BiggerPockets Real Estate Podcast - 379: What the Numbers Reveal About Today's Rents, Prices, and Top Cashflow Markets with Data Scientist Dave Meyer
Episode Date: April 23, 2020There are plenty of opinions out there about where the real estate market is headed next. But what are the numbers telling us? Today we dig into the data with Dave Meyer, BiggerPockets' VP of Growth a...nd Analytics and a real estate investor himself. Dave leads BiggerPockets Insights—a Pro/Premium benefit providing current local market data—and he's been looking at data points in the weeks since shelter-in-place orders began to grind the economy to a halt. So... Why are rents down? Why haven't prices dropped? And what data should investors be keeping an eye on? The guys tackle those questions and much more in today's episode. Plus, Dave discusses his list of the country's best 11 cashflow markets adjusted for vacancy and explains what makes them so attractive right now. Add in a topical "Fire Round" and a breakdown of Dave's "ski for free" Airbnb scheme, and you've got an action-packed episode sure to bolster your confidence in these uncertain times. Check out this episode of the BiggerPockets Real Estate Podcast, and be sure to subscribe to the show in your favorite podcast app so you won't miss the next one! In This Episode We Cover: The top cashflow markets in the country for high value and low vacancy 3 data points Dave looks at when analyzing a new market Why housing prices haven't fallen much yet Dave's (cautiously optimistic) forecast on real estate prices What's happening to rents nationwide What "income-to-price" reveals about a market What BiggerPockets Insights is How new investors can take advantage of this downtime The potential of a population shift away from urban centers How Dave bought an Airbnb in Colorado to "ski for free" And SO much more! Links from the Show BiggerPockets Forums BiggerPockets Webinars BiggerPockets Bookstore BiggerPockets Podcast 186: How to Get Your First Few Properties — Even in a Competitive Market with Dave Meyer Air DNA BiggerPockets Podcast 048: Duplex Investing, Finding Great Properties, and Tips for Managing Tenants with Darren Sager BiggerPockets Pro BiggerPockets Insights Newbie Real Estate Investors - What YOU Should Be Doing During This COVID Time BiggerPockets Podcast 315: How to Read Human Nature to Succeed in Life with Bestselling Author Robert Greene Check the full show notes here: http://biggerpockets.com/show379 Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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This is The Bigger Pockets podcast show 379.
If you look at the data, you can see that the price of new listings,
so what landlords are putting their new listings on,
are about three or four percent lower than what they were a couple of months ago.
So that's why I think rents might decline in the very short term,
just because people are probably desperate to fill vacancies right now.
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Hey, what's going on, everyone?
It's Brandon Turner, host of the Bigger Pockets podcast here today with another episode
with my friend, my mentor, my pal, my surf buddy.
David Green.
Let's up, David Green.
How you doing?
Nicely done, Brandon.
We just spent an entire hour
making fun of you
and you turned it around
and you did do this stuff.
And it's doing so
poured burning coals
on the top of my head.
Very well-
What I mean for?
That's what they mean for.
I want you to feel bad
about how much you made fun of me
on today's episode.
We just got done recording
today's episode
and, you know,
I may have gotten
made fun of,
especially at the end.
It was all for the benefit
of the listeners.
That's for you guys.
I just told you all to know that.
I'm sure it was.
I'm sure.
It was.
All right.
Well, today's episode, here's a deal, guys.
I mentioned this in the show, but I'll say it again now.
There's a lot of fear in the market right now.
There's a lot of motions riding high.
And so we thought it would be a cool idea to bring in some data into the conversation.
Like, what actually is happening right now?
And how can you find out, how can you use data to make better, more informed decisions?
And I know that sounds kind of boring, but trust me, we keep it light.
We keep it fun.
And we talk with one of the, I guess, the former co-hosts, who's been a co-hosts, who's been a co-hosts,
several times here on the Bigger Pockets podcast, Mr. Dave Meyer, we'll bring him in in just a moment.
Dave Meyer back when Josh originally kind of vacated the Bigger Pockets podcast, when his daughter got
sick, we had Dave graciously stepped in back then and hosted a number of episodes with me.
And we brought him back now because Dave is actually a data scientist.
That's his actual like thing.
Like he went to school for it and he knows data better than anybody I've ever met.
And so we talk a lot about the real estate market, what's happening, what's going on right now,
including some information that we're publishing in our new magazine,
Bigger Pockets, Wealth Magazine.
So if you're not subscribed to that, it's actually a physical magazine.
You can have it in your house.
It's beautiful.
And it's got a lot of good data.
So anyway,
we talk about that a little bit in today's show and a lot more,
just really,
really good, solid stuff and a lot of what's going on in the market today.
I mean, this is a very current episode.
And we're talking about what's going on with real estate and COVID and all that stuff.
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check that out. And that is today's tip. All right. Well, I think that's all I got. So shall we
get to today's discussion? Yeah. Let's jump into it and talk some real estate. All right.
Let's get started with the discussion with Mr. Dave Meyer. Mr. Dave Meyer. Welcome back to
the Bigger Pockets podcast. It's been a while. How you doing, man? Good, good. It's great to be back.
Thanks for having me. Yeah. So you are actually right now not in Denver where you were for the last few
times you've been on the podcast. You are not even in America right now. Tell us where you are in the
world. That is correct. I am in Amsterdam in the Netherlands, which is where I live right now.
So I think we're probably as close to an opposite ends of the world as you could possibly be.
I think that's true. Why are you there?
So my fiance, the company that she works for was acquired by a company that's based out of
the Netherlands. So she got transferred over here for a while. And we just got out here in
December. So just in time to get locked down, which is a little bit anticlimactic, but we're
excited to be here. Yeah, cool. And you're still, Dave is still, what is a VP of growth in
analytics, right, at bigger pockets? That's correct. Yeah. So I'm still doing the same thing for bigger
pockets, still working on all sorts of different new projects, new products, and very grateful to
still be part of the team. So Dave here, again, running a lot of stuff of bigger pockets. For those
who don't know, like, pretty much Dave, like, runs a ton of stuff at BP. I mean, Dave is responsible
for like almost every cool thing that comes out of BP. Dave is somehow responsible for it, which is
interesting. The fact that you're doing that now from Europe, which is show, yeah, I mean, you're a rock star.
But what's also cool is that you also still invest in real estate and you own some properties
that people want to listen to your episode.
Do you remember what episode you were the guest on?
I think it's 186.
All right.
186, I think.
186.
All right.
So go listen to the other episode if you want to know more.
But since, you know, besides that, I'm wanted to spend some time today going through
some of the work you've been doing on data because you are a, what are they call a data scientist?
Is that the official name?
Which is a cool.
It's a very fancy name.
But yes.
Yes.
Okay.
So there's a.
a lot of, and I kind of mentioned it's a little bit in the intro today, but there's a lot of
fear and anxiety in the market today. A lot of people freaking out and a lot of emotional
decisions being made and a lot of Facebook decisions being made, meaning like you make your
decisions based on how your Facebook friends are feeling. And that's obviously dangerous. So that's
why we wanted to bring you on to talk data a little bit today on what actually is going on in
the world right now. What's actually happening? Before we get there, though, I do want to know a little
bit more about you personally on what you've been up to since last time you were on the show.
And I know you bought something cool. Can we talk about that? Sure. Yeah. So I was last on in
2016. And so to be honest, I haven't been all that active. As you said, you know, I'm pretty
preoccupied with my job at bigger pockets and maybe different than some of the people who come on the
show regularly. I want to keep working full time. I like that. And I use real estate investing as
something I'll fall back on in the future and something I do sort of.
of out of convenience and as is convenient for my current lifestyle. So I have bought a couple of single
families since then, but I actually sold the first property that I ever invested in. I bought in
2010 and I sold that in 2018 and did really well on that and had a bunch of cash to spend and I wanted
to do a 1031 exchange. And so I was looking at a bunch of deals in Denver, which is where I
primarily do my investing. And a couple of them fell through it pretty much the last minute. So I was
at my 45-day limit. And for a couple of months or even years, actually leading up to that, I'd
always had this dream of buying an Airbnb in the mountains so I could go use it and ski, but also
make some money off of it. And literally on the 44th, the 45th day, I called my real estate agent
and said, we're driving up. We're going to go find a property. I think he booked every single,
showing at every single property that's on sale in the whole county, which is not that many.
And we went and saw every single one and put it in an offer and they luckily accepted it in time
for our deadline and closed like a couple weeks later. That's awesome. So you bought a,
what is it, like a house? Do you call it a chalet? Is that a fancy term for a house?
Yeah, it is kind of a chalet now that you say it. But so I, again, going back to the data thing,
I was really meticulous about this for years.
So it's kind of, you know, it seemed like this spur of the moment, impromptu decision,
but I've been doing research about this market for a really long time and had bought some data from a company called AirDNA.
I don't know if you guys have heard of it.
Yeah.
But they have all this short-term rental data.
And I did some math and just figured out that anything that had four or five bedrooms or above had an outsized ROI.
You just get a much better return on the cash you have to invest.
And there's also just much less competition.
You see tons of one and two bedroom places, especially in ski areas, vacation homes.
But if you can find a place that's four or five bedrooms, you get much, much longer bookings,
which leads to less wear and tear and just really high occupancy rates.
And luckily, I found a three bedroom, but it just had a just a silly amount of living space.
So I made two extra bedrooms and one of them was a bunkroom.
So I added, I think, capacity for 10 more people to sleep in.
So it's definitely getting destroyed on a weekly basis because people are having
bachelor parties and all sorts of parties there.
But up until recently with their recent economic conditions, it had been doing really,
really well and do get the side benefit of being able to enjoy it a couple days a year as well.
Yeah, that's cool.
Yeah, I always love that idea.
of buying a vacation rental somewhere cool that you want to go in vacation anyway relatively often.
And then you buy it there, let the Airbnb pay it off.
Now, obviously right now with Airbnb permits shut down worldwide, you're not getting any income.
So what's it like right now with that side of your business?
It's pretty tough.
We've basically had a lot of cancellations over the next two months.
Luckily, that's coming during a time that in Colorado is known as the mud season,
which is basically when all the snow melts and before it's fun to do anything outside again.
So it's not a really high revenue season, but we're rapidly approaching that.
June, July, August, there's a lot of weddings.
And so that's when I would normally be expecting to generate a healthy chunk of our revenue
for the year.
Luckily, those haven't canceled yet.
But, you know, the way things are trending, I'm not holding my breath.
But luckily, you know, I bought this because I have enough longer-term rentals and a stable
income stream from those long-term rentals in Denver that I knew this is a volatile business
and I knew going into it something like this could happen, not this exact situation, of course,
but I prepared myself so that if I had a long stretch of vacancy, that I would be okay. So luckily,
I'm in a decent position. Yeah, that's cool. So Dave, when you were looking for a property to buy,
did your agent play a very big role in helping you decide what kind of property to get and maybe
which specific property to buy, or did you do most of that yourself and you just kind of
directed your agent what you want to done? So my agent is a good friend of mine, and he's mostly
familiar with Denver, but we have a good working relationship, and I trust him to handle a lot of
the negotiations. So I had done a lot of the research. I had talked to a couple people in the area,
and then he did a great job helping me do all the inspections. There's a lot of different things
investing in rural communities that I really didn't know about like water rights and mineral rights.
So he picked that all up really quickly. But I did most of the financial analysis because as
Brandon said, I'm just a nerd and I like to do that myself. So I guess I'm asking because for people
that are listening and they say, hey, I want to do what Dave does. There's a lot of, on lack of
clarity with what role the agent should play versus the person. And it's so hard to answer like
what should happen because every agent has a different skill set and different
and the same for the client. Can you share a little bit of with the houses you bought,
how you use the agent and what you found out for you work the best?
Yeah, absolutely. I think it's the investor's responsibility to set a budget and a strategy.
And I think with most investing, you sort of need to have a hypothesis about what you think
is going to happen. I think this market is going to appreciate, or one I have in Denver.
I think that single-family homes are going to appreciate because everything's getting converted into
condos, but people still like to have a yard and like to be close to downtown Denver.
So I usually share that sort of hypothesis with my agent and say, you know, I want to look for
single-family homes within two miles of downtown Denver, and this is my price range.
And from there, that's usually where he really can take off and do some investigation into some
of the best potential areas that I have around there. He's done a really great job for me looking
at places that have good zoning opportunities in case I ever want to revamp them or add an
additional dwelling unit, which is something I've been looking into. So I do think you're right
and that a lot of people who are first getting into it assume that the agent is going to sort of
set the strategy for them, which maybe some agents can do. But I think it's better in your long-term
interest as an investor to learn how to formulate your own opinion and your own strategy about
investing and then use your agent as a partner to help facilitate your own vision for your portfolio.
And for you, what that looked like was having your agent work on minutiae and details that
you wouldn't know, like zoning regulations and maybe some ins and outs of specific neighborhoods
as opposed to the overall wealth building strategy you put in place.
Absolutely. Yeah. He did a great job. Like I've bought a couple single family homes.
in an area where there's this big public works project going on in Denver that's going to add a
tremendous amount of value to the neighborhood that I didn't really know about. But he goes to all
these neighborhood meetings and association meetings. And he knew that all of these businesses were
going to be investing in the neighborhood that I was considering. And that sort of put it over the top
for me, all these other neighborhoods being similar in terms of price point. But he did a ton of research
and taught me a lot about a couple specific neighborhoods that I wound up investing in.
And that's something I frankly just don't have the time or skill set for it.
But since he as an agent is always trying to find a way to give his clients a leg up,
goes to these meetings and learn something that they can't really learn on their own.
Yeah, that makes sense.
You know, I like that you say that the investor's job is to come with a strategy
because I feel like a lot of investors go and rely on their agent to,
Tell them what makes a good investment.
Like, well, I want to buy a rental property.
What makes a good deal here?
And the sad truth is, as David, you know for sure, like David Green here, you know,
because you're an agent and you work with these people.
Most agents have no idea what a good deal is.
Like a good deal to them is a cute kitchen or a nice front porch.
Right.
And so like if you're relying on your agents, yeah, there are rare agents out there.
For example, a buddy of my name Darren Stagger.
He lives out in Jersey.
He is an agent who specializes really in helping people buy like duplexes and triflexes
in that exact market.
The reason he is good at that is.
because that's actually what he does.
I think he was on episode 48 of the podcast back in the day.
But like, you know, that's a case where you might say,
okay, agent, I'm going to rely a little more on your expertise.
Or David, Green, you there.
And if you're in the Bay Area, I might rely on David to help me with the house hacking idea
because David, again, you do it and you know it really well.
But those are rare.
Like, that's a rare thing.
And so, like, again, so many people are waiting for someone else to do their
push-ups for them and to tell them what to do and make them feel all comfy and
secure and give them a hug.
But, like, that's our job as an investor is to go out there and do our own
work, which is why the data comes in so handy and why this show is so important. It's like,
you know, listeners, it's time to get like, you know, get your head out of Facebook and the news.
And let's find out what's really going on in the real estate market today. So that's why I want
to go to next, unless you've got anything else green you want to cover before we go on or.
I thought that was, that was really well said. Well, thank you. Dave Meyer, what do you see in?
What does the data show where real estate is at and where it's headed here in America?
So there's a lot to this question. So I'll just start with, I think, a summary of what I'm seeing,
and we can dive into anything that you guys are really interested in here. I think it is too
early to see any decline in home prices. So that is a benefit right now that we're not really
seeing a big decline, but the volume of transaction does seem to be going down. Recently, Fannie Mae and a
couple of the mortgage associations have reported that applications for new mortgages are actually
going down by about a third year over year. So that is a bit concerning, obviously, because if demand
decreases, that is a sign that prices are likely to go down. I also do think that there's the
possibility that supply is going to increase, because when you see that these unemployment numbers,
where they are right now, if those stay high for any extended period of time, you're probably
going to see people being foreclosed on, unfortunately. And you're also going to see people who
choose to downsize or to get some liquidity by selling their home. So that combination of
a potential for increased supply and dropping demand is a bit concerning to be. But luckily,
so far, we haven't seen that. The second thing I'll say is that,
At Bigger Pockets, we have licensed a good amount of data for a new product that we're working on.
And we are pulling rents in real time.
And the interesting thing to see there is that the average asking price for rent has not actually declined much at all.
It's only gone down a few percentage points.
But new listings are down almost 10, 12%.
So we're seeing that landlords are adjusting their expectations for what rents.
rents might be in the future, even though the current listings that are out there have not
dropped that much. So if you look at that and extrapolate that out sort of to a cap rate,
you might think that prices are going to fall if rents are going to fall as well.
If you had to make a gamble right now, and I know like this is going to sound stupid in the future
if you're wrong, so it's not like this is a forever podcast that's up there. But what are, what do
you think prices are going to do based on that stuff? And a lot of
depends on when the social distancing ends, right? If ends tomorrow, it's very different than I
six months from now. But what would be your best guess, your bet on what this is going to do to the
real estate market? Absolutely. I appreciate the caveat. I am not an economist, but I am a real estate
investor and I look at a lot of data. But I would guess that there's going to be a temporary
decline in housing prices over the summer, but that it won't be very significant and it won't be
very long-lasting. I don't think that there is a fundamental weakness in housing market like we saw
in 2008. This crisis is obviously not brought on by cheap loans and cheap money propping up
housing prices. This is a black swan event, as I call it, something no one has ever could ever
really predict coming. But I do think the whole key to everything is really how quickly rehiring
takes place in the U.S.
I put out an article a couple weeks ago in BP Insights that shows that, you know,
April rent was going to be challenging because a lot of people had lost their jobs,
but they weren't yet receiving government assistance.
And I think for the next couple of months,
it probably will stabilize a little bit as people are getting some government assistance
and they do have, hopefully have some savings.
But I think that if rehiring,
doesn't take place until July, August, September,
we're in for much more economic pain
because the current government assistance program
is going to expire,
and people are going to be in much more perilous financial situations.
Green, what do you think on that?
Where do you think we're headed?
Oh, okay, I'll tell you what I think,
and I'm like the only one who has this opinion.
That's why I hesitate to say it,
because the more I listen, I'm always just standing alone.
But I do think about this all the time,
because as an agent, you're a fiduciary to your client.
And just as a human being, I would never want to tell one of my buyers,
you should buy a house right now if I thought prices were going to drop.
So I'm always thinking about this just so I have a clear conscience.
I think first off, it's market by market.
So if you live in an area, and I can't name a specific one,
but let's say where everybody that lives there,
they all work at a warehouse where they assemble widgets,
and that warehouse is shut down and now there's less demand for those widgets
because there's something that are used on, say, an airplane.
and people are going to be flying less because now coronavirus is a scare.
Or everyone in your city works at an airline maybe.
You're going to see exactly what Dave just described.
There's going to be a drop in prices because there's a drop in demand.
If you're an area like mine in the Bay Area where it's mostly tech driven or hospital health care,
like we're seeing a slowdown, but it's still not nearly enough to stop.
Like prices can't go down because people are buying houses too fast.
They're just not getting 10 offers.
They're getting three.
But you're never going to see dropping home prices with it.
three. So what I've realized after thinking about this is there is a single metric that determines
when prices drop. There's only one. And that's how long a house sits on the market. If I go to a
seller and I say, hey, your neighbor sold their house for $600,000, which may sound expensive,
but over here, that's not at all. We need to list yours for $500 or $4.80 because of COVID-19.
They're going to say, yeah, no, we're going to list at $610 and then we're going to see. That's what
every seller is going to say. And a week, two weeks, three weeks in, they're not going to drop.
it to 580 because it's been or 500 because it's been three weeks. What happens is after a significant
period of time, two months, three months, four months, five months, their house is not selling. That
emotionally beats them down and then they finally accept, okay, I have to drop my price. And a good
agent will get them to drop it to right where they should be. A not so good agent will go through
this like staircase declining where you just chase the market down before you get there. But that's
what makes the seller decide to list their house for less. It's one thing is how long is on the
market before they finally agreed to drop their price. They don't care what Fox News or CNN tells them
is going to happen to the housing market. They see that their neighbor's house just sold in 25 days for
600, so that's what they're going to do. And what I would have to see is that unemployment lasted
or this shutdown lasted for three to four months for sellers to actually realize no one's buying
houses before they are going to drop their price. And my gut tells me it's not going to go that long.
We're going to open up before we get to the point where a seller's like, okay, like see,
warfare. I got to leave the castle. They're parked there. Not part, but they're camped around my castle.
We ran out of food. We have to give up. But you don't just give up the minute that the army gets there.
It's not until you start to get hungry and you've eaten all the food that you have.
And all the children. What's that? And eating all the children.
Well, that's very dark. Brandon. I don't even know what to say about that.
Brandon is the guy that likes that song. I'd rather eat Randy. You guys want to see a completely
ridiculous video. YouTube. I'd rather eat Randy. And that's my best.
That's the best video ever.
Right there.
But yeah, I know that was kind of long, but I don't expect to see dropping prices in any market
where people go back to work before you go three, four, five months of a house not selling.
That's what we saw in 08.
Prices kept dropping because no one was buying houses.
They just sat there forever because there was just way too much supply.
I think you're right.
And I hope you're right as well.
I think it really depends on the length of time that we're seeing a shutdown and the economics
because people are obviously just frozen right now.
But as soon as people will see their paychecks start coming in and have a relative sense that it's going to continue for the next couple of months, I'm sure that economic activity is going to pick up.
And your point about the markets is spot on. It's really going to behave very, very differently. I was doing some analysis today. And you mentioned San Francisco, and I'm looking at my data right now.
prices for rent, at least in San Francisco over the last quarter, went up 1%.
You know, well, so obviously San Francisco is insulated in some way against this.
Whereas, you know, you see cities like New York, which are obviously really hard hit,
rent prices have actually dropped 5% over the last quarter.
So we are going to definitely see large variations depending on the, you know,
some of the economic drivers in every single market.
and, you know, obviously you just have to really pay close attention to what's happening
where you're investing.
Yeah, that makes a lot of sense, which is why it's important to be able to get access
to, you know, look at this kind of data, figure out what markets are doing better,
which ones are doing worse, what's your market looking like?
And a lot of people who are long-distance investors like green here, like, it's really
important to be able to pick a market using data, which is partially why we came out with
this whole BP Insights thing and also why we are talking a lot about it in bigger
Pockets, Wealth Magazine, two things that were, I know you've been heavily involved in, Dave.
Do you mind before we go on to the, I do want to talk about some of the best cash flow markets.
I've got that on my list here to make sure we cover your list of 11 best cash flow markets.
But before we get there, what is BP Insights compared to the magazine?
How do they relate?
What exactly is that?
Sure, absolutely.
So BP Insights is something we've been working on for a couple of months now.
And basically the idea is to help investors of any size and any strategy get the data to
crunch their own numbers and to really invest with confidence, just know what's been going on in
their market historically, what's likely to happen in the future. And this is actually something
we weren't going to launch until later in 2020. But with everything that was going on with coronavirus
and the rapidly changing economic dynamics, we decided to just launch it. So right now, it's a
newsletter that goes just to pro and premium members. But it gives all sorts of data about what's
happening in your individual market, you can download spreadsheets that shows what rent and
inventory is going on for every city, town in the country. And we're going to be adding all sorts
of different tools onto that in the near future where you can get rent estimates and all sorts
of cool things on BiggerPockets.com that will be coming out over the course of the year. So if you're
a pro or premium member, you should definitely go check that out. We also will be putting some of that
date in the magazine. So that's how they're tied together. We will be putting bigger studies in the
magazine. And the first one that's launching in a couple of weeks here, as you said, I did a study on
some of the top 11 markets for cash flow, which seems particularly relevant right now, given the
economic climate that we're in. Can we talk about that then for a little bit about the best
cash flow markets? Because it's one of the biggest questions I get when I do webinars every week,
when we talk about real estate investing, people always ask, how do I know what,
market to pick. So how did you decide on what the 11 are? And maybe you can give us a couple
examples of a few of them. But how do you determine what a good cashful market is? Yeah, absolutely.
So I use something that I call a vacancy adjusted metric. So basically, I am looking to,
the first thing I do is I discount the average rent by the vacancy rate. So there are some
places that get fabulously high rents, but they have huge vacancy rates, and that's often overlooked.
So basically what I did is I adjusted all of the rents by their vacancy rate, and then I use
a rent-to-price ratio, which is something that I think, you know, we talk about on bigger pockets
all the time, and it's a really helpful thing. It's very similar to a cap rate, but all you have to
do is divide your annual rent by price. So basically what you want to do is just figure out what
portion of your purchase price is covered by your rent each year. It's pretty simple and it works
really well. Obviously, if you're honing in on a market, you're going to want to use a cap rate,
you're going to want to figure out expenses and some of those taxes and property insurance.
But when you're comparing across markets, it's really difficult to sort of zero in on a
all those things at this really high level. So I think using just the rent to price ratio is
really helpful to start and then you zoom in. So that is how I went about looking at these top
11 markets. So just to clarify real quick, it with an example. So you're basically saying,
hey, it rents for $1,000 a month. The purchase price is $100,000. So it's kind of like 1%
rule, 2% rule kind of stuff. That's what you're saying, right? Exactly. Yeah. So compared to
rents for $1,000 a month and it costs $500 grand, that's a very different, like the one that costs
500 grand and only rents for $1,000 is going to be a much worse cash flow deal likely than the one
that rents for $100,000 and is $1,000 a month.
Right, absolutely.
Yeah.
And I basically, it's the same exact thing as the 1% rule.
I just use an annualized version.
So I multiply the monthly rent by 12, but that's about it.
And like you said, yeah, I mean, it is super helpful for just identifying different markets.
of course, this is averages on, you know, for an entire city. So there's going to be huge differences. But if you're really just starting out and trying to say, I am interested in these five markets, it's a very helpful tool. And then once you identify, you know, a couple of places that you're interested, that's when you should start drilling into individual neighborhoods going block by block to try and figure out as much as you can about the micro neighborhood that you're intending to invest. So what I love about what you're saying is Dave and I have never.
talk, but this is exactly what I talk about in long distance investing.
I was rereading long distance investing this last couple days ago because I'm,
yeah, anyway, and I saw that and I was going to ask you about that.
Because you're having trouble going to sleep. Is that why what you're about to say?
No, because I'm working on a new book for BP. I'm speccing out the table of content stuff.
Oh, so you're going to pick the best stuff.
I wanted to see what you, I wanted to make sure to just copy what you did because we have
similar minds. Anyway, keep going.
From the quote copier, this is really, really big.
how his mind works now.
It's not quote copier.
I quoted myself that you,
I didn't even quote myself.
You thought I quoted myself.
And that's how this whole thing started.
Anyway, David Green,
anyway.
Zibbett-A, folks,
this is how you catch somebody in the eye.
Okay.
Here's what I wanted to say.
What Dave's describing is taking a general rule
as a preliminary screening method
and then chunking down from there.
What you don't do is say,
oh,
here's a metric I can use. I'm going to pick a house based off of what they've just said.
So what I talk about in long distance investing is you want to find a target rich environment.
You want to find an area that is very likely to have the kind of properties you're looking for.
If I'm looking for houses to flip, I want to find a market that has a very big discrepancy in
price. That's why the market I live in now is so good because you can buy a house for
500 grand that looks like trash. And a block away, there's a house for 900 grand.
So the rehab you're doing can add a lot of value to the property.
I also want to find a very low day on market metric.
House has turned really, really quick.
It's almost the opposite when I'm looking for rental properties.
I don't want low days on market.
There's too much competition.
They're going to bid the price too high.
I want to market with less people trying to buy there.
And I want to market with a very strong price to rent ratio,
meaning that the rents are very high in comparison to the price,
which is what Dave was describing.
You would not buy a property because it met just that metric,
but that helps you pick a very overall general area.
I'm going to look in this city or I'm going to look in this spot.
Then you chunk it down another little bit.
I want this kind of property.
So Dave mentioned if it was Airbnb, he uses his metric to pick the right area.
Then he says, now I know that if I get a house with more than five bedrooms, my ROI goes up.
There's a sweet spot.
So that's where I chunk it down the next level.
I'm going to look for houses that have a lot of square footage and a lot of bedrooms.
Even if they only have three bedrooms, but they're 2,800 square feet, I can
add bedrooms to that. I can make it the house I want. Then he brings in his agent. And he says,
agent, here are my criteria. That's three steps that anyone can do to make progress buying a
property. It's simple when you understand it. And you're using the data like what Dave's describing,
but don't try to shortcut it and say, oh, it has the right. What was the name of the metric that
you used, Dave? What did you call it? I call it just a rent to price. A rent to price. And it was basically
a vacancy adjusted operate kind of, right? Like this is a name.
how much money to create when you adjust for it. Don't just say it meets that metrics
buying this house. That's just a step. So that's all I wanted to comment on. This is very
similar to how I found all the properties that I have now. And you made it work for you based on
the data that you have. That's awesome. Absolutely. And if you, you know, if you're using averages,
like if I pick one of the top markets here, let me find one here. St. Peter's for 9%. Pretty good.
That's one of the top. People say, oh, I'm going to invest in St. Petersburg, Florida, that metric.
That's not the right mindset. By rule, because it's an average, that means that there are properties that are much below nine, and there are also properties a lot above 9%. So it's your job as the investor and working with your agent to find the ones that are above that average. It's just meant to be a benchmark. So this is, you know, that 9% is achievable. But, you know, I don't know about you guys. I certainly want to find a.
deal that's above average. So I know to target a deal that I can find that's at 11 or 12 percent.
And that way, when I run my numbers and I find one that's 11 or 12 percent, I'm ready to pull
the trigger because I know that is in one of the top markets and it's above average,
even in one of those top markets. It's a funnel like Brandon likes to say.
It's a funnel. It all comes back to funnels. It always is a funnel, right? They start wide and they
become narrow. And what we're talking about is where you use tools within that funnel. So the agent piece
comes in near the very bottom of it when you're almost at the bottom. This metric Dave's talking about
would come in at the top. I love which thing. If you're a single dude, you don't ask a friend.
That would be a, it's not a target rich environment. It's the same thing with real estate. If you're
trying to find a rental property, you don't come to the San Francisco area and try to find a
house that has a really good rental price ratio. Like they don't exist. People are buying them to live in not to be
rentals. Yeah, that's a good point. Absolutely. And one of the good things is when you're at the top of the
funnel, the wide part, it's very easy. Like the math that we're talking about to calculate the 1%
rule or even to do what I did here takes a couple of seconds. You know, it's really not very hard.
So you can do a lot, really cast a wide net at first when you're getting that wide part of the
funnel. And then sure, when it gets harder at the end, that's when you have help from an agent.
So it's not really this really time-consuming process at every step of the funnel. At first, it's
really easy and it gets a little bit harder as it goes down. But it should. You should be doing
more due diligence and working harder as you become closer to actually transacted. Yeah, that's really
good. And hey, just to kind of summarize something that you guys just said, it's actually written in,
I'm looking at an actual, well, digital copy right now. By the way, this magazine that we're coming
out with, by the way, is a physical magazine shipped to your house. But I'm looking at the digital version here
and it says the end of this little segment on BP Insights inside the magazine said, remember,
comparing markets is meant to help guide your investing.
This analysis does not mean that every deal in these cities will provide strong returns,
nor does this analysis imply that other markets will fare poorly in a recession.
Our goal with BP insights is to provide you with knowledge about the math behind real estate
investing while giving you access to unique data sets.
Our hope is that you'll use this information to focus your investing and that you'll
use what you've learned here to conduct your own analysis.
I love that that's put that way.
It's like, it's just summarized.
This isn't like David Green's point.
It's not just like, okay, it passes this.
this thing. It's passed the 1% rule. You know, it passes the 50% rule. Like, this is just one
piece of the data, but this makes it so cool. Like, okay, well, great, now we can focus
in. I'm going to pick this market. And I would bet of all top 10 markets, I mean, we got things like
Cleveland, Ohio, Arlington, Virginia, Memphis, Kansas City, Missouri. Like, all of those markets,
I can guarantee you, there are a bunch of investors there, probably thousands that are making
money off cash flow and rentals there. So like, if you're new, just looking to invest out of state,
that would not be a bad place to start. Doesn't mean other markets,
don't work, but I just pick one of those and go with it and become an expert of that market.
And now you can understand a little bit more about this data set.
So again, that's just another benefit of, of digging into this BP Insights thing and getting,
of course, the Bigger P. Wealth magazine.
So just real quick, on BP Wealth, and then we're going to move on.
If you want a copy of that actual magazine, like we're coming out with it every other month
or six episodes or six episodes.
What do you call it?
Six editions.
Is that what you'd call it?
Editions. Yeah.
Editions.
Six editions a year.
So every other month, just go to Bigger Pockets.
com slash magazine. We'll actually ship it to your house. And like you get six of them and it's like the
cost of a book. Like it's really not that expensive at all. And if you use it, they look beautiful too.
They look. I know. They do. They're the kind of stuff you want to leave out on your on your coffee
table. So when people come over to your house, like, oh, what's that? And they look at it.
And you're like, oh, actually, I invest in real estate. And that's how you get your private money.
Anyway, use promo code magazine. If you guys are going to sign up anyway, might as well get 20% off by
using the code magazine, which is kind of cool. And of course, you are not a pro member or a premium member.
pro and premium members get full access to the BP insights, which is kind of cool as well.
So make sure you guys do that.
With that said, let's move on a little bit.
I want to go, maybe even move on by going back.
I want to talk about declining rent for a second.
Sure.
Like you said this earlier, there is something that real estate investors are very guilty
of doing and maybe myself as well.
Like, I don't think I've ever said rents don't go down, but there is definitely a feeling
that rents do not go down, that rents tend to go up.
Everyone said like, hey, in the last recession, rent's actually improved.
But you're saying that a lot of markets are showing rents going down right now, which in this kind of black swan event.
Do you think that's going to be a long-term issue?
Or is this just the blip because of COVID?
I don't think it's going to be a long-term issue.
And I sort of, I came onto this because I was analyzing some data for BP insights.
And it was showing me that rents were going up during this time.
And I was really confused by that because it just didn't seem to make any sense.
sense to me. So I wound up breaking out all the data that we have into three different types of
listings. One, I would, on a weekly basis, I would call new listings. So new listings that came
online that week. And we have active listings. Those are ones that have previously have been on the
market for a while. And then we have deactivated listings. So ones that have come off the market and are
presumably being rented. So what's going on is active listing numbers are actually trending upward a
little bit. So things that are staying on average, things that are on the market are going up.
But I believe my hypothesis is that what's going on is that cheaper units are actually coming off
the market and getting signed. And so the more expensive ones are staying on the market and
driving that national average upwards. If you look at the data, you can see that the price of new
listings, so what landlords are putting their new listings on, are about three or four percent
lower than what they were a couple of months ago. So that's why I think rents might decline in the
very short term, just because people are probably desperate to fill vacancies right now.
But I think as soon as, you know, as we were talking about earlier, as soon as things start to
pick back up again, I don't think, I think they'll snap right back into place because I think the same
principles that have driven rent upward for a long time are still there and are going to are going to
resume again quickly you know that's interesting that you mentioned the three to four percent because a lot of
people look at things like well why are prices dropping and they're trying to find a logical question like well
is unemployment dropped by three to four percent and that's why rents have gone down that much when i hear
that number i know what it is is landlords know people are used to seeing a thousand dollars a month for
a three-bedroom home. So if they list theirs at 960 or 970, it's just enough to look like a deal,
the tenant to be like, oh, I should jump on it. That looks cheap. It's not a significant number.
Three to four percent isn't really changing a whole lot with how your portfolio performs,
but it could have a good impact on your vacancy. When you see those numbers affected 20, 30,
40 percent, now you can make a connection logically with like the shape of the economy. And so I think
you're spot on with what you're saying that this is because it's a psychological
perk, ooh, that looks cheap, I'm more likely to move on it at a time of uncertainty. That's,
that's a powerful move. Absolutely. Yeah. And the other thing that's really been interesting in the
data is to see that the number of properties that are coming off the market, that is really
dramatically changing. So it totally depends on market. But in certain markets, like in New York,
we've seen that the average number of delisted properties, so presumably they're getting rented,
has dropped 88% over the last quarter. So it just means that people are, yeah, it's crazy.
I mean, there's huge, huge numbers here. New York, oh, sorry, New York was 85, C was 88. So we're seeing
just really massive changes there. But it's not necessarily all a bad thing. It might mean that
more tenants are just resigning their leases. You know, a lot of people might not want to move right
now. So we're also seeing a decrease in the new listings that are going up. So hopefully that
means that landlords are reaching agreements with their tenants and are finding a mutually
agreeable situation for them to stay in their units because I don't know about you, but the thought
of like moving right now would be pretty tough. Yeah. And you know, I never thought about this before
until right now. But like, there's a lot of, like, a lot of fear, but like, well, you know,
if tenants aren't moving right now, is it going to be hard to fill a vacant unit and all that?
I mean, that's obviously a concern a little bit. Now, like, said, I did. I listed a property
for rent on Friday and I already have two showings this afternoon out here in Hawaii. And we're
on like more lockdown than most people in the world are. Like, they have like locked us down.
But it's still moving. But that said, like, that actually is a great thing if people stop moving
for the rest of my portfolio. Because there isn't the rest of my portfolio. They're not moving either.
And so it kind of actually, it might be bad in one regard, but there's always a pro to every con here.
So, you know, hopefully as long as they stay paying rent.
Now, the downside is they don't pay rent and the government doesn't give us any options of what to do in that case.
Like, you know, if they cancel all evictions long term here and just keep encouraging tenants.
I'm not saying they're encouraging tenants, but there definitely is a vibe of you don't have to pay rent right now, tenants.
If that continues long term, that's going to be a problem.
And I want to know your thoughts on that, Dave, on where you think that's habit.
see, like, you don't know government policy, but I'm just curious. Like, what is the government
going to do in your opinion? What would be your guess? Like, long term, what is the government going to do?
And what should we as landlords owning rental properties in America do if this eviction, like,
if we can't charge, if we can't evict people and tenants don't pay rent? Like, how long does this
last for before every bank, every landlord is bankrupt? Yeah. My real feeling is that that won't
happen. I just think that it's really unlikely that the government would single out basically
landlords to absorb this entire economic situation, because that's what we're fearful of,
right? That you would say that there's no such thing as evictions, but not offer mortgage
forgiveness or forbearance or something at the same time. So I think it's either going to be
all or nothing. Either there's going to be no assistance for renters,
and then no assistance for landlords, or there will be help for renters and there will be also
help for homeowners.
I just don't see how that could happen.
There are so many small landlords just, you know, in really bad financial situations if that were to happen.
So all they would be doing is just creating financial pain just in a different subsection
of the population, which is hopefully not what the government is trying to do, hopefully
they're trying to equally absorb some of the economic hardship here.
Yeah, that makes sense.
David, what do you think?
You know, this is another thing I've thought about quite a bit.
And you and I talked about just like the very interesting intricacies of what the human
mind does when it's faced with, I don't know what's going to happen.
And one thing that I, like, I agree with Dave, basically.
Like, I don't think that's going to happen.
I don't think that a bunch of people getting a really bad flu is that can, like, spread
very easily.
and it does, people die from it, but people were dying from the normal flu too.
We just didn't talk about it all the time because it wasn't unique and novel.
That's not going to crash our economy.
If that was going to crash our economy, it would have already been crashed from a lot of the other flus that are going around.
So that isn't tactical.
But what I do see is people play this what if game once they get scared.
But what if it goes rampant and it goes all over the place?
What if it comes back?
What if it mutates and we get other forms?
What if there's another shelter in place?
And you turn into what happens as your mind starts to create these very unrealistic scenarios
that are worst case propositions.
And at a certain point, you find that you've gone so far down this what if game.
But it's no started off and had nothing to do with coronavirus.
Like, what if we go to World War III starts?
What if we find aliens and they attack us?
There's all kinds of what if they can happen that we never discussed because they're so
unrealistic.
But when it's tied to something like this and your mind natural,
wants to travel that path, it will. So are we going to keep people at home so that they can never
work at all for the next nine months to where that would happen? That doesn't seem realistic at all.
In any world, that doesn't make any sense. So I don't think it makes sense to start
asking those questions now just because this is like all over the news and it's all that we're
talking about. Keep it in context. It's a really bad flu that's going around. It's getting
a lot of people sick, but we can absorb it. I do think there will be a scenario
that is a real, not a black swan event, but a real systemic problem. We will go into a real
recession at some point. And when that happens, a lot of landlords are going to lose their properties,
just like they lost them in 2008. So what I'm telling people is consider this a warning shot.
You just got shown how quickly everything can freeze and how fast people can stop paying their
rent and how quickly everything that seems stable can become unstable. It happens very fast.
So don't think that just because we're in a good economy that you're safe. You should be storing
money. You should be keeping a healthy amount of reserves. You should be considering the economy of
the area where you're buying. If it's completely dependent on one form of employment, like Detroit,
that's a very risky place to invest. And we've been saying this to people on every single episode,
every time people talk to me, I tell them that. This is just that wake up call that,
yeah, it's real, right? Just because it's always been going up doesn't mean it's going to keep going
up. So that's my two sense on what I think is going to play out and if people are going to actually
lose their problems.
Dave, as far as BP insights go, someone like you loves that data.
You're good at that.
That's why you're in the position you're at.
Someone who's like, you know, I want, that sounds cool, but I'm good at numbers.
I'm not with math.
I don't really know what I'm supposed to do with this.
Can you give us some advice for maybe like someone who's not as experienced different
and interpretation of data and just give us some simple ways that that data can be used
for your average, you know, blue collar investor?
No, absolutely.
So I will say first, I try as hard as I can to explain the math that I'm doing in all the BCP Insights stuff that we're putting out.
So if you take a read at that, hopefully you can follow along because the math really isn't that complicated.
It's really just a mindset of trying to gather as much information you possibly can.
From there, the data is not too complicated to analyze.
But I will say I was thinking about this.
and I actually went on Facebook and talked about this a couple of days ago,
just a couple of really simple calculations that people can do
and some data that people can look at,
whether you're experienced or new,
especially in this economic environment that might be helpful to them.
So I was saying three different ways to sort of look at a market,
if it's your market or something that you're looking at,
three simple metrics that will be helpful to you.
And as Brandon, and we've all talked to,
about no one metric is the right one, but if you look at these three different things, you'll
probably have a good sense of how a market is going to perform over the next couple of years.
So the first one we already talked about, which was that vacancy adjusted rent to price ratio.
So basically you want to know what percentage of your investment is covered by each year,
or a year's worth of rent. And that's obviously helpful because it estimates it's a good
sort of proxy for cash flow to figure out how.
how much rent compared to what you're paying for it.
The second one that I've been particularly looking at recently is a income to price ratio.
So you hear a lot about this in the United States that, you know, people, the affordability of rent is going down very considerably.
And in some markets, it's extremely dramatic.
You know, you mentioned Detroit.
I think it's upward 30, 40, 50 percent of your income is going to rent, which is concerned.
So I've been looking at different markets where they have the lowest income to rent ratios.
So you want a lower number.
But if you basically want to figure out what percentage of your tenants prospect income is going to rent.
And so if that's only 10% for them, that bodes really well in hard economic times.
If it's 50 or 60%, that's people who probably have less in reserves.
They probably have less saved up and are probably more susceptible to economic fluctuations.
So those are two. And then the third one you just hit on David was look at historical data.
What happened in different markets during the last recession? I know you guys on the podcast
love to pick on on Detroit. I personally like to pick on Las Vegas. If you look at Las Vegas,
that you guys are familiar with the Case Schiller index. Yeah. So if you're not, if you're not
familiar, it's basically estimates prices and shows how they trend over.
time. It's a big national thing. If you Google the Case Schiller Index for home prices in
Las Vegas, you quite literally see a bubble. It's a trend line that just shoots up and then
shoots back down all around 2008. So if you want any sense of what's going to happen to
Las Vegas in the next recession, I think that tells you a lot about what's going to happen.
As opposed to looking at Denver, where you see basically a long, linear, steady increase. And so,
So, you know, there's all these, as you just said, David, there's all these what's ifs.
Go look at what actually happened in these markets and you'll be able to have a much better
idea of what's going to happen in the future.
I hope that you mentioned in Las Vegas.
Because if you think about which industries are going to be affected after we come out of
the corona thing, it's going to be anywhere that makes people think I'm likely to get sick.
That's now like you're not going to want to fly on planes.
I think the airline industry is going to get hit because you're being trapped in a,
in a circular tube with a bunch of people breathing the same air.
You're not going to want to go to areas where there's a lot of people gathered at one time.
Does Vegas exist for any other reason than people to fly in there to be around a lot of other
people at one time and possibly engage in activities that are very highly likely to be
an exchange of bodily fluids and airport?
That's a very dangerous place to be when you're in the middle of a possible pandemic.
So, yeah, like I would expect.
There's like a million people in Vegas right now going,
And there's a few more things here than that.
Yeah.
That's absolutely right.
And I think, you know, unfortunately, you know, I hope I'm wrong here.
But you look at Vegas and places that have high proportions of people working in the service industry is another metric that I think you could point to.
And if you're a conservative investor, you want to look for places that have a low.
percentage of population working in the service industry. So like you said, David, like you don't
have to be an expert in data analysis to understand these things. You basically just need to
think about common sense ways that you can understand a market. This is not complicated math.
You're looking at how things performed in the past. Look up the average income in a market that
you're that you're considering and compare that to the investment that you're going to have to make.
Look at how much rent is going to cost your tenants and whether they would be able to weather a few
bad months. None of that is difficult math. It just takes a little bit of common sense and a
little bit of research. Beautiful. Well, I love that. And I love that now. There's finally an option for
people who like this. I get a lot of people that reach out to me. And that is how they think.
People like you, Dave, like they are hungry for data, just hungry, hungry hippos that are just
trying to eat it up. And they're like, what metrics do you use when you pick an area? Like,
what numbers should I be looking for? And there's a big percent of the populace that actually
makes their living doing that. Their job for their company is to look at data and interpret it
and help the company make a better decision or at least equip the person who has to make the
decisions with that data and then maybe interpret it for them. So a lot of those people are naturally
drawn to real estate investing because it's so numbers based that you can use data to make better
decisions. It's not, it's not something, you know, I can't think of a good example right now,
that that is just, it's not all art. There's a science to it as well. And this will really help
with the science part. So that's awesome that bigger pockets is offering something like that.
I never thought I'd see the day. So thank you for actually making that happen now. That's,
that's really, really big. Absolutely. Really excited about it. And just to your point, yeah,
there really is no one size fits all to how you approach this kind of stuff. I just want
everyone to know that you don't have to be an expert in this or to be well trained in it.
There's like this term in data science called exploratory data analysis where basically the
first step in solving any problem. Just use common sense and gather as much data and like look at
everything you can. I think that's like if you're concerned about your market or your investment,
try and figure out what the government is doing. Try and figure out what local businesses are doing around
None of that takes training. It just takes some hard work and research.
That's awesome. That's terrific. All right. We're going to move on now. The bigger pockets
forums have been Enfuego. This is one of the coolest times that I've ever seen.
It's just everybody's all over them asking all kinds of really good questions. And there's a lot of
people giving really good answers for stuff that doesn't get to come up very often. So I'd like to
move on to the next section where we're going to have a few questions from the audience. Brandon,
let's move on to the world famous.
Fire round.
It's time for the fire round.
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It's sitting there in the dark thinking, I could be contributing right now.
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All right, Dave, these are questions that come straight from the
BiggerPockets forums, which you can find at biggerpockets.com slash forums. Are you ready to do this?
I think so. All right. We are going to fire them at you. The first one comes from Joseph Henderson from
one of the markets invest in Jacksonville, Florida. Joseph says that we are, assuming that we are
headed into a down market, which class of apartment building do you think will thrive during these times?
A class, B class, C class, et cetera. Good question. My instinct says that it would probably
be a class.
And I do have some data to
that I will publish in bigger BP insights
in the next couple of days.
But we are seeing that the biggest downturn in rents
is coming in the middle market, actually.
Ultimately, 1,500 to 2,500 in rents
have seen the sharpest declines
over the last couple of months.
Fascinating.
All right. Well, number two then.
Matt Mularky says, I'm a new investor.
I'm looking to potentially house hack my first deal.
With all this COVID stuff going on, is now a good time to start buying for me,
or would it be better for me to wait a few months to see if prices go down?
I think trying to time the market with pretty much everything is somewhat foolish.
I think that, as I say, in stock investing, volatility breeds opportunity.
And I think that you should be prepared and understand what a good deal is,
sort of like we were talking about earlier, knowing what the average is, knowing what a good
rent-to-price ratio is, because I do think there's going to be great deals over the next two or
three months. So I think it's still a great time to invest.
That guy's last thing was malarkey. Isn't there saying that's a bunch of malarkey?
That's a bunch of malarkey. Yeah. I wonder where that comes from. There's a funny story.
I went to the police academy with the guy whose last name was Mud. His name was Benjamin Mud.
And he told me like that, have you ever heard that saying, your name is mud? Like it's a terrible.
Yeah.
that actually comes from the fact that one of his great, great, great grandfathers actually was a doctor that helped treat John Wilkes Booth after he shot Abraham Lincoln, but he didn't know that the guy had just shot Abraham Lincoln.
So he did the thing, he stopped off, he broke his leg or whatever, he ran away.
And then this guy ends up helping him.
They're seeing him back to health and sending him on his way.
And then when they find out about it, he was like a horrible person for doing that.
And that's where your name is mud comes from.
Completely unrelated to anything real estate, but I think somebody's a history lesson.
Yes.
And malarkey.
That's funny.
All right.
The next question.
Is now a bad time to start a wholesaling business?
I'm in a major metro area with a resilient housing market.
But I'm wondering if I'll be able to find enough cash buyers, even if I find great deals.
I'll put this by saying I'm not an expert on wholesaling.
But I don't think that it's necessarily a bad time at all.
I think that there are probably a lot of well-prepared real estate investors who are going to see this as a buying opportunity.
And as long as you can find those investors who have been waiting for an opportunity like this, it could be a great time to start.
Brandon, what are your thoughts?
Because you're in a market that's being hit pretty severely making things happen.
Yeah.
I'll say, I'll say kind of what I said on a video on Bigger Pockets a few days ago I published.
It was called like what a new investor should do.
Basically I said this.
It's now a bad time to start a wholesaling business or a flipping business or just in general to find deals.
It's hard.
You can't really leave your house in a lot of cases and there's a lot of other reasons why this is a difficult time.
But I think that's the best reason to get started wholesaling or flipping or buying rentals right now.
Because it's like it's challenging.
And when you learn anything when you're challenged, it's like when you're playing baseball,
if you step up to play it and you're swinging like four or five bats at one time,
then you go and drop the four or five bats and you just have one.
that one feels really light.
And I'm sure, David, you come up with a better analogy than that.
But, like, the idea is, like, when you work hard at something,
then you're like, you're at the gym, right?
You're benching like, you know, if you're like me,
you're benching like 99 and it's like super heavy.
And then you drop it and you bench the bar.
The bar feels really light, right?
It's the only way I can bench the bar.
And so, like, that idea is what works really well right here in real estate is
you do it when it's hard.
I don't know.
Most of the world, I don't even know, 95% of Americans or the world,
not even Americans, just the world.
when they see things that are hard,
they say,
okay,
I'm not going to do it,
therefore.
It's like,
difficult means don't do it.
But I think,
like,
winners or whatever you want to call
that successful people,
they say,
oh,
it's hard.
Okay,
well,
great.
That means more opportunity there.
And so I would just encourage you.
Barrier to entry.
And really good business people
look for a barrier to entry
because competition will be.
That's actually,
that's exactly why I went into mobile home parks.
Because I'm like,
this is like,
mobile home parks are the hardest,
uh,
real estate investment I've ever seen.
and I've ever done, like just to analyze and understand and wrap your head around because of all the moving parts.
So I was like, hey, that's hard. Most people won't be competing with me then. So if you're competing with me right now, stop.
Yeah. Well, that's why it's super hard to make money doing stuff like selling CDs out of the trunk of your car or what because it's the thing that everyone was doing.
They were like trying to be an eBay seller where they would buy. Yeah, drop shipping and Amazon business is like all this stuff works in the beginning when it's hard. Yep. And then everyone does it. No, it's easy.
Very, very good point there. I like it. All right, Brandon, why don't you,
take the last question.
Number four, Scott Hasselback from North Bend, Washington.
I love North Bend, Washington.
Like everyone right now, I'm spending a lot of time at home thinking about the short,
mid and long-term impacts of our new normal as a result of COVID-19.
For example, will we see a movement?
I love this question.
Are we going to see a movement from our large urban centers like New York City or Chicago
to cities that are more like Nashville or Austin or Boise?
Like, is that a trend that you see coming because of this?
David, what do you think?
I've read a lot about this, and I sort of anticipated this question coming up and tried to use our data to figure out what I could.
And there's actually something really fascinating.
The pricing for housing across the country has gone down a bit.
But for homes, for houses, single family homes, they've stayed almost entirely flat over the last couple of months, while apartments have dropped, I think, like six or eight percent.
I need to look up the exact number, but most of the declines and rents have come from actually
from apartment.
So that's not a perfect parallel for the question, but I do think it seems to indicate that
people are more interested in finding a place with more space or maybe that's a little bit
less densely populated.
I do think there is that potential, but honestly, I think it's overblown.
I think we've heard for years and years that the San Francisco market, the New York market,
they're all going to, they're too hot and people can't live there. But I just think that's where a lot of
jobs are. That's where the, you know, the highest paying jobs are and people are going to continue to
move there and they're going to continue to want to live in those places. But I'm sort of just
speculating. Yeah, what do you think, David? I think much like Thanos says, this will bring balance to
the universe that we have. Because what we've seen is this flight out of suburbs and into inner city. It's been
very unbalanced just as far as everything's gone up because the economy's gone good, but it's gone up
a lot faster in urban areas and in suburban areas. People aren't having kids as early, so they don't
need as much space. People don't want to drive cars anymore, right? Like the younger generation,
they want to live without one. They want to be within walking distance of stuff. They want to be
around other people. And the jobs are in those cities. And so when you take all those factors out,
you've seen the inner cities, the urban areas have just exploded. That's where all the buildings.
If you've driven through Denver, Austin, San Francisco, Seattle, Houston, Texas, there are so many skyscrapers or the cranes building stuff. It's ridiculous how much of that is going on because there's such a huge demand to be there. I think that this has shifted that a little bit because, one, there's certain people that aren't going to be want to be that close to someone. I think part of the reason you see Detroit and New York getting hit so hard by coronavirus is that they have all these people that live in apartment buildings and they're sharing air.
The HVAC systems are all connected, right?
So there's going to be an adjustment where construction standards start to change
and they try to isolate units from each other so they're not all sharing the same air.
Well, that stuff that's already built in those inner cities, it's too late.
That's the way that that's going to be set up.
So more people are going to want to be in a suburb because it'll feel safer.
And you're seeing now that a lot of people are working from home.
And companies are still profitable.
I think a lot of companies are recognizing, I don't need this person in here all the time,
especially if I alter their pay structure so they get paid per project as opposed to just per hour.
So that won't happen right away. You're not going to see this immediate shift. But I do think that over
time, you're going to see the balance will start to come back to where there's a healthy amount of
people that want to be in a suburb that want space from other people that want their own property.
And if they're working from home, they don't have to be in the area where the jobs are.
But again, like we said earlier, it is completely unique to the area that you're in.
Some jobs can be transferred to work from home.
Other jobs cannot be transferred to work from home.
So I wouldn't expect to see the same phenomenon
of sweep the country equally.
That makes sense.
All right.
Well, thank you, gentlemen, for your...
David, that makes sense.
Green.
David, that makes sense, green.
All right.
Well, with that, we're going to start to wrap things up
by going to our last segment of the show.
It is time for our...
Famous Four.
All right, before we get to the Famous Four,
though, let's hear from our good buddy, Jay Scott,
about who's going to be on the Bigger Pockets business podcast on Tuesday.
Hey there, Brandon and Bigger Pockets Real Estate Podcast listeners.
This is Jay Scott, your co-host for the Bigger Pockets Business Podcast.
This week on the business podcast, we have our first repeat guest.
His name is Mike McCallowitz.
He was our guest on episode 30, which was one of our most popular episodes ever.
He is a business author who just released his sixth book called Fix This Next.
And it's absolutely amazing.
He talks all about how you can use this book to help fix the biggest problems in your business.
So check us out on the Bigger Pockets Business Podcast this week.
Now, back to your famous fort.
All right.
Big thanks to Kevin, our producer, for arranging to have Jay Scott and everyone else come on the show and tell us about their other episodes.
Make sure you guys are listening to those shows.
They're the cat's meow.
Is that still a phrase?
Can we say that?
As long as, as long as, as long as.
back.
Everyone thinks that you brought it back came up with it.
Yeah.
Go ahead.
Shut your mouth.
Number one.
Dave, do you have a favorite, current favorite real estate related book?
I'm going to say David's long distance investing book.
I'm finally on the board.
I've been waiting a year.
I know.
Well, I now live in Europe, so I need to do some long distance investing.
Even if that was a pity drop, I'll take it any kind of drop.
All right.
How about your favorite business book?
I like the book, Start with Why.
It's a Simon Seneck book.
It's just about finding purpose in what you're doing.
And if you sort of align your personal purpose with what you're working on,
you're more likely to find good results.
Cool.
It's beautiful.
I'm going to throw in a wild card here.
Do you have a favorite quote?
I don't. I really don't.
I'm not surprised.
Maybe it's the cat's meow now.
Pretty good.
I said it.
Brandon should write a book and chapter should start with a ridiculous thing like the
bees knees.
The cat's meow.
David,
did you know that back in 2016,
Brandon gave a presentation at Bigger Pockets to employees and he put up a slide that had a
quote on it and then slid in under it.
attributed the quote to himself.
And so he gave a presentation.
I may have...
He was very memorable.
I was listening to Robert Green on the way here to record this today.
And we had Robert Green on this very, very smart man.
And Robert Green said that people do not change their behaviors.
You have to trust that if they've got it in the past,
they will continue to do it.
And so you shouldn't be fooled.
So this is very insightful coming from the BP Insight guy that way back in 2016,
the data showed that Brandon had been biting quotes and claiming them as his own.
And I wasn't still.
It was it was my quote.
That was accurately attributed.
It was attributed to.
This was when you did the Tyrion from Game of Thrones thing where you said a quote like a wife
once said.
And then you said the question.
No, exactly.
I think that's what happened.
I believe the quote was.
you don't what was the quote it was it was the thing i always say it's uh 50% of a great deal is better
than 100% of no deal well who else i'm going to attribute that to you i wanted to talk about it
like we don't attribute everything we say to another person that was david green that said that by the
way you could have just said it oh that's really funny okay anyways all right enough enough
picking on me let's uh let's get on with this uh and help me pick on brandon do you have any other
I am, well, I usually say that I'm like a stereotypical Colorado guy, but now I live in Amsterdam,
but I like to hike and to ski, and I really like to cook. I do a lot of barbecuing.
You can't really say you're a stereotypical Amsterdam guy. That probably wouldn't have both.
I don't really know what that means yet. I've been in this apartment the entire time. I've lived here,
so I don't really know what that means. That's hilarious that you went to the most
wild place in the world and you've been cooped up in an apartment the entire time,
and unable to do anything there. Yeah, yeah. I mean, it is, it's like a, all the wildness
is kind of concentrated in a very small area and the rest of the city is really nice,
but I would like to be able to experience it. So hopefully soon. All right. Well, with that,
let me get to the end of this show. Dave Meyer, what do you think sets apart successful
real estate investors from those who give up, fail, or never get started?
I think it's, I mean, I know this is going to be a stereotypical response, but I think it's just
perseverance. You know, there are a lot of things that are going to get in your way of getting
your first deal or your second deal. It's just sticking with something and making sure that
it's a priority in your life. The current economic environment is probably a great example.
Like, you might have been ready to pull the trigger on a deal and this is causing a lot of
uncertainty, but that shouldn't derail your commitment to a goal that you have. You should continue
you to pursue the things that you think are going to make a difference in your life,
whether there's a challenge like this or not.
That's a good answer.
That's deep.
All right, Dave.
I have thoroughly enjoyed our time with you as.
Yeah, this is great.
All right.
Well, I'll talk to you guys soon.
Hang on a second now.
For people that want to continue this dialogue with you or want to learn a little bit more
about you, where can they find out more?
Probably on bigger pockets.
I'm really lame and don't really do social media.
So hit me up on bigger pockets.
And of course, they can read all your BP insights by going to the BiggerPockets.com slash insights.
Slash insights. Yeah. Biggerpockets.com slash insights. Oh, and I will have an article in the magazine that's coming out. So check that out too.
Very cool. All right. Well, Dave Meyer, thank you so much for joining us. It's always a pleasure to have you here, even when you tell embarrassing stories about me.
Sorry, I had to get that one out. I loved it. Man, major points. That's awesome.
All right, guys. Bye, guys. Thanks. This is David Green.
for Brandon, a wise man once said, Turner. Signing off.
You're listening to Bigger Pockets Radio, simplifying real estate for investors large and small.
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