Core, Core-Plus, Value-Add and Opportunistic
Core to Opportunistic in Practice
The financing tracks the risk. A core buyer of a stabilized $25,000,000 credit-tenant property might borrow $13,750,000 from a life insurance company at 55% LTV, prioritizing a long fixed rate over maximum proceeds. An opportunistic developer capitalizing a $30,000,000 ground-up multifamily project might combine a $19,500,000 construction loan at 65% of cost with mezzanine debt or preferred equity behind it, accepting completion guarantees and floating-rate risk in exchange for development-level returns.
Core to Opportunistic: What the Market Actually Requires
The conventional mapping runs roughly as follows: core targets net IRRs in the high single digits with leverage of 40% to 60%; core-plus targets around 10% to 13% with leverage up to 65%; value-add targets the mid-teens at 70% to 85% of cost; and opportunistic strategies underwrite 18% and higher with the most structural leverage and the least in-place income. The labels are shorthand for how much of the return comes from durable income versus execution: core is nearly all income, opportunistic is nearly all business plan.
Each profile has a natural lender universe. Life insurance companies dominate core and core-plus, trading lower leverage for long fixed terms on the best assets. CMBS competes for stabilized core and core-plus deals where maximum fixed-rate proceeds and non-recourse execution matter most. Agency lenders span core through moderate value-add for multifamily. Banks are the workhorses of core-plus and lighter value-add, typically with recourse. Debt funds and bridge lenders own the value-add and opportunistic space, pricing execution risk into floating-rate loans, while ground-up construction splits between banks (lower leverage, recourse) and debt funds (higher leverage, non-recourse at a price).
The classification matters because pitching a deal into the wrong bucket wastes weeks. A value-add business plan shopped to core lenders draws quotes sized on in-place income that look insultingly low; a stabilized asset shopped to debt funds gets expensive money it does not need. Risk drift is the other trap: paying a core-plus price for a deal whose returns require value-add execution means the capital markets will price your debt and equity against the riskier profile, no matter what the marketing deck says.
Why It Matters for Your Loan
Naming the profile correctly is the first step of any debt placement or equity raise, because it determines which lenders should ever see the file and what terms are realistic. A mislabeled deal draws the wrong quotes and burns weeks of process. Commercial Lending Solutions maps each assignment to the capital sources whose mandate actually matches the risk, across 1,000+ lender relationships, which is the difference between three usable term sheets and three weeks of polite passes.
Related Terms
Core to Opportunistic: FAQ
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