Contact Us
News

Nuveen Closes Debt Fund Above Target With $650M In Commitments

Placeholder

Nuveen’s first closed-end fund offering in CRE credit is officially in the books, with total equity commitments coming in $150M above its initial $500M target. 

The U.S. Strategic Debt Fund is a closed-end, value-add fund focused on originating senior, floating-rate loans that are backed by traditional real estate assets in need of an operational, physical or financial reorganization. 

Nuveen plans to swoop in where traditional lenders have pulled back, Nuveen’s head of real estate debt for the Americas, Jason Hernandez, said in a press release.

Over 40% of the fund has already been committed, Hernandez told PERE Credit

Investors such as foreign and domestic pension funds, as well as insurers, helped the fund blow past its goal to raise $650M. The fund received a $150M commitment from the general account of Nuveen’s parent, the Teachers Insurance and Annuity Association of America. Goldman Sachs Asset Management is another contributor. 

Nuveen has $139B overall in assets under management. The company’s debt platform manages $44B in global commercial real estate debt, and it originates about $4.7B annually.

This is the U.S. Strategic Debt Fund’s second close. After its initial April 2024 close, Nuveen deployed $1.3B in commitments across 19 investments. The portfolio consists of 60% multifamily and 40% industrial properties across 16 markets. Dallas-Fort Worth accounts for 18% of total asset value, with Atlanta and Orlando accounting for 10% and 9%, respectively. 

Nuveen plans to kickstart fundraising for the fund's successor by the second half of 2026. 

Even though traditional lenders have pulled back from CRE lending over the past two years, they haven’t gone away completely, and Nuveen's fund has closed in an environment that's becoming increasingly competitive — even for the third-largest institutional private real estate owner in the world. 

After wiping away much of their nonperforming commercial debt, banks are stepping up to the plate again. Banks upped commercial real estate issuance by 85% this year compared to last year to the tune of $227B. They are joined by private debt funds, which have been a dominant force for the past few years.