
🚨U.S. banks modified $39.3 billion in commercial real estate loans as of March 2025 — an 86% YoY surge — underscoring the “extend-and-pretend” approach sweeping the industry [Source: CREDaily]. By granting maturity extensions and interest deferrals, lenders are postponing losses and buying time for asset fundamentals to recover. Office and retail loans dominate these workouts, with roughly 40% of CMBS loans in those sectors failing to pay off at maturity [Source: Gerson Law / Trepp]. Regulators currently tolerate such strategies as stabilizers, but the accumulation of deferred risk could weigh on 2026–2028 refinancing capacity.

CRE Loan Modifications: $39.3 B (Mar 2025), +86% YoY — [Source: CREDaily].
CMBS Maturity Misses (2020–2025): 34% of $133 B sample — [Source: Gerson Law / Trepp].
Willis Tower Loan DSCR: 1.32×, 83.1% leased — [Source: CREDaily].
Bank Modified Loans Share: <1% of total — [Source: St. Louis Fed].

Loan Performance. Most modified loans remain current under eased terms, but DSCR cushions are thinning. Interest-only extensions preserve cash flow yet slow amortization, raising 2028 refi pressure.
Demand Dynamics. Office and retail NOI volatility keeps credit metrics fragile; industrial and multifamily loans still refinance normally. Occupancy durability, not cap-rate compression, drives mod viability.
Asset Strategies. Owners use extensions to execute leasing drives and capex triage. Typical reserve: 5–10% of loan for TI/LC and carry.
Capital Markets. Debt funds fill gaps as banks retrench, offering SOFR + 600 bps stretch-senior loans. CMBS “2.0” programs forming to refinance extended paper.

Rates steady but real estate credit risk rising.
Office / retail under strain; industrial resilient.
Lenders favor maturity mods over foreclosure.
2026–2028 refi wall looms; watch reserve adequacy.
🛠 Operator’s Lens
Refi. Model 1–2 yr extensions; test 6–6.5% interest-only DSCR.
Value-Add. Deploy capex only with clear lease-up ROI; hold 10% contingency.
Development. Stress pro forma debt yield ≥ 10%; assume delayed take-out.
Lender POV. Banks prize transparency + cash contribution; mods approved faster with updated appraisals and fresh equity.

Regulatory Inflection: Supervisors may tighten modified-loan capital rules in 2026 if losses mount.
Liquidity Flow: Debt-fund origination rising; CMBS spreads steady but selective.
Risk: Weak NOI recovery could turn “extensions” into 2027-2028 defaults.

CREDaily — “Banks Lean on Extend and Pretend as CRE Loan Troubles Mount” (Oct 2025). https://www.credaily.com GlobeSt — CRE Loan Modifications Trend (Oct 2025). https://www.globest.com Gerson Law / Trepp — CMBS Loan Payoff Rates 2020–2025 (Apr 2025). https://www.gersonlaw.com Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis — CRE Loan Modification Data (Q2 2025). https://www.stlouisfed.org

