Hard Money Loans
Hard Money Loans
Hard Money Commercial Loans* Provide Businesses The Bridge Financing They Need Until They Secure Longer Term Financing, Our Hard Money Commercial Loan Programs include hard money construction loans, aka hard money commercial bridge loans are below*
Call 7 Days A Week To Learn More
1-828-380-5422
Announcement: We’ve just added some new (Non Hard Money) Attractive Commercial Mortgage Programs (Purchases and Refis).
Commercial Loans Up to $15,000,000
Down Payments As Low as 15%
Programs That Include Inventory and Equipment
Call or e-mail us with your scenarios. You can contact us 7 days a week.
A Few Highlights About Our Hard Money Commercial Loans*
We represent a group of private commercial lenders, specializing in hard money loans for commercial property acquisition and refinance. Our creative financing expertise enables us to close on these equity-based commercial hard money loans of $400,000 and up.
Hard Money Commercial Loans – Program Highlights
LOAN SIZE
$400,000 to $15,000,000+
1 – 5 years
LOAN-TO-VALUE
Up to 75%
Throughout U.S.
INTEREST RATES
8% – 14% depending on loan type, structure, risk profile
Interest only or principal amortization
DSCR
Minimum 1.2
EARLY REPAYMENT
Case-by-Case basis
CLOSING POINTS
2 – 5%
SECURITY
1st Mortgage Lien. Additional collateral on case-by-case basis
PROPERTY TYPES
Multi-family, mixed-use, office, warehouse, retail, industrial, hospitality, and special use properties considered
EXPENSE DEPOSIT
Initial Underwriting: No charge
Acceptance of Term Sheet: Third Party Expense Deposit
Acceptance of Closing Letter: Legal/Closing Expense Deposit
Unused expense deposits refundable
The U.S. Commercial Mortgage Market Shrinks Again to 3.31 Trillion dollars: The size of the commercial mortgage loan market in the U.S. continued its shrinkage in the first quarter, to $3.31 trillion from $3.34 trillion at the end of last year, according to the Mortgage Bankers Association’s analysis of Federal Reserve Board flow-of-funds data. The commercial mortgage market has now shrunk for 5 straight quarters and is now about the same size it was in late 2007. Every major investor group, except the housing-finance agencies, private pensions, savings institutions and government entities, saw a drop in their mortgage portfolios. Commercial banking groups saw an $18.9 billion, or 1.3% reduction in the size of their portfolios, to $1.49 trillion. They are still the largest holders of loans, accounting for 44.9% of the entire universe, down from 45.1% at the end of the fourth quarter. CMBS and other securitization vehicles saw their portfolio of mortgages shrink by 1.6 percent over the last quarter to $679 billion. That accounts for 20.5% of the market, down from 20.6% in the fourth quarter. Life-insurance companies, which lately have become eager to write loans but have faced tepid demand, saw their holdings fall by $4.4 billion, or 1.4%, to $301.9 billion. They now hold 9.1% of the total universe, down slightly from 9.2% at the end of last year. The housing-finance agencies, meanwhile, saw their portfolios grow by $5.8 billion, or 1.9%, to $309 billion. That represents 9.3% of the commercial mortgage market, up from 9.1% in the fourth quarter. If you look at only multifamily loans, the agencies – Fannie, Freddie and agency-backed mortgage pools – hold 36.3% of the $852.1 billion market. That market is up from $849 billion in the 4th quarter – proving that the agencies continue to actively write loans. “Low levels of commercial mortgage financing mean that property investors are paying off and paying down more in mortgage loans than they are taking out,” explained Jamie Woodwell, VP of commercial real estate research at the MBA.