At Clopton Capital, we act as a specialist advisor to help sponsors and developers secure preferred equity real estate. As a leading commercial mortgage broker, we facilitate “structured equity” solutions that sit between senior debt and common equity, providing the necessary liquidity to execute high-value acquisitions and developments across the United Kingdom.
Preferred equity is a form of capital that occupies a unique position in the capital stack. Unlike mezzanine debt, which is typically secured by a second charge or a pledge of shares, preferred equity is an investment directly into the entity (usually a UK Limited Company or LLP) that owns the property.
It is called “preferred” because these investors have a priority of return. They must be paid their fixed return and their original capital investment before the common equity holders (the sponsors) receive any profit. In the UK, this is often governed by the company’s Articles of Association and a Shareholders’ Agreement.
Understanding the hierarchy of risk and return is essential for UK sponsors:
Senior Debt: Lowest risk, first priority of payment (Banks, CMBS, Life Cos).
Mezzanine Debt: Subordinate to senior debt but senior to equity.
Preferred Equity: Junior to all debt but senior to the sponsor’s common equity.
Common Equity: The sponsor’s own “skin in the game”; highest risk but unlimited upside.
Preferred equity is frequently used in London and regional UK markets when a senior lender (like a high-street bank) prohibits any secondary “debt” or second charges on the property. Since preferred equity is technically an equity investment, it often bypasses these restrictive “no-secondary-debt” clauses.
Maximise Leverage: Push total project funding up to 85%–90% Loan-to-Cost (LTC).
Conserve Cash: Allows sponsors to execute larger projects or multiple simultaneous developments with less of their own capital tied up.
Flexible Returns: Often structured as “PIK” (Payment-in-Kind), where interest accrues and is paid at the end of the project, preserving monthly cash flow.
Step-In Rights: Preferred equity provides the investor with “protective covenants,” allowing them to take control of the management if the project hits specific “trigger” hurdles.
While both fill the “gap” in the capital stack, they differ in security and rights:
| Feature | Preferred Equity | Mezzanine Debt |
| Security | Contractual (Shareholders’ Agreement) | Pledge of Ownership Interests / Charge |
| Position | Junior to all debt | Senior to all equity |
| Foreclosure | Step-in / Management change rights | UCC or Legal Foreclosure rights |
| Senior Lender View | Often viewed as “Equity” (Easier approval) | Viewed as “Debt” (Requires Intercreditor) |
| Cost of Capital | Typically Higher (12% – 18%+) | Typically Lower (9% – 15%) |
Investment Size: £1,000,000 to £50,000,000+
Max Leverage: Up to 90% LTV/LTC (combined with senior debt).
Term: Generally co-terminous with the senior loan (typically 2 to 10 years).
Pricing: Often a “preferred return” (coupon) plus an “equity kicker” or exit fee.
Asset Classes: Build-to-Rent (Multifamily), Purpose-Built Student Accommodation (PBSA), Logistics, and Prime Office.
A developer in Birmingham has completed the shell of a commercial mixed-use project but needs additional capital for the fit-out and stabilisation. The senior lender refuses to increase the loan facility. Clopton Capital structures a £3 million preferred equity piece. This allows the developer to finish the project without bringing in a Joint Venture partner who would demand 50% of the profit. Instead, the preferred equity is repaid upon the eventual sale, and the developer keeps the majority of the upside.
Leverage our network of private equity funds, family offices, and institutional investors to complete your capital stack.
Legally, it is equity. However, in the capital stack, it functions like “debt-lite” because it carries a fixed return and has priority over the sponsor’s profit.
Usually, no. Because it is an internal equity arrangement, many UK senior lenders do not require a formal intercreditor agreement, though they will perform due diligence on the preferred equity provider.
These are protective clauses that allow the preferred equity provider to remove the sponsor/manager and take over the project if the sponsor fails to meet specific financial milestones or defaults on payments.
Yes, it is a very common tool in the UK BTR sector to bridge the gap between development finance and the sponsor’s capital.