Updated 16 days ago on . Most recent reply

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- New York, NY
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What Traits Predict a Good (or Bad) Real Estate Sponsor?
As my net worth has grown, I’ve started considering putting some capital with sponsors. But I’m cautious as I read about recent post on biggerpockets about sponsors underperforming, asking for capital calls and losing investor capital.
What I want to learn is how to minimize my risk and avoid placing my money with sponsors who are more likely to lose my money.
A few questions I’d love feedback on:
Are there common traits among sponsors who lost investor money?
Conversely, are there common traits among sponsors who’ve consistently performed well?
My Research
I’ve noticed that some sponsors mentioned here on BiggerPockets have faced challenges. I wanted to share my notes and see what others think about whether these issues are warning signs to watch for:
Open Door Capital (Brandon Turner / Brian Murray / Ryan Murdock) – Broad focus across asset classes (mobile home parks, apartments, self-storage) and geographies (half the country). Multiple funds launched in quick succession. Some investors worry they’re stretched too thin and spending time raising capital instead of fixing/stabilizing current projects.
Norada Capital Management (Marco Santarelli) – Originally focused on real estate investments but later pivoted into note investing, where they may not have had as much experience. It seems the pivot into a new area could have introduced risk.
Ashcroft Capital (Joe Fairless) – Large but somewhat focused footprint (about 10 markets). Vertical integration (rehab, property management) seems like a strength. My only hesitation is that the sponsor’s time is divided between the fund, a large networking event, and daily podcasting.
Rise48 (Zach Haptonstall / Bikran Sandhu) – Very focused (4 markets, 100% real estate). The main drawback is limited track record—the sponsors started in 2019 and have less than 10 years of direct real estate experience, with backgrounds in non-RE fields prior.
Based on this, my current criteria for sponsors I’d consider investing with are:
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Focus on 1–2 regions
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Focus on one asset class
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Have 10+ years of direct real estate investing experience
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Primarily dedicated to running investments (vs. running podcasts/courses/events)
Appropriate amount of capital raised / projects going on in a given year.
My question to the community:
Are these the right criteria to evaluate sponsors, or am I missing key factors? For those of you who’ve invested in syndications, what sponsor traits have you found to be the biggest predictors of success or failure?
- Basit Siddiqi
- [email protected]
- 917-280-8544
