Perception becomes reality in the absence of facts. There has been much comment on the thread that is inaccurate..
Indeed. Such as:
The comments about uncompetitive costs fail to stand the test of scrutinising the non-prominent costs of other syndicates, most of the costs of which are higher even though no Development projects are contained.Augusta, used earlier, by Gonk and others deducts about €3m of the €20m raised in rebated property selling agent commissions, in establishment fees and in marketing commissions.
As I have already pointed out, total up front costs for the 6th Augusta fund are €2.33m out of €20m equity. Where are you getting €3m from?
Also as stated above, apart from commissions, that €2.33m includes costs such as stamp duty, legal fees, surveyors fees and other professional advisors. Stamp duty alone accounts for €700k or 30% of the total. It is disingenuous in the extreme of you to imply that Brendan will not incur similar costs. Will Brendan not pay stamp duty on its property purchases? Will it not employ lawyers?
You are speculating when you say Brendan's costs will be lower - the information to support such a conclusion is nowhere to be found in the prospectus. One could just as easily argue that the Augusta fund is likely to have lower total costs for investors given its lower annual management fee and final bonus structure.
As for the constant reference to development projects, whilst I will accept that that these have the potential to deliver higher returns, the flip-side of that is that they carry a higher risk, compared to say, buying an office block with a sitting blue chip tenant. The development component can certainly be characterised as a positive feature, but it is not an unalloyed benefit to investors.
In addition these vehicles are compelled to pay the Revenue 23% of gains on their properties on the 8th anniversary. In the absence of liquidity this means borrowing by the fund. In design terms it means that syndicates will restrict terms to less than 8 years, a term which many believe is too short to weather cyclical downturns.
The Brendan model as a Plc avoids this tax charge . . .
But gains in the Brendan fund
are subject to CGT, currently at 20% - it's not as though they're tax free. And there is no such thing as a free lunch - the 20% rate arises from the fact that the Brendan fund is unregulated and investors will not have recourse to IFSRA and the Financial Services Ombudsman if they have an issue with their investment. (Incidentally, the Augusta fund is structured so gains are taxed at the lower 20% rate too. The same issue with regulation applies to it.)
its cost model best aligns shareholder and director interests.
I beg to differ. As I have stated
ad nauseam the bonus structure is heavily biased towards the directors. Once again (and other readers can draw their own conclusions from your failure to answer the question so far), what other geared property fund levies a performance fee as high as 20% on gains over a threshold as low as 8% p.a.?
There is direct cost recovery capped at a flat 750k clearly explained.
It is not "capped" at €750k - the prospectus clearly states this is an estimate. Presumably, now that the aim appears to be to raise five times as much in shareholders funds as the prospectus states, this figure will rise in proportion.