Zion Wealth

Private credit education

Private Credit and Real-Estate-Secured Lending

A practical guide to borrower capacity, real-estate collateral, lien position, monitoring, repayment paths, and downside risk.

What private credit means in practice

Private credit generally involves capital advanced outside public bond markets to a borrower with a specific asset, transaction, or operating need. Real-estate-secured lending is one form of private credit, but collateral alone does not make a loan safe.

A useful underwriting process connects the borrower’s purpose and repayment capacity to collateral value, lien priority, documentation, servicing, monitoring, and a realistic exit path. Zion emphasizes this total structure rather than headline yield.

Jurisdiction note: Zion’s current private real-estate lending focus is Canadian. Mortgage-related services and public borrower criteria must be presented through the properly licensed person and sponsoring brokerage. Those details are being held from publication until verified.

Core underwriting questions

Borrower and purpose

Who is borrowing, what is the capital for, and which cash flow or transaction is expected to repay it?

Collateral and priority

How was the property valued, what claims rank ahead, and what costs or delays could reduce recovery?

Term and exit

What must happen before maturity, what extensions are possible, and what is the fallback if the exit is delayed?

Four areas that deserve separate review

Loan-to-value

Lower LTV can create more collateral cushion, but that cushion depends on asset quality, valuation evidence, market conditions, priority, and enforceability.

Monitoring

Investors should understand how payments, collateral condition, borrower updates, covenant issues, extensions, and possible defaults are monitored.

Documentation

Security, title, priority, guarantees, insurance, registrations, servicing, and reporting should match the borrower, collateral, and jurisdiction.

Downside case

A credible review asks what could go wrong, how long recovery could take, and which legal costs, carrying costs, or delays could impair proceeds.

Risk belongs in the first conversation

Credit and enforcement

Default, appraisal error, documentation defects, legal costs, priority disputes, property deterioration, and slow enforcement can impair or delay repayment.

Liquidity and concentration

Private loans are generally illiquid and can create concentrated exposure to one borrower, property, market, or exit strategy.

Important: Zion Wealth website content is general information and relationship-oriented commentary. It is not an offer or solicitation, investment advice, mortgage approval, legal advice, tax advice, or a guarantee. No U.S. investment offering is currently presented on this website. Canadian accredited-investor status does not by itself establish eligibility under the family, friends and business associates exemption.