๐Ÿ“ฐ THIS WEEKโ€™S HEADLINES

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๐Ÿ“ฐ THE LENDER DRAFT WEEKโ€™S RECAP

A $2.1 BILLION data center refinance just scrambled the entire CRE bracket in one week. Five lenders co-originated the QTS deal simultaneously โ€” meaning five teams got a stat boost on the same transaction โ€” and the scoreboard looked like a pinball machine. Meanwhile, Wells Fargo was already sitting on a $450M CMBS close and a $215M revolving facility before QTS even hit the tape.

๐Ÿ”ฅ TOP PERFORMANCES: WHO WAS COOKING?

#1 Wells Fargo 127, #31 National Australia Bank 60 (67-point blowout)
Let’s just say Wells showed up with the entire armory. A $2.1B QTS co-origination. A $450M CMBS refinance for Nomad Tower. A $215M senior secured revolver for Orion Properties. Three deals, nearly $2.8B in total volume, and NAB didn’t close a single thing. Wells stays locked at #1 in CRE and they’re not even breathing hard.

#6 Citigroup 85, #4 PNC Bank 59 (Growth Capital) (26-point win)
In Growth Capital, Citi didn’t need volume. They needed one call. An $800M senior secured revolving credit facility refinance for Huntsman International out of Houston.

#5 Republic Business Credit 91, #30 Gateway Trade Funding 83 (8-point win)
This one went down to the wire, and Republic Business Credit earned it the hard way. A $3M invoice financing facility for a California textile manufacturer. Gateway Trade Funding went scoreless and watched Republic hold at #5 in the standings.

๐Ÿ˜ฑ UPSET OF THE WEEK

PGIM 75, #8 Nuveen 60 (15-point upset) โ€” CRE
PGIM just walked into the building and handed the #8 seed their lunch. PGIM closed a $58M refinance for a mixed-use redevelopment in Quincy, MA while Nuveen โ€” sitting pretty as one of the tournament’s top-10 teams โ€” put up a donut. Nuveen drops two spots to #8 and suddenly the top-10 cushion doesn’t look so comfortable.

๐Ÿ“Š THE LENDER DRAFT STANDINGS SHAKEUP

๐Ÿ  CRE LEADERBOARD

๐Ÿ” THE RISERS:

  • #11 BARCLAYS โ†‘9 SPOTS (U.S.: 6 deals, 84 points | 3 Deals – $2.1B QTS Data Center Refi, $58M Office Refi, $17M CMBS Self-Storage Refi
  • #16 BANK OF MONTREAL (BMO) โ†‘8 SPOTS | 4 deals, 71 points | $2.1B QTS Data Center Refi
  • #12 MUFG โ†‘6 SPOTS (4 deals, 82 points) | $689M Lydian Energy construction deal

BEST MATCHUP GAME

#6 Apollo Global Management 98, #19 Barings 72 (26-point win)
Apollo closed a $353M senior mortgage for the Sotherly Hotels acquisition โ€” a 10-asset Southeast portfolio โ€” with a $45M mezz component stacked on top from Ascendant Capital Partners. Full-stack structuring, private hotel play, clean execution. Barings? Zero deals. Apollo climbs to #6 in CRE and looks like a legitimate contender. ๐Ÿจ

View full standings

๐Ÿ’ผ GROWTH CAPITAL LEADERBOARD

๐Ÿ” THE MOVERS:

  • #12 FORTRESS INVESTMENT GROUP: โ†‘7 SPOTS | 3 Deals, 67 Points | $112M senior secured facility for Hollywood Feed
  • #20 CIBC: โ†‘4 SPOTS | 3 Deals, 49 Points | $50M growth capital to AlayaCare
  • #16 ROYAL BANK OF CANADA: โ†‘2 SPOTS | $30M bilateral term loan to Western Forest Products

BEST MATCHUP GAME

#12 Fortress Investment Group 81, Barings 62 (19-point win)
While the big banks were busy syndicated $2.1B data center refinances, Fortress quietly walked into Memphis and closed a $112M senior secured credit facility for Hollywood Feed, one of the fastest-growing independent pet retail chains in the country. No syndication partners. No co-originators. Just Fortress, a borrower, and a clean deal. That’s the private credit playbook in a nutshell: find the growth story everyone else overlooked, underwrite it your way, and collect the points. Fortress sits at #12 in the Growth-Cap standings and is trending in the right direction. Don’t sleep on them.

View full standings

โšก ABL LEADERBOARD

๐Ÿ” THE MOVERS:

  • #6 WELLS FARGO: โ†‘19 SPOTS| 2 Deals, 37 Points | $1.25B Global ABL to City Electric Group
  • #8 FIRST BUSINESS BANK: โ†‘4 SPOTS | 4 Deals, 32 Points | $2M Factoring Facility to a Virginia IT consulting services company
  • #15 NFUSION CAPITAL: โ†‘4 SPOTS | 3 Deals, 24 Points | $5M ABL Facility to Arizona hydroponic business
  • #16 THE HEDAYA CAPITAL GROUP: โ†‘6 SPOTS | 3 Deals, 24 Points | $8M Factoring Facility to NYC-based female-founded footwear development company

๐Ÿ†• NEW ENTRY:

  • JP MORGAN: 3 deals | 48 points
  • TRUIST: 1 deals | 22 points
  • HSBC: 1 deals | 22 points
  • PNC: 1 deals | 22 points

BEST MATCHUP GAME

#15 nFusion Capital 79, #21 Comvest Credit Partners 71 (8-point win)
Here’s your sleeper story of the week. nFusion Capital, sitting at #15 in the ABL standings, closed a $5M asset-based lending facility for a hydroponic agriculture business in Arizona. Growing lettuce with borrowed money. We love it. nFusion jumped UP 4 spots to #15 on the back of one of the most creative deal structures in this week’s entire tournament. Don’t sleep on the specialty lenders. They find angles nobody else is looking at.

View full standings

๐Ÿ† THE LENDER DRAFT LENDERS OF THE WEEK

COMMERCIAL REAL ESTATE

Offensive Lender of the Week: Wells Fargo
This Week: 3 deals | 63 points
Biggest Deal: 3 deals | $2.1B Industrial Refi biggest deal | Virginia, Georgia, Illinois
.
Defensive Lender of the Week: MonticelloAM
The Play: 2-tranche structure ($75M bridge loan + $5M working capital line) | 36-month term + 2x 6-month extension options | Four skilled nursing facility acquisition, Pennsylvania


GROWTH CAPITAL

Offensive Lender of the Week: Blackstone
This Week: 1 deals | 29 points
Biggest Deal: 1 deal | $600M biggest deal | Delhi, India

Defensive Lender of the Week: Lighthouse Financial Corp.
The Play: Dual-tranche structure ($7M revolving line of credit + $1.5M term loan) | Triple collateral stack (accounts receivable + inventory + machinery & equipment) | Appalachian hardwood manufacturer & distributor, Georgia


ASSET-BASED LENDING

Offensive Lender of the Week: JP Morgan
This Week: 2 deals | 30 points
Biggest Deal: 2 deals | $1.25B biggest deal | Houston, Texas

Defensive Lender of the Week: Wells Fargo
The Play: $1.25B senior secured global asset-based revolving credit facility | Borrowing base tied to eligible inventory + accounts receivable across 7 countries (US, Canada, UK, Ireland, Netherlands, Spain, Australia) | Five-lender syndicate (Wells Fargo, PNC, JPMorgan, Truist, HSBC) | City Electric Group, Houston TX

๐Ÿ’ก WHAT THIS WEEK TELLS US

1. The QTS $2.1B refinance is the story of the week for one simple reason: it rewarded participation. Five lenders co-originated โ€” Goldman, Citi, BofA, Morgan Stanley, Bank of Montreal, Barclays โ€” and every single one got points on the board.

2. in ABL, we’re watching micro-lending specialists carve out territory in a completely different way โ€” factoring facilities for female-founded footwear companies, hydroponic agriculture, IT staffing. The ABL bracket is the most creative lending environment in the tournament, and it’s not close.

3. For Borrowers: The disparity between the $2.1B digital infrastructure deals and the highly fragmented sub-$10M ABL market reveals that traditional banks are reserving balance sheet capacity for mega-cap syndications, forcing middle-market operators toward private credit and specialty finance.

4. For Brokers: Traditional commercial real estate financing is heavily skewed toward refinancing and extensions (e.g., Orion Properties’ $355M CMBS extension), indicating extremely low lender appetite for ground-up commercial office development.

5. For Lenders: The dominance of tier-1 syndicates in the $500M+ space leaves the $30Mโ€“$150M commercial construction and bridge market highly fragmented and vulnerable to agile mid-market lenders.

6. For Funds: The simultaneous funding of massive solar/battery construction ($689M) and data center refinancing ($2.1B) points to an interconnected “power and compute” super-cycle driving institutional credit markets.

๐Ÿ“ˆ BY THE NUMBERS: WEEK 7 MACRO

Total Capital Deployed: $9.87 Billion

Deal Volume by League:

  1. CRE: 37 deals
  2. Growth Capital: 14 deals
  3. ABL: 12 deals

Most Active Lender (Overall): Wells Fargo
Wells Fargo dominated the โ€œMega-Capโ€ and syndicate bracket, appearing in the $2.1B Blackstone Data Centers refinance, leading the $1.25B City Electric global ABL, and funding major office deals ($450M Global Holdings, $215M Orion Properties).

Largest Single Deal: $2.1B (Blackstone / QTS Data Centers โ€“ Industrial/Data Centers, Virginia/Georgia/Illinois)

Sector Snapshot (Cross-League Funding):

  1. Multifamily CRE: 13 deals, $675.6M
    The bread and butter of the CRE bracket. The flow is highly specific: itโ€™s dominated by new construction (CLK Properties’ $115M, J&L Companies’ $110M HUD loan) and bridge acquisitions. Lenders are favoring active adult, senior housing, and affordable developments over standard middle-market value-add.
  2. Energy & Digital Infrastructure: 10 deals, $3.93B
    This sector is unequivocally the heavyweight champion of the week in terms of dollars. Between the $2.1B Blackstone Data Center refinance, the $689M Lydian Energy solar financing, and the $600M Neysa AI infrastructure deal in India, tech enablement and power infrastructure accounted for massive global syndicate volumes this week.
  3. Office CRE: 4 deals, $1.07B
    Office is staging a selective, high-dollar defense. We saw over $1.07B deployed into office assets this week. The narrative is heavily anchored by refinancing and extensions for stabilized assets, highlighted by the $450M Global Holdings tower refinance in Manhattan and Orion Properties’ $355M CMBS extension in New Jersey.

Geographic Hotspots:

  1. Texas: $3.3 Billion (8 Deals)
    The Lone Star State takes the crown this week, driven by massive corporate asset-based lending and energy plays. The $1.25B City Electric global ABL in Houston and the $800M Huntsman chemical refinance led the state’s massive volume, supported by allocations from the $689M Lydian Energy deal.
  2. Florida: $1.02 Billion (7 Deals)
    Florida is attracting a wide variety of commercial real estate capital right now. We saw $353M go into Hospitality (Kemmons Wilson portfolio acquisition), $157M into Luxury Condo Construction (Related Ross in West Palm Beach), and $150M into Industrial portfolio acquisitions (Prospect Ridge)
  3. California: $206 Million (9 Deals)
    California narrowly trailed in total dollars but led the pack in standalone deal count (9), acting as the hub for middle-market growth capital. We saw diverse capital deployment ranging from a $50M mixed-use remediation (Comstock) to a $20M aerospace tech ABL (Drone Nerds), showcasing strong demand for specialized inventory finance.

๐Ÿ”ฎ LOOKING AHEAD: WEEK 8

CRE
Lenders are aggressively rotating capital allocations. Expect to see continued heavy deployment into data centers, renewable energy sites, and grocery-anchored suburban retail, while traditional office spaces continue to rely on short-term extensions.

GC:
The IPO window is selectively open, creating a clear exit path for mature portfolio companies. Growth capital funds are actively positioning their late-stage, cash-generative assets (particularly in AI-enabled software and specialty risk) for liquidity events.

ABL:
ABL volume is seeing a noticeable bump in the aerospace, defense, and industrial manufacturing sectors, directly fueled by global supply chain reshoring and heightened infrastructure spending.

March Madness Bracket

๐Ÿ—ณ๏ธ NOMINATE A LENDER FOR THE THE LENDER DRAFT MARCH MADNESS TOURNAMENT

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Until next week, Bye-bye

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