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March 23, 2026.
Borrowers still compare quotes. In today’s market, though, that is no longer the only question shaping a deal. The more important one is often simpler: who is actually going to get this done?
The question is fair. When underwriting slows down, documentation becomes heavier, and lender appetite can shift mid-process, pricing is only one part of the equation. What matters just as much is whether the deal will hold together from quote to close.
That is the shift. Borrowers are not just comparing terms. They are judging how much confidence they have in the process behind them. Increasingly, that confidence is worth more than a few basis points.
A Tighter Credit Backdrop
That instinct did not come from nowhere. Credit is available, but it comes with more scrutiny and less forgiveness than it did a year ago.
More than $1.5 trillion in commercial real estate loans are set to mature by the end of 2026, much of it originated when rates were lower and terms more forgiving. Extensions bought time but did not fix the underlying math, and that debt is now cycling back to lenders with less flexibility than before. The FDIC’s fourth quarter 2025 banking profile showed CRE and multifamily portfolios still well above pre-pandemic averages. The Federal Reserve’s most recent loan officer survey confirms it: CRE lending standards moved to the tighter end of their historical range in 2025 and have not come back down, with construction and land development being the one category where banks expect to tighten further.
None of this means capital has disappeared. It means capital has gotten more selective. The borrower sitting across from you is not just comparing your rate to the next offer. They are asking a harder question: if I go with you, is this actually going to close?
Translation: you are not competing in a market where the job is to find the best quote. You are competing in a market where the job is to de-risk the process.
That is why certainty of execution has become the real differentiator.
What “Certainty of Execution” Actually Means
Elite originators treat execution as a standard, not a goal.
Certainty of execution is the borrower’s assurance that:
- the deal will survive underwriting, conditions, and closing logistics,
- the timeline will be held, not hoped for,
- surprises will be handled quickly and professionally, and
- the loan that gets signed is the loan that gets funded.
You can pitch certainty to a point. But past that point, you have to manufacture it.
The Three C’s: Clarity, Control, Contingency
Every deal that falls apart can be traced back to a failure in one of three areas.
Clarity. The deal tells a complete story, or it doesn’t. If the underwriter has to build the narrative themselves, you’ve already handed someone else the pen.
Control. Deals do not stay on track by accident. Someone has to own the timeline, own the communication, and set the expectations before the process does it for them. The process has no empathy.
Contingency. Hope is not a structure. If your deal has one path to close and that path hits a wall, your borrower is trapped. A credible Plan B is not a luxury. It is how you keep leverage when everything shifts.
Lose clarity and the deal that comes back is not the deal you sent. Lose control and the borrower starts shopping. Lose contingency and one surprise becomes a crisis.
The best originators do not just know this. They build for it every time.
Seven Moves That Build Confidence and Win Deals
These moves do not require a better rate. They require a better operating system.
- Package the deal like a credit committee will read it
Your submission should already answer the obvious questions:
- What is the asset and the business plan, and why does it work?
- Who is the sponsor, and why are they credible?
- What are the real risks, and what mitigants are in place?
Do not wait for questions. Answer them first, because the alternative is letting someone else frame the deal.
- Pre-underwrite before you shop
Pressure-test the deal yourself before sending anything out:
- Leverage realism
- Liquidity
- Sponsorship experience
- Property sensitivity
- Appraisal risk
- Exit strategy
Know your blind spots before the lender finds them for you. Problems discovered early are cheap. Problems discovered in underwriting are expensive. Problems discovered at closing are catastrophic.
- Control expectations before the lender does
The borrower should never be surprised by how long a step takes, what a conditions list looks like, or what normal friction feels like in a deal. The originators who keep borrowers calm are not the ones with fewer problems. They are the ones who told the borrower what to expect before the problems showed up.
- Build a lender champion and keep a real Plan B alive
Find someone inside the lender who wants the deal to close as much as you do. Sell them on the project. Two people pushing for the same outcome are better than one.
Keep a credible second option warm. It should be a real lender with real terms who can move if the primary falls through.
- Communicate like an operator
Silence is not neutral in this market. It is a negative. Every gap between updates is a gap the borrower fills with doubt. The rule is simple:
- Respond fast
- Give timing even when there is no new information
- Make every update answer four things: where we are, what is next, who owns it, and when
- Treat perfection as risk control
A sloppy email creates risk. An incomplete package gives the lender a reason to pause.
Perfection in this business is not about appearance. It is operational. Every document, communication, and submission should leave no room for error.
- Win the post-term sheet phase
Most deals do not die at a term sheet. They die in conditions. The weeks between signing and closing are where execution either holds or falls apart. Win that phase with:
- A visible closing checklist
- Clear condition ownership
- Frequent touchpoints during critical weeks
- A solutions-first approach when something goes sideways
Borrower confidence is not built when you hand them a term sheet. It is built when you get them to the other side of it.
A Quick Execution Scorecard
Ask yourself:
- Would my package be forwardable to a credit committee without explanation?
- Do I have a real Plan B, or just hope?
- Are my updates proactive, or does the borrower have to ask for status?
- If the deal slips, do I know exactly why and what I will do within 24 hours?
If the answers are fuzzy, your execution is fuzzy. Borrowers can sense it.
Closing Thought
Rates still matter. They always will. This is not an argument against competitive pricing.
It is an argument for recognizing what actually decides a deal in this market. The borrower’s real cost is not a few extra basis points. It is doubt. The originator who removes that doubt does not just close the deal. They become the first call next time.
That is why certainty of execution is the new pricing.
Shaun Ashkenazy
Founder & Managing Partner, Lendyx
Shaun Ashkenazy is a serial entrepreneur in real estate finance and the Founder & Managing Partner of Lendyx, a direct private lender. He originates and structures bridge, construction, and permanent debt for real estate investors and developers, with a focus on complex transactions and luxury spec home developments where speed and certainty matter. He also leads Onyx Funding and Novyx Capital.


