Complete guide to real estate syndications
A real estate syndication is a private placement that pools investor capital—typically through a limited liability company—to acquire or operate a single asset or a small portfolio. Investors are usually passive: economic ownership without day-to-day management responsibility.
Why syndications exist
Commercial properties are capital-intensive. Syndication allows individuals who meet qualification standards to participate in professionally underwritten deals with institutional-style documentation and reporting—while the sponsor manages execution and investor communications.
Core components
- Sponsor / manager: Underwrites the deal, negotiates purchase, oversees asset management.
- Investors: Provide equity for a membership interest in the entity holding the asset.
- Documents: Private Placement Memorandum (PPM), operating agreement, subscription agreement.
- Waterfall: Rules for distributing cash—often a preferred return, then a split.
Preferred return (conceptual)
A preferred return is a contractual priority on available cash flow (not a guarantee of payment if cash is insufficient). The exact mechanics—accrued vs. non-accrued, compounding, catch-up—are defined only in the deal documents. Always read the waterfall in full.
What to verify
- Fees: acquisition, asset management, disposition, and any promote.
- Risk factors: tenant, leverage, market, and sponsor-specific items.
- Alignment: sponsor co-investment and “skin in the game.”
- Reporting: frequency and format of financial updates.