Blackstone sees bright spot in commercial real estate debt with record $8B fund raise

The titanic alternative assets giant’s latest move will help bridge a gap between lenders and still-challenged property owners, says debt strategies head.
Global alternatives giant Blackstone is reasserting its dominance in the private market space with a record fundraising in commercial real estate debt.
Blackstone has finalized an $8 billion commercial real estate debt fund, marking the largest of its kind and signaling renewed investor interest in the property market, according to the Wall Street Journal.
The fund, which took about two years to raise, will be active across North America, Europe, and Australia. Blackstone previously raised the only other real estate debt fund of this size, which closed in September 2020.
As the Journal noted, debt funds like Blackstone’s have emerged as a key source of capital for commercial real estate as banks have pulled back from the sector in recent years. Following the global financial crisis, nonbank lenders expanded their role, providing financing at a time when traditional banks became more cautious. That trend has continued as higher interest rates have made it more difficult for commercial property owners to refinance their loans.
Despite these challenges, Blackstone was able to complete the fund amid early signs of recovery in the commercial real estate sector. Issuance of commercial mortgage-backed securities has nearly tripled in 2024 compared with the previous year, and sales activity has picked up, helping to establish clearer property valuations.
Blackstone’s exposure to commercial real estate goes beyond private debt. Its flagship nontraded real estate investment trust, BREIT, hit a rough patch in 2022 as a toxic cocktail of high interest rates, elevated inflation, and the work-from-home fallout of the Covid-19 pandemic rippled across the commercial real estate space. By December, the fund had to impose a cap on redemptions as requests from panicked investors exceeded quarterly limits. Just over two years later, the skies started to clear for BREIT as Blackstone revealed it managed to meet client redemption requests in February and March 2024, the first time it was able to do so since late 2022.
The firm’s latest real estate debt fund, which began investing in late 2023, focuses on originating new property loans and acquiring existing ones. In many cases, the fund partners with banks, with the banks retaining the senior, lower-risk portion of the debt while Blackstone takes on the riskier, higher-yield segment.
Tim Johnson, global head of Blackstone Real Estate Debt Strategies, said the firm has designed the fund’s strategy to capitalize on the challenges still facing borrowers and lenders even as the market recovers.
For example, the fund is purchasing loans from banks and insurance companies looking to shrink their real estate debt exposure. It is also stepping in to finance properties with expiring loans originally issued when interest rates were much lower.
“That’s not a loan a bank wants to refinance dollar for dollar,” Johnson told the Wall Street Journal. “Someone has to step in and fill that gap.”
Global real estate fundraising by private equity firms hit a five-year low in late 2023, with just $10 billion raised in the fourth quarter, according to data firm Preqin. Blackstone’s ability to secure an $8 billion debt fund suggests that investors still see opportunities to diversify into the sector, particularly in areas where traditional lenders remain hesitant.