To visualize how the 8% Preferred Return and 70/30 Split works in practice, let’s look at a 5-year “Pro Forma” (financial projection) for an investor who puts in $1,000,000.

​In this scenario, we assume the property is sold at the end of Year 5.

​5-Year Cash Flow Projection ($1M Investment)

YearCash Flow (After Expenses)Tier 1: 8% Pref PaymentTier 2: Capital ReturnTier 3: 70/30 SplitTotal to Investor
1$60,000$60,000$0$0$60,000
2$80,000$80,000$0$0$80,000
3$90,000$80,000$0$7,000$87,000
4$100,000$80,000$0$14,000$94,000
5 (Sale)$1,800,000$80,000$1,000,000$504,000$1,584,000
Total$2,130,000$380,000$1,000,000$525,000$1,905,000

Analysis of the Results

  • Year 1 Shortfall: In Year 1, the property only produced $60k. Since the 8% Pref is $80k, the investor gets all $60k, and the remaining $20k accrues (carries over).
  • Year 2 Catch-up: In Year 2, the property made $80k. The investor gets the full $80k, but still has that $20k “IOU” from Year 1.
  • Year 3 Profit: By Year 3, the property is performing well. The investor gets their $80k Pref + the $20k accrued from Year 1. Only after that is the remaining $10,000 split 70/30 ($7k to investor, $3k to you).
  • Year 5 (The Exit): When you sell the building, the first $1M goes back to the investor (Tier 2). The remaining profit ($720k in this example) is split 70/30. The investor gets $504k, and you (the Sponsor) get $216,000.

​Why this is a “Win-Win”

  1. Investor Safety: The investor received nearly $2M back on a $1M investment, and they were always “first in line” for cash.
  2. Sponsor Reward: Even though you didn’t put in the $1M, you walked away with over $225,000 in total “Promote” fees over 5 years (plus any acquisition or management fees you charged along the way).

​Key Terms for your Operating Agreement:

  • Cumulative: As shown in Year 1, the unpaid portion of the 8% must carry over.
  • Non-Compounded: Usually, the unpaid 8% does not earn interest on itself (though some aggressive investors may ask for compounding).
  • Capital Event: This includes a sale, a total refinance, or an insurance payout from a total loss.
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