4 Mistakes You Better Not Make in Apartment Syndication

4 Mistakes You Better Not Make in Apartment Syndication

Syndication is a multifamily real estate investor’s chance to move from the minor league to the majors.  
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But with millions of dollars on the line, it’s easy for unseasoned syndicators to get excited and make a mistake that can kill a deal or create a legal problem. 

 

In this post, my outcome is to help you succeed by showing you four of the most common mistakes I see in multifamily real estate syndication: 

Legal Trouble

The easiest way to get yourself into trouble with syndication is to have errors in your paperwork, violate SEC guidelines, and/or accidentally mislead your investors. 

The Securities Acts of 1933 lays out the rules for whether and how a syndication gets registered, if you can market, and what paperwork needs to be filed. 

That law is Gospel; Learn what you can do and what you can’t.  

Above and beyond the legal process (operating agreements, subscription paperwork, etc.), sponsoring a syndication puts you in a fiduciary relationship with your investors. That means you have to work for your investors with honesty, diligence, skill, and care. 

Let them down, intentionally or even unintentionally, and you could open yourself up to civil and criminal liability. 

How to Avoid Legal Trouble:

You don’t need your securities license to set up a multifamily syndication. What you do need is an excellent SEC attorney with experience in syndication to help you navigate the process

 

 

Funding Woes

For beginning syndicators, it can be hard to know whether you should start with finding the deal or locating the investors. I often see rookies go wrong by looking for the deal without lining up their funding first. By the time they find the money, their contract is toast. 

Here’s a scenario I talk about in my book:

An investor finds a 50-unit building. It’s in a great location, has a low vacancy rate, and good income growth potential. He offers $2.5 million, and it’s accepted. 

At a 70% LTV, he’ll need $750,000 down, plus $200,000 for Cap Ex and operating capital. He has $150,000 but needs $800,000 more to close the deal. 

He’s agreed to a 90-day close. Assuming he takes 30 days to do his due diligence, that leaves 60 days to find enough investors to cover the $800,000 needed. 

If this investor waits until 60 days out from his closing deadline to begin looking for potential investors, he’s almost certainly going to come up short and lose the deal. 

Don’t wait until you’ve got a deal under contract to line up investors.

Non-Existent or Inconsistent Marketing

This mistake usually comes in tandem with #2. Rookies either take an inconsistent approach to marketing their real estate investment business or they don’t bother at all. Then, when an opportunity comes along, they don’t have anyone to reach out to for funding. 

How to Ramp Up Your Marketing for Multifamily Syndication:

So many syndicators get this one wrong that it deserves an extended response. 

If you’re in syndication, then you’re in marketing. Take charge of your building your pool of investors by developing an intentional plan to put yourself out there, attract those potential investors, and keep them engaged as you search for a deal to bring them in on. 

That plan should include digital media (web and social), email marketing, direct mail, and phone.

In addition to those attractional items like a website and a blog, get proactive. Clarify your criteria, develop a list of potential investors, and start reaching out. Join your local REIA, go to an investing meetup, and troll your local Rotary club. Tell everyone you meet about your syndication business and what kind of opportunities they can enjoy. Harness the incredible power of social media and consider ways to add value to people to build a network. I have students doing their own podcasts, meetups in their towns, Youtube channels and more. 

Keep building up your list, and you’ll have no trouble finding investors to partner with you on your next deal. 

Shabby Service

At the end of the day, a syndicate is a promise. As the sponsor, you’re telling your investors that they can trust you to take their money and deliver the advertised return. 

One of the easiest ways to wreck a deal and your reputation is to break your promises. But even if you do meet your returns, you can still leave a bad taste in your investors’ mouths by offering unclear or inconsistent communication.

Happy investors are long-term investors. They’ll dive in with you on the next deal, and they won’t be afraid to bring others with them. Ignoring, misleading or over-promising to your equity investors will ensure that doesn’t happen and your syndication business goes nowhere. 

How Not to Alienate Your Investors

If you want to impress your investors, under-promise and over-deliver. Analyze conservatively, understate your returns, and let your diligence and persistence generate a positive surprise for your investors. If you promised 15%, 12% is a disappointment. But if you promised 10%, that 12% is a huge win. 

Second, communicate regularly. Keep investors in the loop. Let them see you doing everything you can to make the deal as profitable as possible. Even if you do post weaker numbers than expected, regular transparent communication will keep your investors from putting all the blame on your shoulders.

 

Conclusion

Over 90% of all apartment transactions are syndicated right now. If you’re not getting your feet wet in syndication, your multifamily business is going to hit a ceiling… fast. 

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