| dc.description.abstract | The evolution of capital structure in U.S. commercial real estate has been shaped by historical and institutional events, including financial crises, regulatory reforms, and shifts in capital market participation. Within this context, the mezzanine tranche has been the most adaptive element of the capital stack, continually reshaping itself to meet shifting market conditions, bridge funding shortfalls, and broaden the range of capital providers. At the same time, this evolution has introduced new type of risks and increased the need for intercreditor alignment and more structured agreement terms. This thesis identifies the inherent risks associated with mezzanine lender’s position in the capital stack and its underlying collateral structure. It further examines the contractual and structural mechanisms that have been developed to protect investor rights and mitigate these risks. Drawing on loan documents, case studies, and professional interviews, the thesis illustrates how these mechanisms operate, particularly in distressed scenarios, and discusses their practical implications. Specifically, it examines (1) the historical and institutional drivers and outcomes of market evolution including various capital stack instruments; (2) the contractual features of mezzanine loans through text-based analysis of loan agreements; (3) lessons from defaults or stress scenarios in selected case studies; and (4) the contractual mechanisms designed to protect investors and mitigate risk, followed by the development of a risk-protection matrix to support the systematic assessment of risk–return trade-offs. By integrating historical analysis, case studies, and contract-level evaluation, this research aims to provide a framework for identifying underlying risks in investment opportunities and supporting sound investment decision-making through the assessment of reasonable risk-adjusted returns. | |