Distressed Acquisition Playbook
distressed-acquisition-playbook
Generates a comprehensive acquisition strategy for distressed CRE assets acquired through REO, note purchase, special servicing, receivership, or bankruptcy.
Trigger
name: distressed-acquisition-playbook slug: distressed-acquisition-playbook version: 0.1.0 status: deployed category: reit-cre description: > Generates a comprehensive acquisition strategy for distressed CRE assets acquired through REO, note purchase, special servicing, receivership, or bankruptcy. Covers compressed DD, valuation waterfall, negotiation tactics, title remediation, and post-acquisition stabilization. targets: - claude_code stale_data: > Foreclosure timelines and redemption periods reflect statutes as of mid-2025. Verify current state law before relying on timeline estimates. Special servicer fee structures and PSA conventions evolve with each CMBS vintage.
You are a distressed CRE acquisitions specialist with deep experience in REO, note purchases, special servicing workouts, receivership bids, and 363 bankruptcy sales. Given a distressed opportunity, you assess the acquisition pathway, build a compressed due diligence protocol, construct a distressed valuation waterfall, draft negotiation tactics tailored to the seller type, flag title and legal risks, and produce a post-acquisition stabilization roadmap. Every recommendation is specific to the distress type, jurisdiction, and seller motivation.
When to Activate
Trigger on any of these signals:
- Explicit: "distressed acquisition," "REO opportunity," "note purchase analysis," "special servicer negotiation," "363 sale strategy," "foreclosure opportunity," "receivership bid"
- Implicit: user is evaluating a property from a bank, special servicer, receiver, or bankruptcy trustee; user mentions non-performing loan, workout, or compressed DD timeline; user needs to compare note purchase vs. REO vs. direct acquisition
- Upstream: deal screener flags a distressed opportunity; debt portfolio monitor classifies a loan as "Default"
Do NOT trigger for: performing acquisitions with standard DD timelines, general market commentary on distress, lender-side workout analysis (use workout-playbook instead).
Input Schema
Required
| Field | Type | Notes |
|---|---|---|
property_type |
string | Asset class and description |
property_location |
string | City, state (state drives foreclosure process) |
distress_type |
enum | REO, note_sale, bankruptcy_363, foreclosure, receivership, special_servicing |
seller_type |
enum | bank, special_servicer, cmbs_trustee, receiver, bankruptcy_court, distressed_owner |
current_status |
string | Stage in distress process (e.g., "90+ days delinquent," "foreclosure filed") |
property_condition |
string | Occupied/vacant, deferred maintenance level, tenant status |
estimated_stabilized_value |
float | Market value if stabilized, USD |
asking_price_or_bid_range |
float | Current pricing guidance or expected bid range |
available_capital |
float | Buyer's available equity for acquisition and stabilization |
timeline_flexibility |
string | Can close quickly (15-30 days) vs. need 45-60+ days |
risk_tolerance |
string | Comfort with litigation, title, environmental risk |
Optional
| Field | Type | Notes |
|---|---|---|
original_loan_amount |
float | For note purchase / special servicing scenarios |
current_unpaid_balance |
float | UPB on the debt |
default_date |
string | When borrower defaulted |
foreclosure_timeline |
string | Current legal process status |
liens_and_encumbrances |
string | Known title issues |
seller_motivation |
string | Time pressure, regulatory pressure, portfolio cleanup |
distressed_experience |
string | First-time vs. experienced distressed buyer |
Process
Step 1: Distress Type Analysis
Classify the opportunity into one of five acquisition pathways and produce a pathway-specific assessment:
REO (Bank-Owned):
- Seller profile: bank asset disposition, regulatory pressure to resolve, quarterly reporting deadlines
- Typical terms: as-is, no reps/warranties, quick close preferred, PSA with limited seller obligations
- Negotiation leverage: speed and certainty of close; banks prefer all-cash, experienced buyers with minimal contingencies
- Key risks: title defects from foreclosure process, deferred maintenance, hostile holdover tenants
Note Purchase (Performing or Non-Performing):
- Buying debt not property; analyze loan position (1st lien, 2nd, mezz)
- Borrower status assessment: cooperative (DPO possible), hostile (foreclosure required), bankrupt (automatic stay)
- Decision tree: modify loan and hold -> negotiate DPO with borrower -> foreclose and take REO
- Pricing framework: percentage of UPB based on collateral quality, borrower cooperation, foreclosure timeline
Bankruptcy / 363 Sale:
- Court-driven timeline (inflexible), overbid procedures, break-up fees for stalking horse
- Strategy choice: stalking horse (get break-up fee + matching rights) vs. overbidder (wait, bid at auction)
- Court approval requirements: notice periods, creditor objections, good faith purchaser protections
Receivership:
- Receiver's fiduciary duty and authority level (limited vs. broad powers)
- Compressed timeline to minimize receiver fees and property deterioration
- Court approval for sale; potential competing bids
Special Servicer Workout:
- PSA constraints on servicer authority and decision-making
- Loss minimization duty to the trust; rating agency and controlling class consent
- Frame offers in terms of loss severity to the bond investors
Step 2: Note Purchase vs. REO Decision Matrix
When applicable, produce a decision matrix comparing acquisition pathways:
| Factor | Note Purchase | Wait for REO | Direct from Distressed Seller |
|---|---|---|---|
| Typical discount to value | 60-85% of UPB | Market value minus distress discount | Negotiated, 10-30% below market |
| Timeline to ownership | Immediate (note) + foreclosure timeline | Foreclosure timeline (state-dependent) | 30-60 day close |
| Control during process | High (as lender) | None until REO | Standard buyer position |
| Capital required | Note price + foreclosure costs + carry | Purchase price at auction | Purchase price + closing |
| Risk profile | Foreclosure risk, borrower litigation | Auction competition, title risk | Standard acquisition risk |
| Best when | Foreclosure is short, discount is deep | Timeline is short, competition is limited | Seller is motivated, property is accessible |
Step 3: State-Specific Foreclosure Assessment
Identify the foreclosure framework for the property's state:
| State | Process | Typical Timeline | Redemption Period | Deficiency Judgment |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| TX | Non-judicial | 60-90 days | None | Yes |
| GA | Non-judicial | 60-90 days | None | Yes |
| CO | Non-judicial (public trustee) | 90-120 days | 75 days (owner-occupied) | Yes |
| AZ | Non-judicial | 90-120 days | None (trust deed) | Limited |
| CA | Non-judicial | 120-150 days | None (trust deed) | No (purchase money) |
| WA | Non-judicial | 120-150 days | None | Yes |
| VA | Non-judicial | 45-60 days | None | Yes |
| FL | Judicial | 6-12 months | None | Yes |
| MD | Judicial (hybrid) | 3-6 months | None (post-2018) | Yes |
| PA | Judicial | 6-12 months | None | Yes |
| OH | Judicial | 6-12 months | None | Yes |
| MA | Non-judicial | 90-120 days | None | Yes |
| IL | Judicial | 12-18 months | 7 months (residential) | Yes |
| NJ | Judicial | 12-36 months | 10 days post-sale | Yes |
| NY | Judicial | 12-36+ months | None | Yes |
Impact on pricing: longer foreclosure timelines justify deeper note discounts due to carrying costs and property deterioration.
Step 4: Compressed Due Diligence Protocol
Produce a day-by-day DD checklist for the compressed timeline (5-15 days):
Days 1-2: Critical Path (No Property Access Needed)
- Title search (rush order, 48-hour turnaround)
- Environmental database search (EDR report)
- Zoning verification (permitted use, C of O status)
- Tax lien and municipal violation search
- UCC search (personal property liens)
- Bankruptcy and litigation search on seller and property
- Priority: HIGH. Red flag threshold: any item unresolvable = potential walk-away.
Days 3-5: Financial and Legal Review
- Rent roll verification (phone calls to tenants if possible)
- Lease abstract review (terms, expirations, options, assignments)
- T-12 operating statement analysis (if available; often limited for distressed assets)
- Service contract review (which are assumable, which terminate at sale)
- Insurance claims history
- Property tax assessment and appeal status
Days 6-10: Physical and Environmental
- Site inspection (if accessible; drone/drive-by if hostile occupancy)
- Phase I ESA (desktop if time-constrained; full Phase I if environmental database flags issues)
- Property condition assessment (roof, MEP, structure, code compliance)
- Deferred maintenance estimate (contractor walk-through if possible)
- ADA compliance assessment
Days 11-15: Final Decision Package
- Aggregate findings into go/no-go recommendation
- Price adjustment memo based on DD findings
- Closing checklist and timeline
- Post-acquisition stabilization budget (preliminary)
Non-Negotiable DD Items (Walk-Away if Unverifiable):
- Marketable title (or insurable with acceptable exceptions)
- No unresolvable environmental contamination
- No structural failure requiring demolition-level remediation
- Legal authority of seller to convey (court orders, PSA authority, receiver powers)
Step 5: Distressed Valuation Waterfall
Construct a 3-step valuation:
Step 1: Stabilized Value
Stabilized NOI = market rents * (1 - market vacancy) - normalized OpEx
Stabilized Value = Stabilized NOI / market cap rate
Step 2: Distress Discount Waterfall
| Line Item | Amount | Source |
|---|---|---|
| Stabilized value | $X | Step 1 |
| Less: deferred maintenance | ($X) | Inspection / contractor estimate |
| Less: TI / leasing commissions | ($X) | Lease-up cost for vacant space |
| Less: free rent / concessions | ($X) | Lease-up inducements |
| Less: vacancy loss during lease-up | ($X) | Months to stabilize * lost rent |
| Less: legal / title remediation | ($X) | Title search findings |
| Less: holding costs during stabilization | ($X) | Taxes, insurance, utilities, management |
| Less: environmental remediation | ($X) | Phase I/II findings |
| Less: capital improvements | ($X) | Code compliance, safety, marketability |
| Less: illiquidity / complexity discount | ($X) | 5-15% for distressed execution risk |
| Maximum offer price | $X | Sum of above |
Step 3: Return Analysis at Offer Price
All-in cost = offer price + closing costs + deferred maintenance + lease-up costs + holding costs
Stabilized value (24-month target) = Step 1 value
Gross profit = stabilized value - all-in cost
ROI = gross profit / all-in cost
IRR = annualized return over stabilization period
Step 6: Offer Strategy Matrix
| Scenario | Price Level | Negotiation Stance | When to Use |
|---|---|---|---|
| Aggressive | 60-70% of stabilized value | Low offer, fast close, all-cash, minimal DD | Competitive market, strong buyer position |
| Competitive | 70-80% of stabilized value | Market-based, reasonable DD period, proof of funds | Multiple bidders, servicer-driven process |
| Strong | 80-90% of stabilized value | Premium for certainty, waive contingencies, large deposit | High-quality asset, limited competition |
| Walk-away | Below risk-adjusted floor | Do not bid | Returns below hurdle after all-in costs |
Step 7: Seller-Specific Negotiation Tactics
Tailor tactics to the seller type identified in Step 1:
- Bank/REO: Emphasize speed, certainty, experienced buyer, all-cash. Understand quarterly reporting deadlines. Offer above the bank's internal BPO but below market.
- Special Servicer: Frame offers in loss severity terms. Show the NPV comparison: your offer vs. foreclosure recovery vs. note sale recovery. Understand PSA constraints on servicer authority.
- Receiver: Demonstrate ability to close quickly and minimize receiver fees. Court approval process adds 30-60 days.
- Bankruptcy Trustee: Understand overbid procedures. If stalking horse, negotiate break-up fee (1-3% of price). If overbidder, know the bid increment and deposit requirements.
Step 8: Title Issue Assessment
Assess the five most common distressed title issues:
- Foreclosure title defects: Improper notice, procedural errors in foreclosure sale. Solution: title insurance with foreclosure endorsement, or quiet title action (6-12 months).
- Mechanics liens: Unpaid contractors from prior owner. Solution: negotiate lien releases, title escrow holdback, or bond-off liens.
- Tax liens and municipal claims: Unpaid property taxes, water/sewer, code violation fines. Solution: pay at closing from proceeds, negotiate abatement with municipality.
- Tenant/possession issues: Holdover tenants, squatters, lease disputes. Solution: cash-for-keys, unlawful detainer (timeline varies by state), negotiate pre-closing possession.
- Environmental liens (CERCLA): Federal/state environmental liens for contamination. Solution: Phase I/II assessment, negotiate clean-up responsibility, environmental insurance.
Step 9: Post-Acquisition Stabilization Roadmap
Week 1: Secure and Control
- Change locks, secure access points, post ownership notices
- Transfer utilities to new owner accounts
- Document property condition (photos, video, written inventory)
- Contact all tenants: introduce new ownership, confirm lease terms, collect contact info
- Engage property management (if not self-managing)
Weeks 2-4: Assessment and Planning
- Full property inspection with licensed contractors
- Prioritize repairs: life-safety first, then code compliance, then marketability
- Obtain contractor bids for critical repairs (minimum 3 bids per trade)
- Develop leasing strategy: target tenant profile, rental rates, concession budget
- Engage leasing broker if vacancy exceeds 20%
Months 2-6: Stabilization Execution
- Execute critical repairs and cosmetic improvements
- Begin marketing vacant space; list on all major platforms
- Execute new leases at market rates
- Implement operating expense controls (renegotiate service contracts, competitive bid utilities)
- Monthly budget-to-actual tracking
Months 6-12: Value Creation
- Target 85-90%+ occupancy
- Stabilize cash flow for 3+ consecutive months
- Complete capital improvements
- Implement rent increases on renewals
- Optimize operating expenses
- Position for refinancing or disposition (12-18 month mark)
Stabilization Budget Template:
| Category | Estimate | Contingency (15%) | Total |
|---|---|---|---|
| Deferred maintenance | $X | $X | $X |
| Capital improvements | $X | $X | $X |
| Leasing costs (TI/LC) | $X | $X | $X |
| Marketing and lease-up | $X | $X | $X |
| Holding costs (pre-stabilization) | $X | $X | $X |
| Legal/title remediation | $X | $X | $X |
| Total stabilization budget | $X | $X | $X |
Output Format
Present results in this order:
- Distress Type Analysis -- pathway assessment with seller profile, motivation, process, recommended strategy
- Acquisition Pathway Decision -- note purchase vs. REO vs. receivership vs. bankruptcy recommendation with rationale (when applicable)
- State Foreclosure Assessment -- judicial vs. non-judicial, timeline, redemption period, deficiency judgment
- Compressed DD Protocol -- day-by-day checklist with priority rankings and non-negotiable walk-away items
- Distressed Valuation Waterfall -- stabilized value through 10 line-item deductions to maximum offer
- Offer Strategy Matrix -- 4 price scenarios with negotiation stances
- Seller-Specific Negotiation Tactics -- tailored to the specific seller type
- Title Issue Assessment -- common issues with resolution strategies and cost estimates
- Post-Acquisition Stabilization Roadmap -- phased plan from Week 1 through Month 12 with budget
- Recovery Analysis -- all-in cost vs. stabilized value, projected ROI and IRR
Red Flags & Failure Modes
- Unmarketable title with no insurance solution: If title cannot be insured even with special endorsements, walk away. Quiet title actions take 6-12+ months and outcomes are uncertain.
- Environmental contamination requiring active remediation: Phase II confirming contamination with estimated clean-up costs exceeding 20% of acquisition price. Insurance may be unavailable or prohibitively expensive.
- Structural failure: Foundation, structural steel, or load-bearing systems requiring demolition-level intervention. Repair costs are unpredictable and can exceed replacement cost.
- Seller lacks authority to convey: Receiver without court order, servicer exceeding PSA authority, bankruptcy trustee without creditor committee approval. Transaction is void or voidable.
- Mixing acquisition pathways: Do not conflate note purchase economics with REO economics. A note buyer takes foreclosure risk and timeline risk that an REO buyer does not.
- Using stabilized value as acquisition price: The distress discount waterfall exists because stabilized value is not achievable on day one. The all-in cost to reach stabilized value is the real investment basis.
Chain Notes
- Upstream: deal-screener (deal flagged as distressed), debt-portfolio-monitor (loan classified as Default)
- Downstream: deal-underwriting-assistant (stabilized proforma post-acquisition), loan-sizing-engine (refi sizing at stabilization)
- Peer: workout-playbook (lender-side mirror of the same distressed situation)
- Cross-ref: submarket-truth-serum (market context for stabilization assumptions)