RJ:
You have correctly described the professed advantages of the NGP/AGP business model. Unfortunately, the reality is somewhat different. First of all, NGP acquired a large number of properties at the top of the market. For example, the portfolio in my part of the country (NC Texas) was purchased at a substantial premium. Secondly, a golf course (and its clientele) has its own peculiarities and needs which does not lend itself to management from afar. You can have a national or regional turf specialist, but if you are paying your local superintendent $50M and dictate to him how and when to do his work, things don't very often come out according to plan. Take away the decision making from your local Director of Golf, restrict his vendor relationships, and bifurcate his authority on the setup of the course and you create a bureaucrat with little initiative. Push for year to year profit growth in excess of cost inflation with fixed asset base (capacity), then you have to price in a market with heavy competition or cut services and expenses. These are but a few reasons why I believe that the golf course business is best done by small, hands-on owner/operators who can respond more quickly and directly to the demands of the marketplace.
Tim:
In this part of the country, away form the high growth corridors, I believe that it is still possible to build a very playable, enjoyable golf course for $5MM+/-, turnkey. It is not going to have 100 sand traps, wall-to-wall irrigation, 8-10' concrete cart paths, and an opulant 15,000 SF clubhouse, but it can provide a very acceptable playing environment. In as far as moderating investors' expectations, the fact that alternative investment yields are down should by itself have a lowering effect. Golf, however, is correctly perceived as a high risk endeavor by most investors so a higher return is expected. Hopefully, as owners turn-over during this down cycle, a new group will emerge that trully loves and understands the game, and who will be long term oriented in its investments.