Location and price dominate real estate discussions, but a less visible factor often decides which apartment projects move forward and which ones stall out: the amount of real, verifiable cash equity a developer puts into the deal before any loans are made.
Numbers like cap rates, rent projections, and market comps matter, but they don’t determine which projects actually break ground. What sets funded projects apart is how much actual cash equity sits beneath the construction loan, not just what’s listed on a spreadsheet.
Andy Klein, Managing Partner and Co-Head of Investments at Lionheart Strategic Management in New York, has overseen dozens of apartment project financings since 2017 without a single loss. He credits this record to one core principle: only back projects where the developer’s own money is at risk. “There’s real cash equity invested in front of us that’s verifiable and auditable,” Klein says.
Real Cash Equity Decides
The common assumption is simple: a developer finds a site, secures a bank loan, and starts building. In reality, the process is more layered. At the base is the developer’s own cash equity — actual funds committed before outside financing. Above that is the construction loan, and sometimes a middle layer of mezzanine debt.
Klein’s firm specializes in this middle layer, but only participates when the developer has already invested significant cash, not just land they’ve owned for years or paper gains from rising property values. “It’s not something that somebody’s owned for 50 years and cashed out multiple times with a zero tax basis,” Klein says. “It’s real cash that’s verifiable.”
This distinction matters because developers with substantial cash at risk behave differently. They are more disciplined with budgets, more realistic about timelines, and less likely to abandon projects when challenges arise. The risk of losing their own money keeps them invested in seeing the project through.
Cash Equity Protects Lenders and Buyers
For lenders, the developer’s cash equity is the strongest protection against project failure. Legal agreements matter, but nothing aligns interests more than knowing the developer stands to lose real money if the project fails.
Lionheart typically lends a larger portion of the project cost — a “thicker tranche” in the capital stack — but only after confirming the developer’s cash is in first. This approach reduces risk, as Klein explains, because the developer’s equity cushion protects their investment. “We can take a thicker tranche of the capital stack, and that in itself de-risks, because there’s no appraisal event where we’re a sliver and some big tenant moves out and values decline.”
For homebuyers and everyday investors, this principle is just as relevant. When considering a new apartment building or condo project, ask how much real cash equity the developer has contributed. Projects with significant cash backing are more likely to finish on time and meet promised standards.
The Risks of “Fake” Equity
Problems arise when developers rely on “paper equity” — land they bought cheaply years ago that has since appreciated. On paper, this looks like a strong equity contribution, but if construction costs rise or the market slows, the developer has little personal financial risk. They can walk away, leaving lenders and investors exposed.
Lionheart avoids these scenarios by requiring evidence of actual cash investment, such as wire transfers. Developers with real money at stake are less likely to abandon a project or cut corners. As Klein puts it, “We’re positioned in a hard asset that’s brand new, and if it’s built well, you’re somewhat inured against a downward trending market.”
How to Identify Projects with Real Equity
Whether you’re investing in a real estate fund, buying a condo in a new building, or simply curious about which projects in your city are likely to get built, focus on these signals:
– Ask about the developer’s cash equity contribution. A strong sign is a cash investment of more than 20 percent of the total project cost. If the equity is primarily land value or other non-cash assets, be cautious.
– Review the developer’s track record. Developers who invest real cash typically have a history of completing similar projects, as lenders are reluctant to back first-timers with minimal equity.
– Look at the other funding sources. Projects that involve reputable lenders or investment firms have usually undergone thorough equity verification.
– Monitor project timelines and budgets. Developers with substantial cash at risk have strong incentives to avoid delays and cost overruns. Frequent changes or slow progress can indicate insufficient real equity.
Why This Matters Now
As construction costs fluctuate and financing conditions tighten, lenders and investors are scrutinizing equity contributions more closely than ever. The difference between real and paper equity has become a deciding factor in which projects secure funding and move forward. In today’s market, only those with verifiable upfront cash are likely to be built as planned.
The Takeaway
While location and price remain important, they don’t guarantee a project’s success. The most reliable indicator is whether the developer has committed substantial, verifiable cash equity. Projects with real money at risk are more likely to be completed on time, built to standard, and deliver on their promises.
“In our space, having a healthy portfolio and a reputation for commercial reasonability is of paramount importance,” Klein says. For anyone navigating new construction — whether as an investor, buyer, or observer — the key question is simple: is the equity real?
About the Expert: Andy Klein is Managing Partner and Co-Head of Investments at Lionheart Strategic Management, a New York-based firm specializing in construction and development lending. Since 2017, the firm has funded residential projects across major U.S. markets without incurring any losses.
This article is based on information provided by the expert source cited above. It is intended for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal, financial, or real estate advice. Readers should conduct their own research and consult qualified professionals before making any real estate or financial decisions.
