By Jalen West
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When people hear the word investment, they often picture spreadsheets full of numbers or a Wall Street ticker flashing across a screen. While financials clearly matter, successful investing is rarely just about the math in black and white; it’s about seeing the full picture.
That’s where the FUND framework comes in. It’s a simple way to evaluate opportunities by looking at four pillars: Financials, Underlying Assets, Notable Differentiator, and Delegation of Responsibilities. Let’s walk through it with a real world example.
Imagine you’re considering investing in a local apartment building renovation. The sponsor hands you a glossy pitch deck showing projected returns of 18% annually. Impressive, right?
But before you get excited, you dig deeper:
This is where the Financials lens kicks in. Strong enduring investments are built on conservative assumptions that still work if things don’t go perfectly. If the deal only looks good under best-case scenarios, it’s worth pausing.
Lesson: Don’t just look at returns. Stress test the assumptions under different circumstances.
Now ask yourself: What’s backing up this investment?
In our apartment example, the underlying asset is real estate. A physical property in a real neighborhood. Before investing, you should tour the building and location, and when you do, you notice:
Even if the operator is substandard or even stumbles, the underlying asset still carries intrinsic value. Compare that to investing in a start-up with no revenue and no intellectual property. While there may be promise, if the business fails, there’s nothing left to fall back on.
Lesson: High-quality assets with physical, tangible value provide a safety net.
Let’s say two different sponsors bring you nearly identical apartment deals. Why choose one over the other?
Here’s where you look for the edge. In our example, we have two sponsors touting experience. Sponsor A has renovated ten properties in the same neighborhood and built strong ties with the local community. Sponsor B is newer, with no track record in the area.
All things being the same, Sponsor A’s experience and reputation are the differentiators. They’ve already proven they can manage projects like this, and understand the local rules and supply/demand dynamics, which lowers your risk as an investor.
Lesson: Look for what sets the opportunity apart; experience, unique positioning, or a built-in competitive advantage.
Finally, the question: Who’s actually running the show?
You learn that Sponsor A has a proven system:
Sponsor B, on the other hand, proposes doing everything themselves including raising money, attracting/managing tenants, and swinging a hammer on site. While there’s sometimes a benefit to having one entity control all facets of the renovation, that’s a red flag and worth investigating more closely.
Lesson: Well-delegated responsibilities with controls and procedures mean the project isn’t dependent on one person’s bandwidth, talent or ego.
The FUND framework helps you slow down and look past the hype. By asking:
…you’re no longer just an investor chasing numbers, you’re making thoughtful, educated decisions.
The next time you evaluate an opportunity, try walking through the FUND framework step by step. It may not guarantee success, but it will certainly tilt the odds in your favor.
PPR Capital Management manages more than $1.3B in capital on behalf of a community of over 1,500 accredited investors. If you’d like to learn more about how they deliver returns while mitigating risk, visit their website here.
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Jalen joined PPR Capital Management in 2019 and serves as the Senior Marketing Manager. In his role, he is responsible for educating new investors about PPR’s investment offerings and how they can utilize the funds to meet their investment goals. In his tenure at PPR, Jalen has aided in raising over $100M in new capital from investors and built out various processes within the Investor Relations Department.

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