Hamilton Sterling Capital LLC

Hamilton Sterling Capital LLC Hamilton Sterling Capital LLC: A nationally active credit/funding platform built on more than 40 years of Wall Street experience in finance/capital markets.

We specialize in capital solutions for non-owner-occupied residential/multifamily, mixed-use/CRE. Hamilton Sterling Capital LLC, we deliver sophisticated lending solutions tailored to real estate investors, non-owner occupied multifamily residential properties, mixed-use, and commercial properties nationwide.

03/07/2026

🚨 If you’re an investor and you found your lender online, you should assume one thing: you’re being sold. 🫷 🛑
That’s not cynical, it’s rational. 🤔
Online leads in real estate investing are not referral leads. There’s no pre-built trust, no shared network, no “my friend used him.” So the investor does what smart investors do:
🪧 They test you. ⏩ And they test you fast.
Here’s the reality I see every week:
Some online investors are experienced, they already have lender relationships, but they are always looking for better options:
✅ faster ex*****on
✅ cleaner underwriting
✅ real leverage that holds up
✅ a lender who can solve problems, not create them
🆕 Others are newer, and the problem is different: they don’t need a pitch, they need a path.
They want to know what to do first, what matters, and what mistakes will cost them the deal.
Either way, the online investor is asking the same question:
✔️ “Can I trust you with a transaction where one mistake costs me time, money, and credibility?”
So here’s my approach, and it’s why my online conversations convert:
✅ I don’t lead with a rate.
✅ I lead with clarity.
✅ I ask five questions, and in five minutes, the investor knows whether I’m useful or not:
❓ What are you buying, and what’s the real story of the asset?
❓ What’s your timeline, and what happens if it slips two weeks?
❓ Where is the cash flow coming from, and can we document it cleanly?
❓ How strong are reserves, not net worth, actual liquidity?
❓ What is the exit, hold, refi, or sale, and does it survive a stress test?
Because the truth is this:
Good investors don’t want a salesperson. They want an operator.
If you’re actively buying, refinancing, or scaling a portfolio and you want a straight answer, I’ll do this for you:
📌 Send me the basics, property type, purchase price, estimated rents, and your target timeline. I’ll tell you what I’d structure, what will slow underwriting down, and what you should fix before you waste time.
Call ☎️ or Text 📨 (201) 204-1141

03/05/2026

🚨 If you’re in NJ or Connecticut with a $500K+ mortgage, this matters.
🤑 Refinancing is not won by rate shopping, it’s won by ex*****on.
💵 A quote is not an approval. The difference between a smooth refinance and a stalled file usually comes down to:
✅ clean documentation
✅ real reserves
✅ property profile
✅ timeline discipline
✅ an MLO who structures the loan to close, not to sell a headline
That’s how I work. No noise, no gimmicks, no last-minute surprises.
If you’re a NJ or CT homeowner or buyer and you want a clear read on whether a refinance or restructure makes sense right now, call or text my office and we’ll review your scenario directly. 📲 Call or text: 201-204-1141
Anthony Tricarico (NMLS 2705480) Barrett Financial (NMLS 181106)

02/01/2026

Introduction: A Warsh Fed, a Big Deficit, and the Myth of “One Person Sets Rates”
In the Ivy Family Office Network, most of us have seen enough cycles to recognize a pattern: markets get a new character, the story turns into personality-driven forecasts, and people start talking as if the next move in mortgage rates, credit spreads, and the 10-year can be pinned to a single appointment. The headlines are already moving in that direction with Kevin Warsh as the announced pick to replace Jerome Powell at the Federal Reserve.
That narrative is convenient, but it is incomplete. The environment a new Chair steps into is the real story: persistent budget deficits, a large and rate-sensitive federal debt stock, and a market that increasingly prices “policy” as a joint outcome of central bank decisions and fiscal math. The uncomfortable possibility that investors keep circling, sometimes explicitly, is a form of fiscal dominance: not a formal surrender of monetary policy, but a steady gravitational pull toward policy choices that keep the government’s funding costs manageable. The Financial Times has framed Warsh’s nomination as signaling a push to rethink the Fed’s post-crisis footprint, including balance-sheet policy and even the relationship between the Fed and the Treasury.
This matters for a simple reason that every allocator understands: the Fed directly controls the front end, but most borrower-facing rates are set off the long end plus spreads, and the long end is a market price. Mortgage rates, investor DSCR loans, CRE coupons, and mixed-use financing are all, in practice, combinations of (a) the market’s expected path of short rates and (b) the term premium investors demand for holding duration and risk through uncertainty. A Chair nominee can influence those expectations and that premium, but they do not “set” the 10-year by decree.
What makes the current moment more interesting, and more relevant to real-world borrowing costs, is the apparent tension inside the policy mix. Reporting around the late-January FOMC decision describes a hold at 3.50%–3.75%, with dissents from governors favoring a cut. At the same time, the Fed has described technical Treasury-bill purchases tied to reserve management after ending quantitative tightening. If you are a borrower, lender, or investor in housing credit, that combination should immediately raise a different question than “hawk or dove”: how do you cut or signal easing on the short rate while also shrinking the balance sheet, and how do you do that in a world where the Treasury’s financing strategy and deficit trajectory are not side notes, they are the backdrop?
Warsh’s public posture, as described in recent coverage, adds another layer: support for rate cuts while also wanting a more aggressive reduction in the Fed’s balance sheet, plus an openness to revisiting coordination norms that trace back to the 1951 Treasury-Fed Accord. Even if you bracket the politics, the market implication is not automatically “lower rates.” It is more nuanced: lower front-end rates can coexist with higher long-end yields if deficits and issuance keep pressure on term premia, and if investors demand additional compensation for inflation uncertainty, volatility, or perceived erosion of institutional independence.
Then there’s housing specifically, where the plumbing matters. Policy focus on reducing mortgage-backed securities exposure, whether via runoff or sales, can widen MBS spreads even if Treasury yields are stable, which flows through to primary mortgage rates. Recent Reuters reporting points to active debate and action around MBS holdings and housing affordability, including discussion of measures meant to offset the mortgage-rate impact of Fed runoff. If you work backward from what the household borrower actually pays, the Fed funds rate is only one piece of the stack. The spread between MBS and Treasuries, the hedging and convexity regime, and the marginal buyer of duration often matter just as much, sometimes more, in the short run.
So the introduction to my thesis is this: the conversation is not “Will a new Chair lower mortgage rates?” The real question is whether the next regime looks like a cleaner separation between monetary policy and fiscal necessity, or a more explicit coordination that the market interprets as accommodation, with all the consequences that implies for term premium, volatility, and long-end pricing. The 10-year does not belong to the Fed, but the market’s confidence in the rules of the game, and in the credibility of institutions, absolutely feeds into the price of duration.
That brings me to the question I want to leave this group with, because smart people can disagree here, and the disagreement is investable: When a new Fed Chair is nominated, are we really debating their “rate policy,” or are we debating whether the market will demand a higher term premium to finance persistent deficits, and if that’s the real driver, what would it take, in practice, for mortgage and commercial borrowing costs to fall meaningfully without the market immediately pricing the long end back up?
About the author: Anthony Tricarico brings over 40 years of capital markets and lending experience, shaped by multiple full-rate and credit cycles and proven under real stress tests: including protecting client portfolios through the 1987 crash, the dot-com bubble, and the 2008 financial crisis, while navigating decades of changing interest-rate regimes. He held senior roles at Lehman Brothers, Oscar Gruss & Son, and Robb Peck McCooey, with work spanning wealth management, asset allocation, and transaction ex*****on. Today, he is CEO of Hamilton Sterling Capital and a licensed Mortgage Loan Originator (NMLS: 2705480). Earlier in his career, he founded and served as President of Moore Financial Group LLC, a licensed New Jersey mortgage banker that scaled through direct relationships with many of the largest direct lenders of the 1990s. Across borrower and investor engagements, he is known for practical underwriting judgment, clear communication, and structuring financing around what will actually close, not what looks good on paper.

WHEN THE BANK SAYS “NO” IN NEW JERSEY… THAT IS OFTEN WHERE THE REAL DEAL STARTS 🚨If you are trying to buy:🏭 An older war...
01/28/2026

WHEN THE BANK SAYS “NO” IN NEW JERSEY… THAT IS OFTEN WHERE THE REAL DEAL STARTS 🚨
If you are trying to buy:
🏭 An older warehouse or industrial building
🏬 A mixed use property on a main street
🏢 A small or mid size multifamily asset
🏚️ Or a “story deal” with hair on it …and the “usual” lenders keep passing, tightening terms, or ghosting you after committee, you are exactly who I work with. Here is the truth:
Most turn downs are not about the property being bad. They are about:
▪ DSCR that is a little tighter than the box
▪ Short operating history or lease up in progress
▪ Borrowers who own too many doors for one bank’s limits
▪ Construction, repositioning, or bridge to perm that is “too complicated”
▪ Environmental, zoning, or sponsor profile that makes an underwriter nervous.🫢 😱
At Hamilton Sterling Capital (HSC), my job is simple:
✔️ I structure the capital stack around the deal, and I introduce you to the specific lenders and private capital that can actually close it.
✔️ No cookie cutter “programs”, no one size fits all term sheets.
✔️ ✔️ Just experienced eyes on the deal and a network of banks, credit unions, debt funds, and private lenders that still want New Jersey exposure when the story makes sense.
I bring: ✅ 40+ years in Wall Street and real estate capital markets
✅ Deep familiarity with NJ industrial, mixed use, and multifamily
✅ A reputation for rolling up my sleeves on the tougher files, not just the easy ones. If you have:
• A warehouse or flex deal in the Meadowlands or along the Turnpike
• A mixed use building where the rent roll does not fit the box
• A multifamily deal that needs bridge, rehab, or creative structuring
…let us talk before you walk away or cut the price.
💬 Send me a DM or call 📞 and let's talk the property,
and I will tell you straight whether it is financeable and how I would approach it.
🤔 Serious investors do not wait for perfect conditions, they find the right capital partner. Let us see what is possible for your next New Jersey acquisition.

💳 Trump’s 10 percent credit card cap: headline relief or long term risk?🫨 There is a lot of noise right now about a one ...
01/18/2026

💳 Trump’s 10 percent credit card cap: headline relief or long term risk?
🫨 There is a lot of noise right now about a one year 10 percent cap on credit card interest rates. 💳 On the surface, it sounds great: take people paying 25 to 30 percent and cut that in half. 👏 Who would not cheer for that, especially with how many households are carrying balances.
💭 But when you have lived inside the funding side of the system for decades, you learn that how you lower the cost of money matters just as much as the number. 💲 💵 💰
From my seat, here is the tension: 💸 Credit cards are unsecured and high loss, so that high rate is paying for real credit risk and real write offs
💱 If you force a hard cap at 10 percent, banks will not just accept less profit, they will cut credit lines, approve fewer people, and push riskier borrowers out of the system. 😭 😭
😢 When that happens, the people who needed relief most often end up in worse products: payday, “easy” online loans, or other forms of shadow credit
🤔 So yes, I agree that the cost of revolving consumer debt is a problem, and I understand why this proposal is politically powerful. I just do not believe a blunt interest rate cap, dropped on top of the current system for a year, is the clean fix people think it is.
⌛ Over 35 yrs I have sat on the capital side: Wall Street, funding, capital raises, private clients, real estate, lending. One pattern keeps repeating:
🤨 When you distort price without fixing structure, you usually get less access to credit, not more fairness.
💡 If we want real relief, I would rather see smarter changes: cleaner disclosures, fewer junk fees, more honest risk pricing, and better pathways to refinance expensive consumer debt into lower cost, asset backed structures when it makes sense. 👍👍
🤗 🤗 That is the world I live in every day: taking expensive money and trying to replace it with smarter money, whether it is on a home, an investment property, or a commercial deal.
🔍 I am curious how you see it:
❓ Do you think a 10 percent cap is worth the tradeoffs, even if it tightens credit? ❓ Or do you think we need a deeper structural change instead of a one year headline fix?
📥 Drop your thoughts in the comments or DM me if you want to talk about how this kind of policy shift might affect real estate funding, refis, or your next deal. I am always happy to walk through the numbers and the tradeoffs with you.

🏙️ Commercial Real Estate in 2026: Challenge, Change, and Real OpportunityAs we head into 2026, New Jersey and the broad...
01/02/2026

🏙️ Commercial Real Estate in 2026: Challenge, Change, and Real Opportunity

As we head into 2026, New Jersey and the broader tri-state CRE market are in a transition, not a downturn.

Industry outlooks for 2026 point to three clear themes:
• Interest rates beginning to stabilize, which supports more predictable underwriting and deal flow.

• Strong demand in income-producing sectors such as industrial, logistics, medical, senior living, and well-located mixed-use.

• Ongoing repositioning of office and older retail into higher and better uses, especially in transit-served New Jersey locations.

For developers, owners, and investors, the next phase will favor those who can do three things well:

1️⃣ Structure capital creatively across the stack, not just hunt for one “perfect” loan.
2️⃣ Match each asset’s real risk profile to the right type of lender, from banks to private credit.
3️⃣ Move quickly when approvals, tenants, or market windows finally line up.

That is where Hamilton Sterling Capital LLC comes in.

We do not originate, broker, or lend. We act as an experienced guide between serious sponsors and a curated network of banks, credit funds, and private lenders across the country, with a deep focus on income-producing residential, mixed-use, and commercial assets.

If you are:

Refinancing a maturing loan in a tougher rate environment

Capitalizing a new acquisition or redevelopment

Filling a gap between senior debt and equity

…and you want a clear view of your options before you walk into the next lender meeting, let us be a sounding board.

📩 Email us at [email protected]
with a short description of your asset, capital need, and timing.

We will respond with practical thoughts on structure, likely capital sources, and what today’s lenders will want to see from you.

Hamilton Sterling Capital LLC
Grounded in experience. Focused on ex*****on. Ready for what 2026 brings.

Address

Harrison, NJ

Opening Hours

Monday 7:30am - 9pm
Tuesday 7:30am - 9pm
Wednesday 7:30pm - 9pm
Thursday 7:30am - 9pm
Friday 7:30am - 9pm
Saturday 7:30am - 9pm
Sunday 7:30am - 9pm

Telephone

+14152000175

Website

https://www.linkedin.com/in/anthony-t-real-estate/

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