{"id":3975,"date":"2022-10-10T09:10:46","date_gmt":"2022-10-10T09:10:46","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/imsfund.com\/?p=3975"},"modified":"2022-10-10T09:10:46","modified_gmt":"2022-10-10T09:10:46","slug":"these-real-estate-niches-are-primed-for-huge-growth-in-2023","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/imsfund.com\/index.php\/2022\/10\/10\/these-real-estate-niches-are-primed-for-huge-growth-in-2023\/","title":{"rendered":"These Real Estate Niches Are Primed for HUGE Growth in 2023"},"content":{"rendered":"<p> <br \/>\n<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"https:\/\/www.biggerpockets.com\/blog\/commercial-real-estate-fundamentals\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\"><strong>Commercial real estate<\/strong><\/a> isn\u2019t the sexiest asset class out there. With industrial, office, and warehouse buildings, <strong>most investors are enticed by single-family homes<\/strong>, duplexes, triplexes, and other \u201ctraditional\u201d types of real estate. But in a <strong>recession<\/strong>, these may not be the best asset classes around. <a href=\"https:\/\/store.biggerpockets.com\/collections\/books-by-j-scott\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\"><strong>J Scott<\/strong><\/a>, author, investor, syndicator, and the godfather of flipping, thinks these often <strong>overlooked asset classes could be primed to explode<\/strong> <strong>in value <\/strong>over the next few years.<\/p>\n<p>Welcome to <em>On the Market<\/em>, where familiar faces Dave Meyer and Henry Washington invite J back to the show to talk about <a href=\"https:\/\/www.biggerpockets.com\/blog\/inflation-what-the-fed-wont-tell-you\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\"><strong>inflation<\/strong><\/a>, <a href=\"https:\/\/www.biggerpockets.com\/blog\/on-the-market-4\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\"><strong>interest rates<\/strong><\/a>, and<strong> the best real estate opportunities<\/strong> around. We also talk about the importance of knowing <strong>how to analyze deals <\/strong>during times like these, as<strong> price drops<\/strong> could allow you to <strong>build wealth far faster than ever before<\/strong>. If you\u2019re still new to real estate, waiting to get your first deal, or want to build your portfolio to greater heights, grab Dave and J\u2019s new book, <a href=\"https:\/\/store.biggerpockets.com\/products\/real-estate-by-the-numbers\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\"><strong><em>Real Estate by the Numbers<\/em><\/strong><\/a>, where they go into factors behind the formulas.<\/p>\n<p>In this episode, we debate <strong>single-family homes vs. large multifamily and commercial investing<\/strong>, how to go beyond the numbers, and the crucial questions to ask when buying or selling a real estate deal. Plus, you\u2019ll peak into the minds of one of the most successful real estate investors around, whose track record speaks volumes, and <strong>hear exactly what he\u2019s buying<\/strong> in this market.<\/p>\n<div style=\"overflow-y: scroll; max-height: 400px; background: #eee; padding: 20px; border: 1px solid #ddd;\">\n<p>Dave:<br \/>Hey, everyone. Welcome to On the Market. I\u2019m Dave Meyer, your host, and I am here with two BiggerPockets and investing legends. We\u2019ve got Henry Washington who\u2019s here a lot. Henry, how\u2019s it going?<\/p>\n<p>Henry:<br \/>What\u2019s up, buddy? Glad to be here.<\/p>\n<p>Dave:<br \/>Thank you. Thank you for being here. And we also are bringing back, I think you are our first two-time guest, J Scott. What\u2019s going on, J?<\/p>\n<p>J:<br \/>I am doing great and I am thrilled to be your first two-time guest. I can\u2019t wait. And hopefully, I\u2019ll be your first three-time and four-time and five-time also.<\/p>\n<p>Henry:<br \/>Whoo. Whoo.<\/p>\n<p>Dave:<br \/>All right. Wow, I like it. Yeah. I mean, I think your episode about investing in a recession might be one of our best, if not our best episode of all time. So if you haven\u2019t listened to that already, you should check that out. J has written a book about recession, investing in all sorts of market cycles, particularly useful in this type of economic environment. But J, can you tell people why you\u2019re here joining us today?<\/p>\n<p>J:<br \/>Yeah. I\u2019m here today because you wanted me to be here because you and I are getting ready to release a book, our next book for BiggerPockets, and you were too ashamed to self-promote and announce it yourself. So you brought me on to announce it so you wouldn\u2019t have to look bad.<\/p>\n<p>Dave:<br \/>That\u2019s exactly right.<\/p>\n<p>J:<br \/>So we\u2019re here to talk about a lot of\u2026 Or I\u2019m here to talk about a lot of things, but would definitely want to mention that you and I, Dave, are releasing a book called Real Estate by the Numbers. It\u2019s coming out in a couple days, I think October 13th, from BiggerPockets. It\u2019s now available for pre-order. And basically, it\u2019s all about how we can better think like investors. So how we can think more strategically, how we can employ investing concepts that really successful investors use, all the math that goes on behind the scenes that we need to underwrite deals, and how we should be thinking about investing from the most basic level, like underwriting deals, to how we should be thinking about structuring our business and structuring our portfolio basically to be a more successful, more profitable investor.<\/p>\n<p>Dave:<br \/>That\u2019s perfectly right, and thank you for taking the responsibility of the shameless plug. We got to do it, but I do want to mention that it is available for pre-order for two more days. And if you do pre-order it, there are benefits. J and I are both giving away coaching calls. We\u2019re going to be hosting a webinar that you can attend. It\u2019s a live Q&amp;A. There\u2019s a couple other benefits. And you can use a discount code, DAVE, to get 10% off. Or J, I think, do you have a code also?<\/p>\n<p>J:<br \/>Yeah, JSCOTT.<\/p>\n<p>Dave:<br \/>Okay, or you could either use the code Dave, D-A-V-E, or J-S-C-O-T-T, JSCOTT for 10% off. So you should check that out. So it\u2019s a great book. I think you should read it. I think Henry actually even wrote a little blurb about how much he loved the book on it.<\/p>\n<p>Henry:<br \/>Yes. You know what\u2019s funny is if I were to direct somebody, if somebody came to me and said, \u201cHey, Henry, I really need to know about what are the best rules of thumb or financial equations, or how do I get really good with numbers? Who do you know at BiggerPockets that could help me with that?\u201d My 1000% answer would\u2019ve been like, \u201cOh, you got to talk to Dave and J Scott. Talk to those two people. Those are the ones who can really break down the numbers for you.\u201d And so the fact that you actually wrote a book called Real Estate by the Numbers, it\u2019s almost like, it\u2019s like a meme. Like, \u201cOf course, Dave and J Scott wrote a book Real Estate by the Numbers. That is 1000% who they are.\u201d So I think people should take advantage of that because you want people to speak on the things that they are passionate about and that they know the best. And if I know anything about the two of you, it\u2019s that you\u2019re passionate about data, the numbers, and real estate. So that\u2019s super exciting.<\/p>\n<p>Dave:<br \/>Well, thank you, Henry.<\/p>\n<p>J:<br \/>Thank you, Henry. I don\u2019t want to spend the whole episode talking about the book. There are so many more important things to talk about, but I do want to point out that Dave and I, we worked for several years on this book. This is my fifth and by far the hardest book that I\u2019ve ever worked on. And no way I would\u2019ve accomplished it at all, let alone it be as good as it is without Dave. So we put a lot of time and effort and blood, sweat, and tears into this one. But at the end of the day, I am more excited about this book launch than any of the other four that I did because I really think this book is going to help more investors over the next 10, 20, 50 years than anything we\u2019ve ever written.<\/p>\n<p>Dave:<br \/>All right. Well, we will get into the meat of this episode because we want to hear about what J is doing with investing. But I am also excited because I now have physical proof to all my teachers and guidance counselors who said I\u2019d never graduate college or do anything with my life, that I have done something with my life. So there.<\/p>\n<p>J:<br \/>I like how he says he has physical proof and he just holds up an invisible\u2026<\/p>\n<p>Dave:<br \/>Yeah, it doesn\u2019t even exist. I\u2019m just holding up nothing. But in a couple of weeks, I will. This is what they meant, J, when they said I\u2019d never amount to anything.<\/p>\n<p>J:<br \/>It was all a dream.<\/p>\n<p>Dave:<br \/>All right. Well, let\u2019s take a quick break, but then we are going to talk to J all about his investing and what he\u2019s doing in this very confusing economy, and we will be right back.<\/p>\n<p>Speaker 4:<br \/>(singing)<\/p>\n<p>Dave:<br \/>Okay. So J, tell us about your read of the economy. And what are you doing in your investing business right now to adjust to these very confusing market conditions?<\/p>\n<p>J:<br \/>Yeah, I wish I had a better answer than what I\u2019m about to give, but I think right now is very much\u2026 I\u2019m not stopping investing. There\u2019s no reason to ever stop investing if the right deals are coming along, but I\u2019m certainly being a little bit more introspective, and sitting on the sidelines a little bit and waiting to see where things go probably not for too much longer. I think we\u2019ll have a good bit more clarity in the next month or two. So everybody knows that we\u2019re experiencing some high inflation and that\u2019s leading the Federal Reserve to raise interest rates to slow down that inflation, which is leading to higher mortgage rates. And now, debt is more expensive. It\u2019s harder to get a loan, or it\u2019s not hard to get a loan, but it\u2019s harder to get a cheap loan to buy your real estate.<br \/>And so nobody really has any idea of how high interest rates are going to go. And so we\u2019re in an uncertain time right now. But what I will say is that even though some other asset classes, I mean, the stock market has struggled a little bit recently and crypto is down like 80%, and other asset classes that I look at are down a good bit, real estate has stayed pretty strong. Now, certainly there\u2019s a few markets around the country that things got so hot over the last couple years, places like Seattle, San Francisco, Boise, Idaho, New York City, where things are starting to slow down a little bit and we\u2019re seeing prices actually decrease in a few markets. But for the most part, in most markets\u2026 And I know it\u2019s going to be a couple weeks before this episode\u2019s released, hopefully nothing\u2019s happened in those two weeks that make this statement look idiotic. But for the most part, most markets have been pretty resilient.<br \/>And so what we\u2019re seeing is there aren\u2019t a lot of sales. Sellers aren\u2019t really lowering their prices and buyers aren\u2019t necessarily willing to come up to the high prices right now. So what we\u2019re seeing is a drop off in sales. We\u2019re seeing increased inventory in a lot of these markets and we\u2019re seeing lower transaction volume, but the nice thing is we\u2019re not seeing desperate sellers. We\u2019re not seeing a real\u2026 I mean, foreclosures are up a good bit percentage wise, but they were so low that even the big jump percentage wise doesn\u2019t translate to big numbers. So foreclosures are still relatively low. Lots of people locked in long-term, really low fixed-rate debt a couple years ago. So I don\u2019t see right now a whole lot of desperate sellers, which means prices are going to stay relatively strong.<br \/>Now, the downside is, as real estate investors, we don\u2019t mind if prices drop because we just dollar cost average and buy more real estate, but what I expect over the next at least six to 12 months is that we\u2019re going to see just a stagnating market. We\u2019re going to see prices that don\u2019t really go up, don\u2019t really go down, we\u2019re going to see sellers that aren\u2019t really willing to budge off their prices because they don\u2019t have to, we\u2019re going to see buyers that aren\u2019t really willing to come up to the seller\u2019s prices just because they don\u2019t know where things are going. And so I think it\u2019s going to be a quiet six to 12 months, despite the fact that we could be facing a big recession in the economy and other parts of the economy could be getting much worse. So it\u2019s interesting that we\u2019re facing a lot of economic headwinds, but real estate could really just be boring for the next six to 12 months.<\/p>\n<p>Henry:<br \/>Yeah, man, that\u2019s super interesting. I share your perspective. I think things are just going to stay where they are. I don\u2019t see much of a drop coming in prices in most markets. Like you said, some markets are going to see somewhat of a drop, but we\u2019ve got this\u2026 What did Jamil call it? We\u2019ve got this standoff happening in real estate until there\u2019s some change that has an actual major effect. One thing you did mention that I want to ask you about is you did say that you\u2019re not stopping investing, but also have been waiting on the sideline. And so can we define that for people? Because I think there\u2019s a lot of investors out there who feel like they should be waiting on the sideline. And I think us as investors, when we say that, we\u2019re really meaning like, \u201cI may not be as actively aggressively searching for something to pour my money into, but I\u2019ve still got my eyes out there. And if something comes along, we\u2019re going to jump on it.\u201d So what does that really mean to you?<\/p>\n<p>J:<br \/>Well, here\u2019s the big thing, I can stay active and we can all stay active in real estate without buying or selling anything. So I\u2019m actually using this time to investigate some new asset classes. So there\u2019s some asset classes that I think are likely to do well during a downturn. So over the next year or two or three. There are a couple asset classes that I\u2019m starting to look at and we can talk about those. But just at a high level, I\u2019m using this opportunity, one, like you said, I\u2019m not stopping investing. I\u2019m still looking for deals. I\u2019m not finding as many deals. I\u2019m not finding as many opportunities, but if a good deal comes along, I\u2019m going to jump on it. But at the same time, I\u2019m using this slow down to do research, to learn how to underwrite other asset classes, to build relationships with operators in other asset classes.<br \/>When I say other asset classes, I don\u2019t mean outside of real estate. I mean instead of focusing on multifamily, which is what I\u2019ve been focused on the last few years, I\u2019m starting to investigate other commercial niches, and I\u2019m still buying some single-family stuff. But I\u2019m trying to see where the market is going, where the economy is going in the specific locations where I\u2019m investing and seeing what opportunities might exist outside of the core asset class, again, for me, multifamily, that I\u2019ve been in. And what I like to tell people, is that you don\u2019t necessarily ever have to stop investing. You may have to move to a different location, or if you want to stay in the location, you may have to find a different niche, or different asset class, or different business model.<br \/>But if you\u2019re good at being flexible and you\u2019re good at pivoting\u2026 And this is why\u2026 And to go back to the fact that the book Dave and I wrote is so important, it\u2019s really important that you\u2019re able to evaluate deals in different ways. We all probably know how to underwrite if we flip houses. We all know the equation to evaluate a house flip. And if we hold a rental, a lot of us know the equations and the formulas for how to evaluate a single-family buy-and-hold. But the reality is every deal is going to be analyzed differently. Every asset class is going to be analyzed differently. And there are lots of different ways to look at deals and look at markets, and there are lots of different reasons we invest in real estate.<br \/>And so using this time to really educate yourself on how to look at deals from different perspectives, and how to maximize the returns on deals with other things other than maybe cash flow, or other than maybe just equity growth. There\u2019s a lot of things that we can be learning and doing right now to really find these needles in a haystack, and to find other asset classes that might be more advantageous given where the market\u2019s headed and where the market currently is. And so what I\u2019m spending a lot of time doing is, one, I\u2019m not stopping looking for deals, but I\u2019m really trying to get familiar with other asset classes, and other business models, and other niches that I can leverage to really grow my portfolio in a market that\u2019s about to change.<\/p>\n<p>Dave:<br \/>J, can you remind everyone what your primary niche is currently? And then talk a little bit about some of the niches that you think are going to work short term, or maybe some of the niches and opportunities you are excited about on the longer term perspective as well.<\/p>\n<p>J:<br \/>Yeah. So long term, I\u2019m excited about everything. Honestly, I mean, we\u2019ve talked about this before. Go back and listen to the last episode we did of this podcast that I was on. But the reality is that historically speaking, recessions don\u2019t last that long. And so if the Fed started raising interest rates six months ago on average between the time the Fed starts raising interest rates and starts dropping interest rates, is about two years, just over two years. The longest it\u2019s ever been is about three years. So if history is going to repeat itself, which it normally does, we can expect that in the next year and a half to two and a half years, we\u2019re going to see interest rates starting to come down again. So if you\u2019re a house flipper, if you\u2019re a buy-and-hold investor, whatever you do, most likely in the next two to three years, it\u2019s going to be a great time to do it again. The market\u2019s going to have recovered and interest rates are going to come down. Everything\u2019s going to be good.<br \/>That\u2019s longer term. From a shorter term perspective, the next 6, 12, 18 months, what I like about real estate is that there\u2019s a segment of real estate called commercial real estate where values of properties are based on the income those properties produce. So if I go and buy a single-family home\u2026 I live in a house right now. The house that I live in, the value of that house is going to be impacted by the value of all the other houses around me. So if somebody goes to sell\u2026 If I go to sell my house right now, I\u2019m going to look at what my neighbor sold his house for last month, or what the guy down the street sold his house for three weeks ago, or whatever. I\u2019m going to find other houses that are similar to mine, what we call comparables or comps. And whatever they\u2019re selling for, that\u2019s probably what my house is worth.<br \/>In the commercial real estate world, and when I say commercial, I mean anything that you use that generates income that\u2019s bigger. So multifamily, or self-storage, or mobile home parks, or office space, whatever it is, the value of that real estate isn\u2019t based on what the building next door sold for, or what the complex across the street sold for. The value of that building, or the value of that real estate is based on the income it\u2019s producing. And if it makes more income next year than it did this year, the value is probably going to go up. And so the reason I really like commercial real estate right now is because even though values may drop on a comp basis, even though single-family values may go down or stagnate over the next 6, 12, 18 months, in the commercial space, as long as rents are going up, we\u2019re going to see values going up for the most part. Now, there\u2019s another component there, but for the most part, if rents are going up, values tend to go up.<br \/>And so the question we need to ask ourselves is, \u201cWhat are those asset classes where we expect income to go up?\u201d So multifamily, that\u2019s the niche that I\u2019m in. I own a bunch of apartment complexes and what we\u2019ve seen over the last couple of years is this trend away from home ownership and this trend towards renting. More people are renting, wages are going up, people are moving to certain population centers. So if you\u2019re in the right market with good population growth and good wage growth and good employment growth, you\u2019re going to see that rents are going up. And so I really like multifamily in a lot of these markets because I know that rents are going to go up, which means values in my properties are going to go up. And so any asset classes where you think income is going to go up over the next couple years, that\u2019s a good place to be.<br \/>Historically, during recessions, people move from bigger houses to smaller houses, but they don\u2019t like to sell their stuff. What do they do with their stuff? They put it in storage. So historically, self-storage is counter-cyclical to the broader economy. If the broader economy is doing worse, self-storage is doing really well because people need a place to put their stuff when they downsize. So I really like self-storage right now. Mobile home parks, mobile home parks tend to do pretty well during a recession because it\u2019s the lowest common denominator for housing. And so a lot of people that have to move out of their house or out of their apartment, a lot of them will look for a mobile home. And so typically, mobile homes do pretty well during recessions.<br \/>Other asset classes that I like right now are industrial and warehouse. So we\u2019re seeing this shift away from in-person retail. People aren\u2019t walking into stores and malls as much anymore. This isn\u2019t a revelation. Everybody knows this. They\u2019re ordering off of Amazon, or they\u2019re ordering off of other online retailers, and these retailers need to be able to ship in 24 or 48 hours. And so they\u2019re opening warehouses all around the country to make basically their fulfillment and delivery systems more efficient. So lots of big companies like Amazon are buying warehouses all over the country, as well as smaller online retailers doing the same thing. And so what we\u2019re seeing is demand for these light industrial warehouse lots and warehouses has been going through the roof. And so I really like that because I think that trend is going to continue.<br \/>Now, there are other asset classes in commercial where I think income is likely to go down; office space. So we saw a ton of office space open up after COVID, simply because everybody was working from home. And a lot of companies have recognized that this work-from-home thing is actually working okay for them. Not saying everybody. Some companies are starting to tell their employees to come back to work, but for a lot of companies, they\u2019ve recognized that this work-from-home movement is a great way to save costs for the company. And so they have all this office space that they may have leased for a year or two years or three years or five years, but at some point, that lease is going to come due over the next couple years and they\u2019re not going to renew. And the landlord, whoever\u2019s holding the building, is going to have trouble leasing this office space. So office space, I have a feeling, is going to be one of those asset classes that\u2019s going to start to contract over the next year or the next couple years.<br \/>Retail. So retail tends to not do well during recessions. People don\u2019t go out and shop as much. Certain types of retail do well. If you own an anchor store like a grocery store or the big store on the corner of the shopping center, that might do well. But in general, retail and strip malls and mall space isn\u2019t going to do well during a recession. So I\u2019m staying away from retail. So this is basically what I mean by there are going to be opportunities out there, but you really have to understand how the market works, you have to understand how the economy works, and you have to understand how the two work together, how the economy impacts the real estate market in certain asset classes. And so I\u2019m starting to do research on those asset classes that I think are likely to do well over the next couple years, as well as starting to build relationships with other operators who are working in those asset classes so that I can either learn from them, I can partner with them, I can invest with them, whatever it is.<\/p>\n<p>Henry:<br \/>That\u2019s super interesting because we have taken some time this year to do almost exactly the same thing. And so I purchased my first commercial office complex this year, and also we\u2019re looking at a trailer park. And so all that to say, not to toot my own horn, but I\u2019m agreeing with the point that you\u2019re making, is that there are other niches and there are niches that are going to be better suited to the economic conditions. It\u2019s an echo to what you said in the beginning. There\u2019s always room to be an investor. It\u2019s just about what you invest in, what price points you enter at, and then what your return on that investment is.<br \/>A good deal, is a good deal, is a deal. And we say a good deal is based on what you\u2019re getting it for in that current market condition. And so you can get a good deal in any market condition. So I love that you\u2019re looking into those things. And I hope that encourages some people to think, not necessarily outside the box, but just be smart about, in sports, we call it take what the defense is giving you. And so you look around at your environment, at what the defense or what the country or what the economic status is giving you, and then you look for the opportunities there. So that\u2019s awesome.<\/p>\n<p>J:<br \/>Yeah. And another thing to keep in mind, I think one of the reasons I like real estate right now, I love real estate right now, is because I think the long-term growth trends are astronomical. One of the big concerns that the Federal Reserve has now, for anybody that\u2019s listened to some of the recent press conferences or read some of the things that Jerome Powell, Federal Reserve has released over the last couple months, is this concern for housing. And they\u2019re not concerned about housing because they want us real estate investors to continue to do well and make money. They don\u2019t care about that. They\u2019re concerned about housing because they know that if we don\u2019t continue to create more housing, that we\u2019re going to have affordability problems, that we\u2019re going to have a housing crisis where people can\u2019t afford to live. Basically, the Fed is telling us, \u201cWe need housing to do well because we need builders to keep building, and we need people to keep providing housing for all the people that can\u2019t afford a place to live or a place to buy.\u201d<br \/>And so I have a feeling, and not just a feeling, but the data supports this as well, that there\u2019s going to be a whole lot of housing, millions of units literally somewhere in the three to five million units that are needed over the next five years to support all of the people that are looking for housing, and all of the people that can\u2019t necessarily afford to buy and are looking for rental housing. And so if you\u2019re a landlord, if you\u2019re a developer, if you\u2019re a multifamily investor, this is going to be a fantastic place to be over the next five or 10 years. So what I would suggest to anybody is if you\u2019re flipping houses right now, start investigating how to buy single-family rentals because there\u2019s going to be a great opportunity and it\u2019s going to be a very powerful asset class over the next few years. If you\u2019re already buying single-family rentals, start looking into multifamily and looking into going bigger. Because again, it\u2019s not that difficult to do bigger in the residential space. And so start thinking about how you can scale up your business.<br \/>If you\u2019re in multifamily or if you\u2019re a single-family landlord, start thinking about development because there\u2019s probably going to be some good opportunities. I\u2019m not saying this month or even this year, but over the next several years, there could be some great opportunities for you to be doing either ground-up development or infill development, which means basically buying a house, knocking it down and rebuilding it. And so learning these new skills now while everything\u2019s slowed down and boring is going to be a great way for you to be making a lot of money come two years from now or three years from now or five years from now.<br \/>I see too many real estate investors that are so focused on what they\u2019re doing day in and day out that they\u2019re not thinking about, \u201cHow am I going to be able to make a lot of money two or three or five years down the road?\u201d Well, now is the time. If you\u2019re not doing a lot of deals, now is the time to be reading, and learning, and studying, and building relationships that you can leverage a couple years down the road when the market\u2019s really going to need more rental housing.<\/p>\n<p>Dave:<br \/>I love that, J. It\u2019s such a good synopsis of the long-term prospects for real estate investing. There\u2019s just a supply shortage in the market. There\u2019s going to be so many ways to profit from that over the next couple years. And not just profit from it, but provide housing for people that need it. You are providing value to society and you could benefit from it personally too. To me, I agree. That gets me super excited about real estate investing over the next couple years.<br \/>A couple of the asset classes you talk about, to me, at least when I was getting started, felt a little daunting, retail. Henry, you\u2019re just buying office spaces. What would you say to people who are ready to get into the market now, or maybe they\u2019re in one of those markets that have already settled down or maybe is going to keep growing over the next few years? Do you think now is a good\u2026 Would you caution people away from single-family rentals right now if they can find good deals? Or do you still think those are possible to be profitable in the next year or so?<\/p>\n<p>J:<br \/>Well, let me start with the first part of that first. Yeah, people are definitely scared of these bigger asset classes. I know that when I started, I used to think that people that owned apartment complexes were special people. It wasn\u2019t people like you and me. I grew up living in an apartment complex, probably literally one of the largest department complexes in the country. It was something like 1600 units. And so my idea of an apartment complex is, \u201cYou\u2019ve got this multi-billion-dollar company that buys these things and that\u2019s who owns apartment complexes.\u201d<br \/>And what I\u2019ve realized over the last couple years is, \u201cNo, there are a lot of mom and pop investors like me and you and Henry and other people who are buying up apartment complexes or buying office space or buying retail space.\u201d We\u2019re not talking about necessarily having to go in and buy a billion-dollar shopping mall or having to go to New York and buy a skyscraper for office space. Henry, tell us a little bit about the office space you built or that you bought, and break it down for us in a way that makes it sound like it\u2019s really not that daunting. I imagine it probably wasn\u2019t once you broke it down.<\/p>\n<p>Henry:<br \/>Yeah, no, the way I approached it is the way I\u2019d probably advise someone who\u2019s new to commercial real estate investing. I had a general interest in wanting to understand it better. And so the way I went about doing that was obviously on my own research, but I put intention around networking with people who already do it and are good at it. And so I was able to then create a friendship with someone who thrives in this space, and then we started looking for deals together. And then as deals would come across, we would analyze them, and then we would make\u2026 Just like in residential real estate, we would analyze the deal, we would figure out what we think the value is based on the income that it\u2019s making, and then we would figure out what we think the value could be based on the income that it would be making if everything was at market rates and in good condition, and then we made our offer.<br \/>And when we made our offer, the financing worked almost the same as how it does when I buy my residential properties. The only difference was the evaluation was based on the money it brings in. And so we put the deal under contract, we went and looked at the property, we did an inspection on the property, it had an appraisal. And then we bought the property, we then met with the tenants, and we either are renewing leases at market rates or we are going to bring in new tenants at market rates. The only major differences between this deal and what I do in the residential space was these new leases are going to be on triple-net leases, which is not something we can get in residential, but it\u2019s super sweet if we could. And then the evaluation and the value of it is based on the income that it brings in. Those are really the only two things that were different.<br \/>And so as I got into doing it, first of all, I partnered with somebody who\u2019s an expert. So that way, when I do my analysis and when I looked at something, I could be looking at it through the wrong lens because I\u2019ve never done it before. So I had that sounding board to bounce things off of. And then so I partnered with somebody, I brought value to the table, and then I learned along the way and I\u2019m still learning. And what I\u2019ve learned was that it\u2019s not much different than the process I\u2019ve been doing with residential minus a few things, but the values are higher and the income is higher. And so that\u2019s what I would tell people. It\u2019s daunting until you surround yourself with people who are doing it and then it just seems like the thing to do.<\/p>\n<p>J:<br \/>Yeah. And I think you hit a couple really important things there. And Dave, I have not forgotten your main question and I will come back to it.<\/p>\n<p>Dave:<br \/>Go on. You could ignore me. Don\u2019t worry about that. Henry\u2019s got more interesting things to say anyway.<\/p>\n<p>J:<br \/>Yeah, but the way he described it is the same way you would describe buying a single-family rental. Basically, you have to find the deal, and then you have to underwrite the deal or analyze the deal and figure out, \u201cDo the numbers work?\u201d And then you have to figure out how to make the money part, the financing part work, and then you have to manage it on the back end. And so at the end of the day, these are the same steps we take, whether you\u2019re buying a hundred-thousand-dollar single-family house or a hundred-million-dollar skyscraper. And so I just want people to start thinking from the perspective of yeah, the nuts and bolts change.<br \/>You need to learn how to underwrite different types of deals. Finding these deals are going to be completely different than finding single-family deals. And structuring the loans and the money you put in is going to be different. And then managing it on the back end is going to be different, but it\u2019s the same four steps. It\u2019s finding, underwriting, capital stacks or financing it, and then managing it. And so really, I would encourage everybody out there, don\u2019t not think big. If you want to be doing single-family, that\u2019s fantastic. I did single-family for 10 years. I love single-family, but don\u2019t stay in single-family just because you\u2019re scared to move out of it. If you want to stay in it, great, but don\u2019t think you can\u2019t do other things.<br \/>Now, getting back to your original question, Dave, do I think single-family is still a good asset class to be in? Absolutely. Here\u2019s the thing, there\u2019s more single-family houses out there than any amount of commercial real estate in the country. So opportunity is obviously larger. And here\u2019s the other thing, real estate in general, single-family real estate in general is one of the best hedges against inflation on the planet. And we\u2019re all concerned about inflation. I think we\u2019re not going to see 7, 8, 9, 10% inflation like we have the last few months. But I think there\u2019s a really good chance that over the next five or 10 years, we see inflation a little bit higher than it\u2019s been the last 10 years. Last 10 years, it\u2019s been under 2%. Most likely over the next 10 years, it\u2019s probably going to average two and a half, 3%.<br \/>And so what is real estate\u2026 Why is real estate good when you see a lot of inflation around you? Well, number one, if you look over the last hundred years, real estate in general, single-family real estate in general in most places tends to track inflation in terms of home values. So we like to think over the last couple years, home values are going up 5, 10, 15, 20% a year. That normally doesn\u2019t happen. But if inflation\u2019s at three or 4%, home values are likely to go up at least three or 4% per year. Secondarily, the best part of real estate is you can get loans against it. You can get the bank to give you money and they\u2019ll give you money at this low interest rate.<br \/>These days, it might be 6, 7, 7.5%, but still, you can refi it in a couple years if rates go down, but the best thing is your mortgage payment never changes. In 20 years when your income is doubled because of inflation and everything, all the money you\u2019re making has gone up because of inflation, that mortgage payment\u2019s going to be exactly the same. I mean, I know people that got loans on real estate 20, 25 years ago. They\u2019re almost done paying it off and their mortgage payment is like three, four, $500 a month because they locked in debt 30 years ago when everything was so cheap. And when I say three, four, $500 a month, that sounds like little, but back then, that was a lot of money because we didn\u2019t have 20 years of inflation.<br \/>So yeah, I love single-family real estate and there\u2019s never going to be a bad\u2026 As long as we see inflation\u2026 And we\u2019ve had inflation pretty much throughout this country\u2019s history. As long as we have inflation, single-family real estate\u2019s going to be a great place to be. And so obviously, you need to know how to underwrite your deals, you need to know how to analyze your deals and look at the numbers. And right now, you might want to be a little bit more conservative than you have been in the past, and you want to be more cognizant of the location that you\u2019re buying. Buy in places where populations are growing, people are moving, employers are coming in, laws tend to be landlord friendly. As long as you\u2019re focused on those things, you\u2019re not going to make a mistake buying real estate that you\u2019re going to hold for the next 10 or 20 years.<\/p>\n<p>Dave:<br \/>I love what both of you\u2019re saying because you\u2019re reinforcing the idea that if you learn the principles and concepts behind analyzing deals, it applies to single-family rentals, it applies to multifamily, it applies to trailer parks, self-storage, office space. It\u2019s almost like if someone wrote a book that taught you how to analyze those deals and to learn all those formulas, that that would be super helpful. So that\u2019s me giving you a shameless plug for J and my book. We have two of them now. We\u2019ll give you one more shameless plug. We won\u2019t do more than three.<\/p>\n<p>J:<br \/>But here\u2019s the thing, it\u2019s not just about the numbers and the formulas. It\u2019s understanding that for any deal you do, you have to ask the right questions. And Dave and I came up with this idea back when we started writing the book a few years ago, that instead of just throwing a bunch of formulas out there and saying, \u201cHere, learn the math,\u201d basically, we decide to write a book to teach you how to think about how to do these investments. And we wrote a book that starts\u2026 Every chapter starts with a bunch of questions, \u201cHere\u2019s the questions you need to be asking for these types of investments and here\u2019s how to answer them.\u201d<br \/>And so it doesn\u2019t just teach you to fill in the blanks or put numbers in a spreadsheet. It teaches you how to ask the right questions and be thinking about investments because I have investing situations every day that come up where I don\u2019t know what formula to use. I can\u2019t just stick the numbers in a formula because I don\u2019t know a formula. I give an example in the book where I had this house that I was selling a couple years ago, and I listed it for sale and I got two really quick offers. And the first offer was full price, full list price, cash, close in two weeks.<br \/>The second offer was from another investor who really wanted the property, but he didn\u2019t have the money because he had another deal that was closing, and he told me he was closing seven months from now. And basically, he said, \u201cI\u2019ll pay you. I\u2019ll close on the property. I\u2019ll buy your property today, but I can\u2019t pay you for seven months. You\u2019ll have to wait seven months. And I paid cash so I could do that, I could hold the note, I could do what\u2019s called seller financing.\u201d And he said, \u201cI\u2019ll pay you in seven months. I\u2019ll buy it now, but I\u2019ll pay you in seven months.\u201d And he said, \u201cI\u2019ll pay you more than list price.\u201d<br \/>And so I needed to figure out how much more do I need to be selling this property for in seven months so that it\u2019s a better deal for me than selling it for full list price today? And so once I knew the right question to ask, and that was the question I needed to ask, \u201cHow much is a property going to be worth in seven months to me? Or how much do I need to sell a property for in seven months for it to be worth it not to get the money for seven months?\u201d And once I realized that\u2019s the question to ask, well, then I can figure out what formula or what concepts to use to plug the numbers in and figure out that number was.<br \/>And at the end of the day, this was a real deal I did. I went back to the guy. I figured out how much more I would need in seven months to make me actually get the same amount of money and then I bumped it up 10,000. I went to him and I said, \u201cHere\u2019s how much I need.\u201d And he said, \u201cOkay.\u201d And I knew that I was actually getting a better deal waiting seven months for my money. And so again, that\u2019s not something where I could just have said, \u201cOkay, stick it into this formula and get an answer.\u201d I need to understand the concepts behind, in this case, something called time value of money. If I wasn\u2019t going to get my money for seven months, how much more do I need to get to make myself whole?<\/p>\n<p>Dave:<br \/>Well, learning about the time value of money legitimately changed my life more than almost anything. Once you understand and can incorporate that concept into your everyday thinking, your spending, your investing, it\u2019s really honestly life changing. Henry, I\u2019m curious, are there any formulas, investing tricks, or concepts that you have come across in your career that have just opened your eyes that really changed your perspective on investing or money in general?<\/p>\n<p>Henry:<br \/>Yeah, yeah. So for me, I\u2019m mainly single and small multi. And so my whole business is based off of the 70% rule of thumb. For me, that\u2019s my measuring stick to, \u201cIs this even worth my time?\u201d Because what it did was when I was first starting out, I would have to go look at every single house, and then you do the dance of, \u201cDo they want retail? Do they not want retail?\u201d And you waste a lot of time. Now, when you\u2019re new, I actually encourage you to do that. The more houses you can walk into and evaluate and make offers on, the more experience you\u2019re going to get. But as you close more deals, that time that you\u2019re putting into that is better used on deals that are actually going to produce the income. And so I had to figure out a way to still evaluate property and scale, still make the amount of offers I need to make, but not have to physically go put myself inside of every property before I knew that.<br \/>And so I know everybody understands, or most people have a general understanding of what the 70% rule is, but understanding it and then putting it into practice in a way that\u2019s going to benefit you financially are two different things. And so for me, everything gets run through that filter before I\u2019ll even go put my time into looking at that property and making an offer. And I\u2019m not saying that that rule is a hard and fast rule, but what I needed was something for me to say, \u201cHey, this is probably worth your time,\u201d or, \u201cThis is less likely to be worth your time,\u201d so that I could spend my time on the ones that fit better. And so for me, I evaluate everything through that lens. If I\u2019m talking to a seller and I can get them to tell me what they want and it doesn\u2019t seem like it\u2019s going to fit at a 30% discount, then we don\u2019t even waste the time. It directs the conversation that I have.<\/p>\n<p>Dave:<br \/>Can you just quickly though explain to anyone who doesn\u2019t know what the 70% rule of thumb is?<\/p>\n<p>Henry:<br \/>Yeah, absolutely. So as an investor, if you\u2019re going to make money on a property, typically either as a rental or make profit as a flip, it\u2019s that you need to be buying a house at a 30% discount or buying it at 70% of its value minus the repairs that it\u2019s going to take to fix that property. And when I started just running it through\u2026 And I mean, you get enough where you\u2019re just running it through it in my head. But yeah, typically, if I\u2019m talking to somebody and I know their house in that neighborhood is worth a hundred-thousand dollars, I get it, there\u2019s no house worth a hundred thousand dollars. I can hear you all already.<br \/>But just for numbers\u2019 sake, if I\u2019m talking to somebody and I know that their house is probably worth a hundred-thousand dollars and they want 95 for it, then that\u2019s a lead that is less important to me than one that\u2019s worth a hundred and they\u2019ve already said they\u2019d entertain an offer of less than 70. And so it helps me prioritize where I\u2019m going to go to first and then prioritize who I\u2019m going to make offers to first.<\/p>\n<p>Dave:<br \/>I love that. Yeah, it\u2019s a great way. Yeah, just allows you\u2026 These kinds of rules of thumbs, these concepts allow you to scale your business a lot faster than you would when you\u2019re running everything single deal through a calculator, treating every lead equally, spending a lot of time just in random houses. I felt really old when I bought a deal that I had been in twice. It had been in the market and sold and then I came back to it. And it\u2019s because when I first started, I would go to every open house. I was like, \u201cWhatever, whoever will show me a house, I will go,\u201d but you quickly learn that that is not sustainable. Well, thank you both. We do have to start wrapping this up, but this has been super helpful. J, is there anything else you think our audience should know about investing in this current climate? Or any words of wisdom for people who are trying to get in right now?<\/p>\n<p>Henry:<br \/>Yeah, I\u2019m going to use\u2026 Anybody that\u2019s listened to me speak more than two or three times has probably heard me say this, but for anybody out there that hasn\u2019t heard it or that just needs the reinforcement, anybody out there that\u2019s looking to get that first deal, I don\u2019t believe there are any secrets in real estate. Go to BiggerPockets. It\u2019s all out there. But if I had to pick that one idea that\u2019s the closest to a secret in real estate, it\u2019s this, I\u2019ve met two types of real estate investors in my life. 95% of the people, of the real estate investors I meet have never ever done a deal. They want to do a deal, they\u2019re trying to do a deal, they\u2019re thinking about doing a deal, but they haven\u2019t yet done a deal. That\u2019s 95% of the investors I meet. The other 5% of investors I meet are people who have done three deals or five deals or 10 deals or 50 or a hundred deals.<br \/>There\u2019s one type of investor I hardly ever meet, if ever, and that\u2019s an investor who has done one deal. And there\u2019s a reason for that. There\u2019s a reason for that because if you can do one deal, if you do one deal, you\u2019re going to do a second, and you\u2019re going to do a third, and you\u2019re going to do a fifth, and you\u2019re going to do a 10th. It\u2019s so hard to get that first deal. But anybody that does recognizes the second one becomes so much easier because all the pieces fall into place and the third one becomes so much easier after that, and the fifth one and the 10th one, they all get easier.<br \/>So if you\u2019re one of those people that\u2019s on zero deals right now, just remember if you can get to one deal, you will do 3, 5, 10, 50, a hundred deals. You just cannot stop until you get to that first deal. Don\u2019t give up until you get to that first deal. And once you do, you\u2019re going to realize, \u201cWow, this really isn\u2019t that hard, and now I understand, and all the pieces have fallen in place, and everything\u2019s going to get easier.\u201d So for anybody out there that needs a little bit of motivation, don\u2019t think about how hard it\u2019s going to be to do 10 deals because it won\u2019t be. It\u2019s hard to do one deal. And as long as you don\u2019t give up before you do that first deal, the rest of this business is easy.<\/p>\n<p>Dave:<br \/>I love that. I\u2019m feeling inspired now, J. That is good. I totally agree. That\u2019s a good point. I don\u2019t know anyone who\u2019s been in the game, who did a deal five years ago and was like, \u201cEh, I had enough. I\u2019m good.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>J:<br \/>Exactly.<\/p>\n<p>Dave:<br \/>Well, J and Henry, thank you so much. Again, if you want to check out the book that J and I wrote together, it is available right now for pre-order. If you use the code, either JSCOTT or DAVE, you\u2019ll get 10% off and a chance to win coaching calls with either J or myself. And hope you check it out. I think you\u2019ll really like it. J, where can people connect with you if they want to do that?<\/p>\n<p>J:<br \/>Yeah, absolutely. So anybody who wants to connect with me, go to www.connectwithjscott.com. And that\u2019ll link you out to everything you need to know and also let you get in touch with me directly if you want to.<\/p>\n<p>Dave:<br \/>And Henry, I know that everyone who has an Instagram account already follows you. Your Instagram is so, so popular, but if there\u2019s three people out there who don\u2019t know yet, where should people connect with you?<\/p>\n<p>J:<br \/>Yeah, best place, Instagram. I\u2019m @thehenrywashington on Instagram.<\/p>\n<p>Dave:<br \/>All right. Thank you both for being here, and thank you everyone for listening. We\u2019ll see you next time for On The Market. On The Market is created by me, Dave Meyer and Kailyn Bennett, produced by Kailyn Bennett, editing by Joel Ascarza and Onyx Media, Copywriting by Nate Weintraub, and a very special thanks to the entire BiggerPockets team. The content on the show On The Market are opinions only. All listeners should independently verify data points, opinions, and investment strategies.<\/p>\n<p>\u00a0<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<p><b>Note By BiggerPockets:<\/b> These are opinions written by the author and do not necessarily represent the opinions of BiggerPockets.<\/p>\n<p><br \/>\n<br \/><a href=\"https:\/\/www.biggerpockets.com\/blog\/on-the-market-42\">Source link <\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Commercial real estate isn\u2019t the sexiest asset class out there. With industrial, office, and warehouse buildings, most investors are enticed by single-family homes, duplexes, triplexes, and other \u201ctraditional\u201d types of real estate. But in a recession, these may not be the best asset classes around. J Scott, author, investor, syndicator, and the godfather of flipping, [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":5,"featured_media":3976,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"site-sidebar-layout":"default","site-content-layout":"","ast-site-content-layout":"default","site-content-style":"default","site-sidebar-style":"default","ast-global-header-display":"","ast-banner-title-visibility":"","ast-main-header-display":"","ast-hfb-above-header-display":"","ast-hfb-below-header-display":"","ast-hfb-mobile-header-display":"","site-post-title":"","ast-breadcrumbs-content":"","ast-featured-img":"","footer-sml-layout":"","ast-disable-related-posts":"","theme-transparent-header-meta":"","adv-header-id-meta":"","stick-header-meta":"","header-above-stick-meta":"","header-main-stick-meta":"","header-below-stick-meta":"","astra-migrate-meta-layouts":"default","ast-page-background-enabled":"default","ast-page-background-meta":{"desktop":{"background-color":"","background-image":"","background-repeat":"repeat","background-position":"center center","background-size":"auto","background-attachment":"scroll","background-type":"","background-media":"","overlay-type":"","overlay-color":"","overlay-opacity":"","overlay-gradient":""},"tablet":{"background-color":"","background-image":"","background-repeat":"repeat","background-position":"center center","background-size":"auto","background-attachment":"scroll","background-type":"","background-media":"","overlay-type":"","overlay-color":"","overlay-opacity":"","overlay-gradient":""},"mobile":{"background-color":"","background-image":"","background-repeat":"repeat","background-position":"center center","background-size":"auto","background-attachment":"scroll","background-type":"","background-media":"","overlay-type":"","overlay-color":"","overlay-opacity":"","overlay-gradient":""}},"ast-content-background-meta":{"desktop":{"background-color":"var(--ast-global-color-5)","background-image":"","background-repeat":"repeat","background-position":"center center","background-size":"auto","background-attachment":"scroll","background-type":"","background-media":"","overlay-type":"","overlay-color":"","overlay-opacity":"","overlay-gradient":""},"tablet":{"background-color":"var(--ast-global-color-5)","background-image":"","background-repeat":"repeat","background-position":"center center","background-size":"auto","background-attachment":"scroll","background-type":"","background-media":"","overlay-type":"","overlay-color":"","overlay-opacity":"","overlay-gradient":""},"mobile":{"background-color":"var(--ast-global-color-5)","background-image":"","background-repeat":"repeat","background-position":"center center","background-size":"auto","background-attachment":"scroll","background-type":"","background-media":"","overlay-type":"","overlay-color":"","overlay-opacity":"","overlay-gradient":""}},"fifu_image_url":"https:\/\/www.biggerpockets.com\/blog\/wp-content\/uploads\/2022\/10\/OTM_42_YT.jpg","fifu_image_alt":"","footnotes":""},"categories":[9],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-3975","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","category-blog"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/imsfund.com\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/3975","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/imsfund.com\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/imsfund.com\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/imsfund.com\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/5"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/imsfund.com\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=3975"}],"version-history":[{"count":1,"href":"https:\/\/imsfund.com\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/3975\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":3977,"href":"https:\/\/imsfund.com\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/3975\/revisions\/3977"}],"wp:featuredmedia":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/imsfund.com\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media\/3976"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/imsfund.com\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=3975"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/imsfund.com\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=3975"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/imsfund.com\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=3975"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}