Syndications and Fund Structures
Syndications: Pooling Capital for Institutional Real Estate
A real estate syndication pools capital from multiple investors to acquire a property that no single investor could buy alone. A 200-unit apartment complex costs $25 million. No individual LP is writing that check. But 40 investors contributing $250K-$500K each can fund the equity, and a bank provides the senior debt. Syndications are the dominant structure for private real estate investing. They allow passive investors to access institutional-quality assets, tax benefits, and professional management without the burden of direct ownership.
GP and LP Roles
Every syndication has two classes of participants with fundamentally different roles, risks, and economics.
- GP (General Partner/Sponsor): Finds the deal, negotiates the purchase, arranges financing, manages renovations, oversees property management, handles investor reporting, and executes the business plan. The GP signs on the loan (personal guarantee or KP requirement). The GP has unlimited liability for the partnership's obligations.
- LP (Limited Partner): Provides capital. That is it. LPs are passive by law. They do not make operational decisions, sign on loans, or participate in day-to-day management. In exchange for giving up control, LPs receive limited liability, meaning they can only lose what they invested.
- The GP typically contributes 5-10% of the total equity. LPs contribute 90-95%. But the GP earns a disproportionate share of the profits (the promote) for doing the work and taking the operational risk.
- LP due diligence focuses on three things: the GP's track record, the deal's underwriting assumptions, and the legal terms of the operating agreement.
The Promote (Carried Interest)
The promote is the GP's outsized share of profits relative to their capital contribution. It is the primary way GPs get compensated for their work and risk. A typical structure: LPs receive an 8% preferred return on their invested capital before the GP participates in profits. After the 8% pref is met, remaining profits are split 70/30 (70% to LPs, 30% to GP) or 80/20 depending on the deal. The GP contributed 5% of the equity but receives 30% of the profits above the preferred return. That 30% promote on a deal that returns 2x equity is worth far more than the GP's 5% capital contribution. The promote aligns interests because the GP only earns the outsized share if the deal performs well enough to pay LPs their preferred return first. If the deal returns 6% and the pref is 8%, the GP earns nothing on the promote.
Syndication vs. Fund
A syndication raises capital for one specific property. You see the deal, evaluate the underwriting, and invest if the numbers work. A fund raises a pool of capital first, then the manager deploys it across multiple deals over time. You are betting on the manager, not a specific property.
- Syndication: specific property identified before you invest. You evaluate the deal directly. Concentrated risk (one property). Typical hold: 3-7 years.
- Fund (blind pool): capital raised first, properties acquired later. You evaluate the manager's track record and investment thesis. Diversified across multiple properties. Typical fund life: 7-10 years with a 3-5 year deployment period.
- Fund of funds: invests in other funds rather than directly in properties. Additional layer of fees. Double-promoted.
- Co-investment: an opportunity for LPs to invest directly alongside the fund in a specific deal, often at reduced fees.
Syndication vs. Fund
Choosing between a syndication and a fund depends on your desire for deal-level control vs. diversification.
| Asset Visibility | Specific property known | Blind pool (manager discretion) |
|---|---|---|
| Diversification | Single asset | Multiple assets |
| Due Diligence Focus | The deal + the GP | The GP's track record |
| Minimum Investment | $50K-$100K typical | $100K-$250K typical |
| Hold Period | 3-7 years | 7-10 years |
| Fee Structure | Acquisition fee + promote | Management fee + promote |
| Capital Calls | Full amount at close | Called over 2-4 years |
Reg D: The Legal Framework
Syndications and funds are securities offerings regulated by the SEC. Most use Regulation D exemptions to avoid full SEC registration.
- Rule 506(b): The sponsor cannot advertise or generally solicit investors. Can accept up to 35 non-accredited investors (with sophistication requirements) plus unlimited accredited investors. The most common structure. Requires a pre-existing relationship between sponsor and investor.
- Rule 506(c): Allows general solicitation (advertising, social media, podcasts). All investors must be accredited, and the sponsor must verify accreditation (tax returns, letter from CPA/attorney, brokerage statements). Growing in popularity as sponsors build online audiences.
- Accredited investor: $200K individual income ($300K joint) for the past two years with expectation of the same, OR $1M net worth excluding the value of your primary residence, OR certain professional certifications (Series 7, Series 65, Series 82).
- The SEC updated accreditation rules in 2020 to include professional knowledge qualifications, recognizing that financial sophistication is not purely a function of wealth.
Syndications pool LP capital with GP expertise to buy institutional real estate. The GP earns a promote for managing the deal. LPs get passive exposure with limited liability. Funds offer diversification but less deal-level visibility. Understand the Reg D structure (506(b) or 506(c)) and verify your accreditation status before investing. The operating agreement governs everything, so read it.
Understand GP and LP roles, the promote structure, Reg D frameworks, and the difference between syndications and funds. The operating agreement governs everything.