Insights5 min read

The coupon reset and the refinancing math

Newly originated CRE mortgage rates sit meaningfully above the rates on maturing loans. That gap is not a passing market event — it is the math that determines how this refinancing cycle actually clears.

By DiversyFund

Newly originated CRE mortgage rates sit meaningfully above rates on maturing loans — the resulting DSCR compression is the math that drives borrower behavior and creates entry points for disciplined credit.
Source: S&P Global Market Intelligence — refinancing rate gap

The maturity wall gets attention because of its size. The coupon reset gets attention from the people who have to live with it, because it determines whether a deal can actually refinance at all. The headline can carry the size of the cohort. The math underneath determines who pays and how.

This piece walks through the three pieces of math that matter most: the rate gap between maturing and newly originated loans, the credit spread on top of Treasuries, and the price reset that resets the basis underneath any new transaction.

The rate gap: where the pain originates

Newly originated CRE mortgage rates remain meaningfully above the rates on maturing loans. That gap is the engine of refinancing pressure. A loan written at one coupon, refinanced into a materially higher coupon, cannot maintain the same debt-service coverage ratio at the same proceeds unless something else changes.

That "something else" is usually one of three things:

  • Lower proceeds. The borrower refinances at a smaller loan balance, which means writing a check (or rounding up additional equity) at closing.
  • Smaller distributions. Cash flow that previously went to equity now goes to debt service.
  • A restructure. Modified terms, A/B note structures, preferred equity, or rescue capital come in to bridge the gap.

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This article is for general information only and does not constitute an offer to sell or a solicitation to buy securities. Investing involves risk, including loss of principal. Review offering documents and speak with qualified professionals before investing.

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