Acquisition Financing

Kismet Kapital structures and places acquisition financing for commercial real estate nationwide — sourcing senior debt and complementary structured capital across asset classes.

Typical Leverage
60–75% LTV
Typical Term
5–10 years (stabilized) / 1–3 years (transitional)
Recourse
Non-recourse standard for stabilized; selective recourse for transitional
Initial Read
Within 48 hours

Overview

Acquisition financing covers the senior layer of capital used to purchase income-producing CRE — sourced through banks, life companies, agencies, CMBS, debt funds, and private credit depending on profile.

Kismet Kapital maintains direct relationships with banks, life companies, agencies, debt funds, CMBS desks, and private credit groups across the U.S. Capital is sourced based on asset, business plan, and sponsor profile.

Underwriting focuses on in-place income, sponsor track record, market fundamentals, and the strength of the business plan. Capital structures are tailored to the specific risk profile of each transaction.

Financing challenges

  • Sizing acquisition proceeds against in-place income, projected stabilization, and exit strategy.
  • Engineering a capital stack that aligns sponsor economics with lender constraints.
  • Negotiating commercial terms — pricing, recourse, reserves, and covenants — to protect the business plan.

Capital solutions

  • Stabilized multifamily and industrial
  • Value-add retail and office
  • Portfolio acquisitions
  • Recapitalization buyouts
  • Direct outreach to relevant institutional lenders and equity partners.
  • Term-sheet negotiation, structuring, and execution support through closing.

Frequently asked questions

What is a acquisition loan?

Acquisition financing covers the senior layer of capital used to purchase income-producing CRE — sourced through banks, life companies, agencies, CMBS, debt funds, and private credit depending on profile.

What leverage and term are typical for acquisition financing?

Acquisition Financing typically size to 60–75% LTV with terms of 5–10 years (stabilized) / 1–3 years (transitional). Recourse is non-recourse standard for stabilized; selective recourse for transitional.

How long does a typical CRE financing process take?

Bridge and structured executions typically close in 30–60 days. Permanent and agency debt typically close in 45–75 days. Construction and JV equity transactions often run 60–120 days depending on diligence scope.

What documents are required to start?

An initial review typically requires a deal summary or OM, sponsor bio, sources & uses, an underwriting model or rent roll, and any third-party reports available. Kismet Kapital returns a structured read within 48 hours.

How does Kismet Kapital approach acquisition financing for commercial real estate?

Kismet Kapital builds a tailored capital plan, identifies the most likely capital sources, runs a competitive process, and negotiates commercial terms — staying engaged through structuring, documentation, and closing.

Engage

Ready to structure your next deal?

Submit your transaction or schedule an introduction call. Confidential review within 48 hours.

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