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Posted over 5 years ago

What is a Real Estate Syndication?

What is a Syndication?

We often have new investors come to us with a variety of questions, but one of the first questions we get is, “What is a Real Estate Syndication?”. It’s a great question and one I get frequently as many people have never heard of this opportunity.

A real estate syndication is a pooling of an investor’s assets to invest as a group. For example, instead of buying a rental property yourself, you pool together your money with other investors to buy a larger property, like an apartment building, self-storage facility, or mobile home park. These types of opportunities allow you to invest alongside proven operators who have a successful track record.

Syndications will have two major players involved:

1) Limited Partners – this is you, as the investor. You provide the capital to buy the asset and in return, you will expect a return of the distributions from the cash flow of the property as well as a split of the profits at sale. Your liability is limited to the extent of your share of the ownership. Limited partners are passive; therefore you simply invest the capital and don’t have to worry about managing the property, finding the deal, operating the property, or executing a business plan.

2) General Partner – often called the Syndicator/Sponsor, this is the person or group of people who do all the work. The GP has the knowledge, expertise, time, and experience to make this a successful investment. They are the managing partner and active in the day-to-day operations of the business.

As an LP, you will enjoy the benefits of investing in real estate, without all the headaches. As a passive investor in a real estate syndication, you don’t have to do any of the work. You just invest your money and then start getting cash flow checks every month/quarter.

How are Syndications structured?

While this can vary between deal, operator, etc. what we see most often is an 8% preferred return and a 70/30 split. This means, you as a limited partner will receive an 8% return on your money and anything above that will be split 70/30 with 70% to you as the limited partner and 30% to the GP. You want to make sure the GP you align with has your best interests in mind. The GP doesn’t make money until you make at least the 8% preferred return. Therefore, the GP is incentivized to make sure this investment performs so they can make money as well.

Let’s run through a quick example. Say you invest $100,000 into an apartment community in Dallas, TX. The syndication is structured as noted above, with an 8% preferred return to investors and a 70/30 split. It’s a 5 year business plan where the GP will increase rents by renovating units, cleaning up the exterior of the property, and finding ways to decrease expenses. This is a typical value-add deal, with the goal to increase the NOI.

Assuming the investment is performing as expected, each year you should expect to receive $8,000 in distributions from the cash flow. This will likely come as $2,000 per quarter or $667 per month.

Many of the deals we are seeing have a projected equity multiple of 2x over 5 years. This means your money should double over 5 years.

Sticking with this same example, where our preferred return is 8% and we are able to hit that every year, that means you would get about $8,000 per year for 5 years. In other words, you would receive about $40,000 in cash flow distributions over the 5 years we hold the asset.

Then, when the asset is sold, you would get your original $100,000 investment back plus another $60,000 in profit from the sale.

Therefore, you’ve received $40,000 in cash flow distributions over the 5 years, then $60,000 at sale, plus your original $100,000 investment back. This gives you $200,000 total, which is the 2x equity multiple we often strive for.

I hope this brief article helped you understand what a syndication is, and how truly passive of an investment it can be for you. Feel free to reach out directly with questions!



Comments (2)

  1. Thanks for the informative article.  I started off reading your follow-up blog first and found myself asking- I wish the author would explain syndication? I am so glad you did.  Information like this helps to alleviate all of the confusing jargon and numbers that are thrown around.  


  2. Dear Aaron,

    An excellent introduction to syndication. I'm an absolute newbie, and unashamed of it. This was pretty basic, I could tell, but I'm still a little green. Can you suggest any place to get some pre-basic training? Also, will I have to wait to have 100,000 to participate? That's about 1000 months of what i have to spare to begin with. Willing to learn on my own, though.

    Thanks,

    John

    [email protected]