EPISODE · Jun 24, 2026 · 42 MIN
How Smart Investors Vet Syndications Before Writing a Check | Ep 131
from Furlo Capital Real Estate Podcast · host James Furlo
(Watch the YouTube video of this episode here)Most syndication losses don't come from bad markets. They come from bad operators.This episode reverse-engineers a real investor pitch from a local sponsor: the fees most slide decks gloss over, the waterfall math behind every "80/20" split, and the questions actually worth asking before writing a check.After sitting in on a syndicator's live investor presentation, this conversation breaks down what he got right and walks through the mechanics underneath the slides. It starts with why a simple stock-versus-real-estate comparison misses the five financial levers (leverage, forced appreciation, cash flow, tax treatment, and the inflation hedge) that real estate carries and most other assets don't, then digs into the cap rate math that turns a rent increase into real dollars of building value.Key Moments(00:00) When Borrowing Becomes Theft (and Where AI Fits In)(04:13) Why I'm Borrowing Another Investor's Pitch(06:14) The Five Financial Levers Stocks Don't Have(14:06) How Forced Appreciation Actually Builds Value(19:25) Inside the GP-LP Structure (and Why the SEC Vets Investors, Not Sponsors)(26:55) How the Waterfall Really Pays You Out(31:03) The Real Way to Vet a Sponsor Before You Invest(35:10) K-1s, Depreciation, and the 1031 Catch(39:22) Why a Steady Market Beats a Booming One6 Key LessonsThe 80/20 split is never the whole story: Acquisition fees, asset management fees, and construction management fees all get paid to the sponsor before any profit split happens.A preferred return amortizes like a loan: Paying down investor capital early shrinks next year's preferred return obligation, the same way extra principal payments shrink a mortgage balance.Skin in the game is a real filter, not a cliché: Whether a sponsor has their own money in the deal says more about alignment than any slide in the deck.Owning a syndication isn't owning real estate: Investors own LLC shares, so a 1031 exchange only works if the entire entity sells and the whole group rolls into the next property together.Cost segregation gets less valuable the longer the hold: It costs money upfront, and for investors using retirement accounts, the passed-through depreciation is close to worthless anyway.Most syndication losses trace back to the operator, not the market: Which makes vetting the person running the deal more important than the city the deal sits in.Let's build your wealth and improve housing, together.I spent 12 years as a data scientist at HP and purchased $5M worth of real estate over 15 years using my own money. Now, I'm partnering with busy professionals to diversify their investments and generate passive income through real estate syndications and short-term flips — without dealing with tenants, toilets, or tantrums.At Furlo Capital, we believe real estate isn't just a transaction; it's a partnership. Our value-add approach creates win-win situations where residents thrive, and investors build wealth. We're not just in this to make money — we want to make a difference.If you're ready to diversify from stock market volatility and want reliable, steady returns, let's build your wealth and improve housing, together.Want to dive deeper into my investing thesis and strategy?👉 Learn more: https://furlo.comCurious about the critical questions to ask before investing?👉 Get my 196-question due diligence vault: https://furlo.com/good-deals-only-ebookDisclaimerPlease note that investing in private placement securities entails a high degree of risk, including illiquidity of the investment and loss of principal. Please refer to the subscription agreement for a discussion of risk factors.
What this episode covers
(Watch the YouTube video of this episode here)Most syndication losses don't come from bad markets. They come from bad operators.This episode reverse-engineers a real investor pitch from a local sponsor: the fees most slide decks gloss over, the waterfall math behind every "80/20" split, and the questions actually worth asking before writing a check.After sitting in on a syndicator's live investor presentation, this conversation breaks down what he got right and walks through the mechanics underneath the slides. It starts with why a simple stock-versus-real-estate comparison misses the five financial levers (leverage, forced appreciation, cash flow, tax treatment, and the inflation hedge) that real estate carries and most other assets don't, then digs into the cap rate math that turns a rent increase into real dollars of building value.Key Moments(00:00) When Borrowing Becomes Theft (and Where AI Fits In)(04:13) Why I'm Borrowing Another Investor's Pitch(06:14) The Five Financial Levers Stocks Don't Have(14:06) How Forced Appreciation Actually Builds Value(19:25) Inside the GP-LP Structure (and Why the SEC Vets Investors, Not Sponsors)(26:55) How the Waterfall Really Pays You Out(31:03) The Real Way to Vet a Sponsor Before You Invest(35:10) K-1s, Depreciation, and the 1031 Catch(39:22) Why a Steady Market Beats a Booming One6 Key LessonsThe 80/20 split is never the whole story: Acquisition fees, asset management fees, and construction management fees all get paid to the sponsor before any profit split happens.A preferred return amortizes like a loan: Paying down investor capital early shrinks next year's preferred return obligation, the same way extra principal payments shrink a mortgage balance.Skin in the game is a real filter, not a cliché: Whether a sponsor has their own money in the deal says more about alignment than any slide in the deck.Owning a syndication isn't owning real estate: Investors own LLC shares, so a 1031 exchange only works if the entire entity sells and the whole group rolls into the next property together.Cost segregation gets less valuable the longer the hold: It costs money upfront, and for investors using retirement accounts, the passed-through depreciation is close to worthless anyway.Most syndication losses trace back to the operator, not the market: Which makes vetting the person running the deal more important than the city the deal sits in.Let's build your wealth and improve housing, together.I spent 12 years as a data scientist at HP and purchased $5M worth of real estate over 15 years using my own money. Now, I'm partnering with busy professionals to diversify their investments and generate passive income through real estate syndications and short-term flips — without dealing with tenants, toilets, or tantrums.At Furlo Capital, we believe real estate isn't just a transaction; it's a partnership. Our value-add approach creates win-win situations where residents thrive, and investors build wealth. We're not just in this to make money — we want to make a difference.If you're ready to diversify from stock market volatility and want reliable, steady returns, let's build your wealth and improve housing, together.Want to dive deeper into my investing thesis and strategy?👉 Learn more: https://furlo.comCurious about the critical questions to ask before investing?👉 Get my 196-question due diligence vault: https://furlo.com/good-deals-only-ebookDisclaimerPlease note that investing in private placement securities entails a high degree of risk, including illiquidity of the investment and loss of principal. Please refer to the subscription agreement for a discussion of risk factors.
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How Smart Investors Vet Syndications Before Writing a Check | Ep 131
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