Why Brazilian Investors Are Looking at U.S. Workforce Multifamily
For Brazilian investors with U.S.-dollar exposure goals and a long-duration mindset, workforce multifamily real estate has been a quietly compelling allocation through multiple cycles. Here is why — and the diligence questions that matter.
Why workforce multifamily survives cycles
Workforce multifamily — typically Class B and B+ properties serving households earning 60–120% of area median income — has structural durability: housing demand at this income band is relatively inelastic, supply is constrained, and operating cash flow is steady through downturns.
What sponsor diligence actually looks like
- Track record: completed assets at scale; references from prior LPs.
- Alignment: meaningful GP capital co-investment; carry structure.
- Operations: in-house property management or proven operating partner.
- Reporting: institutional-quality investor reporting cadence.
Structuring 101
For Brazilian and other foreign investors, common structures include LP interests with U.S. blocker corporations to manage estate-tax exposure and FIRPTA withholding. Treaty positions matter. Form W-8BEN-E is standard. None of this is optional.
Currency and hedging
U.S.-dollar exposure is often the point of the investment, but BRL/USD volatility affects deployment timing and repatriation. Hedging is available; cost should be modeled into return expectations.
Investor reporting and governance
Quarterly capital account statements, annual audited financials at fund level where applicable, material consent rights, and conflict-of-interest disclosure expectations are the institutional minimum.
Para investidores brasileiros: A NAJA Capital tem uma página em português dedicada a investidores cross-border. Visite /pt →
