
Why Syndications Remain My Investment Vehicle of Choice - Terence Critchlow
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Anyone who knows me, Terence Critchlow, is aware of my strong advocacy for syndication investing. Following three decades of real estate education and my own shift from direct property ownership to passive investment strategies, I attribute my ability to retire just six years after initiating syndication investments to this approach. Yet the fundamental reasons behind my conviction in this investment method may not be entirely clear. This article examines my rationale while simultaneously addressing the constraints inherent to syndications.
Before we begin, it is worth emphasizing that this is not investment advice. This represents my opinion based on personal experience and observation. Always consult with your own professional advisors before making investment decisions. As with any investment vehicle, syndications fill a specific role in your portfolio and I do not advocate for investing exclusively in any single asset class.
Understanding Syndications
Syndications encompass various structures and span multiple asset classes. For this discussion, I characterize syndications as direct real estate investments. These may involve a single property syndication, a fund containing multiple properties, or a fund of funds structure—with real estate serving as the underlying asset in all cases. Your investment as a limited partner (LP) in a syndication establishes you as a fractional owner of tangible property rather than merely a shareholder in an entity that holds property.
This differentiation carries more significance than initially apparent.
Benefits of Asset Ownership Through Syndications
In contrast to Real Estate Investment Trust (REIT) equity positions, LP status in a syndication deal confers ownership of the underlying asset itself—not simply the corporate entity holding it. This ownership framework delivers meaningful advantages that prove challenging to replicate through most alternative investment structures.
Depreciation-Based Tax Advantages
Your first benefit involves the entitlement to claim tax depreciation. Depreciation represents a substantial tax advantage by enabling you to counterbalance property income with a paper loss. While high-income W-2 employees typically cannot apply this loss against employment income due to passive activity loss regulations, you may utilize it to offset syndication-generated cash flow. Unutilized losses from the current year carry forward into subsequent years and apply whenever you would otherwise recognize gains.
Understanding depreciation as a paper loss rather than an actual economic loss remains crucial. You will eventually incur taxes on gains upon property sale. Nevertheless, because this taxable event may occur years into the future, you capture the time value of money throughout that entire duration. In essence, you receive an interest-free government loan that you can invest and compound until the property ultimately sells.
Underlying Asset Appreciation
As an owner, you capture any appreciation occurring in the underlying real estate. Real estate values generally increase over time. Values can certainly decline across short timeframes, as recent experience with office and multifamily assets in specific markets demonstrates. Nevertheless, across decade-long periods or longer, well-maintained properties in attractive locations have historically appreciated. On average, real estate values minimally match inflation rates, despite encountering peaks and valleys throughout the journey.
Property values rarely shift dramatically during brief intervals, yet these fluctuations create opportunities when sponsors capitalize on them. Specifically, provided properties generate adequate cash flow to satisfy all associated expenses, compelling reasons to sell into declining markets rarely exist. As an owner, you benefit from eventual property appreciation to the degree specified in your sponsor agreement, as documented in the Private Placement Memorandum (PPM).
This ownership-driven appreciation fundamentally diverges from stock market appreciation, which frequently relates more to market sentiment and trading multiples than to shifts in underlying company valuation. Real estate appreciation typically connects to concrete factors: location attractiveness, rental income expansion, property enhancements, and local economic growth.
Consistent Cash Flow
Once stabilized, syndications generally deliver regular cash flow distributions to investors. This cash flow, with taxes mitigated by depreciation, constitutes after-tax income available for reinvestment or lifestyle support. As an investor focused on cash flow, I value receiving cash distributions while simultaneously retaining the underlying asset and benefiting from its appreciation potential.
This parallels holding dividend-producing stocks or bonds, yet with after-tax, cash-on-cash returns of seven percent or higher, the returns can substantially exceed after-tax distributions from most alternative investments. For high-income earners in upper tax brackets, this tax-advantaged cash flow delivers a clear advantage over completely taxable investment income.
Leverage Accelerates Syndication Benefits
Among the widely recognized and frequently discussed advantages of real estate investing is the capacity to secure loans on generally favorable terms as part of property acquisition. By securing loans where interest rates fall below anticipated property returns, real estate investors generate substantially increased returns on invested capital.
Consider, for example, a property financed with 70 percent debt at seven percent interest. When the property produces total returns (encompassing both cash flow and appreciation) of 12 percent annually, you earn a positive spread of five percent on the lender's capital. This spread—the gap between property earnings and interest payments—accrues entirely to you as the equity owner.
To demonstrate this principle differently, examine your personal residence or a single-family rental. You may have contributed only 20 percent as a down payment on your home purchase, yet you capture 100 percent of the value increase upon sale. The lender receives only interest as compensation. The profit generated on the lender's capital transfers to owners upon property sale or refinance.
This amplification of returns through debt represents one of the most potent wealth-building instruments available to real estate investors, and syndications enable you to access this leverage without the burden of personally qualifying for and administering commercial loans.
Leveraging Knowledge and Networks
Syndications additionally provide a second, equally valuable form of leverage: the capability to leverage other individuals' time, experience, and networks. Upon becoming an LP in a syndication, the sponsor team manages all demanding responsibilities. They oversee the property, resolve problems as they emerge, ensure timely document creation, perform bookkeeping, maintain relationships with lenders and contractors, and communicate regularly with investors.
This operational leverage renders syndication deal investing dramatically more scalable than direct real estate investing. You need not create the systems, assemble the teams, or establish the infrastructure that successful real estate investing demands. Instead, you benefit from work the sponsor has already completed, often across many years of business development.
For high-income professionals managing demanding careers, this time leverage frequently proves even more valuable than financial leverage. Your time constitutes your most precious resource, and syndications enable you to build real estate wealth without sacrificing the career that supplies your primary income.
The Dual Nature of Leverage
Naturally, leverage operates in both directions. Beyond accelerating the benefits of successful deals, it will similarly magnify any negative outcomes. When you hold only 20 percent equity in a deal and the property value declines by 10 percent, you have forfeited 50 percent of your invested capital. A 20 percent value decline would entirely eliminate your investment.
This magnification of outcomes—both favorable and unfavorable—explains why conducting thorough due diligence on both the sponsor team and the deal itself remains absolutely essential. You must understand not merely the potential upside, but also the downside scenarios and how the deal would perform under stress. The sponsor team's quality becomes paramount because they will make the decisions that determine whether leverage operates in your favor or against it.
Syndications Are Not Universal Solutions: Downsides
Despite my enthusiasm for syndications, they do not suit every investor or every situation. Three potential, interconnected drawbacks must be understood before committing capital to these investments.
Illiquidity
The investment lacks liquidity. Unlike publicly traded equities, no straightforward method exists to sell your syndication deal investment. Once you have committed your capital, you remain invested until the deal concludes entirely. No secondary market for LP interests exists, and legal agreements typically restrict transfers even when you could locate a willing buyer.
Consequently, you must ensure that you do not invest money that you will require in the short or medium term into a syndication. I recommend particular conservatism with your time horizons here. While the deal may target an exit in three years, it could require five or more years to actually conclude when challenges arise in the market or with the property. The sponsor possesses ultimate decision-making authority regarding property sale timing.
To mitigate this risk, I recommend maintaining a diversified portfolio with sufficient liquid reserves and ensuring that no more than a prudent percentage of your net worth remains tied up in illiquid investments. Syndications should comprise a component of your portfolio, not its entirety.
Extended Investment Timeframes
Closely related to liquidity concerns, these investments tend toward long-term duration by design. Syndication completion in under three years proves extremely unusual. Five to seven years is more characteristic, and ten or more years is not uncommon.
Substantial change can occur across a five-year period, and inherent risk exists in being unable to adjust your investment portfolio in response to those changes. As an obvious example, five years ago, artificial intelligence was not on most investors' radar. Today, it is reshaping entire industries, impacting business valuations, and influencing how we view economic trends. Less obviously, five years encompasses more than an entire United States election cycle, meaning significant policy changes affecting tax law, interest rates, and real estate markets can occur during your investment period.
However, this extended timeframe also provides benefits. It compels you to remain invested and avoid panic selling during temporary market downturns. It enables you to capture long-term market trends rather than experiencing whipsaw from short-term volatility. The key is entering these investments with eyes wide open, understanding that your capital will be committed for the duration.
Absence of Control
Finally, you lack control over the deal. You have no meaningful influence over decisions made during the investment period. You do not decide what property improvements are made, who the third-party operators are, what the refinancing terms should be, or when the property is sold. You have delegated the right to make those decisions to the sponsor.
The sponsor operates in a fiduciary capacity and is obligated to act in the partnership's best interests. However, they also face competing considerations: maintaining lender relationships, managing multiple properties simultaneously, responding to market conditions, and balancing different investor groups' interests. While sponsors generally make thoughtful decisions, they will not always make the same decisions you would have made with full information and control.
This loss of control represents the price you pay for the time leverage that syndications provide. The mitigation strategy is straightforward but crucial: invest only with sponsors whose judgment you trust, whose track record demonstrates competence, and whose interests align well with yours through meaningful personal capital investment in the deal.
Making Syndications Work for Your Situation
Each drawback I have outlined possesses a corresponding advantage. The illiquidity that concerns some investors is what compels you to remain invested and avoid emotional decision-making during market turbulence. The long time horizon that feels uncertain is what allows you to capture the full benefit of real estate appreciation and compounding returns. The lack of control that requires trust in your sponsor is what provides the time leverage that makes these investments feasible for busy professionals.
Similarly, the benefits of ownership and leverage carry inherent risks that must be managed through careful sponsor selection and prudent portfolio construction.
Personally, I find the advantages of syndication investing extremely compelling for my situation and goals. I mitigate most of the drawbacks through extensive evaluation of sponsors and deals before committing capital. I also maintain diversified investments outside of syndications that provide additional liquidity and balance out my overall portfolio.
The question is not whether syndications are objectively good or bad investments. The question is whether they align with your financial goals, risk tolerance, and life circumstances. For high-income professionals seeking to build passive income streams without creating a second career in real estate, syndications can be a powerful tool—but only when approached with clear understanding of both their potential and their limitations.
For more of Terence's takes on passive investing, you can follow him on LinkedIn or his blog, Thoughts on Passive Investing.
Written by
Terence’s career has been in tech, with his most recent role being at Amazon. Outside of his day job, he has been investing in Real Estate for over 30 years, primarily in small properties. In 2019, he discovered what he considers an optimal strategy for busy professionals – investing in syndications to provide passive income streams. This strategy has allowed him to break his paycheck dependency without creating another job and retire early. He has created MBC Real Estate Investing, LLC to share his insights and strategies with other passive investors. You can follow him on LinkedIn or through his blog Thoughts on Passive Investing.
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