Syndication & structure

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.

Syndication is straightforward in concept—pool capital, buy real estate, distribute cash under a written waterfall—and uncompromising in execution: every dollar flows only as the documents say it does.

At a glance

  • Structure: Investors typically hold membership interests in an LLC that owns the asset; economics are in the PPM, operating agreement, and subscription agreement.
  • Role: Most LPs are passive—professional sponsor oversight replaces day-to-day investor operations.
  • Returns: Preferred return and splits describe priority and sharing of cash when available—not guaranteed outcomes.
  • Qualification: Private placements under Regulation D Rule 506(c) permit general solicitation subject to SEC rules, with accredited-only purchasers and verification; see Reg D 506(c).

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.

Illiquidity, leverage, and fit

Syndicated real estate is typically illiquid for years; resale of LLC interests is constrained by securities law and practical buyer availability. Leverage (if used) layers refinance risk and covenant risk on top of tenant and market risk. Before subscribing, confirm that your balance sheet and liquidity profile tolerate a multi-year lockup and potential loss of principal—topics expanded on legal & compliance and in each PPM’s risk factors.

How Stoneforge fits this framework

Stoneforge sponsors private placements focused on small-format necessity retail in secondary growth markets; we describe philosophy and typical economics at a high level on investment overview and investment strategy. No guide replaces underwriting exhibits, rent rolls, or counsel review for a live offering.

Syndication education | Investment overview | Deal pipeline | Speak with Stoneforge

Education only. Not an offer to invest. Terms for any offering come from the PPM and signed agreements.

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Accredited investors may reach us through contact or schedule a call. Offerings are discussed only after qualification; nothing on this site is an offer to invest.

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Not an offer to sell or solicitation of an offer to buy securities. Participation requires accredited status and qualification per each offering.