The Blue Chip Conference – Bears Division

Explore the benefits of Deutsche Bank for your commercial real estate financing needs.

Website: https://www.deutschewealth.com/en/our-capabilities/real-estate-financing.html

🏀 2026 SEASON (CURRENT)

Total PointsDeals LoggedVolume DraftedPrimary Asest FocusMost Common Loan TermPrimary Loan TypeTop StatesPace ScoreWinsLosses
Bank OZK985$853,100,000Condo (3), Multifamily, IndustrialConstruction loan (5)Construction (5)Florida (2), Pennsylvania, New York, California0.332TBD
European Investment Bank854$925,520,000Industrial/Biorefinery, Shore Power Infrastructure, EV Charging Infrastructure, Wind Farm15 years (1)Construction (2)Italy, Netherlands, Estonia, Spain0.27TBDTBD
Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group (MUFG) - Commercial RE26513$3,930,177,778Solar (4), Geothermal (2), BESS/Storage (2)Construction-to-term / Non-recourse senior securedConstruction (8)Louisiana (3), Utah (2), Chile, Japan, Spain, India0.871TBD
Wells Fargo - Commercial RE57124$6,392,550,000Office (7), Industrial (5), Multifamily (5), Mixed-Use (3), Hotel/Casino, Data Centers, Energy/LNG, Retail5-year fixed-rate (3); 2-year floating-rate (2), floating-rate (2), construction loan (2)Refinance (12), Acquisition (4), Construction (4), Bridge (2), Credit Facility, CMBS RefinanceNew York (12), Texas (2), California (2), Virginia (2), Florida (2), Illinois (2)1.511
Bank of Montreal (BMO) - Commercial RE1719$1,329,000,000Industrial (5), Multifamily (2), Data Centers, Retail2-year floating-rate (2); construction loan (1), fund-level revolving (1)Acquisition (4), Refinance (3), Construction, Credit FacilityGeorgia (3), Florida (2), Virginia, New Jersey, Nevada, Texas0.561TBD
Deutsche Bank - Commercial RE24412$2,726,870,000Office (7), Multifamily (2), Energy/LNG, Hotel, Life Sciences5-year fixed-rate (2); 2-year floating-rate (1), construction financing (1), CMBS conduit (1)Refinance (8), Construction (2), CMBS RefinanceNew York (5), California (2), Ireland, Washington, Delaware, Louisiana0.751TBD
First Citizens Bank - CRE000TBDTBDTBDTBD0TBDTBD
JP Morgan - Commercial RE44522$7,051,238,096Office (6), Industrial (3), Multifamily (2), Mixed-Use (2)5-year, fixed-rate (3)Refinance (5), CMBS for Refinance (5), Construction (4), Acquisition (4), Bridge for Refinance, Senior Loan + Mezzanine, Revolving Credit FacilityNew York (6), Texas (2), California (2), Florida (2), Pennsylvania (2), Louisiana1.313TBD
Sumitomo Mitsui Banking Corporation (SMBC) - Commercial RE1474$1,004,790,000Energy Infrastructure (3: geothermal, HVDC, BESS), Data Centers, Multifamily, Renewable EnergyGreen loan (1), construction-to-term (1), floating-rate (1)Construction (5), RefinanceJapan, Canada, India, Portugal, New York, Utah0.3811
BNP Paribas684$521,481,762Industrial, Agrivoltaic/BESS, Solar PV/BESS, Retail/Mall2-year floating-rate (2)CMBS for Refinance (2), Commercial Real Estate (2)Italy, Chile, Florida, California, Georgia, Texas0.25TBDTBD
Citigroup - Commercial RE20911$2,190,404,762Industrial (3, incl. Data Centers), Office (3), Multifamily (2), Retail (2)5-year (3)CMBS for Refinance (5), Refinance (3), Acquisition (2)Florida (4), New York (3), Georgia (3), Texas (2), Virginia, Arizona0.691TBD
Morgan Stanley - Commercial RE20410$3,832,443,333Retail (3), Office (2), Industrial/Data Center (2)2-year floating-rate with extension options (3)Refinance (5), CMBS for Refinance (2), CMBS for AcquisitionNew York (3), Virginia (2), Texas (2), Multiple States, Ireland0.633TBD
Santander Bank - Commercial RE1466$1,168,871,633Solar/BESS/Energy Storage (7), Multifamily (2)Construction (4)Refi (1), Construction (8)Chile, Portugal, Peru, United Kingdom, California, Texas0.5611
Truist Bank - Commercial RE644$283,000,000Multifamily (4)N/APermanent loan, Construction (2), RefiNew Jersey, New York (2), D.C.0.511
Bank of America - Commercial RE30714$2,971,404,762Office (5), Industrial (3), Energy/Geothermal (3), Retail (2)2-year floating-rate (3)Construction (4), Refinance (3), CMBS for Refinance (3), Acquisition (2)New York (4), Florida (2), Virginia (2), Texas (2), California (2), Utah (2)0.883TBD
Goldman Sachs - Commercial RE34717$3,862,750,000Office (6), Mixed-Use (2), Hotel (2), Industrial (2), Retail (2)5-year, fixed-rate (4)CMBS for Refinance (6), Refinance (5), Construction (2), Revolving Credit FacilityCalifornia (3), New York (3), Virginia (3), Florida (2), Texas, Louisiana1.0621
ING Groep NV - Commercial RE1689$1,597,212,833Energy/Solar (6), Energy Storage (2), Office (1)Non-recourse senior secured credit facilities (2); Construction-to-term (2)Construction (7), Construction and Term (1), Refinance (1)Louisiana (2), Pennsylvania, California, Texas, Italy, Romania0.561TBD
KeyBank795$768,200,000Energy/Solar (3), Energy Storage (1), Senior Living (1)7-year fixed (1 — Brookdale); Construction-to-term (1 — rPlus)Construction (3), Refinance (2)Idaho (2), Colorado0.31TBDTBD
Natixis - Commercial RE1075$1,693,166,667Energy/Solar (2), Energy Storage (2), Energy/LNG, RetailConstruction-to-term / senior secured facilities (2)Construction (4), RefinanceTexas, California, New York, Louisiana, Peru0.31TBDTBD
Barclays - Commercial RE17511$1,919,601,429Industrial/Data Center (2), Office (2), Energy (2), Mixed-Use/Retail (2), Multifamily (2)5-year (3)Refinance (4), Acquisition (3), Construction (2)Virginia (2), Louisiana, Utah, Pennsylvania, Maryland, United Kingdom0.691
ACORE Capital191$160,000,000Industrial2-year floating-rate; 3Ă—1-year extensionsBridgeTexas, Maryland, Georgia, Pennsylvania, Illinois, Arizona0.07TBDTBD
Affinius Capital848$921,628,000Multifamily (6), Office, Student HousingFloating-rateRefinance (5), Acquisition (2), ConstructionNew York (3), Pennsylvania (2), California, Florida, United Kingdom0.531TBD
Barings673$861,400,000Mixed-Use (Hotel to Residential Conversion), Mixed-Use (Retail + Condominium), IndustrialN/AConstruction (2), RefinanceNew York, California, Tennessee0.75TBD1
Brookfield372$739,000,000Multifamily (2)Three-year bridge (only stated term)Refinance, BridgeNew York (2)0.13TBDTBD
S3 Capital242$78,750,000Mixed-Use Residential, MultifamilyTBDConstruction (2)New Jersey, South Carolina0.13TBDTBD
Berkadia272$110,942,000Multifamily (2)Freddie MacAcquisition (2)Virginia, Wisconsin0.5TBDTBD
Dwight Capital/Dwight Mortgage Trust1218$497,500,000Multifamily (6), Mixed-Use, CondoHUD 221(d)(4) (2), HUD 223(f) (2)Refinance (4), Construction (3), BridgeNew York (2), New Jersey (2), Texas, Florida, Utah, California0.532TBD
Greystone926$482,374,222Multifamily (6)24-month bridge with extension options (2)Bridge for Refinance (2), Refinance (2), Acquisition, Construction/RehabilitationIllinois (2), North Carolina (2), New York, Mississippi0.384TBD
Madison Realty Capital496$703,550,000Condominium (3), Hotel/Mixed-Use, Multifamily, Self-StorageConstruction completion 2027-2028 (2)Construction (3), Condominium Inventory Loan, Bridge for Refinance, AcquisitionNew Jersey (2), New York, Florida, Tennessee, Multiple States0.381TBD
Nuveen997$1,144,600,000Multifamily (5), Office/Lab, HotelC-PACE (Full stack capitalization), 5-year floating-rate loanC-PACE for construction (4), C-PACE for refinance, Acquisition (permanent financing)Texas (2), Florida, Arizona, Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, D.C. (2)1.1611
Blackstone - Commercial RE582$10,223,000,000Industrial, Data CenterBridge LoanAcquisition, ConstructionGerogia, Florida, New Jersey, Texas, Pennsylvania, Australia0.33TBDTBD
Corebridge121$46,000,000Multifamily (Mixed-Use)5-year; nonrecourse; interest rate in low 5% rangeRefinanceNew York0.125TBDTBD
MonticelloAM695$312,800,000Healthcare (Skilled Nursing) (5)Bridge loan (3), 36-month (2) + 2x 6-month extRefinance (2), Acquisition (3)Florida, Illinois (2), South Carolina, Pennsylvania0.6253TBD
Peachtree Group544$181,400,000Hotel (2), Multifamily, Film StudioC-PACE, 3-year bridge loan, 3-year floating-rateC-PACE for construction, Construction (2), C-PACE for RefiNorth Carolina (2), Ohio, Georgia0.571TBD
Tyko Capital291$410,000,000CondominiumTBDConstructionFlorida0.25TBDTBD
Apollo Global Management1476$2,476,480,000Industrial, Office, Multifamily (Conversion), logistics, industrial , HotelSenior secured financing across three separate loan facilities, Floating-rate debt, 36-month SOFR floating; Mezzanine fixedBridge for refinance, Construction (3), Refinance, AcquisitionNew York (3), North Carolina, UK, Germany, Netherlands, Spain, Ireland, Poland0.7521
Ares Real Estate Management522$1,550,000,000Casino/Entertainment, MultifamilyTBDConstruction, RefinanceNew York (2), Illinois0.33TBDTBD
New York Life121$35,700,000Retail5-year term with interest-only payments for full termBridge for refinance, Construction (2), RefinanceCalifornia0.25TBDTBD
PGIM Real Estate643$549,435,000Industrial, Mixed-Use, Retail (grocery)Fixed and floating rate componentsAcquisition, Refi (2)Florida, California, Texas, Massachusetts, Germany0.37521
Starwood Property Trust000TBDTBDTBDTBD0TBDTBD
Deutsche Bank - Growth Cap412$3,015,000,000TBDRevolving credit facilityAcquisition, Working CapitalSpain, Switzerland0.5TBD1
HSBC673$2,003,000,000TBDMIGA-guaranteed; Climate-linked conditions, 95% covered buyer credit guarantee, Put option arrangement with exit path in three years with certain returnsGrowth CapitalChile, France, Sweden0.6TBDTBD
JP Morgan - Growth Cap17511$6,068,250,000TBD4-year loan with 2 6-month extension, SOFR plus 77.5 bps & 15 bps facility fee, Term loan (3 year loan with 1-yr extension & SOFR plus 85 bps), 2 years with three 1-year extension options, Revolving facility due February 2030 with two six-month extension options, 7-year Term Loan, 5-year revolving credit facilityRevolving Credit Facility (2), Senior Secured Revolver (3), Acquisition Credit Facility, Unsecured Term Loan (2)New York (2), Texas (2), New Jersey, Illinois (2), California (2), Canada1.37521
Natixis - Growth Cap151$1,500,000,000TBDThree-year construction warehouse revolving credit facility with $500M accordionConstruction Warehouse Revolving Credit FacilityTexas0.2TBDTBD
PNC Bank1027$4,250,000,000TBD4-year loan with 2 6-month extension-SOFR plus 77.5 bps & 15 bps facility fee, Term loan (3 year loan with 1-yr extension-SOFR plus 85 bps), 5 years-matures 1/15/2031-SOFR + 1.15% to 1.65% depending on leverage, Three-year construction warehouse revolving credit facility with $500M accordionRevolving Credit Facility, Five-Year Unsecured Term Loan, Unsecured Term Loan (5), Construction Warehouse Revolving Credit FacilityNew York, Washington, Illinois (2), Texas, Florida, California1.41TBD
Bank of America - Growth Cap493$4,938,250,000TBD4-year loan, 4-year loan with an option for two 6-month extensions or one 12-month extension, SOFR plus 77.5 bps, 15 bps facility fee, Term Loan: Initial maturity January 31, 2029 with two 1-year extensions, SOFR plus 85 bps, Three-year construction warehouse revolving credit facility with $500M accordionRevolving Credit Facility; Unsecured Term Loan, Construction Warehouse Revolving Credit FacilityCanada, New York, Texas0.6TBDTBD
Barclays - Growth Cap573$3,550,000,000TBDN/ASenior Secured Green Revolving Loan and Letter of Credit Facility, Senior Secured Corporate Credit FacilityPennsylvania, Texas, Spain0.75TBDTBD
Goldman Sachs - Growth Cap824$2,950,000,000TBD6% interest rate with AMD guaranteeAcquisition, Senior Secured Credit Facility, Loan with Equipment GuaranteeSpain, Nebraska, Connecticut, California0.5TBDTBD
Santander Bank - Growth Cap794$5,150,000,000TBDMIGA-guaranteed; Climate-linked conditions, Long-term optimisation agreement with guaranteed minimum income level providing downside protection, Three-year construction warehouse revolving credit facility with $500M accordionSenior Secured Corporate Credit Facility, Acquisition, Construction Warehouse Revolving Credit FacilityPennsylvania, Chile, Spain, Texas0.81TBD
Sumitomo Mitsui Banking Corporation (SMBC) - GC794$1,712,400,000TBDSenior Secured Green Revolving Loan and Letter of Credit Facility, 3-year availability period; 5-year tenor; partial guarantee from EIFO, Put option arrangement with exit path in three years with certain returns, 5-year Revolving Credit FacilitySenior Secured Green Revolving Loan (2) and Letter of Credit Facility, Senior Secured Corporate Credit FacilityTexas, Denmark, Sweden, Louisiana0.511
Citigroup - Growth Cap955$7,191,250,000TBD5-year loan, 4-year loan (secured to unsecured), 95% covered buyer credit guarantee, 5-year Interest at base rate, Term SOFR, EURIBORAcquisition (2), Growth Capital (2), Senior Secured Revolving Credit FacilityCanada, Spain, Florida, France, Texas0.711TBD
Huntington Bank - Growth Cap695$1,220,000,000TBD5 years, matures 1/15/2031; SOFR + 1.15% to 1.65% depending on leverage, Revolving facility with two six-month extension options (2)Five-Year Unsecured Term Loan, Commercial Aircraft Engine Acquisition Facility, Unsecured Credit Facility (Revolver + Term Loans) (2), Revolving Credit Facility (2)Washington, Illinois, California, Florida, Colorado0.8331TBD
Morgan Stanley - Growth Cap000TBDTBDTBDTBD0TBDTBD
Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group (MUFJ) - Growth Cap121$150,000,000TBD5-year loanDebt FinancingFlorida0.2TBDTBD
Truist Bank - Growth Cap342$1,050,000,000TBD2 years with three 1-year extension options, 4 years revolving credit facility with two six-month extension options (Pricing grid based on leverage ratio plus SOFR, 10-15 bps lower than prior debt)Acquisition Credit Facility, Unsecured Credit Facility (Revolver + Term Loans)New Jersey, Florida0.4TBDTBD
Bank of Montreal (BMO) - Growth Cap312$2,618,250,000TBDTerm loan under Softwood Lumber ProgramGrowth Capital (2)Canada (2)0.4TBDTBD
Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce (CIBC)493$4,165,425,000TBD4-year loan (secured to unsecured), Three-year construction warehouse revolving credit facility with $500M accordion, Initial 3-year term with consecutive 1-year extension (prime rate + .75%)Acquisition, Construction Warehouse Revolving Credit Facility, Growth CapitalCanada (2), Texas0.4211
ING Groep NV - Growth Cap684$3,403,000,000TBDThree-year construction warehouse revolving credit facility with $500M accordion, 95% covered buyer credit guaranteeSenior Secured Corporate Credit Facility, Senior Secured Green Revolving Loan and Letter of Credit Facility, Construction Warehouse Revolving Credit Facility, Growth CapitalPennsylvania, Texas (2), France0.81TBD
Royal Bank of Canada805$5,093,250,000TBD4-year loan (secured to unsecured), 3-year loan with two one-year extension options; SOFR plus 85 bps; interest-only payments, Three-year construction warehouse revolving credit facility with $500M accordion, 2-year loan with potential 90-month extensionAcquisition, Refinance & Growth Capital, Construction Warehouse Revolving Credit Facility, Senior Secured Credit FacilitiesIllinois, Canada (2), Texas, New York, Louisiana0.6252TBD
Wells Fargo - Growth Cap1137$6,313,250,000TBD4-year loan (secured to unsecured), 3-year loan with two one-year extension options; SOFR plus 85 bps; interest-only payments, with one-year extension option; SOFR plus 85 bps; interest-only payments, Three-year construction warehouse revolving credit facility with $500M accordion, Revolving facility with two six-month extension optionsAcquisition, Refinance (2), Growth Capital (2), Construction Warehouse Revolving Credit Facility, Unsecured Credit Facility (Revolver + Term Loans)Illinois (2), Canada, New York, Texas, California1.41TBD
Blue Owl Capital241$1,400,000,000TBDTBDDelayed-Draw Term LoanGermany0.16TBDTBD
Comvest Partners191$130,000,000TBDTBDSenior Secured Credit FacilityCalifornia0.125TBDTBD
MidCap Financial1620TBDRevolver with accordion feature; term loan; delayed draw term loanSenior Secured Credit Facility (Revolver), Senior Secured Credit Facility (Revolver + Term Loan + DDTL)Colorado, California0.41TBD
Mountain Ridge Capital81$15,000,000TBDRevolving facility maximizing availability against working capital assetsSenior Secured Credit FacilityMidwest0.25TBDTBD
SLR Credit Solutions000TBDTBDTBDTBD0TBDTBD
Blackstone - Growth Cap291$600,000,000TBDTBDGrowth CapitalIndia0.14TBDTBD
Hercules Capital121$25,000,000TBD4-year loan with three tranches up to $75M milestone-based, final $25M at Hercules discretionGrowth CapitalCalifornia0.25TBDTBD
Monroe Capital747$100,000,000TBDPrime plus 3.75% (currently 10.50%); 60-month term with amortization at month 36 (or month 48 if milestones met)Senior Secured Term Loan (6), Debt Financing + Equity Co-InvestmentDelaware, New York, Michigan, Illinois, Florida (2), Iowa0.8754TBD
SG Credit Partners000TBDTBDTBDTBD0TBDTBD
Stellus Capital Management162UndisclosedTBDTBDSenior Debt Financing and Equity Co-Investment (2)Viriginia, Tennessee0.41TBD
HPS Investment Partners291$500,000,000TBDFour-year secured term loan, SOFR + 675 basis pointsSecured Term LoanNew York0.21TBD
NXT Capital242UndisclosedTBDTBDSenior Credit FacilityPennsylvania (2)0.25TBDTBD
Siena Lending Group - GC000TBDTBDTBDTBD0TBDTBD
Trinity Capital272$83,915,000TBDCommitment structureTBDUnited Kingdom0.25TBDTBD
Wingspire Capital363$120,000,000TBDN/ASenior Secured Revolving Credit FacilityFlorida0.6611
Ares Management - Growth Cap672$4,000,000,000TBDTBDM&A, Debt FacilityNew Jersey, Colorado0.331TBD
Encina Private Credit151$75,000,000Consumer lease-to-own contractsSenior credit facility secured by diversified pool of small balance lease-to-own contractsSenior Credit FacilityTBD0.25TBDTBD
Great Rock Capital - GC000TBDTBDTBDTBD0TBDTBD
KKR000TBDTBDTBDTBD0TBDTBD
Whitehawk Capital Partners000TBDTBDTBDTBD0TBDTBD
Advantage Business Capital81$1,000,000InvoicesTBDInvoice Factoring FacilityTBD0.16TBDTBD
First Citizens Bank - ABL000TBDTBDTBDTBD0TBDTBD
Gibraltar Business Capital810TBDTBDSenior Secured FacilityTBD0.25TBDTBD
nFusion Capital243$13,000,000Accounts receivable and inventory, InventoryTBDAsset-Based Lending Facility (2), Factoring LineColorado, California, Arizona0.423TBD
Culain Capital000TBDTBDTBDTBD0TBDTBD
First Business Bank324$12,200,000Vehicle inventory, Accounts ReceivableFactoring facilityCredit Facility, Inventory Floorplan, Factoring Facility (2)Hawaii, Pennsylvania, Virginia0.571TBD
Great Rock Capital - ABL493$340,000,000Accounts receivable and best-in-class machinery and equipment (2)TBDSenior Secured Revolver (3)Pennsylvania0.5TBDTBD
Rosenthal Capital Group162$4,000,000Accounts receivable (2)TBDRecourse Factoring Facility (2)California, Michigan0.25TBDTBD
Ares Commercial Finance121$175,000,000Accounts receivable; Machinery & equipmentTBDSenior Secured Revolving Credit FacilityTBD0.16TBDTBD
Sallyport Commercial Finance81$2,000,000Accounts receivableTBDAccounts Receivable FacilityCanada0.5TBDTBD
SLR Healthcare ABL81$7,000,000TBDTBDAsset-Based Revolving Line of CreditNortheast0TBDTBD
Utica Equipment Finance81$11,000,000Heavy equipment (trucks, trailers, dozers, excavators, graders, loaders, turf-farm machinery)TBDCapital LeaseMid-Atlantic0.25TBDTBD
Amerisource Business Capital162$9,000,000Accounts receivable (2), commercial real estateA/R Only Facility, Asset-Based Lending FacilityAsset-Based Lending Facility, A/R Only FacilityMidwest US, Texas0.5TBDTBD
King Trade Capital000TBDTBDTBDTBD0TBDTBD
MidCap Business Credit243$31,000,000Accounts receivable (2), inventory (2), machinery and equipment, Distributor of specialty chemicals and materialsWorking capital revolver and machinery/equipment term loanWorking Capital Revolver (2), Machinery and Equipment Term Loan, Asset-Based Credit FacilityTBD0.75TBDTBD
White Oak Commercial Finance151$35,000,000Various assets across UK and U.S. platforms (multi-currency facility)$20M uncommitted accordion feature; structured in USD, GBP, EURABL Revolver FacilityTexas0.125TBDTBD
Loeb Equipment000TBDTBDTBDTBD0TBDTBD
Prestige Capital000TBDTBDTBDTBD0TBDTBD
JPalmer Collective324$15,000,000Inventory (2)Line of credit with flexible structureLine of Credit (2), Debt Facility, Working Capital Facility (Asset-Based)California, Oregon, New York, Georgia0.81TBD
Austin Financial Services81$10,000,000TBDTBDTBDTBD0.201
eCapital405$31,500,000Accounts receivable (2), Freight receivables (2)ABL facility with advances against accounts receivable and inventoryA/R Financing Facility (3), Freight Factoring Facility (2)Canada, Massachusetts11TBD
Porter Capital000TBDTBDTBDTBD0TBDTBD
Siena Lending Group - ABL000TBDTBDTBDTBD0TBDTBD
Gateway Trade Funding152$500,000Purchase orders (letter of credit-backed), InventoryLetter of credit-backedPurchase Order Facility (2)TBD0.33TBDTBD
Republic Business Credit476$23,000,000Accounts receivable (3)Ledgered line of credit, Includes $10 million accordion feature, Accordion up to $6M with $2M inventory lending option after 6 months upon meeting performance thresholdsLedgered Line of Credit, Factoring Facility (3), Asset-Based Loan (2)Northeast US, Southwest US, Midwest US, California, West Coast0.752TBD
SLR Business Credit000TBDTBDTBDTBD0TBDTBD
TAB Bank000TBDTBDTBDTBD0TBDTBD
Alpine Ridge Funding000TBDTBDTBDTBD0TBDTBD
Celtic Capital233$4,320,700Accounts receivable (3)AR Line (2), Equipment Loan (2)Accounts Receivable Line of Credit (2), Equipment LoanPacific, South-Central US, California0.375TBDTBD
Clarus Capital81$10,000,000Essential use assets (medical transportation vehicles)Loan facility for sponsor-backed companyLoan FacilityTBD0.25TBDTBD
Gordon Brothers000TBDTBDTBDTBD0TBDTBD
Assembled Brands000TBDTBDTBDTBD0TBDTBD
MidCap Financial - ABL000TBDTBDTBDTBD0TBDTBD
Southstar Capital7510$14,500,000Invoices (4), Accounts receivable (5)Accounts receivable (3), Flexible structure; potential payment assurance arrangementsAccounts Receivable Facility (7), Invoice Factoring Facility (3)SouthEast US (2), Midwest, Indiana1.253TBD
Wintrust Equipment Finance000TBDTBDTBDTBD0TBDTBD
The Hedaya Capital Group243$11,000,000Accounts receivable (2)Factoring facilityFactoring Facility (3)Texas, New Jersey, New York0.421TBD
Sigma Funding152$2,600,000Accounts receivable (2)TBDAccounts Receivable Funding Facility (2)California, Florida0.28TBDTBD
Capteris121$25,000,000New and existing assets acquired over past yearTBDLease FacilityTBD0.5TBDTBD
Baker Garrington385$5,750,000Accounts receivable (4)Factoring facilityFactoring Facility (5)Colorado, Oklahoma, Indiana, Louisiana, Texas0.625TBDTBD

Tale of the Tape (YTD 2025)

  • Total Points: 270
  • Deals Logged: 23
  • Volume Drafted: $9.32 Billion*
  • Primary Asset Focus: Industrial (2) | Mixed-Use (4) | Multifamily (3)
  • Most Common Loan Term: Five-year (7), Two-year, 14-year, Specific Term Details (CMBS (3), Floating-rate (3), Interest-only (2), Three one-year extension options (2), Construction financing, Fixed-rate)
  • Primary Loan Type: CMBS (8) | Refinance (9)
  • Top States: New York (8), Australia (2), California (2), Florida (2), Colorado, Connecticut
  • Win-Loss-Draw: 3-3-7
WeekOpponentResultScore & Top DealTop Deal Source
Playoff-Round 1Morgan StanleyLoss0-14 ($970M CMBS Refi Coronado, CA)
12CitigroupWin21-0 ($2.08B Windfarm Development, Germany)Link to Deal
11Goldman SachsWin14-0 ($239.57M Construction Loan, Milan/Affi Italy)Link to Deal
10Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group (MUFG)Draw14-14 (No Decisive Deal)
9First Citizens BankDraw0-0 (No Decisive Deal)
8Bank of Montreal (BMO)Draw0-0 (No Decisive Deal)
7JP MorganLoss0-14 ($820M Inland Empire/East Bay/Atlanta/DFW/Charlotte/Tampa. CA/GA/NC/FL/TX)
6CitigroupWin14-7 ($380M Multiple Cities, TX/OK/FL/MO)Link to Deal
5Goldman SachsDraw0-0 (No Decisive Deal)
4Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group (MUFG)Draw0-0 (No Decisive Deal)
3First Citizens BankDraw0-0 (No Decisive Deal)
2Bank of Montreal (BMO)Draw0-0 (No Decisive Deal)
1JP MorganLoss0-14 ($1.4B Manhattan, NY)

*Indicates a syndicated loan. Per “The Lead Arranger & The Syndicate Rule”, scoring is based on the lender’s specific allocation or lead arranger status. See The Rulebook for details.

Lender Overview

  • Headquarters: Frankfurt am Main, Germany
  • Founded: 1870
  • Ownership: Public company (Frankfurt Stock Exchange, NYSE)
  • Primary Focus: Commercial Real Estate (CRE), Renewable Energy Infrastructure, CMBS, Syndicated Lending

2025 PERFORMANCE SUMMARY

The Record

Deutsche Bank finished the 2025 Lender Draft season with a 3-3-7 record, demonstrating limited competitive activity and a highly selective approach to standalone deal origination. The record masks a bifurcated participation strategy: three outright wins on mid-market CMBS refinances and renewable energy development facilities, three competitive losses on megadeal infrastructure syndications where Deutsche Bank was part of larger lending consortia, and seven draws reflecting capital preservation periods and participation in multi-lender club structures where no single lender claimed dominant positioning. This pattern—more draws than wins or losses—reveals Deutsche Bank’s posture as a portfolio company in consortium-led renewables financing rather than an aggressive sole lender chasing market share.

DEAL FLOW ANALYSIS

  • Deal Size Range: Smallest deal $50 million; largest deal $2.088 billion; sweet spot concentrated in the $180M–$510M range, indicating preference for stabilized, seasoned assets with proven cash flow profiles rather than ground-up development or distressed turnarounds.
  • Geographic Focus: New York dominance is pronounced, with 8 of 23 deals representing 35% of deal count; secondary concentration in international renewable energy across Germany, Italy, Thailand, Australia, and Ireland representing 9 of 23 deals or 39% of deal count by frequency, signaling strategic priority on ESG-aligned infrastructure financing over traditional U.S. office/retail CRE.
  • Industry Patterns: Renewable Energy accounts for 7 deals and over 50% of total volume deployed; Mixed-Use represents 4 deals; Multifamily/Residential accounts for 3 deals; Hospitality and Office each represent 1 deal; renewable energy concentrates 30% of deal frequency and indicates strategic capital allocation toward energy transition infrastructure.
  • Loan Structures: CMBS financing dominates with 8 deals; Refinance structures account for 9 deals, often paired with recapitalization; Construction Financing comprises 3 deals; Interest-Only structures appear in 3 deals; Five-year fixed-rate and floating-rate facilities dominate term selection, with longer 14-year tenors appearing only on energy infrastructure with contractual offtake agreements.
  • Deal Purposes: Refinancing dominates with 9 deals, followed by Recapitalization with 2 deals, Modernization/Repowering with 2 deals, Construction with 3 deals, and Portfolio Expansion with 2 deals; refinancing deals average $225M, while new development/construction deals average $496M, indicating Deutsche Bank structures larger facilities for greenfield infrastructure but smaller packages for seasoned asset rebalancing.
  • Loan Sizing Pattern: One-deal case study illustrates Deutsche Bank’s renewable energy infrastructure thesis: a €208M facility for biomethane production plant development across a specific European market demonstrates Deutsche Bank’s appetite for mid-sized renewable gas infrastructure with multi-asset portfolio structure and 10-year development runway, positioning Deutsche Bank as a knowledge anchor in markets where few large-cap lenders operate.
  • Transaction Velocity: Average time between consecutive deals is 15.5 calendar days across 365 days, with pronounced clustering in Q2 and early Q1, late summer activity, and minimal mid-summer engagement, suggesting capital deployment tied to annual portfolio rebalancing cycles and energy transition fund closing calendars rather than continuous origination rhythm.

IDEAL BORROWER PROFILE

The ideal borrower for Deutsche Bank, based on verified 2025 activity, is a European or Asia-Pacific renewable energy developer, mixed-use stabilization platform, or multifamily recapitalization sponsor with $200M–$500M transaction scale, existing asset base (rather than greenfield), and willingness to accept longer-dated facilities (5–14 years) with portfolio-level cash flow underwriting and relationship-based pricing. Secondary positioning includes opportunistic New York luxury residential sponsors executing office-to-residential conversion or recapitalization of stabilized multifamily assets.

STRATEGIC INTELLIGENCE

FOR BORROWERS

  • Energy Transition Financing Momentum: Deutsche Bank’s renewable energy deployment ($3.9B across 7 deals, or 42% of 2025 capital) significantly exceeds its traditional CRE output, and Deutsche Bank’s wins on NeXtWind (€75M co-lending, lead participant), Green One (€208M sole lender), and Acen Australia (multi-lender anchor) signal organizational priority and pre-positioned appetite for 2025–2026 energy infrastructure deals. Conversely, traditional office-to-residential and hospitality sponsors (who generated only 2 deals of $50M–$68M each) face competitive headwinds and should not assume similar execution speed or favorable pricing.
  • Action: If your company operates renewable energy infrastructure (wind, solar, biomethane, energy storage) with $300M–$800M asset base or pipeline, structure a formal capital-raise discussion with Deutsche Bank’s Project Finance team, referencing their 2025 track record and consortium relationships. If your deal is traditional CRE refinance or stabilization play, price Deutsche Bank competitively against private credit and CMBS issuers rather than assuming relationship advantage.
  • Timing: Deutsche Bank’s draw-heavy record suggests limited capital available during commodity CMBS windows (Weeks 1–5, 7, 10); target submission for Q4 2026 and early Q1 2026 when Deutsche Bank resets annual allocations and energy infrastructure sponsors close development roadmap funding.

FOR BROKERS

  • Consortium Role Arbitrage: Deutsche Bank’s loss record on top-tier syndications (0-3) but win record on renewable energy development (2-0) reveals Deutsche Bank is not competing for equity checkmarks on trophy deals but rather serves as intelligent consortium anchor on infrastructure projects where it owns relationship origination and can require co-lender participation. This positioning creates opportunity for brokers: Deutsche Bank is an inexpensive entry point on U.S. multifamily and mixed-use recaps (where deals averaged $50M–$280M and met little outbound competition) but an expensive exit on mega-cap syndications where the bank views participation as optional.
  • Action: When brokering a renewable energy infrastructure deal (solar, wind, biomethane, energy storage), lead with Deutsche Bank as anchor lender and structure syndication around their consortium model—they will size aggressively and expect to own borrower relationship continuity. When pitching traditional U.S. CMBS or industrial portfolio deals, position Deutsche Bank as secondary co-lender rather than lead, as the bank’s track record suggests preference for portfolio stability over market competitiveness on commodity structures.
  • Strategy: Develop broker relationships with Deutsche Bank’s Frankfurt-based Project Finance team and Dublin-based EMEA CRE platform, not their U.S. origination centers. Deutsche Bank’s 2025 focus on international renewable energy and Dublin multifamily (Kennedy Wilson JV) signals that non-U.S. origination is outperforming U.S. direct origination; submitting deals through EMEA contacts will receive more responsive review and faster committee turnaround than U.S. pitch lists.

FOR RIVAL LENDERS

  • Selective Capital Allocation Discipline: Deutsche Bank’s 26.1% win percentage and draw-heavy record suggest the bank is rationing capital to high-conviction opportunities and deliberately passing on competitive-bid situations where margin compression or documentation risk is elevated. This is operationally expensive—Deutsche Bank maintains origination teams, underwriting infrastructure, and syndication capacity but deploys capital on <30% of competitive opportunities. Rival lenders with higher win percentages (>50%) are either accepting lower-margin deals, operating with less stringent approval standards, or originating from relationship continuity rather than competitive bids. Deutsche Bank’s model prioritizes pricing discipline over volume.
  • Action: Target Deutsche Bank’s “passed-on” deal inventory: if the bank declined to compete on a mid-market U.S. multifamily recapitalization or industrial CMBS deal (as suggested by the loss on $820M regional portfolio in Week 7), position your offer as faster execution, simpler documentation, or relationship-based pricing that acknowledges the sponsor’s time pressure. Deutsche Bank’s documented preference for longer-dated, portfolio-level financing means they will cede small-balance, high-yield hospitality and niche CRE deals to faster lenders.
  • Defense: If you face Deutsche Bank competition on renewable energy infrastructure, do not compete on pricing or docstring aggressiveness. Instead, emphasize execution speed, simplicity, and U.S. tax optimization (where applicable). Deutsche Bank’s 14-year facility on the Thailand satellite project and multi-lender approach on Acen Australia reveal Deutsche Bank is comfortable with complex regulatory and credit structures if underwriting is thorough; rival lenders can differentiate by offering faster approval and simpler loan agreements at a modest spread premium that sponsors will accept to avoid negotiation lag.

FOR ANALYSTS & FUNDS

  • European Renewable Energy Refinancing Cycle Signal: Deutsche Bank’s €3.9B in renewable energy deployment across 7 deals (42% of 2025 volume) signals that European and Asia-Pacific renewable energy developers with 2018–2020 vintage debt are executing refinancings ahead of 2026–2027 maturity cliffs, and larger consortium lenders are positioning early for portfolio growth in this sector. Deutsche Bank’s participation in Acen Australia ($750M AUD portfolio financing), NeXtWind (€75M–€300M consortium), and Green One (€208M sole facility) indicates that mega-project refinancing and portfolio consolidation in renewable energy will remain capital-intensive through 2026, suggesting continued elevated lending margins and deal flow in this sector. This contrasts sharply with traditional CRE, where deal velocity is lower and spreads are under compression.
  • Observation: Deutsche Bank’s renewable energy focus outweighs traditional CRE by a 42%-to-35% capital ratio, signaling that institutional asset managers should expect sustainable energy assets (particularly European offshore wind farms, solar portfolios, and energy storage infrastructure) to command better lending terms and more aggressive syndication appetite than office, retail, or hospitality CRE over the next 12–18 months. Energy transition sponsors with existing debt maturing in 2026–2027 should lock refinancing commitments now, as lender appetite will soften post-2026 if new renewable energy project pipelines contract or regulatory uncertainty increases.
  • Strategy: Position portfolio exposure toward renewable energy infrastructure operators and their lenders (Deutsche Bank, consortium banks participating in Acen/NeXtWind deals, and European development banks) rather than traditional CRE lenders, as capital deployment is flowing toward energy transition. If allocating to CRE, favor mixed-use and multifamily recapitalization sponsors (where Deutsche Bank executed 7 deals averaging $170M) over traditional office CMBS, where Deutsche Bank’s 0-3 loss record suggests weakening competitive positioning and likely compressed returns.

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