Investment structure

Returns, terms & alignment

Clear preferred return mechanics, profit participation, and accredited-investor-only access. Final terms for any offering are in the Private Placement Memorandum.

Structure summary

Preferred return 8% annual (priority on available cash flow)
Split above pref 70% investors / 30% sponsor
Minimum $50,000 per deal (typical)
Investors Accredited; Reg D 506(b)
Hold period 3–5 years (plan dependent)
Investors / deal Up to 35 (typical 506(b) constraint)

Cash flow

Returns (summary)

The following is a high-level summary. Waterfall mechanics, accrual, and catch-up—if any—are defined only in the operating agreement and PPM for each transaction.

  • 8% annual preferred return to investors (priority on available cash flow, subject to documents and cash available)
  • 70% investors / 30% sponsor on distributions above the preferred return
  • Return of capital before profit splits on sale, as described in offering documents
  • Quarterly distribution target when operations and cash flow support it
Publix storefront with parking and customer access

Waterfall

How cash flow is generally ordered

Conceptual order: operating expenses and debt service (if any), reserves per lender and business plan, preferred return, then split of remaining cash—subject to the definitive documents.

1

Operating & debt

Property-level obligations funded before investor distributions.

2

Reserves & pref

Reserves as required, then priority toward the preferred return when cash is available.

3

Split & exit

Residual cash flow and sale proceeds per the operating agreement after pref and return of capital.

Terms

Investment terms

  • Minimum: $50,000 per deal (typical)
  • Investors: Accredited investors only; Regulation D 506(b)
  • Hold period: 3–5 years (business plan dependent)
  • Maximum investors per deal: Up to 35 under 506(b) (typical structuring constraint)

Fees & alignment

Fees (high level)

Fees vary by transaction. Illustrative categories include an acquisition fee and ongoing asset management. Sponsor co-investment of 5–10% of project equity is targeted for alignment. Confirm all economics in the PPM for a specific offering.

Acquisition

Market-competitive, tied to complexity and capital raise—disclosed in each PPM.

Asset management

Ongoing sponsor oversight and reporting—stated as a % in offering materials.

Co-investment

Sponsor capital alongside investors on every deal to align incentives.

Illustrative fee math (not an offering)

Select a principal amount. Assumptions: 2% acquisition fee and 1% annual asset management for 5 years; cumulative 8% preferred (simple); at exit, illustrative 15% gain on equity at sale with 70% of that gain to investors (vs. sponsor)—hypothetical for discussion only.

Timing

Distributions & reporting

Quarterly distribution target when cash supports it. Investors receive reporting aligned to the operating agreement—typically including NOI, occupancy, and capex narrative.

Property-level transparency

Reporting is designed to answer whether the asset is performing to plan—no marketing fluff. Exact schedules and deliverables are in each deal’s operating agreement.

Tax

Tax considerations (general)

Investors often receive pass-through allocations and a Schedule K-1. Tax outcomes depend on your situation. This is not tax advice—consult your CPA and attorney.

  • Typical pass-through treatment; timing and character of income or loss vary by investor.
  • K-1 delivery timelines follow partnership tax rules and preparer schedules.
  • Discuss liquidity, basis, and state filing obligations with your advisors.
Walmart storefront with customer entry and parking access

Risk

Risk reality

Real estate involves illiquidity, tenant risk, interest rate risk, and macroeconomic risk. No projection is guaranteed. See risk factors in offering documents and our legal disclosures.

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