $12.9 million future funding commitment, transitioned to performing matured status in June 2025 due failure to pay off at maturity.

Historical data from CRED iQ highlights the broader trend. Distress rates climbed from 8.6% in January 2024 to 15.1% in January 2025, driven by maturing loans and rising rates.

For investors and lenders, the CRE CLO market’s seesaw trends underscore the need for vigilance. Platforms like CRED iQ provide critical insights into loan performance, helping stakeholders navigate risks and seize opportunities in this resilient yet volatile market.

About CRED iQ

CRED iQ is a market data provider that offers a robust suite of data and software solutions tailored for commercial real estate and finance professionals.

With over $2.3 trillion of CRE loans, CRED iQ delivers instant access to a comprehensive range of financial data and analytics for millions of properties in every market. CRED iQ’s data and analytical capabilities are instrumental in helping investors, lenders and brokers make informed and strategic decisions critical to their business.

THE DATA, INFORMATION AND/OR RELATED MATERAL (“DELIVERABLES”) IS BEING OFFERED AS-IS/WHERE-AS CONDITION. CRED-IQ MAKES NO REPRESENTATION OR WARRANTY AS TO QUALITY OR ACCURACY OF SUCH DELIVERABLES BEING PURCHASED, WHETHER EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, EITHER IN FACT OR BY OPERATION OF LAW, STATUTE, OR OTHERWISE, AND CRED-IQ SPECIFICALLY DISCLAIMS ANY AND ALL IMPLIED OR STATUTORY WARRANTIES INCLUDING WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND OF FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE, TECHNICAL PERFORMANCE, AND NON-INFRINGEMENT. WITHOUT LIMITING THE FOREGOING, YOU AS CUSTOMER ACKNOWLEDGE THAT YOU HAVE NOT AND ARE NOT RELYING UPON ANY IMPLIED WARRANTY OF MERCHANTABILITY OR OF FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE OR OTHERWISE, OR UPON ANY REPRESENTATION OR WARRANTY WHATSOEVER AS TO THE DELIVERABLES  IN ANY REGARDS WHATSOEVER, AND ACKNOWLEDGE  THAT CRED-IQ MAKES NO, AND HEREBY DISCLAIMS ANY, REPRESENTATION, WARRANTY OR GUARANTEE THAT THE PURCHASE, USE OR COMMERCIALIZATION OF ANY DELIVERABLES WILL BE USEFUL TO YOU OR FREE FROM INTERFERENCE. BY ACCEPTANCE OF THE DELIVERABLES, YOU HEREBY RELEASE CRED-IQ AND ITS AFFILIATES AND AGENTS FROM ALL CLAIMS, DAMAGES AND LIABILITY ARISING HEREUNDER.

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