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Updated 9 months ago on . Most recent reply
New Industrial Syndication Investment, looks good to me?
Came across this Deal from heritagegroupcapital.com, They are buying 2, 100k industrial fully tenanted/leased buildings in North East Indiana, near Fort Wayne. Sponsor is Jeff Greenberg, owner of Heritage Group Capital, 3rd generation CRE, at first did multi-family in New Jersey, now diversified. He is putting in 15% of equity as his family office as a TIC, tenant in common to the deal via a 1031 exchange, so that aligns him with LPs better than 99% of deals out there, also GP fees are fair to reasonable, 8% pref, then 80/20 and then for >14% IRR, they split 70/30, so better than 95% of last 100 deals I have seen. (I analyze syndication deals all the time, wife says I'm likely on some damn Spectrum :) I asked the first question on this week's webinar. They seem smart and straightforward. Min buy in is 50k, pays quarterly distribution. timeline 5-7 yrs, getting very good loan from insurance co source at 6.75% or so with interest only on yrs 1-3 then no defeasance penalties thereafter if they re-fi or sell. It is a very small investment, only 4.5 sticks, so should fill up fast. Industrial is a good place to be next 10 yrs IMO. watch recent webinar. What are your thoughts?
[NE Indy Industrial Portfolio (heritagegroupcapital.com)](https://heritagegroupcapital.com/ne-indy-industrial-portfolio/)
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This is one of the rare times I disagree with @Brian Burke.
Brian is a career GP. GPs do not like to put material portions of their net worth into deals. And do not like pressure from LPs like me who simply pass if they don't.
LPs do like it when GPs put material portions of their net worth into deals.
I've never met a GP who feels that they should have to put a meaningful co-invest and serious percentage of their own net worth into a deal.
I've never met an LP who feels that they shouldn't.
Data in this industry is the wild west. But, we will figure it out. And I bet that when all is said and done, LPs who invest with GPs who put real wealth into their own deals will do better on a risk-adjusted basis than those who invest with GPs who don't. Having real skin in the game is a major incentive to do the best thing for investors in a downside situation.
And, I just don't buy that GPs will liquidate the deal to finance their personal problems - if that's the case, then I invested with a GP who was irresponsible to risk their family's financial future on a single deal. I feel that the coinvest should be meaningful enough to cause real pain for the GP in the event of a bad outcome, but not so much pain that a bad outcome or 100% loss ruins them or threatens to disrupt their lifestyle either.