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This page is a high-level summary only. Full terms are in the PPM and subscription agreement. Not an offer to sell securities.

Confidential investor materials. Not an offer to sell securities except as registered or exempt.

Tennessee · Housing · Infill supply

Nashville Infill Housing Program

New supply in supply-constrained Nashville submarkets where employment and tourism support housing demand. High-level summary only.

Illustrative cash flow uses this program’s published minimum with 7.2% of principal per month, 67% per year, and total/year in the metrics below. Hold shortens when you invest more. Updates via email. See the PPM for definitions.

Target metrics

Monthly inflow (7.2% / mo)1

*

At published minimum

Annual inflow (67% / yr)1

*

At published minimum

Total illustrative / year1

*

12 × monthly + annual inflow

Minimum investment2

Subject to manager discretion

Illustrative hold3

Shorter when you invest more — see return snapshot

Strategy

Build-to-core

Path-of-growth

Important disclaimers for target metrics

Program overview

Nashville’s growth has attracted both residents and developers. The program targets infill sites with feasible density and acceptable land basis relative to stabilized value.

Execution spans entitlements, vertical construction, lease-up, and eventual refinance or sale. Each phase is modeled with contingencies in investor-only materials.

Illustrative capitalization emphasis

Simplified educational stack only—not a current offering circular. Percentages are illustrative and rounded for discussion; they are not live capitalization data for any specific vehicle unless the same figures appear in your executed documents.

Offering highlights

  • Focus on delivering rentable units into supply-constrained pockets where zoning allows.
  • Shorter target hold implies reinvestment or exit timing risk may cluster.
  • Tourism and employment cyclicality can affect lease-up velocity.
  • Noise, parking, and neighbor relations can affect entitlements and operations.
  • Forward-looking returns are not guarantees.

Market context

Hospitality and entertainment demand can lift certain submarkets; affordability pressure and traffic congestion can shift renter preferences.

  • Rapid construction pipelines in popular submarkets may compress rent growth.
  • Infrastructure and school capacity can become political constraints on density.
  • Interest rate sensitivity is elevated for shorter hold strategies.

Investment rationale

Employment drivers

Healthcare, music industry services, and corporate relocations influence housing demand.

Land basis

Discipline on land price relative to stabilized NOI targets is central to downside protection.

Exit liquidity

Buyer depth for new product varies with credit spreads and multifamily cap rates.