Alt Investments
What Family Offices, HNW Individuals Want From Real Estate - A West Coast View

This publication talks to a Californian real estate investment house for its take on what wealthy individuals and families are looking for in their holdings.
This publication continues to chart alternative investments and one of the core ones is real estate. We talk to StarPoint Properties’ head of investments and capital markets, Lonnie Vidaurri, who was appointed to his post more than a year ago. StarPoint is based in Beverly Hills, California. Vidaurri previously worked at Ladder Capital Corp, and has experience at Lehman Brothers, Barclays and OneWest Bank. In his present role, Vidaurri is charged with overseeing acquisitions and lining up debt and equity capitalization for its deals. StarPoint Properties focuses on the West Coast.
What sort of real estate does your
organization invest in? Please elaborate on the
structures it uses for property investments?
We invest in all properties except hotels. All our investments
are structured as LLCs, and typically the equity is sourced
through combinations of 1031 exchange funds and private capital.
What sort of clients does it have and do these include
HNW individuals and family offices, private banks and trusts? If
so, what sort of investments and returns are such clients looking
for and why?
Our capital is typically high net worth private investors. Last
year, we acquired three commercial assets in California: a
12-story office in Beverly Hills, high street retail in Santa
Monica, and a research and development park in Los Angeles
County. This year, we have acquired one multi-family investment
in Texas and are under contract to acquire two development
parcels in coastal California. Returns are commensurate with
the risk profile. We tend to focus on value-add returns. We look
at entitlement risk vs. development risk vs. lease-up risk vs.
stabilized assets with cash flow with below-market rents.
Does tax play much of a role in determining investments
that you like/avoid?
Yes. Historically, we use 1031 exchanges to defer capital gains
exposure and protect equity. Currently, we are focusing on QOZ
[Qualified Opportunity Zones] and will be closing our first
investment at the end of July.
Real estate has often been important in family offices'
portfolios because it is an asset family offices understand. Is
that broadly still the case? Are you finding any changes in how
investors think about real estate today in terms of what it can
do in a portfolio?
I think family offices still like the tangible nature of real
estate. Given the current late-cycle environment with abundant
liquidity, attractive risk adjusted returns are scarce.
Are there risks in real estate investing that you think
investors are often not fully aware of? How much of what you do
involves trying to educate clients?
Since we have been actively investing for 25 years, the firm
tends to have a loyal and steadfast investor base. We are
constantly challenged to time capital markets and identify the
appropriate timing to utilize fixed versus floating rate debt.
Luckily today, we have many options.
Are there case studies (we can remove real names) that
stand out as examples of investments that worked
well?
Most are available on our website. Our firm’s goal is to deliver
asymmetrical returns. Since inception, our track record speaks
for itself. Our PR firm can provide you with links to our recent
transactions.
How have developments such as changes to estate tax
affected your market, if at all?
It’s unclear. The QOZ tax incentives have created a lot of buzz.
We shall see if it results in achieving its intended purpose. To
maximize the tax advantages, investments must be held for 10
years.
Do you think family offices are taking undue risks by
direct investing (unless the FO happens to be an expert anyway)?
What sort of challenges should FOs be aware of before going
"direct"?
I do not have sufficient data to comment on your first question.
However, most of the family offices I have worked with tend to be
sophisticated and well informed. I think the main diligence item
for going direct is to vet the sponsor’s track record and
execution capabilities.
Are club deals and JVs also common in your experience as
far as family offices and some individuals are
concerned?
Yes.
Do you act for only US buyers/sellers or are you
international?
We are currently only domestic.
Any other points you would like to make? Are there actual
investors/commentators whom you look to for inspiration and who
have provided great lessons?
There are a great many lessons. I am currently reading
Principles by Ray Dalio.