For development we are looking for 20%+ IRR. We would dip lower if the project was located in a true gateway city (NY, Boston, D.C, Chicago, LA, or SF). It's hard to justify going much below a 20% IRR when we have sponsors that average a 16% - 17% IRR on their value add deals. There is added risk with any development and that is something we need to be compensated for.

For opportunistic value add deals we would need to see at least a 15% IRR.

Core Plus can be in the 10% - 12% range depending on how heavy the lift is.

 

Yes, I've looked at a lot of deals in Austin. We are getting close to selling 3 developments we completed there.

I'm not sure what you mean by "What you guys look for here". If you're talking about asset class we are open to pretty much anything. If you are talking about returns, see my response above. It's not a gateway market so we are pretty strict with out return metrics. Honestly, unless something changes dramatically I don't think we will do more deals in Austin anytime soon. There is a ton of capital flowing into that market and 80's vintage value add multifamily deals are only penciling to about a 12% - 13% IRR and newer vintage returns are even thinner than that.

 

MOIC's and IRR are directly tied so it's something that is included in all of our committee memos and models. I don't want to list out the IRR/MOIC targets for all our investment strategies here, but you can do the math based on the guidance I provided above.

15% IRR for a 5 year hold is always a 2.0x MOIC 26% IRR for a 3 year hold is always a 2.0x MOIC

 
picklemonkey:
For development we are looking for 20%+ IRR. We would dip lower if the project was located in a true gateway city (NY, Boston, D.C, Chicago, LA, or SF). It's hard to justify going much below a 20% IRR when we have sponsors that average a 16% - 17% IRR on their value add deals. There is added risk with any development and that is something we need to be compensated for.

For opportunistic value add deals we would need to see at least a 15% IRR.

Core Plus can be in the 10% - 12% range depending on how heavy the lift is.

What's definition of opportunity value added vs opportunistic?

 

IMO opportunistic deals do not have in place cash flow, generally when my firm talks about value add deals there is an existing stream of cash flows we are looking to grow through an infusion of capital. With "opportunistic" deals there usually is not any cash flow until improvements are completed.

This is just my/our fairly loose definition and I'm sure others would describe things differently.

 

^^^ On the money... Although I've seen some brand name capital sources out there doing deals for -200bps on each range, respectively.

Edit: Looking back, I think I've confused some people with my comment. For clarification, I was responding to the...

20% IRR threshhold for development 15% for value-add 10%-12% for core plus

I'm saying I've seen sophisticated capital in secondary markets solve to returns at a 200bp discount to these ranges. For instance, a pure value-add deal (leasing and reno) we took a run at sponsoring was committee approved at an 11.5% IRR over 5 years.

 

I do some work in the NYC market and recently underwrote a few big multifamily developments on behalf of private owners. These developers are going forward with 30-50bps spreads (YoC) with ~55% LTC. They're projecting long-term holds and very ambitious rent growth.

Thus I'm curious how anyone is conservatively projecting 13-14% IRRs in NYC on value-add multifamily, especially with what's rumbling in Albany. Are your projects all market rate? Because it sounds like there's a greater than 50% probability that rent stabilized deals lose a lot of value this summer.

 
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Everyone is so focused on IRR at 15% for value add, what kind of leverage and growth do you hvae in that model? what is spread between going in and exit cap rate? There is a lot more to IRR. I have seen deals where brokers want some crazy price and solve to a 18 to 20% IRR. Unfortunately, once you look under the covers, it's easy to see these fucktards are using 4% growth in a market with 1 month rent concession and using 75% LTV. Well, no shit these dumbasses are getting a 18% IRR while I am getting 12% despite all over assumptions are relatively comparable.

Array
 

The only useful information provided by the brokers are the historical financials and the rent roll. Even that can be manipulated by moving R&M into Capex to inflate NOI. It's amazing how much time and energy IS firms put into their books for sections that almost no one even references. If you underwrite deals based on broker assumptions you will be very disappointed.

 

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