Total Commercial and Multifamily Lending Declined 8 Percent in 2022

April 13, 2023 Commercial / Multifamily FHA Multifamily MBA Research Multifamily Press Release

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WASHINGTON, D.C. (April 13, 2023) — Total commercial real estate mortgage borrowing and lending equaled $816 billion in 2022, which is an 8 percent decrease from the record $891 billion in 2021 and a 33 percent increase from $614 billion in 2020.This is according to the Mortgage Bankers Association’s (MBA) 2022 Commercial Real Estate/Multifamily Finance Annual Origination Volume Summation.

Excluding activity from smaller and mid-sized depositories not directly captured in MBA’s survey, commercial and multifamily mortgage bankers closed $595 billion of loans in 2022 – 13 percent less than the $683.2 billion reported in 2021.

“Borrowing and lending backed by commercial and multifamily properties started 2022 strong but then dropped off because of rising interest rates, uncertainty about property values, and increased questions about the economy and some property fundamentals,” said Jamie Woodwell, MBA’s Head of Commercial Real Estate Research. “Despite the eight percent annual decline, the $816 billion in total volume was still the second highest on record. Bank lending ran against the trend, increasing by 12 percent to $409 billion.”

Woodwell continued, “A key question for 2023 is when the market will have stabilized enough for the logjam in new deal activity to break.”

Multifamily properties saw the highest volume last year, at $437 billion of total lending and $333 billion of mortgage bankers’ originations. First liens accounted for 93 percent of the mortgage bankers’ dollar volume closed.

Depositories were the leading capital source, accounting for $408 billion of total commercial/multifamily lending in 2022 and $189 billion of mortgage bankers originations. Government-sponsored enterprises (Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac) saw the second highest total volume at $128 billion, followed by life insurance company and pension funds, private label CMBS, and investor-driven lenders.