Every Delaware Statutory Trust (DST) investment begins with a Private Placement Memorandum (PPM).
The PPM is the primary disclosure document that governs the offering. It outlines the property, sponsor, financing structure, fees, risk factors, and legal terms that define the investment.
Marketing materials and presentations can summarize an opportunity, but the PPM explains how the investment is actually structured.
Marketing materials explain the opportunity. The PPM explains the assumptions, obligations, and risks behind that opportunity.
For investors evaluating a DST as part of a 1031 exchange, understanding where to focus within the PPM is essential. The objective is not simply reading every page. The objective is knowing which sections have the greatest impact on investor outcomes.
Understanding the Offering Summary and Property Details
Most PPMs begin with an offering summary that provides the basic framework of the investment.
This typically includes:
This section provides context, but investors should not stop here.
The summary explains what the investment is expected to do. The deeper analysis comes from understanding the assumptions supporting those expectations.
For example, two industrial DSTs may have similar projected returns but completely different risk profiles.
One may own a mission-critical logistics facility leased to an investment-grade tenant for 15 years. Another may own a multi-tenant property with shorter leases and greater rollover risk.
The headline numbers alone do not tell the full story.
Investors should evaluate:
A DST should ultimately be evaluated as ownership in institutional real estate, not simply as an investment product.
Understanding DST Fees Across the Investment Lifecycle
DST fees are often discussed as a single category. A more useful framework is understanding where fees occur throughout the lifecycle of the investment.
DST investments generally move through three phases:
Each phase has a different purpose and a different fee structure.
The Syndication Phase
The syndication phase occurs when the DST is created, structured, and brought to market.
During this stage, the sponsor identifies the property, completes due diligence, arranges financing, acquires the asset, creates the trust structure, prepares offering documents, and raises investor capital.
The fees associated with this stage are commonly referred to as upfront fees or the upfront load.
These may include:
These fees compensate the parties involved in sourcing, acquiring, structuring, and distributing the investment.
Investors should understand how much capital is allocated toward transaction costs and how much is ultimately invested into the underlying real estate.
The Operating Phase
The operating phase begins after the DST has been funded and the property is held for investment.
During this period, the sponsor oversees the execution of the business plan. Responsibilities may include managing property-level operations, monitoring tenants, coordinating with property managers, overseeing financing obligations, and communicating with investors.
The primary fee during this phase is typically the asset management fee.
This fee compensates the sponsor for ongoing oversight and may be structured as a fixed percentage or based on property-level financial metrics.
The evaluation should not focus only on the existence of the fee. The more important question is whether the sponsor's experience, capabilities, and responsibilities align with the economics of the arrangement.
The Disposition Phase
The final phase occurs when the DST reaches the end of its hold period and the property is sold. At this stage, the sponsor may receive a disposition fee for managing the sale process, negotiating the transaction, and completing the exit.
The structure varies by offering. Some sponsors charge a stated disposition fee. Others may reduce or waive certain fees based on investment performance or other provisions outlined in the PPM. Because the disposition directly affects final investor proceeds, understanding the exit economics is an important part of evaluating the investment upfront.
DST fees should not be analyzed only by the total amount charged. They should be reviewed based on when they occur, what services they compensate, and how they affect investor outcomes.
Evaluating the Debt Structure
For leveraged DST offerings, financing terms are one of the most important sections of the PPM. Debt can enhance returns, but it can also introduce additional risks.
Investors should review:
A property can perform well operationally but still face challenges if the financing structure creates pressure. A loan maturity during an unfavorable lending environment or exposure to variable interest rates can affect distributions regardless of property quality. The real estate and capital structure should always be evaluated together.
Reviewing the Risk Factors Section
The risk factor section is often lengthy and written from a legal perspective. Because of that, many investors assume it is standard disclosure language. That assumption can overlook important information. While some risks apply broadly to all real estate investments, others are specific to the offering.
Investors should pay particular attention to disclosures related to:
The purpose of reviewing risk factors is not to find an investment without risk. It is to understand which risks you are accepting.
Every investment involves trade-offs. The key is ensuring those trade-offs are understood before capital is committed.
How to Choose the Right Approach for Your Situation
Reviewing a PPM is ultimately not just a document review exercise.
The purpose is determining whether the investment fits the investor's objectives.
Different investors may reach different conclusions after reviewing the same DST.
Important questions include:
For 1031 exchange investors, this analysis is especially important because decisions are often made within the 45-day identification window.
The framework should be established before timing becomes the primary constraint.
Conclusion
The Private Placement Memorandum is the most important document investors receive when evaluating a DST.
Marketing materials summarize the investment. The PPM defines it.
Understanding the property fundamentals, lifecycle fee structure, financing terms, sponsor responsibilities, and specific risk factors allows investors to evaluate DST offerings with greater clarity.
The goal is not simply identifying the highest projected return. The goal is understanding the structure behind those projections and determining whether the investment aligns with the investor's broader objectives.
A structured planning discussion can help evaluate the key sections of a DST Private Placement Memorandum and compare how different offerings fit within an overall 1031 exchange strategy.
General Disclosure
This material is provided for informational and educational purposes only and is based on information from sources we believe to be reliable. However, its accuracy is not guaranteed, and it is not intended to be the sole basis for investment decisions or to meet specific investment needs.
Wealthstone Group does not offer tax or legal advice. This content should not replace professional advice tailored to your individual situation.
Not an offer to buy, nor a solicitation to sell securities. All investing involves risk of loss of some or all principal invested. Past performance is not indicative of future results. Speak to your finance and/or tax professional prior to investing. Any information provided is for informational purposes only. Securities offered through Arkadios Capital, member FINRA/SIPC. Advisory Services offered through Arkadios Wealth. Wealthstone Group and Arkadios are not affiliated through any ownership.