At our December DIG Philly meeting, Fred Hubler finished his worst-case scenario story with the part that matters most: how the sponsor protected investors during the 2008 crisis. Even when facing an 18% hard money loan and mortgage refinancing impossibility, DST investors never received a capital call. This isn't just reassuring—it's a fundamental structural protection that sets DSTs apart from other real estate investments.
When the Gander Mountain deal hit its perfect storm in 2008—stock collapse, mortgage called, credit markets frozen—the sponsor made two critical decisions to protect investors:
"The sponsor took no fees."
Think about what this means. The sponsor—the institutional operator managing the property—voluntarily forfeited their management fees to preserve investor income.
They didn't have to do this. The fee structure was contractual. But they chose to protect investor distributions at their own expense.
Why this matters:
This is why Hubler only trusts 30 sponsors out of hundreds available. When crisis hits, sponsor character matters more than anything else.
"[They] renegotiated the lease to a much lower amount just to keep something going."
Rather than demand full contractual rent that the struggling tenant might not pay, the sponsor negotiated a reduced but sustainable rent structure.
This pragmatic approach:
And critically: "Then obligated Gander Mountain, the company, to refi as soon as they could."
The lease renegotiation included a provision requiring the tenant to help facilitate refinancing once markets normalized. This wasn't a permanent rent reduction—it was a temporary bridge with built-in recovery mechanisms.
"At one point they had almost a hard money loan of 18%."
To understand how desperate this was: In 2008, when traditional mortgage markets froze completely, the only financing available was hard money—essentially loan sharks for commercial real estate.
Normal market conditions:
2008 crisis conditions:
The sponsor had to take an 18% loan to avoid default—a rate that would normally destroy property economics completely.
But here's what's remarkable: Even with 18% financing costs temporarily destroying cash flow, investors continued receiving distributions (albeit reduced to 2%). No capital calls. No assessments. No demands for more money.
"It was temporary because it took about a year and a half before Gander could get a real mortgage and everything went better."
The crisis wasn't permanent. As credit markets recovered:
That 18-month period of extreme stress—18% financing, reduced rents, sponsor working without fees—was the bridge from crisis to recovery.
And investors' role during this crisis? Absolutely nothing. They didn't:
That's passive investing at its most valuable—being passive even during disasters.
"You can never have a capital call with a DST."
This is the single most important structural protection in DST investing, and it's legally mandated—not just a best practice.
What capital calls are:Capital calls occur in syndications and partnerships when:
Investors receive demands: "Send us $25,000 within 30 days or we'll dilute your ownership" or "We need emergency funding to avoid foreclosure."
Why they're devastating:
DSTs cannot do this. Ever. It's prohibited by the structure. The debt is set at purchase, and that's the only debt the property will ever have during the DST period.
"The debt on the DST is fixed. If there's any debt, it's fixed for the life of the DST. So there's no interest rate risk."
This is another massive protection that investors often overlook.
The prohibition on capital calls isn't a guideline—it's a legal requirement of the DST structure established by IRS Revenue Ruling 2004-86.
DSTs must have:
If a sponsor violates these rules, the entire DST structure fails, and all tax benefits disappear. The penalty for breaking these rules is catastrophic for both sponsor and investors.
This creates absolute certainty: When you invest $500,000 in a DST, that's the maximum you will ever invest in that DST. Not $500,000 plus potential future capital calls. Just $500,000. Period.
Understanding what DSTs prevent requires seeing what other structures allow:
Real estate syndications can and do:
Example scenarios syndications face:
These aren't theoretical. They happen regularly in real estate partnerships.
DSTs simply cannot do any of this. The structure forbids it
DST investing offers two ironclad protections that other real estate structures don't:
1. No Capital Calls, EverYour initial investment is your total investment. No future demands. No emergency assessments. Complete certainty.
2. Fixed DebtInterest rates locked at acquisition. No payment increases. No interest rate risk. Predictable costs for entire hold period.
These protections proved their value during the worst financial crisis in modern history. When an 18% hard money loan and mortgage refinancing impossibility hit simultaneously, DST investors weren't asked for additional capital.
They just had to wait longer than expected and accept reduced distributions temporarily. That's it.
For passive investors who want certainty and protection—who want to know exactly what they're committing to without risk of future demands—these structural protections are invaluable.
You might never face a crisis like 2008. But if you do, you'll be grateful the DST structure prohibits capital calls and fixes debt from day one.
Because in a crisis, structure matters more than anything else.
Delaware Statutory Trusts are prohibited by law from issuing capital calls and must have fixed debt for the life of the investment. However, distributions can decrease based on property performance, and properties can face operational challenges. Past crisis management by sponsors does not guarantee future performance. This article is for educational purposes only. Always consult with qualified tax, legal, and financial professionals before making investment decisions.
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