Canadian Commercial Real Estate Lending
A working model of the market Cameron Stephens operates in. Read this before any other doc.
What CRE lending is
Commercial real estate (CRE) lending is the business of advancing capital — secured by income-producing or to-be-built real property — to sponsors (developers and owners) who use the money to buy, build, refinance, or reposition real estate. The lender's return is interest plus fees; the lender's risk is that the property can't be sold, refinanced, or operated well enough to repay the loan. Almost everything in the industry — underwriting, structuring, pricing, monitoring, workout — is a variation on managing that risk.
The two things to internalise from day one:
- CRE debt is not residential mortgage debt. A house has a salaried borrower and a comp-driven valuation. A 200-unit purpose-built rental, a half-built condo tower, or a logistics facility has cash-flow risk, construction risk, lease-up risk, market risk, and sponsor-execution risk. The discipline is closer to corporate credit than to consumer lending.
- Almost every CRE loan is structured, not commoditised. Even where the product looks standard ("a 75% LTC construction loan"), the covenants, advance mechanics, recourse package, intercreditor terms, and exit conditions are negotiated deal-by-deal. This is why headcount-per-dollar-funded in CRE lending is much higher than in retail mortgage, and why workflow automation has been slow to penetrate.
The Canadian market
Three structural facts make Canadian CRE lending distinct from the US market that most lendtech is built for:
| Fact | Implication |
|---|---|
| The Big Five dominate. RBC, TD, BMO, Scotia, CIBC plus National Bank originate the majority of CRE debt by volume. | Alternative lenders compete on speed, structuring flexibility, and deals the banks won't touch — not on price. Cameron Stephens lives here. |
| CMHC backstops multi-family. Government insurance (NHA-MBS, MLI / MLI Select) makes purpose-built rental debt extremely cheap when you can get it. | Any multi-family deal is shaped by the question "is this CMHC-eligible, and if so, when does it qualify?" Non-CMHC multi-family lending is essentially a bridge to CMHC takeout. |
| A small institutional LP pool. A handful of pensions (CPPIB, CDPQ, OTPP, OMERS, IMCO, AIMCo), life cos (Manulife, Sun Life, Canada Life), and bank-owned asset managers fund most of the non-bank capital. | Tech, reporting, and ESG standards are largely dictated by what these LPs ask for. Vendor decisions ripple through investor reporting. |
Rough order of magnitude: the Canadian CRE debt market is estimated at $400–500 B outstanding, with annual originations in the $80–100 B range (varies sharply with the rate cycle). Non-bank lenders (MICs, mortgage funds, private lenders, life cos on the non-insured side) collectively account for roughly 15–25% of the stock and a higher share of construction/transitional/bridge originations.
Asset classes
Every CRE deal you'll see slots into one of these buckets. The underwriting, valuation method, and exit story differ for each.
| Class | What it is | Primary cash-flow driver | 2026 vibe |
|---|---|---|---|
| Multi-family | Purpose-built rental apartments | In-place & market rents, vacancy, opex | Hot. CMHC-eligible. Supply-demand favourable in most metros. |
| Condo (construction) | For-sale residential towers, low-rise infill | Pre-sale velocity and price, build cost | Stressed in GTA/GVA. Sponsor failures, project re-traded to lenders. |
| Industrial | Logistics, warehouse, light manufacturing, last-mile | Rent PSF, clear height, location to highways/airports | Cooling from a peak; still favoured asset class. |
| Retail | Grocery-anchored centres, power centres, urban high street | Anchor covenant, tenant mix, foot traffic | Bifurcated. Grocery-anchored bid; secondary retail discounted. |
| Office | Class A/B/C office buildings | Lease rollover, tenant credit, sublet supply | Distressed. Most lenders have a hard "no" on net new exposure outside trophy assets. |
| Land | Raw or serviced land, often pre-zoning | Path to entitlement, comp sales | Risky. Pure land loans usually short-dated, high-rate. |
| Hospitality | Hotels, resorts, short-term-rental conversions | RevPAR, brand, flag | Recovering post-COVID; specialist underwriting required. |
| Self-storage / data centres / seniors | Specialty | Class-specific | Smaller in CS's book, but rising institutional interest. |
Operator When an originator says "75% LTC, $42 million, 24 months" the first three questions are: what asset class, where, and who's the sponsor. Everything else flows from that.
Loan products
| Product | Use | Term | LTV / LTC | Repaid by |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Term mortgage | Stabilised, income-producing asset | 3–10 yrs (5 typical) | 55–75% LTV | Refinance or sale at maturity |
| Construction loan | Fund vertical build | 18–36 mo | 65–80% LTC | Conversion to term, CMHC takeout, condo sales |
| Bridge loan | Between events — acquisition pending lease-up, repositioning, awaiting CMHC, broken deals | 6–24 mo | 60–75% LTV (often "as-stabilised") | Stabilised refi or sale |
| Mezzanine | Slot above senior debt, below equity, to stretch LTC | Coterminous with senior | Pushes total leverage to 80–90% | Same as senior; ranks behind on default |
| Land loan | Hold land through entitlement, pre-development | 1–3 yrs | 50–65% of land value | Construction loan or sale |
| Inventory loan | Finance completed, unsold condo units | 12–24 mo | Marked to broken sales price | Unit sales |
| Preferred equity | Structured as equity but with debt-like return | Coterminous with project | n/a — equity slot | Equity waterfall |
Cameron Stephens, on the Mortgage Capital side, almost certainly plays in construction, bridge, and land — the "transitional" segments where banks are slow or absent. They are unlikely to be writing many vanilla 5-year term loans against stabilised office, where bank pricing is unbeatable.
The capital stack
Every deal funds against a layered capital stack. Lower in the stack = first to be repaid = lowest risk = lowest return. Higher in the stack = last to be paid = highest risk = highest return. Knowing where you sit dictates pricing, covenants, and remedies on default.
Yields are illustrative for early-2026 Canadian market; actuals move with the GoC curve and deal-specific risk.
Lender taxonomy
| Type | Cost of capital | Sweet spot | Examples |
|---|---|---|---|
| Schedule I banks (Big Six) | Cheapest (deposit-funded) | Stabilised assets, prime sponsors, CMHC takeout, large syndicates | RBC, TD, BMO, Scotia, CIBC, National |
| Schedule II banks | Low | Niche / foreign-sponsor / specific verticals | HSBC (now RBC), ICICI, etc. |
| Credit unions | Low/medium | Regional, mid-market, relationship-driven | Vancity, Meridian, Desjardins |
| Life insurance cos | Low | Long-duration term loans against trophy assets | Manulife, Sun Life, Canada Life, Empire Life |
| CMHC-approved lenders | Very low (insured) | Multi-family construction & term | First National, MCAN, CMLS, Equitable Bank, banks |
| Mortgage Investment Corps (MICs) | Medium | Bridge, transitional, mid-leverage | Atrium, Firm Capital, Timbercreek, Trez Capital, MCAN MIC |
| Debt funds / mortgage funds | Medium | Construction, mezz, custom-structured | Romspen, Trez, Fiera RE, KingSett Mortgage, Cameron Stephens |
| Private lenders / family offices | High | Hard-to-place, short-dated, distressed | Hundreds; opaque market |
| Foreign capital | Variable | Large tickets, trophy assets, opportunistic | US debt funds (Blackstone Real Estate Debt, Madison, Mesa West), sovereigns |
Regulation
The regulators and frameworks you will hear named in the building:
| Body / framework | What it does | Why it matters to CS |
|---|---|---|
| OSFI Office of the Superintendent of Financial Institutions |
Federal prudential regulator for banks, life cos, federally regulated trust cos | Does not regulate Cameron Stephens directly (CS is a manager, not a federally regulated lender), but OSFI rules on banks/life cos dictate what bank lenders can/can't do — which is the source of opportunity for non-bank lenders |
| Guideline B-20 | Residential mortgage underwriting (stress test, etc.) | Mostly residential; touches CRE only via multi-unit lending at federally regulated lenders |
| Guideline B-21 | Residential mortgage insurance underwriting — for CMHC and private insurers | Shapes CMHC's appetite |
| Capital Adequacy Requirements (CAR) | Risk weights for bank exposures (Basel III) | The reason banks like CMHC-insured paper (~zero RWA) and dislike construction loans (high RWA). Non-bank lenders fill that gap. |
| CMHC | Crown corp providing mortgage insurance and securitisation programs (NHA-MBS, CMB) | Source of cheap takeout debt for multi-family. MLI Select ties premium discounts to affordability/accessibility/energy criteria — huge originations driver. |
| Provincial securities commissions | Regulate any retail fund offering (OSC in Ontario, BCSC, ASC) | Cameron Stephens' private investor capital is offered under prospectus exemptions (accredited investor, offering memorandum) — disclosure, KYC, reporting all flow from this |
| FINTRAC | AML / KYC / sanctions reporting | Applies to mortgage administrators; new requirements rolled in 2024–2025 for source-of-funds on mortgages |
| Provincial mortgage broker / administrator licensing | FSRA (ON), BCFSA (BC), RECA (AB), etc. | Provincial licensing for mortgage brokerage and administration activity |
| IFRS 9 ECL | Expected credit loss accounting standard | How CS books loan-loss provisions; drives reporting cadence and risk-grading discipline |
The biggest reg conversation in Canadian CRE right now is CMHC tightening (MLI Select scoring being made harder) combined with the federal housing supply push (Apartment Construction Loan Program / ACLP being expanded). The two move in opposite directions and a Director of AI/Tech will be asked to model their combined impact on origination pipeline before too long. Worth understanding even though it doesn't sound like a tech topic.
Where Cameron Stephens fits
Best inference from the public footprint:
| Dimension | Likely position |
|---|---|
| Lender type | Non-bank specialty debt manager + equity sponsor; somewhere between a MIC and a private debt fund manager |
| Primary products | Construction loans, bridge loans, structured senior, possibly mezz; equity JV with developers on ground-up |
| Ticket size | Probably $10M–$150M, occasionally larger via syndication |
| Asset focus | Multi-family (purpose-built rental + condo), low-rise infill, master-planned communities — public site says so explicitly |
| Geography | National — but office footprint suggests core flow is Ontario / Alberta / BC |
| Capital source | $3B institutional (likely segregated mandates from pensions/life cos) + $0.6B private (HNW, family office, accredited investors) |
| Competitive edge | 21-year sponsor relationships, structuring flexibility, speed of decision vs banks, ability to do equity AND debt in the same deal |
Confirm all of these in your first week — the public site is deliberately high-level.
Where the cycle is
Context for your day-one conversations (as of Q2 2026):
- Rate cycle. Bank of Canada has been cutting from the 2023 peak; overnight is well off the high but still above pre-2022 norms. Senior CRE pricing has compressed from the wides; construction is still well-priced for non-bank lenders.
- Condo distress in GTA/GVA. Multi-year condo presale slump; broken deals, sponsor failures, projects being re-traded to lenders. Big workout / lender-in-possession workload; opportunity for opportunistic equity.
- Multi-family supply push. Federal and provincial governments throwing capital and policy at purpose-built rental. ACLP, MLI Select, GST rebate. Banks aggressively lending against insured multi-family — but the pre-stabilisation bridge is where non-banks like CS earn.
- Office repricing. Class B/C office values down materially from 2019. Some converting to residential; most lenders not playing offence.
- Capital inflows to private credit. Pensions and life cos continuing to allocate to private CRE debt; competitive pressure on non-bank manager fees and on origination quality.
None of this is permanent — it is the backdrop against which deals are being underwritten today. Re-read this section in six months.