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Updated 7 months ago,

User Stats

10
Posts
3
Votes
Dan Bowe
3
Votes |
10
Posts

Ex-Multifamily fund analyst looking to create a first syndication, how do I start?

Dan Bowe
Posted

So a bit of professional background about me:

• Bachelors in finance, top of my class - I have deep understanding in debt, equities, cashflows, business operations etc

• Worked for a year as an acquisition analyst at small fund that invests in multifamily deals. Doing mainly $50M-$300M JVs with local PMs. I had my fare share of financial modeling and asset management and can say I know how to analyze deals and asset manage very well.
But, I was not too involved in the closing phases of the deals (lawyers, reports, debt placement, contract negotiations, parts of the DD...) so I lack knowledge in those parts, which I make up for in reading ton of materials and listening to podcasts.

• After that I worked for three years as a management consultant at McKinsey where I sharpened my business acumen, problem-solving, storytelling, and presentation skills. And also engaged with institutional investors on a regular basis.

I'm highly entrepreneurial and figured out that what I really want to do in my professional career is US multifamily investments.

What I've done so far is selecting the markets I'm interested in (in TX), building a comprehensive financial model to analyze deals, and creating a very detailed due diligence list. I also have an investment strategy in place (core/core+ investments, minimal to no rehab, aiming for 8%-12% IRR over a long holding period).
I even have some friends and family that want to invest with me. Together with my personal funds I can pull around $600K of equity for the first deal.

The thing is, I was never involved in the entire closing process on a property, from A-Z, myself. Not even on a SFH. I feel like I don't know what I don't know, and I feel that jumping straight to an investor-backed leveraged multifamily deal as a first timer might be a bit too much.
Yet, I see no other way to enter the multifamily space as the entrance barrier is high, and cheaper deals in tertiary markets are often cheap for a reason.

Would love to hear your thoughts on whether jumping straight to a multifamily syndication is reasonable, and if so, what would be the best path for me  to make a deal happen in the coming months?

P.S, I'm not a US citizen/resident, don't have a credit score, and plan to manage my operations remotely if that matters.

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