With the Federal Reserve meeting this week, markets are pricing an 87% probability of a 25 basis-point rate cut (0.25%).
While a cut would signal continued progress on inflation, it is important to focus on what truly drives real estate and business financing: the long end of the yield curve and lender credit conditions.
The 10-year Treasury is currently trading near 4.17%, up roughly 10 basis points in the last week. Even if the Fed cuts, the 10-year does not automatically decline. The long end of the curve is being shaped by three forces:
-
Persistent Treasury supply driven by over $38 trillion in federal debt.
-
Reduced foreign demand from countries that historically bought large amounts of U.S. debt.
-
A higher structural term premium, reflecting uncertainty and geopolitical risk.
Historically, the 10-year Treasury traded about 1.50% above inflation. That relationship is weakening. Today’s environment suggests a more realistic “neutral range” of 3.75 to 4.50%, even with inflation contained. This has implications for borrowers who are waiting for rates to “return to normal.”
The definition of normal has shifted.
Credit Spreads: Stability, Not Compression
Lenders have generally held spreads firm. Several dynamics limit the ability for spreads to tighten:
-
Banks remain capital-constrained and selective.
-
Companies will be competitive in Q1 but tend to become more disciplined later in the year.
-
Debt funds are operating with a higher cost of capital and cannot compress margins without sacrificing return requirements.
-
The credit cycle is still working through stress in office, certain retail segments, and leveraged owners approaching maturity.
Even if benchmark rates decline, the borrower’s all-in cost of capital may not fall proportionally.
Why Q1 Matters: The Best Window for Financing
Every January, lenders reset their annual allocations. Early in the year, competition is stronger, underwriting turn times improve, and pricing is more negotiable.
As we move through the second half of 2025 and into early 2026, we expect greater volatility related to election dynamics, slower committees and wider spreads. For clients contemplating a refinance, acquisition, expansion, or construction loan, the strongest execution window is the first quarter of 2026, when lenders reset allocations and competition is at its peak. The current environment rewards decisiveness.
Housing Dynamics and Multifamily Outlook
For-sale housing continues to face several headwinds: elevated mortgage rates, affordability pressure, and low consumer sentiment. As a result, mobility remains historically low. Fewer homeowners are listing, and fewer renters are transitioning into homeownership.
This creates three downstream effects:
-
Renter households remain in place longer.
-
Vacancy decreases in stabilized, non-luxury multifamily.
-
Rent growth is poised to strengthen in 2026 as very little new construction will be delivered.
New multifamily development has slowed materially because projects do not pencil under current capital costs. This underbuilding will shape the next phase of rent growth.
Seller Behavior: Motivated or Waiting
The market remains bifurcated. Only motivated sellers are transacting. Others prefer to wait for pricing clarity. This is not a distressed cycle—it is a repricing cycle. In many cases, the equity, not the asset, must adjust.
For investors, that means:
-
Opportunities do exist, but patience and discipline are essential.
-
Discounted deals generally come from maturity pressure or partnership issues, not broad market capitulation.
Strategic Guidance Going Forward
-
If you have a financing need, begin the process now. Q1 2026 will offer better pricing, faster execution, and more lender appetite than later in the year.
-
Underwrite stabilized borrowing costs using a 3.75–4.50% 10-year Treasury assumption.
-
Expect rent growth to re-accelerate in 2026 as supply normalizes and renter mobility remains low.
-
For acquisitions or recapitalizations, use conservative leverage, structured capital options, and place emphasis on cash flow durability.




