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25

Nov

Capital Stack Optimization for Self-Storage Expansion Projects: Comparative Analysis of Three Financing Structures

Executive Summary

Self-storage expansion projects – acquiring an existing facility and adding new square footage – present unique financing challenges that differ from both stabilized acquisitions and ground-up development.

This analysis examines three capital stack structures for a representative $7.3M self-storage expansion project in Florida:

  1. All-Cash Acquisition + Construction Loan (Conservative)
  2. Bridge-to-Permanent Financing (Aggressive)
  3. Preferred Equity Structure (Institutional)

For each structure, we analyze:

  • Sources & uses (detailed capital breakdown)
  • Debt terms (rates, LTC/LTV, covenants, guarantees)
  • Equity returns (IRR, equity multiple, cash-on-cash)
  • Risk profile (execution risk, market risk, refinance risk)
  • Optimal use cases (which investors should choose which structure)

Key Finding: Capital stack selection can impact IRR by 3-4 points (15.8% to 19.2%) while significantly altering risk profile – making structure optimization as important as deal selection itself.


SECTION 1: THE DEAL (BASELINE ASSUMPTIONS)

Project Overview: Central Florida Expansion

Existing Facility Acquisition:

  • Property: 45,000 SF self-storage (~400 units)
  • Vintage: 2008 construction
  • Occupancy: 80%
  • In-Place NOI: $320,000
  • Purchase Price: $3,500,000
  • Entry Cap Rate: 6.9%

Expansion Component:

  • Additional SF: 20,000 SF (200 new climate-controlled units)
  • Hard Costs: $3,400,000 ($170/SF construction)
  • Soft Costs: $400,000 (architecture, engineering, permits, fees, financing costs)
  • Total Development Cost: $3,800,000

Total Project Cost: $7,300,000


Value Creation Strategy

Lever #1: Rate Optimization (Existing Units)

  • Current average rate: $105/month
  • Market rate: $140/month
  • Upside: +$35/month × 400 units = $14,000/month
  • Annual NOI improvement: $168,000

Lever #2: Operational Improvements

  • Technology upgrades: $25K savings (labor efficiency)
  • Marketing optimization: $45K revenue (digital campaigns)
  • Ancillary revenue: $35K (insurance, merchandise, truck rental)
  • Expense efficiency: $20K savings (vendor renegotiation)
  • Annual NOI improvement: $125,000

Lever #3: New Unit Revenue

  • 200 units × $155/month average × 90% stabilized occupancy
  • Annual gross revenue: $334,800
  • Operating expenses (35%): $117,180
  • New unit NOI: $217,620

Lever #4: Portfolio Premium

  • Combined 65,000 SF facility (institutional scale)
  • Modern + legacy mix (appeals to broader tenant base)
  • Operational efficiencies (single management, shared utilities)
  • Additional NOI: $50,000

Combined Stabilized NOI: $880,620 (conservative) to $950,000 (optimistic)


Exit Assumptions

Stabilization Timeline: 24-30 months from acquisition

  • Months 1-12: Existing facility rate optimization + construction
  • Months 13-24: Lease-up new units to 90% occupancy
  • Months 25-30: Fully stabilized operations

Exit Valuation:

  • Stabilized NOI: $915,000 (midpoint)
  • Exit cap rate: 6.25% (premium for modern, expanded facility)
  • Exit value: $14,640,000

Exit Scenarios (Sensitivity):

Article content
Exit Scenarios by Capital Advisors USA, LLC

SECTION 2: OPTION A – ALL-CASH ACQUISITION + CONSTRUCTION LOAN

Structure Overview

Philosophy: Conservative approach that separates acquisition (all-equity) from development (levered construction loan)

Advantages:

  • Clean acquisition (no acquisition debt complicates construction loan underwriting)
  • Flexibility on construction timing (can delay if market conditions deteriorate)
  • Maximum control (no acquisition lender covenants)
  • Simpler legal structure (single construction loan vs. complex intercreditor)

Disadvantages:

  • High equity requirement (61% of total project cost)
  • Lower leverage (reduces IRR potential)
  • Two separate closings (acquisition, then construction loan 2-6 months later)

Sources & Uses

SOURCES OF CAPITAL:

Article content
Sources and Uses by Capital Advisors USA, LLC

Total Equity Required: $4,450,000 (61.0% of project)


USES OF CAPITAL:

Article content
Uses of Capital by Capital Advisors USA

Debt Terms – Construction Loan

Lender Profile: Regional bank or non-bank construction lender (Argentic, Berkadia, SBA)

Loan Amount: $2,850,000 (75% of $3.8M hard + soft costs)

Interest Rate: 7.5% (SOFR + 450 bps, floating)

  • Current SOFR: ~3.0%
  • Spread: 450 bps
  • All-in rate: 7.5%
  • Option: Interest rate cap (2-year, 8.5% strike, cost ~$35K)

Term: 18 months interest-only

  • Draw period: 12 months (construction)
  • Stabilization period: 6 months (lease-up to 85%+ occupancy)
  • Extension: +6 months available (pay 0.50% extension fee + higher rate)

Loan-to-Cost: 75% LTC on development component only

Recourse: Full recourse (personal guarantee required)

  • Carve-outs: fraud, misappropriation, environmental, bankruptcy
  • Some lenders offer partial burn-off (guarantee reduces as project stabilizes)

Covenants:

  • Minimum liquidity: $500K (borrower maintains reserves)
  • Completion guarantee: Borrower completes project even if cost overruns
  • Lease-up requirement: 85% occupancy within 18 months or default
  • Debt service coverage: 1.25x upon stabilization (for conversion to perm)

Draw Schedule:

  • Monthly draws (submit invoices, lender inspects, funds within 10 days)
  • 10% retainage held until completion
  • Final draw: Upon certificate of occupancy + 85% occupancy

Exit Strategy:

  • Convert to permanent loan (same lender, 7.0%, 25-year amort, 65-70% LTV)
  • Refinance with permanent lender (shop for best terms)
  • Sell property (pay off construction loan from proceeds)

Financial Projections

Year-by-Year Cash Flow:

Article content
Financial Projections by Capital Advisors USA, LLC

Note: Year 3+ assumes conversion to permanent loan (7.0%, 25-year amort, $3.5M balance)


Exit Analysis (Year 5):

Exit Value: $14,640,000 (base case: $915K NOI ÷ 6.25% cap)

Loan Payoff: $3,250,000 (remaining balance after 2 years of principal paydown)

Gross Proceeds: $14,640,000 – $3,250,000 = $11,390,000

Less Equity Invested: $4,450,000

Net Profit: $6,940,000

Plus Cumulative Cash Flow (Years 1-5): $2,277,250

Total Return: $9,217,250


Return Metrics:

Article content
Financial Modeling by Capital Advisors USA, LLC

Sensitivity Analysis – Option A

IRR Sensitivity to Exit Cap Rate:

Article content
Financial Modeling by Capital Advisors USA, LLC

Pros & Cons Summary – Option A

✅ ADVANTAGES:

  1. Maximum Flexibility Own property free-and-clear initially (no acquisition debt constraints) Can delay construction if market conditions deteriorate Can modify expansion plans based on existing facility performance Not locked into specific construction timeline
  2. Simpler Execution Two separate, straightforward transactions (acquisition, then construction) No complex intercreditor agreements Easier lender underwriting (construction loan only evaluates development component)
  3. Lower Refinance Risk Construction loan converts to permanent (predictable exit) Or refinance with ample time (not time-pressured) Or hold and cash flow (strong returns even without sale)
  4. Best Risk-Adjusted Returns 17.2% IRR with 61% equity (moderate leverage) Strong downside protection (even 6.75% exit cap yields 14.8% IRR) Predictable cash flow (no aggressive refinance assumptions)

❌ DISADVANTAGES:

  1. High Equity Requirement $4.45M equity (61% of project cost) Limits number of deals investor can pursue simultaneously Capital tied up longer (no refinance to recycle capital early)
  2. Lower Absolute IRR 17.2% (vs. 19.2% for bridge-to-perm structure) Moderate leverage reduces return potential Not maximizing financial engineering opportunities
  3. Two Closings Additional transaction costs (two sets of closing fees, title, legal) Timeline gap between acquisition and construction financing (2-6 months typical) Market risk during gap (rates could rise, construction loan terms could worsen)
  4. Full Recourse Guarantee Personal guarantee required on construction loan Borrower fully liable if project fails No limitation on downside risk

Optimal Use Cases – Option A

Choose This Structure If:

✅ You have substantial liquidity ($4.5M+ available equity)

✅ You prioritize risk management over IRR maximization

✅ You want maximum flexibility (ability to pause/adjust project)

✅ You’re conservative on leverage (prefer 60-70% equity positions)

✅ You value simplicity (straightforward structure, predictable execution)

✅ You plan to hold long-term (5-7+ years, not forced exit at specific date)

Ideal Investor Profile:

  • Family office (patient capital, risk-averse)
  • First-time self-storage developer (learning the business)
  • Conservative institutional capital (pension fund, endowment)
  • Investor with experience in other CRE but new to self-storage

SECTION 3: OPTION B – BRIDGE-TO-PERMANENT FINANCING

Structure Overview

Philosophy: Aggressive leverage approach that finances entire project (acquisition + development) with single bridge loan, then refinances to permanent upon stabilization

Advantages:

  • Lower equity requirement (30% vs. 61%)
  • Single closing (one loan, one transaction)
  • Higher IRR potential (maximum leverage)
  • Capital efficiency (can deploy across multiple deals)

Disadvantages:

  • Higher interest rate during construction (8.5% vs. 7.5%)
  • Refinance risk (must refinance to permanent, no conversion option)
  • More complex underwriting (lender must evaluate acquisition + development)
  • Market timing risk (if market deteriorates, refinance may be difficult)

Sources & Uses

SOURCES OF CAPITAL:

Article content
By Capital Advisors USA, LLC

Total Equity Required: $2,190,000 (30.0% of project)


USES OF CAPITAL:

Article content
Sources and Uses by #CapitalAdvisorsUSA

Debt Terms – Bridge Loan

Lender Profile: Non-bank bridge lender (Argentic, Thorofare, Ready Capital, SBA)

Loan Amount: $5,110,000 (70% of $7.3M total project cost)

Interest Rate: 8.5% (SOFR + 550 bps, floating)

  • Current SOFR: ~3.0%
  • Spread: 550 bps
  • All-in rate: 8.5%
  • Rate cap required: 2-year, 9.5% strike, cost ~$55K (included in soft costs)

Term: 24 months interest-only

  • Construction period: 12 months
  • Stabilization period: 12 months (lease-up to 90% occupancy)
  • Extension: +12 months available (pay 1.0% extension fee + rate increases to 9.0%)

Loan-to-Cost: 70% LTC on total project (acquisition + development)

Recourse: Full recourse during construction, burns off to 50% upon stabilization

  • If project achieves 90% occupancy + 1.30x DSCR → guarantee reduces to 50%
  • Remains full recourse on standard carve-outs (fraud, bankruptcy, etc.)

Covenants:

  • Minimum liquidity: $750K (borrower maintains reserves throughout)
  • Completion guarantee: Borrower completes project regardless of cost overruns
  • Lease-up requirement: 90% occupancy + 1.30x DSCR within 24 months
  • Interest reserve: Lender may require 6-12 months of interest in reserve account

Exit Strategy (REQUIRED):

  • Must refinance to permanent loan within 24 months
  • If refinance fails → extension (costly) or loan default
  • Permanent loan assumption: 65-70% LTV, 7.0%, 25-year amort
  • Critical: Bridge structure assumes successful refinance

Financial Projections

Year-by-Year Cash Flow:

Article content
Dynamic Financial Modeling by #CapitalAdvisorsUSA

Note: Year 3+ assumes successful refinance to permanent loan:

  • New loan amount: $10,248,000 (70% LTV on $14.64M value)
  • Rate: 7.0%, 25-year amortization
  • Refinance proceeds: $10,248,000 – $5,110,000 (bridge payoff) = $5,138,000
  • Return to equity: $5,138,000 (capital return exceeds original $2.19M investment!)

Exit Analysis (Year 5):

Exit Value: $14,640,000 (base case)

Loan Payoff: $9,748,000 (remaining balance after 2 years principal paydown from refinance)

Gross Proceeds: $14,640,000 – $9,748,000 = $4,892,000

Less Remaining Equity: $0 (equity fully returned at refinance!)

Net Profit at Exit: $4,892,000

Plus Refinance Return of Capital (Year 3): $5,138,000

Plus Cumulative Cash Flow: $1,376,300

Total Return: $11,406,300


Return Metrics:

Article content
Analysis Provided by #SustainableInvestingDigest

Note: Equity multiple appears extraordinarily high because refinance returns 234% of original equity in Year 3, then exit returns additional proceeds. This is accurate mathematics for leveraged refinance strategy.


Sensitivity Analysis – Option B

IRR Sensitivity to Exit Cap Rate:

Article content
Sensitivity Analysis by Capital Advisors USA, LLC

Critical Insight: Refinance terms dramatically impact returns. If lender only approves 60% LTV (vs. 70% assumed), IRR drops 3.4 points (19.2% → 15.8%).


Pros & Cons Summary – Option B

✅ ADVANTAGES:

  1. Maximum IRR Potential 19.2% IRR (highest of all three structures) 5.21x equity multiple (refinance returns capital early) 27.2% stabilized cash-on-cash (on remaining equity after refinance)
  2. Capital Efficiency Only $2.19M equity (vs. $4.45M for Option A) Can deploy capital across multiple deals simultaneously Early return of capital (refinance Year 3 returns 234% of equity!)
  3. Single Closing One transaction (vs. two for Option A) Faster to execute (no gap between acquisition and construction financing) Lower transaction costs (one set of closing fees)
  4. Leverage Maximization 70% LTC (aggressive but not unreasonable) Magnifies returns if project performs Efficient use of equity dollar

❌ DISADVANTAGES:

  1. Refinance Risk (CRITICAL) Must refinance within 24 months or face default/extension If market deteriorates (cap rates expand, lenders tighten), refinance may fail Extension is costly (1% fee + higher rate) Failure to refinance = forced sale at potentially bad timing
  2. Higher Interest Cost 8.5% bridge rate (vs. 7.5% construction loan in Option A) $434K annual interest (vs. $214K in Option A during construction) Reduces Year 1-2 cash flow (negative cash flow Year 1)
  3. More Complex Underwriting Lender must evaluate acquisition + development simultaneously Longer approval process (30-45 days vs. 21-30 for simple construction loan) More documents required (acquisition due diligence + development plans)
  4. Market Timing Risk Locked into 24-month timeline (can’t pause if market weakens) Must achieve 90% occupancy + 1.30x DSCR (if market softens, may fail covenants) No flexibility to hold/wait for better market conditions
  5. Negative Cash Flow Year 1 -$14,350 (NOI < debt service during construction) Requires equity reserves to cover shortfall Psychologically difficult for investors (paying money out, not receiving distributions)

Optimal Use Cases – Option B

Choose This Structure If:

✅ You have limited equity capital ($2-3M available, not $4-5M)

✅ You want to deploy across multiple deals (capital efficiency priority)

✅ You’re confident in refinance market (stable/improving conditions)

✅ You prioritize IRR over cash flow stability

✅ You have experience with bridge financing (understand risks)

✅ You have reserves to cover negative cash flow periods

✅ You’re comfortable with refinance risk (have backup plans if refinance fails)

Ideal Investor Profile:

  • Experienced developer (understands bridge-to-perm execution)
  • Private equity fund (seeking maximum IRR for LP reporting)
  • High-net-worth individual (comfortable with leverage and timing risk)
  • Operator deploying across multiple deals (capital efficiency critical)

SECTION 4: OPTION C – PREFERRED EQUITY STRUCTURE

Structure Overview

Philosophy: Institutional capital stack with three layers: senior debt, preferred equity, and common equity. Preferred equity provides mezzanine financing between senior debt and common equity.

Advantages:

  • Lowest common equity requirement (19% of project)
  • Predictable preferred return (fixed cost of capital)
  • Scalable structure (institutional investors understand)
  • Limits downside risk to common equity (preferred is senior)

Disadvantages:

  • Complex waterfall (distributes to preferred first, common second)
  • Preferred equity limits upside leverage (no promote participation)
  • Higher blended cost of capital (preferred wants 12%, senior wants 7%)
  • More legal complexity (intercreditor agreement required)

Sources & Uses

SOURCES OF CAPITAL:

Article content

Debt Terms – Senior Loan

Lender Profile: Regional bank or life insurance company (construction-to-permanent product)

Loan Amount: $4,400,000 (60% of $7.3M total project cost)

Interest Rate: 7.0% (fixed rate, construction-to-permanent)

  • Construction period (12 months): 7.5% interest-only
  • Permanent period (25 years): 7.0% fixed, 25-year amortization

Term:

  • Construction: 12 months IO
  • Permanent: Converts automatically at stabilization (85% occupancy + 1.25x DSCR)
  • Total term: 25 years from conversion

Loan-to-Cost: 60% LTC on total project Loan-to-Value: 65% LTV on stabilized value

Recourse: Non-recourse after stabilization

  • Recourse during construction (completion guarantee)
  • Burns off to non-recourse upon conversion to permanent
  • Standard carve-outs (fraud, misappropriation, bankruptcy)

Covenants:

  • Minimum DSCR: 1.25x upon stabilization
  • Maximum LTV: 65% (ongoing covenant)
  • Minimum liquidity: $500K (borrower reserves)
  • Cash management: Lockbox account, lender approval for distributions >$100K

Preferred Equity Terms

Investor Profile: Institutional mezzanine fund, family office, or high-net-worth individuals seeking predictable returns

Investment Amount: $1,500,000

Preferred Return: 12% annually (accrued monthly, paid quarterly if cash available)

  • Non-compounding: If cash flow insufficient to pay preferred, accrues but doesn’t compound
  • Cumulative: All accrued preferred must be paid before common receives distributions
  • Current pay preferred: Not PIK (payment-in-kind); investor expects quarterly cash

Priority:

  1. Senior debt (first priority)
  2. Preferred equity (second priority)
  3. Common equity (last priority)

Participation: None

  • Preferred gets fixed 12% return
  • All upside above 12% goes to common equity
  • No promote participation (unlike common equity which gets residual profits)

Security: Second lien on property (junior to senior debt, senior to common equity)

Covenants:

  • Consent required for major decisions (sale, refinance, additional debt)
  • Financial reporting (monthly to preferred investors)
  • Replacement reserve: $50K minimum (maintained for property needs)

Exit:

  • Repaid at sale or refinance (after senior debt, before common)
  • Return: Original $1.5M + accrued preferred return
  • No equity upside participation

Common Equity Terms

Investment Amount: $1,400,000

Return: Residual after debt service + preferred return

Priority: Last (subordinate to senior debt and preferred equity)

Upside: 100% of residual profits

  • After paying 7% senior debt
  • After paying 12% preferred equity
  • All remaining cash flow and exit proceeds go to common

Risk: Highest

  • If project underperforms, common may receive nothing (preferred must be paid first)
  • If project performs well, common gets magnified returns (leverage effect)

Control:

  • Common equity typically controls decisions (as managing member)
  • Subject to preferred equity consent rights on major decisions

Waterfall Structure

Distribution Priority:

Quarterly Cash Flow Distributions:

  1. Senior Debt Service: Pay lender debt service (interest + principal)
  2. Preferred Return: Pay preferred equity 12% annual return (3% quarterly)
  3. Common Equity: Remaining cash flow to common equity

Refinance or Sale Proceeds:

  1. Senior Debt Payoff: Repay outstanding loan balance
  2. Preferred Equity Return of Capital: Repay $1,500,000 principal
  3. Preferred Equity Accrued Return: Pay any unpaid accrued preferred return
  4. Common Equity Return of Capital: Repay $1,400,000 principal
  5. Residual Profits: 100% to common equity (no promote to preferred)

Financial Projections

Year-by-Year Cash Flow:

Article content
FInancial Projections by #SustainableInvestingDigest

Note: Year 1 common equity receives negative cash flow because NOI insufficient to cover debt + preferred.


Exit Analysis (Year 5):

Exit Value: $14,640,000

Senior Debt Payoff: $4,100,000 (remaining balance after 2 years of permanent loan paydown)

Preferred Equity Return:

  • Principal: $1,500,000
  • Accrued return (5 years × 12%): $900,000
  • Total to Preferred: $2,400,000

Common Equity Return:

  • Gross proceeds: $14,640,000
  • Less senior debt: -$4,100,000
  • Less preferred: -$2,400,000
  • Remaining to Common: $8,140,000

Less Common Equity Invested: $1,400,000

Net Profit to Common: $6,740,000

Plus Cumulative Cash Flow to Common: $735,000

Total Return to Common Equity: $7,475,000


Return Metrics:

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Return Metrics by #SustainableInvestingDigest

Sensitivity Analysis – Option C

Common Equity IRR Sensitivity to Exit Cap Rate:

Critical Insight: Even in stress scenarios, preferred equity gets paid in full. Common equity takes all downside risk below $800K NOI (at which point preferred still gets 12%, but common IRR drops to single digits).


Pros & Cons Summary – Option C

✅ ADVANTAGES:

  1. Lowest Common Equity Requirement Only $1.4M (19% of project) Can deploy across even more deals than Option B Maximum capital efficiency
  2. Predictable Cost of Capital Preferred equity: fixed 12% (known cost) Senior debt: fixed 7% (construction-to-perm) No refinance risk (debt converts automatically)
  3. Downside Protection for Common Preferred equity absorbs first $1.5M of losses (after senior debt) Common equity has “cushion” between them and senior debt Less risk of total loss compared to highly leveraged Option B
  4. Institutional Structure Professional investors understand preferred/common stack Easier to raise capital (preferred appeals to conservative investors, common to aggressive) Scalable across multiple deals
  5. Non-Recourse Senior Debt Liability burns off at stabilization No ongoing personal guarantee (unlike Options A & B)

❌ DISADVANTAGES:

  1. Complex Waterfall Multiple distribution priorities (senior → preferred → common) Requires sophisticated legal documentation (intercreditor agreement) Quarterly distribution calculations complicated Investors need to understand waterfall mechanics
  2. Preferred Equity Limits Common Upside 12% preferred return paid before common receives anything In early years, common may receive little/no cash flow Preferred gets $900K of profits over 5 years (reduces common’s share)
  3. Higher Blended Cost of Capital Senior debt: 7% × 60% = 4.2% weighted Preferred: 12% × 21% = 2.5% weighted Blended: 6.7% (vs. 7.5-8.5% for Options A/B) Wait – this is actually LOWER. But preferred is “harder” cost because it’s cumulative even if not paid.
  4. Negative Cash Flow to Common (Year 1) Common receives -$90K Year 1 (must cover shortfall) Psychologically difficult Requires reserves
  5. Finding Preferred Equity Investor Not as liquid a market as senior debt Preferred investors want 12%+ (expensive capital) Negotiating preferred terms can be complex May require significant time to source

Optimal Use Cases – Option C

Choose This Structure If:

✅ You have very limited common equity capital ($1-2M, not $4-5M)

✅ You’re scaling across many deals simultaneously (5-10 properties)

✅ You can source preferred equity investors (institutional contacts, family offices)

✅ You want downside protection (preferred equity cushion)

✅ You’re comfortable with complex waterfall structures

✅ You prioritize capital efficiency over simplicity

✅ Your investors understand institutional structures

Ideal Investor Profile:

  • Institutional fund (raising common equity from LPs, preferred from separate investors)
  • Operator building large portfolio (10-20 properties over 3 years)
  • Experienced developer (comfortable with mezzanine structures)
  • Family office partnering with preferred equity provider

SECTION 5: COMPARATIVE ANALYSIS

Side-by-Side Comparison

Article content
Analysis By Capital Advisors USA, LLC

Risk-Adjusted Ranking

Methodology: Sharpe Ratio = (IRR – Risk-Free Rate) / Standard Deviation of Returns

Assumptions:

  • Risk-free rate: 4.5% (5-year Treasury)
  • Standard deviation calculated from sensitivity analysis (exit cap + NOI variance)
Article content
Analysis Provided by #SustainableInvestingDigest

Interpretation:

Option A has highest risk-adjusted return despite lowest absolute IRR because:

  • Lower volatility (flexible structure, no forced refinance)
  • Downside protection (moderate leverage, conversion option)
  • Execution certainty (simple structure, predictable timeline)

Option B has highest absolute IRR but lowest risk-adjusted return because:

  • Refinance risk (must successfully refinance or face default)
  • Market timing risk (locked into 24-month timeline)
  • Higher volatility (sensitive to exit market conditions)

Option C falls in the middle:

  • Moderate volatility (preferred equity cushion provides downside protection)
  • No refinance risk (construction-to-perm eliminates timing pressure)
  • Complex execution (harder to source preferred, negotiate terms)

Capital Efficiency Comparison

Deals You Can Pursue with $10M Equity:

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Corporate Structure Provided by #GlobalEmpowermentLeadership

Insight:

If you have $10M to deploy:

  • Option A: Control $16M in assets (conservative, concentrated)
  • Option B: Control $34M in assets (moderate diversification)
  • Option C: Control $52M in assets (maximum diversification)

Portfolio Diversification Benefit:

With 7 deals (Option C) vs. 2 deals (Option A):

  • Geographic diversification (multiple Florida markets)
  • Timing diversification (staggered closings)
  • Strategy diversification (REIT + expansion + ground-up mix)
  • Risk reduction (one deal failure doesn’t sink portfolio)

Trade-off: More deals = more complexity (7 preferred equity investors to manage, 7 closings, 7 ongoing relationships)


SECTION 6: LENDER LANDSCAPE & RECOMMENDATIONS

Senior Debt Lenders (60-75% LTC)

Regional Banks:

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Banks & Lifeco Analysis by Capital Advisors USA, LLC

Non-Bank Construction Lenders:

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Non-Bank & Bridge Lenders by Capital Advisors USA, LLC

Recommendation for Option B (Bridge-to-Perm):

First choice: Argentic

  • Fast approval (2-3 weeks)
  • 75% LTC at 8.5% (competitive)
  • Experienced with self-storage
  • Flexible on construction oversight

Second choice: Ready Capital

  • Slightly better pricing (8.0% vs. 8.5%)
  • Strong servicing platform
  • Longer approval (4-5 weeks)

Preferred Equity Sources (10-15% returns)

Institutional Mezzanine Funds:

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Mezz Funds & Family Offices by Scott L Podvin

High-Net-Worth Individuals:

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#HNWI by #GlobalEmpowermentLeadership

Recommendation for Option C (Preferred Equity):

For $1.5M preferred raise:

  • Source from 2-3 family offices ($500K each) or 5-6 high-net-worth individuals ($250K each)
  • Offer 12% preferred return (market rate for $1-2M mezzanine)
  • Structure as second lien on property (provides security)
  • Quarterly current-pay distributions (not PIK)

SECTION 7: RECOMMENDATION MATRIX

Decision Framework by Investor Profile

Profile #1: First-Time Self-Storage Developer

Characteristics:

  • Experienced in other CRE but new to self-storage
  • Conservative risk tolerance
  • Substantial liquidity ($5M+ available)
  • Values simplicity and control

RECOMMENDATION: Option A (All-Cash + Construction Loan)

Rationale:

  • ✅ Simple structure (learn the business without complex financing)
  • ✅ Maximum flexibility (can pause/adjust if issues arise)
  • ✅ Best risk-adjusted returns (7.06 Sharpe ratio)
  • ✅ Moderate leverage (won’t over-lever first deal)

Expected Outcome: 17.2% IRR with low volatility, successful first project builds track record for future deals


Profile #2: Experienced Developer Seeking Maximum Returns

Characteristics:

  • Multiple self-storage deals completed
  • Aggressive risk tolerance
  • Limited equity per deal ($2-3M available)
  • Wants to scale quickly (deploy across 3-5 deals)

RECOMMENDATION: Option B (Bridge-to-Perm)

Rationale:

  • ✅ Maximum IRR (19.2%)
  • ✅ Capital efficiency (can pursue 4-5 deals with $10M equity)
  • ✅ Comfortable with refinance risk (has done it before)
  • ✅ Expertise mitigates execution risk

Expected Outcome: 19.2% IRR, early return of capital at refinance allows redeployment to additional deals


Profile #3: Institutional Fund Building Portfolio

Characteristics:

  • Raising capital from LPs (limited partners)
  • Building 10-20 property portfolio over 3 years
  • Access to preferred equity investors
  • Sophisticated team comfortable with complex structures

RECOMMENDATION: Option C (Preferred Equity Structure)

Rationale:

  • ✅ Lowest common equity per deal ($1.4M)
  • ✅ Can deploy across 7+ deals with $10M common equity
  • ✅ Institutional structure LPs understand
  • ✅ Preferred equity cushion reduces risk for common LPs

Expected Outcome: 18.5% IRR to common equity LPs, portfolio of 10-15 properties totaling $70-100M value


Profile #4: Family Office (Patient Capital)

Characteristics:

  • Long-term hold focus (10-20 years)
  • Moderate risk tolerance
  • Prefers current cash flow over IRR maximization
  • Values simplicity over complexity

RECOMMENDATION: Option A (All-Cash + Construction Loan)

Rationale:

  • ✅ Best cash-on-cash returns (14.9% stabilized)
  • ✅ No forced exit (can hold indefinitely)
  • ✅ Non-recourse conversion option (liability burns off)
  • ✅ Simple structure (family understands)

Expected Outcome: 17.2% IRR, strong stabilized cash flow ($665K annually), option to hold 10+ years or refinance and hold for perpetual cash flow


Profile #5: Conservative Pension Fund / Endowment

Characteristics:

  • Fiduciary duty (must minimize risk)
  • Target 12-15% IRR (not 20%+)
  • Cannot accept personal recourse guarantees
  • Values transparency and reporting

RECOMMENDATION: Option C with Preferred Equity Position (Not Common)

Rationale:

  • ✅ Fixed 12% return (predictable, achievable)
  • ✅ Senior to common equity (downside protection)
  • ✅ Non-recourse senior debt (no guarantee exposure)
  • ✅ Current-pay distributions (quarterly cash flow)

Expected Outcome: 12.0% IRR, minimal volatility, all distributions received on time, full return of capital at exit


SECTION 8: IMPLEMENTATION ROADMAP

Option A: All-Cash + Construction Loan – 90-Day Timeline

Days 1-30: Acquisition

Week 1-2:

  • Execute purchase agreement (all-cash, 30-day closing)
  • Order title, survey, Phase I environmental
  • Property inspection (physical condition assessment)
  • Financial audit (validate seller’s NOI representations)

Week 3-4:

  • Complete due diligence
  • Wire funds to escrow
  • Close acquisition
  • Result: Own property free-and-clear

Days 31-90: Construction Loan Sourcing

Week 5-8:

  • Engage architect (preliminary site plan for expansion)
  • Hire civil engineer (grading, drainage, utilities)
  • Cost estimating (GC bids on hard costs)
  • Prepare construction loan package (plans, budget, timeline, borrower financials)

Week 9-12:

  • Submit to 3-4 construction lenders
  • Receive term sheets (compare rates, terms, covenants)
  • Select lender, negotiate final terms
  • Execute loan commitment

Week 13:

  • Close construction loan
  • Begin construction draw schedule
  • Result: $2.85M funded, ready to build

Months 4-15: Construction & Lease-Up

Months 4-15:

  • Construction (12 months)
  • Lease-up new units (begins Month 10, concurrent with construction completion)
  • Rate optimization on existing units (gradual, ongoing)

Month 16-18:

  • Stabilization (90% occupancy + 1.25x DSCR)
  • Convert construction loan to permanent (automatic or refinance)
  • Begin quarterly distributions to equity

Option B: Bridge-to-Perm – 60-Day Timeline

Days 1-30: Bridge Loan Sourcing

Week 1-2:

  • Execute purchase agreement (subject to financing, 60-day closing)
  • Engage architect (preliminary expansion plans)
  • Prepare comprehensive loan package: Acquisition due diligence (property details, financials, market analysis) Development plans (site plan, unit mix, construction budget) Borrower financials (liquidity, experience, guarantor strength)

Week 3-4:

  • Submit to 2-3 bridge lenders (Argentic, Ready Capital, Thorofare)
  • Receive term sheets within 7-10 days
  • Negotiate terms (rate, LTC, covenants, recourse)
  • Execute loan commitment

Days 31-60: Closing

Week 5-8:

  • Lender due diligence (appraisal, Phase I, engineering review)
  • Legal documentation (loan agreement, mortgage, guarantees)
  • Rate cap purchase (hedge interest rate risk)
  • Final approval from lender credit committee

Week 9:

  • Simultaneous closing (acquisition + bridge loan funding)
  • Wire $2.19M equity + $5.11M loan proceeds
  • Take title to property
  • Result: Own property with bridge loan in place, ready to start construction

Months 3-24: Construction, Lease-Up & Refinance

Months 3-14:

  • Construction (12 months on draw schedule)
  • Begin lease-up (Month 10 onwards)
  • Rate optimization on existing facility

Months 15-20:

  • Achieve 90% occupancy + 1.30x DSCR
  • Engage permanent lender (start 6 months before bridge maturity)
  • Submit refinance package

Months 21-24:

  • Close permanent loan ($10.2M at 70% LTV on $14.6M value)
  • Pay off bridge loan ($5.11M)
  • Return $5.1M to equity (234% of original investment!)
  • Continue operations with permanent financing

Option C: Preferred Equity Structure – 120-Day Timeline

Days 1-60: Capital Raising

Week 1-4: Preferred Equity Raise ($1.5M)

  • Prepare offering documents (PPM, subscription agreement, term sheet)
  • Market to target investors: Family offices ($500K-1M commitments) High-net-worth individuals ($250K-500K commitments) Self-directed IRA investors ($100K-250K commitments)
  • Hold investor calls (explain structure, terms, returns)
  • Execute subscription agreements

Week 5-8: Senior Debt Sourcing ($4.4M)

  • Prepare loan package (acquisition + development)
  • Submit to regional banks or life companies (Synovus, Truist, Principal)
  • Receive term sheets
  • Execute loan commitment

Days 61-120: Legal Documentation & Closing

Week 9-12:

  • Complex legal documentation: Operating agreement (common + preferred member rights) Intercreditor agreement (senior debt vs. preferred equity) Preferred equity subscription documents Senior loan documents
  • Negotiate waterfall mechanics (distribution priorities)
  • Define governance rights (major decision approvals)

Week 13-16:

  • Investor due diligence period (30 days)
  • Lender due diligence (appraisal, environmental, engineering)
  • Fund escrow accounts: Common equity: $1.4M Preferred equity: $1.5M
  • Close senior loan ($4.4M)

Week 17:

  • Simultaneous closing (acquisition + all capital funded)
  • Disbursements per waterfall (pay acquisition costs, reserve for development)
  • Result: Own property with complex capital stack in place

Months 5-24: Construction, Stabilization, Operations

Months 5-16:

  • Construction (12 months)
  • Lease-up (concurrent with construction completion)
  • Quarterly distributions: Senior debt: $82,500 quarterly (IO) Preferred equity: $45,000 quarterly (12% annual) Common equity: Residual (if any)

Months 17-24:

  • Achieve stabilization (85% occupancy + 1.25x DSCR)
  • Senior debt converts to permanent (non-recourse)
  • Quarterly distributions increase: Senior debt: $96,250 (P&I) Preferred equity: $45,000 Common equity: $89,250 ($357K annually = 25% CoC!)

SECTION 9: KEY TAKEAWAYS & FINAL RECOMMENDATIONS

Capital Stack Selection Matters Significantly

IRR Range: 15.8% to 19.2%

  • 3.4 point spread based solely on financing structure
  • Equivalent to difference between “good deal” and “exceptional deal”
  • Structure optimization is as important as deal selection

Risk-Return Trade-offs

Article content
Risk-Return Analysis By Capital Advisors USA< LLC

No “perfect” structure – depends on investor goals, experience, capital availability


Match Structure to Investor Profile

First-time developer → Option A(learn with simple structure)

Experienced developer → Option B(maximize returns with bridge-to-perm)

Institutional fund → Option C(scale with preferred equity)

Family office → Option A(long-term hold, current cash flow)

Conservative capital → Option C as Preferred (fixed 12% return)


Capital Efficiency Enables Scaling

With $10M equity:

  • Option A: 2.2 deals ($16M total assets)
  • Option B: 4.6 deals ($34M total assets)
  • Option C: 7.1 deals ($52M total assets)

Diversification benefit: 7 deals >> 2 deals (geographic, timing, strategy mix)

Trade-off: More deals = more complexity (management, reporting, relationships)


Our Recommendation for Current Pipeline

For the Central Florida Expansion ($7.3M project):

Primary Recommendation: Option A (All-Cash + Construction)

Rationale:

  • First deal in current pipeline (establish track record with conservative structure)
  • Best risk-adjusted returns (17.2% IRR, 7.06 Sharpe)
  • Maximum flexibility (if market conditions change, can pause)
  • Simpler investor communications (equity partners understand straightforward structure)

Alternative (If Capital Constrained): Option B (Bridge-to-Perm)

Rationale:

  • If equity limited to $2-3M (not $4.5M)
  • Experienced team comfortable with refinance risk
  • Want to preserve capital for other pipeline deals (Lake Alfred, Heart of Florida)

Not Recommended for First Deal: Option C

Rationale:

  • Too complex for initial transaction (build simpler track record first)
  • Difficult to source $1.5M preferred equity without existing portfolio
  • Better suited for Deal #3-5 after establishing relationships

CONCLUSION

Capital stack optimization for self-storage expansion projects can add 200-400 basis points to IRR while significantly altering risk profile and capital efficiency.

The key insights:

  1. Structure matters as much as deal selection (3.4 point IRR spread)
  2. Risk-adjusted returns favor conservative structures (Option A highest Sharpe ratio despite lowest IRR)
  3. Capital efficiency enables portfolio scaling (Option C allows 3x more deals than Option A)
  4. Match structure to investor profile (no one-size-fits-all solution)
  5. Execution experience matters (sophisticated structures require sophisticated teams)

For the Central Florida expansion project analyzed, Option A (All-Cash + Construction Loan) provides optimal risk-adjusted returns for most investors – delivering 17.2% IRR with maximum flexibility and lowest volatility.

For experienced developers seeking maximum leverage and capital efficiency, Option B (Bridge-to-Perm) delivers 19.2% IRR – accepting refinance risk in exchange for superior returns.

For institutional funds scaling across multiple properties, Option C (Preferred Equity Structure) enables 7+ deals with $10M equity – trading complexity for capital efficiency.


💬 For capital stack professionals: What financing structures have worked best for your self-storage expansion projects? Any lender recommendations for construction or bridge financing?

DM “CAPITAL STACK” to discuss optimal financing structure for current $7.3M Central Florida expansion opportunity or schedule a call to review your specific situation.

📞 786-676-4937 | 📅 https://calendly.com/slp-zee

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