Industrial is a resilient asset class, so most industrial loan stress is financial — a rate reset or maturity the property can't refinance — rather than fundamental. That often makes for a clean, well-priced sale: the asset performs, the debt simply doesn't pencil at current rates.
Demand for warehouse and logistics space has held up; when an industrial credit is impaired, it is usually because a floating-rate or maturing loan can't refinance at today's rates, not because the building is failing. A paying borrower who simply can't refinance can support a strong sale price.
Send the rent roll and status; a buyer prices to in-place income and the path to a refinance or sale, then closes all-cash. Standing Bid Capital is a direct principal buyer of CRE loans, discounted payoffs, and REO — $250K–$25M, all-cash, no re-trade, confidential. Request a confidential review.
Yes — given the asset class's strength, buyers actively acquire industrial credits and price them to performance.
Yes — lenders sell performing and non-core industrial loans for portfolio and concentration reasons; they often price near balance.
$250,000 to $25 million per loan or asset, nationwide.