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Updated almost 3 years ago on . Most recent reply
Best market for large multi family syndications and why?
Wanted to ask the experienced syndicators here where are you investing and why?
It might be a loaded question be what I'm trying to learn and better understand, is that I noticed that a lot (if not most) syndicators that I come across invest in -
- Atlanta Georgia
- South & North Carolina
- Dallas Texas
- Some Orlando Florida
As I'm living in Miami and ideally would like to invest in this area (Looking for 16-50 units), I'm finding it's quite challenging to find a deal that works and things here are very expensive, which makes me start wondering if I should look outside of Florida, but I wanted to better learn and understand what is so attractive in those places that I mentioned above that, for example, Miami doesn't have? Is it lower property taxes and insurance? more multi-family inventory? more people looking rent in the garden-style multi-family where for example, Miami people are looking for condos?
Would be grateful to learn from you guys.
Thanks.
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@Guy Idan, the markets you mention, and most every other market are hard to make numbers work. You mention "large MF syndications", can you confirm what large means to you? To me it is 200+ units per community, but you mention 16-50 units.
As for what makes markets attractive: diversity of economy (no single industry cities), population growth, and rent growth are some of the primary drivers for markets. Transaction volume, landlord friendliness, and others can also factor into market decisions. Lastly, pricing will dictate a lot of people's decisions, but this becomes a trade off for risks. I.e. Indianapolis seemingly trades at higher cap rate than Atlanta, but Indy overall saw a 12% Year over year rent growth vs Atlanta's 20%, and continued forecast rent growth in Atlanta is projected to continue to outpace Indy.
I do not mean that Indy is a bad place to invest, but you are generally trading current return (higher going in cap rate in Indy) for faster long term growth in Atlanta.
As for size, a big piece of any multifamily investment is your ability to exit at a good price. Knowing your likely buyer pool is imperative. So if you are buying a 16-50 unit property, I would say you likely buyer is going to be a local group and/or a mom and pop type investor. As such, market is not quite as big of deal, as long as you aren't buying 50 units in a tiny rural town with a population of 1,000. But any reasonably major market, you will have investors willing to pay for that asset. If you are buying 200+ units, your buyer pool will be institutional. In this case, the larger demographic trends will come into play at a much larger level.