For most of the last decade, business loan and CRE delinquency rates traded within a tight range. In 2018-2019, CRE delinquency was actually lower than business loans. That relationship has reversed. CRE now runs 0.24pp higher, and the gap has been widening since mid-2023.
This divergence is not just a statistical curiosity. It tells you that the source of banking system stress has shifted from operating businesses to property owners. That distinction has major implications for how banks allocate capital, how regulators prioritize examinations, and ultimately how much credit is available for different types of borrowers.
When CRE delinquency runs higher than business loan delinquency, it means property income -- rents, occupancy, lease renewals -- is deteriorating faster than corporate revenue. Businesses are generating enough cash flow to service their loans. Landlords are not. That is a property-market problem, not an economy-wide problem.
During the Great Recession, CRE delinquency peaked at 11.99% while business loans peaked at 6.75%. The CRE peak was more than double. CRE has always been more volatile -- higher highs and lower lows. But the current gap is driven by a structural factor (remote work reducing office demand) rather than a cyclical one (recession), which means the CRE rate may stay elevated longer than historical patterns would suggest.
In 2007-2009, CRE recovered as the economy recovered because the vacancy problem was temporary. Today's office vacancy is permanent for a significant share of the inventory. Buildings that were 95% occupied in 2019 may never reach 75% again. That changes the math on debt service permanently.
When CRE delinquencies rise at a bank, the bank does not just tighten CRE lending. It tightens all lending. Here is why: bank capital is fungible. Losses on CRE loans reduce the bank's capital ratios, which reduces its capacity to lend across all categories. A bank dealing with a troubled CRE portfolio may pull back on C&I lending, SBA loans, and lines of credit even if those categories are performing well.
For business owners at community banks (the institutions with the heaviest CRE concentrations), this is a direct threat to credit availability. Your business may be performing perfectly, but your bank's CRE losses could reduce your credit line at renewal.
Business and CRE in context with other categories:
| Loan Category | Current | Prior Qtr | QoQ Change | Year Ago | YoY Change |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Business Loans (C&I) | 1.34% | 1.33% | +0.01pp | 1.27% | +0.07pp |
| Commercial Real Estate | 1.58% | 1.56% | +0.02pp | 1.56% | +0.02pp |
| Consumer Loans | 2.62% | 2.71% | -0.09pp | 2.76% | -0.14pp |
| Credit Cards | 2.94% | 2.98% | -0.04pp | 3.08% | -0.14pp |
| All Loans (total) | 1.48% | 1.49% | -0.01pp | 1.53% | -0.05pp |
CRE at 1.58% versus business loans at 1.34%, a gap of 0.24pp as of Q4 2025. CRE has been running higher since mid-2023.
CRE stress is structural (remote work reducing office demand) rather than cyclical. Businesses are generating enough cash flow to service loans, but property owners face permanent occupancy declines and refinancing at higher rates.
Yes. CRE losses reduce bank capital, which constrains lending across all categories. Community banks with heavy CRE exposure may tighten C&I lending even when business loan performance is strong.
During the Great Recession, CRE peaked at 11.99% while business loans peaked at 6.75%. CRE is always more volatile. The current divergence is unusual because it is driven by structural rather than cyclical forces.
Property-specific stress rather than broad economic weakness. If both rates were rising together, it would signal a recession. CRE rising alone signals a real estate problem.
FRED series DRBLACBS (business loans) and DRCRELEXFACBS (CRE). Both from the Federal Reserve quarterly Charge-Off and Delinquency Rates release.