For investors
Returns & distributions
Asset Nook Capital presents returns in two layers investors understand quickly: dividend-style distributions (ongoing cash) and total return on investment (often cited as up to 67% on certain flagship programs — a target, not a guarantee). The framework below should be aligned with counsel and your executed offering documents.
The big picture
Where the money comes from
Dividend-style distributions (cash income)
Investors receive periodic cash from property operations — we describe this as dividend-style for clarity. Offering documents may still call them distributions; tax treatment varies. Payouts depend on occupancy, expenses, debt service, and reserves — not guaranteed.
Appreciation & exit proceeds
Value creation from rent growth, renovations, or market repricing often shows up when a property sells or refinances. Investors may receive a return of capital and/or gain depending on structure and tax treatment (consult a tax advisor).
Transparency
What investors should see on each offering
| Field | Why it matters |
|---|---|
| Minimum investment | Sets who can participate and portfolio sizing. |
| Target hold period | Illiquidity horizon; not a promise to exit on time. |
| Dividend-style yield / cash-on-cash | Ongoing cash to investors from operations — targets, not guarantees. |
| Target total ROI (e.g. up to 67%) | Full-cycle return including distributions and exit — offering-specific; not a promise. |
| Distribution frequency | Monthly, quarterly, or event-based — plus conditions to pay. |
| Fees (mgmt, acquisition, disposition, etc.) | Shows what reduces investor net results. |
| Risk factors | Leverage, vacancy, rates, execution — in plain English + legal PPM. |
Fees
Typical fee categories
Institutional programs publish a clear fee table. Your attorney and fund administrator define what applies to your structure.
| Fee type | Example range | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Asset management | 1.0%–2.0% / yr | On committed or invested capital — varies by deal. |
| Acquisition / origination | 1%–3% | Often one-time; must be disclosed in docs. |
| Performance allocation | 10%–20% | After preferred return hurdles, if applicable. |
Reporting
What the investor dashboard should show
- Capital called vs. funded
- Distributions received (date, amount, type)
- Position value updates (with methodology footnotes)
- Documents: K-1 / tax packets when applicable, statements, PPM updates
- Capital events: refinances, sales, and return of capital