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Mavik Raises $1B for Distressed Properties

Published Jul 11, 2026
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Summary:
  • Mavik Capital Management is raising $1 billion for a new fund focused on distressed assets, named VS3.
  • The commercial real estate sector has been under pressure since the Federal Reserve began hiking rates in 2022, driving up borrowing costs and depressing property values.
  • CEO Vik Uppal describes the resulting market dislocation as a "compelling opportunity set" for investors with capital.

Commercial real estate is in a painful spot. Borrowing costs shot up and property values fell. But that pain creates a rare opening for investors who have cash.

Mavik Capital Management, an asset manager, recognizes this opportunity and is aiming to raise $1 billion to participate. The new fund, VS3, will acquire distressed properties and the loans tied to them.

The Big Picture: Why Distressed Assets Are Piling Up

The problem started in 2022. The Federal Reserve raised its key interest rate by 4.25 percentage points that year alone. That made borrowing much more expensive.

Many of these properties were financed with loans that are now coming due, and refinancing at today's higher rates is often unaffordable. This looming maturity wall is expected to generate even more distressed opportunities in the coming months.

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Industry data suggests that over $1.5 trillion in commercial real estate loans are coming due by the end of 2025, creating a wave of potential defaults. Fund managers like Mavik and Starwood are positioning to acquire these assets at discounted prices, anticipating that many property owners will be forced to sell or refinance at unfavorable terms.

Property owners are in a difficult position: selling would mean accepting a significant loss, while refinancing is prohibitively expensive. That is creating a glut of assets in trouble.

Vik Uppal, Mavik's chief executive, said, "While stress doesn't always appear in headline default rates, beneath the surface there is a significant need for capital, restructurings and recapitalizations. "That dislocation is creating what we believe is an extremely compelling opportunity set"."

The rapid rise in interest rates has also depressed transaction volumes, with many properties trading at discounts of 20-30% from their peak values. This environment particularly pressures office and retail assets, where occupancy has declined sharply. Mavik intends to target properties where underlying fundamentals remain solid but the capital structure has broken, allowing the fund to acquire assets at forced-sale prices.

What VS3 Will Buy - and What It Will Avoid

Mavik is not the only firm chasing this opportunity. Last week, Starwood Capital Group secured $10 billion for a fund pursuing similar distressed real estate opportunities. That shows how big the market has become.

VS3 will invest in two main things: physical real estate properties (actual buildings and land) and commercial mortgage-backed securities. Previous Mavik funds, VS1 and VS2, financed ventures such as a gilsonite mine and The Geneva, which is the largest office-to-residential conversion in Washington, D.C.

One notable detail: Mavik will avoid artificial intelligence investments. According to its CEO, valuations in AI seem too high right now. The firm wants to stick with real estate where the dislocation is real, not hype.

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