
Hosted by Anchor Loans · EN

For production builders, growth isn’t just about finding the right land or building the right product anymore — it’s about capital strategy.In this episode, we explore how leading home builders are using borrowing base facilities and private lending to unlock trapped equity, scale faster, and compete in a consolidating housing market dominated by large public builders.Featuring insights from Cole West Homes principal Colin Wright and Anchor Loans CRO JP Ackerman, we discuss:Why traditional bank lending is becoming more restrictiveHow borrowing base structures can create more flexibilityThe hidden cost of trapped land equityWhy private lending is evolving beyond “last resort” financingHow capital structure can become a true competitive advantageWhether you’re trying to scale operations, increase flexibility, or position your company for long-term growth, this conversation breaks down how builders are rethinking financing in today’s market.Key TakeawaysCapital structure is becoming a major differentiator for buildersRegional and traditional banks face growing regulatory limitationsBuilders may be sitting on untapped borrowing power in owned landPrivate lenders can offer flexibility without sacrificing relationship-driven serviceStrategic financing can accelerate growth and improve operational freedomPresented ByAnchor LoansLearn more at anchorloans.com

In this episode, we break down one of the biggest long-term opportunities shaping today’s housing market: America’s aging housing stock. Drawing from the April 2026 Anchor Loans Housing Monitor, we explore how deferred maintenance, constrained inventory, and low housing turnover are creating durable opportunities for renovation-focused investors, builders, and value-add operators.We discuss why more than half of resale listings are now over 20 years old, how mortgage rate lock-in continues restricting supply, and why operational execution is becoming more important than market appreciation alone. From remodeling demand to fix-and-flip strategy shifts, this episode examines the growing importance of renovation expertise in today’s housing cycle.Whether you’re a real estate investor, builder, developer, or industry professional, this conversation offers insight into how aging inventory is reshaping acquisition opportunities and why updated housing product remains in high demand.Based on the April 2026 Anchor Loans Housing Monitor.

In this episode of the Constructive Thinking Podcast by Anchor Loans, we break down the February 2026 Housing Monitor and what it reveals about today’s market.After years of Sunbelt dominance, the data is pointing to a shift. The Northeast and Midwest are gaining momentum, driven by stronger affordability and more stable supply, while many Sunbelt markets begin to normalize.We explore what is behind this regional divide and what it means for investors, builders, and developers looking to navigate a more balanced market.Read the latest U.S. Housing Monitor here: https://www.anchorloans.com/resources-2/us-housing-monitor

The U.S. housing market is shifting as inventory begins to rise in 2026. In this episode, we break down what that means for fix and flip investors, from increased deal flow to changing exit dynamics. While supply is improving, the market remains undersupplied, creating a unique window of opportunity for investors who stay disciplined. Tune in to learn how mortgage rates, buyer demand, and smarter acquisition strategies will shape success in today’s evolving market.

This episode is part of our Blog to Go series, where we turn our written insights into on-demand audio for builders, developers, and real estate professionals.Recorded from our recap of IMN Land & Homebuilder West, this discussion covers:• How private credit and institutional capital are reshaping A&D financing • Why underwriting discipline has tightened across development lending • What 75 to 85% leverage means for risk alignment • How to sequence land banking, acquisition and development loans, and vertical construction financing • Why certainty of execution and speed of funding are competitive advantages in 2026The capital stack is no longer transactional. It is strategic, phased, and execution driven.Read the full blog on our website for our key takeaways from IMN Land & Homebuilder West. anchorloans.com/blog

Is the U.S. housing market improving in 2026? In this episode, we break down the latest January 2026 housing market data from Anchor Loans’ U.S. Housing Monitor, covering housing inventory, absorption, home price trends, mortgage rates, affordability, and long-term housing supply.You’ll hear what the data suggests for real estate investors, builders, developers, and brokers navigating today’s housing market. We discuss why inventory remains tight, why absorption is improving, why home prices are moderating, and how mortgage rate lock-in continues to limit existing home sales. We also cover how housing starts remain below historically normal levels, why the U.S. remains structurally undersupplied, and what slowing multifamily construction could mean for the broader housing ecosystem.Read the full January 2026 U.S. Housing Monitor at https://www.anchorloans.com/resources.

The U.S. housing market is entering a new era in 2026, shaped by powerful regional shifts that are redefining where homes are built, who is buying, and how projects get financed.In this episode, we break down how migration patterns, affordability gaps, insurance challenges, and local policy decisions are reshaping housing markets across the country. From Sun Belt growth to coastal constraints, these regional dynamics are creating new opportunities and new risks for investors, builders, and private lenders.You will hear practical insights on how market participants are adapting their strategies to stay competitive, protect capital, and move projects forward in a more fragmented housing landscape.

Real estate headlines are full of uncertainty. Softening prices. Rising delistings. Hesitant buyers. For retail buyers, uncertainty often means pause. For experienced real estate investors, it often signals opportunity.In this episode, we break down why 2026 could present some of the most attractive investor entry points seen in years, and how cooling markets historically create stronger margins than peak-price frenzies.Drawing on national data and what Anchor Loans sees across thousands of financed projects each year, we explain why selective price declines are not a warning sign, but a reset that disciplined investors know how to use.

New York City voters approved a major set of charter revisions that could significantly change how housing projects move from concept to completion. For builders, developers, investors, and lenders, this is more than a policy update. It is a structural shift that could reduce approval timelines, lower entitlement risk, and unlock new housing opportunities in one of the country’s most complex markets.In this episode, we break down what changed, why it matters, and how faster approvals in New York could influence housing development and lending strategies nationwide.

In this episode of the Anchor Loans Real Estate Insights Podcast, we explore why speed has become the foundation of success in real estate investing, building, and development. With limited inventory, rising construction costs, and tightening credit conditions, the ability to fund projects quickly and keep them moving is no longer optional.We break down the structural housing shortage in the U.S., the ongoing tightening of construction lending, and how quick draw financing has emerged as a critical advantage for investors and builders operating in today’s market. Learn how milestone-based funding keeps projects on schedule, improves liquidity, and protects profitability, especially in fix and flip and new construction strategies.This episode also explains why not all lenders deliver true speed, and what to look for in a financing partner who understands how real projects operate in real time.