Student Housing Sectors
- Student housing occupancy rates remain stable during economic booms and may actually rise during downturns because of increased college attendance.
- Four years is no longer the standard for degree completion, exactly two-thirds of high school grads are taking significantly longer to complete their degrees. Where are they going to live while in school?
- Overall the rental revenue, rental rates, and net operating income in student housing properties across the country have continued to rise year over year due to student demand and limited space.
- List ItemIncreased student housing demand by renovating and creating value-add improvements to the properties, may help realize higher returns at a faster rate as compared to the acquisition of stabilized assets.
- Student housing provides appreciation potential, an inflation hedge, portfolio diversification, and monthly income with tax efficiency through depreciation anchored by student housing assets.

Offering Size: $214,516,000
Loan-to-Value: 66.66%
Targeted First Year Yield: 6.50%

Offering Size: $40,264,856
Loan-to-Value: 49.90%
Targeted First Year Yield: 6.20%

Offering Size: $70,014,541
Loan-to-Value: 54.27%
Targeted First Year Yield: 5.50%