Preferred Equity

Definition: Preferred equity is an ownership investment in a commercial real estate venture that ranks ahead of common equity for distributions and return of capital, but behind all debt. Unlike mezzanine debt, it carries no lien: the preferred investor holds no mortgage and no pledge of equity interests. Its protections live in the operating agreement instead, typically a priority return, mandatory redemption dates, and the right to take over management or force a sale if the sponsor fails to perform.

Preferred Equity in Practice

A $25,000,000 value-add acquisition is capitalized with a $16,250,000 senior loan at 65 percent of cost. A preferred equity investor contributes $5,000,000, and the sponsor funds the remaining $3,750,000 of common equity. Total outside capital reaches $21,250,000, or 85 percent of cost. Cash flow pays senior debt service first, then accrues the preferred return on the $5,000,000, and the sponsor's common equity collects only after the preferred position is current.

Preferred Equity: What the Market Actually Requires

Preferred equity occupies the same slice of the capital stack as mezzanine debt, typically the 65 to 85 percent band, but through an entirely different legal structure. The preferred investor buys into the ownership entity or a joint venture above it, receiving a priority return that accrues ahead of any common equity distributions and a scheduled redemption of its capital. There is no mortgage, no UCC pledge, and usually no intercreditor agreement. If the sponsor fails to pay the preferred return or redeem on schedule, the remedies are corporate rather than foreclosure-based: removal of the sponsor as manager, a forced-sale right, or dilution of the sponsor's promote.

Structure matters enormously within the category. Hard-pay preferred requires current cash payments and behaves like debt; soft-pay preferred accrues when cash flow is short and behaves more like equity. Senior lenders read these distinctions carefully. Agency lenders, which prohibit hard mezzanine behind their multifamily loans, generally accept properly structured preferred equity, sometimes with a recognition agreement giving the preferred investor notice and cure rights. But preferred that carries mandatory current pay, a fixed maturity, and default remedies can be recharacterized by a credit committee as disguised mezzanine, jeopardizing the senior approval.

Family offices, institutional funds, and the preferred sleeves of debt funds supply most of the capital, and they underwrite the sponsor as much as the asset, because their remedy is taking over the deal rather than selling a loan position. Sponsors should negotiate the change-of-control triggers with the same intensity a mezzanine intercreditor would get: an aggressive forced-sale right exercisable after one missed quarterly distribution can hand the asset's timing, and the common equity's upside, to the preferred investor at the worst possible moment.

Why It Matters for Your Loan

Preferred equity is often the only way to push leverage past the senior lender's ceiling on agency-financed multifamily, and it can rescue a capital stack when construction costs overrun or a refinance falls short. But its control provisions are the real price, and the difference between a patient preferred partner and an aggressive one shows up exactly when the deal is stressed. Commercial Lending Solutions matches sponsors with preferred equity providers whose remedies, return targets, and hold periods actually fit the business plan.

Preferred Equity: FAQ

Legally it is equity: an ownership interest with distribution priority, not a loan, and it holds no lien on the property and no pledge of ownership interests. Economically it can be engineered to feel like either. Soft-pay preferred that accrues unpaid returns behaves like equity, while hard-pay preferred with mandatory current payments and a fixed redemption date behaves like debt. Senior lenders focus on that substance, and preferred that looks too debt-like can violate senior loan covenants that prohibit subordinate financing.
Because mezzanine debt introduces a second secured creditor with foreclosure rights, an intercreditor agreement, and the possibility of an abrupt ownership change through a UCC sale. Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac programs generally prohibit that structure behind their loans. Preferred equity holds no lien and exercises remedies through the operating agreement, so any ownership change happens inside the borrower structure the agencies already underwrote. Even so, agencies scrutinize hard-pay preferred, and well-structured deals often include a recognition agreement defining the preferred investor's cure rights.


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