BiggerPockets Real Estate Podcast - 533: No Tenants, Toilets, or Trash? It's Possible, Through Self Storage w/ Paul Moore
Episode Date: November 18, 2021It’s easy to get caught up in the world of residential real estate investing. Maybe buy a single-family buy-and-hold deal, or try and flip a house, or why not BRRRR? But, residential real estate com...es with many challenges: complicated evictions, clogged toilets, a noisy tenant in your upstairs unit, and many, many more. But, there is an asset class you can invest in without toilets, tenants, or trash problems. Paul Moore, author, capital raiser, and real estate educator joins us to talk about his newest obsession: self storage investing. Why self storage? Maybe it’s because nobody is living in the property, or that many existing facilities have HUGE value-add potential, or maybe it’s the tax savings, or the ability to increase equity by hundreds of thousands, if not millions, seemingly overnight. There are so many reasons why self storage investing could be one of the greatest yet rarely spoken of assets in the world of real estate investing. Wondering how you can get started in this high-profit, low-maintenance investing world? Grab Paul’s new book, Storing Up Profits! In This Episode We Cover: Why commercial real estate allows you to build wealth faster, smarter, and with scale The four strategies you can use to build your self storage empire The massive tax-saving strategies you may be missing out on Looking for value-add that’s hidden in plain sight The seven paths a new investor can take to get started in the self storage industry Income opportunities that could turn thousands in revenue into millions in equity And So Much More! Links from the Show BiggerPockets Forums BiggerPockets Blogs BiggerPockets Podcast 285: 3 Reasons Multifamily Rentals Might Be the Perfect Investment with Paul Moore BiggerPockets Podcast 286: $13M in Equity from One Deal & Cash Flowing Despite Being Comatose with AJ Osborne Paul Moore’s Blogs in BiggerPockets Blog Blackstone U-Haul Airbnb Forbes Amazon Wellings Capital Sam Zell J Scott's Personal Website Tarl Yarber's BiggerPockets Profile Gary Keller Jeff Bezos Tom Wheelwright's Personal Website Check the full show notes here: https://biggerpockets.com/show533 Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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This is the Bigger Pockets podcast show 533 where we talk about self-storage strategies, supercharging
NOI, and saving taxes with Bigger Pockets author Paul Moore.
This is very powerful.
And the point is in all of commercial real estate, you have an asset.
And if you can find a way to significantly increase the income by extracting that extra
value, you can get great returns.
What's going on, everybody?
This is David Green, your host of the best.
Bigger Pockets podcast where we teach you how to build wealth through real estate.
We dive into the tactics and mindset of our guests who have been successful in specific
niches of real estate and break down their strategies so you can follow them and have the same
results as long as you take the same consistent action.
Today I am going to be speaking with Bigger Pockets new author Paul Moore who wrote
the book for Bigger Pockets on self storage.
This is a fantastic conversation.
It is literally one of the best ones that we put out.
Paul goes into incredible detail about just how you can get into the self-storage game.
I know after listening to this, I was thinking, this doesn't seem so bad.
I think I could get into it as well.
And Paul does a great job of highlighting just why you would want to.
A lot of the things that stop people from investing in real estate traditionally,
Paul calls them toilets, trash, and tenants.
They're not a problem in the self-storage space.
It's much easier to add value in these ways than it would be in.
traditional residential real estate in many cases. And one point that came up during this conversation
that I didn't think of, the contractors that you need to add the value in the self-storage space
are more readily available than they are in the residential space. This is a way that you can go
left when everybody else is going right. And it might be the most informational interview I've ever
done on a specific topic. So make sure you listen to this one all the way through and take some really
good notes because by the time this is done, you are going to want to invest in self-storage just as much as I do.
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Okay, guys, buckle your seatbelt because this is an awesome interview with Paul Moore.
If you like what you hear like I did, please go to biggerpockets.com slash storage and grab a copy of Paul's book where he shows you how you can build big wealth through self-storage.
And without any further ado, let's get to Paul.
Mr. Paul Moore, welcome back to the Bigger Pockets podcast.
Hey, it's great to be here, David.
Thank you.
Yeah, I'm glad to hear that.
We had you on back on show 285 where Brandon and I interviewed you.
And I believe at the time, you had sort of started to transition from residential investing
in sales into the commercial side of it.
Can you give us a quick recap on what we talked about on that show?
Yeah.
So I started, I sold my company in 1997 to a public firm.
I started flipping houses before flipping was a thing.
It was actually called fixer uppers back in those days, if you remember that.
And then I started flipping waterfront lots.
I started building some homes around Smith Mountain Lake in Virginia to a small subdivision.
And David, I learned something amazing.
I found out that you shouldn't actually try to build homes ground up if you don't know how to change the doorknob on your own home.
It's just a little piece of advice for anybody who, you know,
might want to benefit from that. But at any rate, I went from residential. I ended up writing a book on
residential real estate. We talked about that briefly before. But in 2010, I found myself investing in
oil and gas in North Dakota. And while I was there, I realized there was a huge housing crisis.
And so we talked about on the last show how we built a multifamily asset and then another one next door
to it in 2011. And we operated that multifamily.
Poise Hotel during the oil rush during the Bakken for a number of years. And then I wrote the book
called The Perfect Investment about multifamily investing. So commercial level multifamily is what we
talked about on the last show for the most part. How is that investment doing with some of the
changes we've seen in the recent administration and a policy regarding like oil production in
America? Yeah. Well, we bought, we built these facilities when it was said that oil would never go
below $90 a barrel again. And it was like 90 to 110, if I remember right, when we were operating
the facility. And we sold it and then oil plummeted to about $30 a barrel within six months of us
selling the facility. And our goal was to build the nicest facility in that part of North Dakota.
And I think we did. And so the buyer of that, the guy who's operating it now, is still doing
pretty well because there's still a lot of oil production people in the area. They need housing.
This is a great solution.
But from what I understand, it's going pretty well.
Okay, that's awesome.
Now, what inspired your shift out of residential investing and into the commercial stuff?
You know, David, I don't think I knew at the time how true this was, but I've observed over the years that the wealthiest people in the world, the Forbes 400, almost all of them own commercial real estate.
And I think, you know, that there's a couple reasons.
One, they want to write large checks.
and it's easier to do that in commercial real estate.
That's pretty obvious.
But another reason is math.
Now, your mom always told you to be good in math.
And thankfully, I went to math class.
And I learned something that has been very powerful for me.
And that is that the commercial real estate world operates on math.
Now, when I was flipping houses, we flipped dozens of houses.
You know, if we put $100,000 into the purchase of a house and then we put in, you know,
let's say we finished the basement, finish the attic, put on additions, we put in gold-plated
fixtures. I never did that. But let's say we added $200,000 to the basis in that house. So we got
$300,000 plus in it, but it's in $150,000 neighborhood. Well, that's not going to make sense because
residential real estate's based on comps, comparables, and we all know that. But commercial real estate's
entirely different. It's based on math. In fact, it's based on a value formula. And
The value formula is that the value or the change in value is based on the net operating income
divided by the rate of return, also known as the cap rate.
And so if you can increase the numerator in that equation, the net operating income,
or if you can compress the denominator or keep it constant, you can force appreciation.
Forcing appreciation means that you can increase the NOI or, like I said, compress the cap rate
and have a significant increase in the value of the asset.
And when you sprinkle in a little safe debt, some leverage, it is very, very powerful.
And so that's one of the reasons.
That's one of the major reasons.
I and a lot of other people love commercial real estate.
So you, from hearing you correctly, what you found was I have more control over increasing
the value of commercial real estate than sort of the wild grab bag of results you can
get in residential. Yeah, I think that's true. I think especially for an experienced operator who can
recognize intrinsic value. And what I mean by that is recognize value that's inherently locked up,
but not being drawn out by a mom and pop operator. It's a very, very powerful strategy. And especially in
days like this, when you can put together a lot of these assets into a portfolio and sell it to an
institutional investor at a compressed cap rate, which means lower denominator means larger sale price.
And so these guys are looking for stabilized assets. And the opportunity to put together a portfolio
is a very real and very profitable strategy. So if you're looking for somebody to exit,
you've built up some revenue producing assets and you've added value to them. You want to sell
to sort of like a hedge fund or something like that. What's some advice you have for how
people can get in touch with those acquisition managers of those companies.
Yeah, well, first of all, I would recommend that you put together a franchise type operation,
which means that you're, you know, you're putting together standard practices, policies
and procedures, standard management, a web presence. You're doing all kinds of things that mom
and pop operators don't do because they don't have the desire or the knowledge or the resources
typically to do it. And hey, David, they don't have to because the cap rate compression we've
seen over the last decade has already doubled the value of their facilities in many cases.
They can go on being average and still make a huge profit. So putting together a portfolio
of similarly run assets with, you know, similar marketing, similar management, et cetera,
would be something you could do. And then if they're in a similar geographic region,
they're under one flag.
You can approach an institutional buyer like a life insurance company, a hedge fund, someone like Sam Zell or Blackstone.
You can sell this for a very, very nice premium because of your efforts in putting together the portfolio.
Now, my understanding is you've actually written a book for bigger pockets with some of these strategies you're talking about now.
Is that the case?
Yeah, we've got a new book coming out in November on.
self-storage investing. It's called storing up profits, capitalize on America's obsession with
stuff by investing in self-storage. Okay, so if somebody is to get this book, what are some of the
things that they can expect to learn from it? Well, first of all, the first third of the book is
dedicated to why we love self-storage. And one of the reasons I changed over since the last
podcast from multifamily to self-storage is the fact that multifamily has been a very,
very popular asset class. In fact, Chris Bennett has done some research on this and he said that
93% of multifamily over 50 units is owned by companies that have multiple assets, which means
they're typically run better. They might have squeezed the value ad out of these assets and
they're already at a premium price. And let's face it, a lot of single family and multifamily assets
are selling at a premium. We were looking for asset types that were recession resistant,
but also had a lot of meat left on the bone. Like Brandon's found mobile home parks. Well,
we first stumbled into self-storage. We realized that those two asset types both have a lot of mom
and pop owners, which means, again, they have not significantly increased income and maximize
value. So the book talks about some of the things we love about self-storage. Some of the things we love
are, you know, that the tenants are typically pretty sticky. That doesn't mean they wear Velcro suits,
but they might. I don't judge. But, you know, these are tenants who actually stay around with a
price increase. I mean, think about it. If you had a multifamily lease and your landlord raised the
price from, let's say you raised it by 6%. Well, you might move out rather than pay 6%. Well, you might move out rather
than pay 60 bucks extra a month. But in a self-storage facility, renting at 100 bucks a month,
you're probably not going to spend a weekend, get your friends together, rent a U-Haul to move
your treasure out of your unit down the street just to save six bucks a month. So self-storage
is done very good in all types of different recessions in good times and bad times. Good times
people are filling up their Amazon carts, bad times, you know, they're storing stuff as they
downsize. There's the four Ds that play into this, you know, downsizing, dislocation, death,
and divorce. It's bad times people have where they need to store their stuff. And so the first
third of the book is dedicated to talking about why we love self-storage and why we recommend people
look into the self-storage asset type. The second third of the book,
book is about four different strategies to build a self-storage empire. We can talk about that
if you want. Then the last third is about seven different paths to get into self-storage from
wherever you are now. So why don't we start with those four strategies that someone can use to
build a self-storage empire? What's the first one? Okay. So one I didn't talk about a lot was the
momentum play. The momentum play would just be buying an existing self-storage facility.
that's already stabilized.
The income is already where it needs to be.
The marketing is already good.
Everything's already dialed in.
That's probably not a strategy that most people getting into self-storage would want to do.
But it is a potential strategy.
A second strategy is buying a value ad asset.
And this is where you can, like I said earlier, you can extract a lot of intrinsic value.
There's a lot of value.
of value add opportunities in self-storage that I never would have imagined. When someone first told me
about value ad and self-storage, I kind of laughed because I was used to apartments, you know,
where there's carpeting or hardwood floors and lighting and countertops and cabinets and lots of
things you can upgrade to add value. But self-storage has four pieces of sheet metal, a floor and a door
and some rivets. And it's really hard to imagine how to increase the value. But there's a lot of
lot of ways. For example, you can add U-Haul truck rental. That can add thousands of dollars a month to your
income and hundreds of thousands to the value of facility. You can add tenant insurance or late fees,
administration charges. You can bring the rents up to market levels. You can increase occupancy.
You can pave an acre or two or put gravel down outside and rent to boats and RVs and other
things like that. So there's a lot of ways to add value to a self-storage facility. We've seen
lots of value ads that have allowed investors to increase their equity by literally two or
three-fold. And if you want, we can do an example later where that exact thing happened. But
there's a lot of great ways to add value to a lot of mom and pop self-storage facilities.
That makes a lot of sense. Yeah. What's the third one? Yeah. I love this because, I mean,
This is something a lot of people could do.
I mean, you might have a hundred unit self-storage facility down the road from you,
and you could put a U-Haul out front of it and potentially significantly increase the NOI and the value as a result.
The third strategy is ground up development.
And this is the riskiest, and it also carries the, I would say, the highest potential return as you bring an asset out of the ground.
you go through all the hassle of building it and then bringing it to a stabilized state and then
potentially either refinancing it or selling it to a larger buyer. So the ground up would be
the next strategy. And then another one of my favorites is the retrofit and repurpose strategy.
And A.J. Osborne was on show number 286 in July of 2018. And he talked about taking an abandoned
Kmart selling off.
the parking lot, cutting it in half and turning that into a beautiful self-storage facility
in Reno, Nevada. And we all remember that story because he was in a coma a lot of the time
while he did it. And he turned that into a beautiful self-storage facility. After that show,
he and I were on the phone one day. And he got an offer from a large institutional buyer for that
facility for many times, literally many times what he had in it. And he was only 40 or 45
percent occupied at the time in the fall of 2018. So repurposing could be taking an old Kmart,
a Sears building, a Toys R Us. And I even heard the other day of somebody doing this with an office
building and repurposing it as a self-storage facility. That's pretty cool. Those are actually some
really good practical examples of ways that people can get in and add value. And I like that you mentioned
they don't involve a traditional rehab. You're not looking for a contractor to come in there and
put in new cabinets and put a new flooring. Maybe you're looking for someone they can lay concrete,
level the ground. It's a different type of contract you're looking for. And my guess would be
some of those people are actually easier to find than the people that are doing cosmetic rehabs
on single family homes. Is that, am I close to being accurate there? No, these days, that's
exactly right. And one thing I failed to mention was just adding climate control.
self-storage. We looked at acquiring a self-storage facility outside of Raleigh, and the lady was a mom-and-pop
seller. She said, everybody has to bring a check in every month to pay for their facility.
Well, think about that. That's reminding them that they have a unit every month, and it's reminding
them that they're writing this check and reminding them that they probably need to clear that out.
And I said, where's your website? She said, I don't have a website. I said, oh, she said, why would I need a
website, I'm 100% occupied for years. And of course, that reminds me that she's probably,
it tells me she's probably under market with her rents and she was. But there was about an acre
out front of her facility that would have been a perfect location on this well-traveled road
for a climate-controlled self-storage facility. And so if we would have acquired that facility,
we would have put a nice three-story climate control building out front in front of these,
you know, a couple hundred old tired units in the back where she was. So that's a great value add.
Think about it. The land's already paid for. It's in a great location. You've already got a
business. Hopefully you'll have a website and a marketing presence. It's a great way to add value,
to add income and to really significantly increase the investor's wealth. Now, you mentioned earlier
a little known strategy used by operators to generate over 40% annual returns. Can you share what that
would be. Yeah. So this is a little bit crazy, but I wrote about this in the bigger pockets,
blogs a number of times. Michelangelo was a great sculptor. And he made a weird statement. He said,
when I look at a block of marble, I already see an angel that's inside the block. All I have to do is
chip away the superfluous material to get to that angel. I thought that was kind of weird myself.
But there's a lot of truth in that.
There's a lot of intrinsic value locked up in mom and pop assets.
And they can be all kinds of different assets.
Could be single family homes sometimes if you can convert them to a commercial or an Airbnb.
Or it could be self-storage.
It could be mobile home parks, apartments.
There's a lot of value that's locked up and that it takes a trained eye to see.
So sometimes I was talking to a great operator yesterday who said,
I said, what cap rate do you acquire these assets at?
He said, well, there might be a three and a half or four percent, which sounds terrible.
That's really expensive.
But if you see a tremendous upside that nobody else could see if it's like being run terribly,
like we know one asset in Colorado that was acquired, had 80 percent occupancy.
That sounded okay.
but they also had 80% delinquency.
So 64 of every 80 tenants were not paying or were paying late.
And so that thing was not making anywhere near the profit it could have been.
So the strategy is whatever asset type you're in to find intrinsic value and extract that
value.
I like to call it intrinsic value extraction.
And so my company looks for us.
operators that are experts at extracting intrinsic value out of assets and significantly
increasing the income and therefore the value.
I mean, just simple examples would just be the stuff we already talked about.
Adding a website, adding a web presence, finding a way to lease units, you know, site unseen through
an iPhone, just adding a U-Haul.
If you can add U-Haul, that's, you can add $3,000 a month if you're in the right location.
and $3,000 a month is $36,000 a year using our value formula, $36,000 divided by a 6% cap rate, 0.06.
I believe that's like a $600,000 increase to the value of your asset.
Think about it.
If you bought a million-dollar self-storage facility, a small one, you put $500,000 down, $500,000 in debt,
you added $600,000 to the value.
You more than doubled the value of the value of.
of the equity by just that one simple contract you signed with U-Haul.
This is very powerful.
And the point is in all of commercial real estate, you have an asset.
And if you can find a way to significantly increase the income by extracting that extra value,
you can get great returns.
One of the operators we invest with has over 60% IRA, 60% average annual returns,
because he does this strategy over and over, David.
Well, you're certainly making a compelling.
case for why someone would want to get into it. What are the seven paths someone can take if they want
to get into this asset class? Yeah. You know, when I thought about getting into commercial real estate,
I had no idea where to get in. I mean, I looked at storage facilities or large commercial strip
centers or whatever. And I was, I couldn't figure out what would I need millions of dollars,
the ability to get millions of debt, convince a broker. There's a lot of, you know, barriers to
entry. So the last third of my book has seven paths on how to get into the self-storage business,
but this is applicable to lots of different commercial real estate. It applies to mobile home
parks and, you know, data centers, industrial, etc. So the first path, I call it the long and
winding road. The long and winding road basically means that you buy something small,
you improve it, you go out and lease it up to its capacity.
then you either refinance it or sell it, and then you repeat.
I think somebody called this the Burr strategy.
I heard that somewhere, David.
And so it works with commercial too, but a lot of times people find that the Burr strategy
works better in commercial when you sell the asset and jump up to a higher level.
And so in 2015 or 16, I was in Arlington, Texas.
I met with a multifamily owner who was selling his apartment complex.
He'd start out with a $1,000 bonus from his job as a mechanic.
He bought a duplex.
He fixed it up, rented it, sold it, bought a fourplex, did the same.
And he did this from 1993 to 2015.
And he was selling this asset 132 units for $11.8 million.
And he was jumping up to a $15 million asset.
So I know it's possible.
It's a long and winding road because it took him 22 years to
pull that off, but he was doing quite well in that path. So that's path number one, the long and
winding road. Some people refer to it as Brandon's stacking strategy. I don't think it's exactly
the same as stacking, but some people might call it that. The second path would be to be a capital
raiser. Now, raising capital is fraught with challenges and SEC potential violations. So don't just
run with this. You can't just go raise money and get paid a commission unless you're
a licensed broker dealer, or unless you're a principal in the deal. So if you've got background,
if you've got access to a lot of people with money, if you've got social media skills,
if you can blog and write and podcast and do those type of things, you can actually raise
money. And if you can become a general partner, a co-GP in a deal, or if you can get a broker
dealer's license, you can actually raise money and then let somebody else do the heavy lifting
of the operation. So that's another path in. Some people might be tempted to do that in it and just
try to charge a commission and that is just not okay. There are some nuances of getting a flat fee,
but the gist of this is you really want to be involved as a principal. The third path is being a
deal finder. Now a deal finder, you might be tempted to get a commission like a real estate
broker, but it's not legal to get a commission for the most part. Can I jump in there real quick, Paul?
This needs more clarity. I frequently hear people asking for, they might call it a finder's fee,
they might call it a commission, and I don't think the average listener understands how regulated
certain parts of this industry are when it's appropriate to ask for that when it's not.
Do you mind providing a little bit of clarity on both when it's okay to ask for a finder's fee type
situation and what type of problems you might be creating for the person you're asking of that
from? Yeah, there are, I believe it's seven things in residential real estate, at least in the
state of Virginia where I am, that you cannot do as an unlicensed person. You can't negotiate a deal.
You can't offer a deal. You can't write up a contract. You can't do a lot of things that only a
principal or a real estate agent should do. And so if you're trying to do that and then get a fee as
non-licensed person. Again, I don't know what's true in the other 49 states, David. I don't know
what's true where you are, but in general, I don't think you should be charging a commission.
Can you get a flat finder's fee? I think you might be able to, but my point in this is you should
try to get into the deal. Like say, hey, give me 3% ownership and let me learn the business.
Be my mentor. What do you think, David? Do you think that that's, do you think I'm on track with
that or do you see it differently? I think it can be problematic. Like if someone brought me a deal and said,
hey, I want in on it. And now they're wanting my help with the deal, but they're also trying to
negotiate their split of what they think it should be. And they have their understanding of what
their split should be is based off of sort of ignorance in this industry. And someone like us has a lot more
experience. So maybe we don't value what they're bringing as much as they do. It opens up the
door for hurt feelings. It could cause the whole thing to fall apart.
there's also the element of when you're becoming someone's partner,
you're getting into bed with them in a sense.
And it's often a person you don't know very well.
So if it's someone like you, Paul,
who has extensive experience with doing this,
you probably already have documents drawn up at a very standardized.
This is the cut that I would etch out to give to this person.
And you can present it to them and they can make their decision.
For someone who doesn't do this all the time,
I think that could be a little bit trickier.
So I do think ideally it's better to be in the deal.
But before I brought the deal to the person and said, here it is, I would probably say, hey, hypothetically speaking, if we had a deal that matched your criteria, what do you think would be fair to include me in this, right?
Like, maybe you give up some of the cash flow to make the deal work and you get equity in the deal.
Maybe the person says, I don't want you to have equity because I don't know you, but I'll cut you off a portion of the cash flow and pay you that.
Sort of let the operator decide what they're comfortable with.
And then once that's decided, then you can say, well, here's the deal.
Does this work for you?
Yeah.
I find the human nature always each party values their role completely different before and after
the deal, you know? So it's important to negotiate that up front. And I think the reason I don't
tend to partner with people and that's it's a huge, huge deal. And even then they have to be someone
that I know really well is everything can go great, but we could just have a different vision for
when we want to exit, how we want to run it. Sometimes it involves capital raising where
partners have to bring money into the deal. Maybe one of them doesn't want to.
put capital in it or one of them wants to sell because they have another opportunity.
And the other investors say, no, we don't want to sell.
And it causes hurt feelings.
When you partner with someone for the first time that you don't know, it typically needs
to be a deal that's so big that there's enough meat on the bone that human beings can
be paid to take care of the maintenance of that deal, right?
Like asset managers and property managers that have experience because otherwise you're
relying on a human you don't know to do part of the job that maybe they don't have experience
doing.
or the goal is an exit.
We are going to hold it for X amount of time and then we're going to sell it.
Like flips were great for partnerships or what you're describing.
We're going to buy this place, turn it around, sell it to institutional money.
But if it's like, now, we're going to hold this thing together for 50 years.
That's very similar to marrying someone you just met till death of this part.
Yeah.
Yeah, that's very true.
And so I am part of a mastermind with a lot of commercial guys.
And we talk about this deal finder issue a lot, David.
One thing we've concluded is that, you know, we don't have to standardize it across different companies,
but seems like the going rate, and I don't think this has anything to do with the fact that it's real estate commission's 3%.
But the going rate seems to be for the person bringing the deal to get about 10% of the general partnership.
So in a syndication, we can talk about that more if you like, but typically the GP, the sponsor, the syndicator,
they're getting something like a 30% ownership split and giving the cash investors 70.
So 10% of 30% would be about 3% of the deal.
And if you give a deal finder that and they want to get in and they want to hang around
and they want to go to the due diligence and sit on the conference calls and meet the lender.
And then as a deal finder, if you do that, you can make some money from it and then you can
put it on your resume.
In other words, a lot of people out there that say, I've been part of.
X number of hundreds, you know, of units, a lot of them, they just brought the deal.
They were a deal finder. And I think that's a pretty good strategy to get into this business.
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Okay, what would the next path be?
The fourth path would be go big.
So if you won the lottery or you got a big inheritance or you, you know,
or an NFL football player and you retire, you might have a lot of money.
And this is actually a real situation.
I've seen this.
And so people want to get in and they want to jump in big right up front rather than go
through the long and winding road or be a deal finder or whatever.
And they've got capital.
So if that's you, you might want to really seriously think about getting all the training
you can, reading all the books, going to the, listening to the podcast and then getting a great
asset management team around you because this is a great way to get burned if you've got millions
of dollars but no knowledge. And I've run into people on the BP forums where they're saying,
hey, I actually don't know anything about self storage or mobile home parks, but I've got an
opportunity to buy one from my uncle. And I'm just thinking, that's fraught with trouble. I mean,
it's one thing to buy a flip house. And, you know, maybe you'll lose $20,000 or $30,000 in your learning
process, but if you're buying a two or three or five million dollar property, especially if you've
got other people's money involved, not a good path in my mind. I think there's a lot of wisdom in
that statement. And the reason I'm highlighting this is when we're discussing it from the perspective
of the person looking at the deal, they've never bought it. It seems obvious they shouldn't get into
that. But it never gets presented to the investor from the perspective we're talking about. All that
they see is, hey, I've got a great deal. It's self-storage. It's a farm. Here's my idea of what I'm
going to do. And they hear people on the podcast say, oh, self-storage is great. It makes all this
money. And the investors like, oh, I'm investing in self-storage. No, you are investing in an operator
that has never done a deal like this before and would frankly just have to get lucky for it to work out.
Right. So that's why I want to highlight this is when we're talking about it now, it's with
clear vision of this person doesn't know what they're doing. But when the PPM gets put out and the
memorandum goes out where, hey, here's the deal. Do you want to invest in it? So many investors
look at the asset class or they look at the returns and they don't look at the person who's actually
flying that plane. Yeah. You know, David, I'm writing another book for a bigger pocket. It's supposed to
come out in a year and a half about Warren Buffett's principles for real estate investors.
And one of those principles is, sure, a rising tide raises all boats. But some
day the tide's going to go out and then we'll see who's skinny dipping. That's a loose quote from
Buffett. And that's what we've been experiencing since the great financial crisis for about the last
11 or 12 years. The rising tide has made a lot of newbies look amazing. And some of them have
become overconfident, maybe overpaying for assets, charging a lot of fees. Investors are happy.
But someday that tide's going to go out. You know, Howard Marks reminds us that everything is cyclical,
trees don't grow to the sky.
And so you got to look at, you know, the track record, the team, all that stuff you mentioned, David.
So yeah, thank you.
That's good stuff.
Well, when you described your value formula, I'll see if I could break down this and make it as simple as I can.
There's two ways that you add value to a property because there's a numerator and a denominator, right?
The numerator in this world is the net operating income.
And you can understand that as the profit, what the thing's going to make in a year.
The denominator is the cap rate.
And that would be how the property is valued loosely based on like how much demand is there.
If it's at a three cap, there's a ton of people that are all trying to buy that asset class.
It's at a 12 cap.
They have to make it more appealing to somebody because there's not as many people that want to buy it.
So the price is going to come down.
And it's very similar to what I talk about with the Burr method where you have the numerator there is also like the yearly profit, what it makes in a year.
denominator is how much money I put into the deal. And if you understand that there's two components
that make up that formula, you know that there's two levers that you pull on to increase the
value. The denominator is always the stronger lever, right? So as cap rates are going down,
you are now dividing your profit by a lower number, making it a better deal. That's a much more
powerful lever than if you can get the numerator to go up. I remember Jay Scott and I were having a
conversation with, I think it was Jay Martin maybe at an event in Washington that Taral Yarber
Perot. And we were sort of going over how so many people are focused on that. Jay had brought that up.
Like, well, I can make the NOI go up. We were describing how like, yeah, that's cool. It's nothing
like when you can make the cap rate go down. They just don't compare. And because there's been so much
demand for income producing assets by institutional capital, by hedge fund people, by regular investors
like me that sold my property and need a 1031 into something that gets cash flow.
And I'm willing to pay more than somebody else would to protect the money.
There's a lot of demand.
Those cap rates go down.
And as they go down, it makes the operator look like they've done a much better job than
they really have, right?
Just the wind's been at their back.
And so that's what we're trying to highlight is just because someone's done well for the
last three years, four years, five years doesn't necessarily mean they're a great swimmer.
The tide has been really strong pushing people in that direction.
And when the tide stops and it comes back the other way, that's where you find out who's actually operating a good business, who swims well, and who's going to be drowning.
Yeah, that's right.
And so we talked earlier about putting a portfolio together, and that's one way to impact the compression of the cap rate, in order words, increasing the value, like you said.
But if it goes in the other direction, and it will, you know, you've got to have a numerator that's strong enough to overcome the number.
that expanding denominator. And that's why I love that strategy of buying intrinsic value.
Yes. The numerator describes how well the swimmer is. The denominator describes what the
tide is doing. That'd be the best way I can describe it. So that's a great point is if your numbers
are strong and you're running a good business and your net operating income is healthy,
those businesses will survive regardless of what the cap rates do. Yeah, it's true. And we have
seen lots of opportunities where, you know, again, we invest with these experts at extracting
intrinsic value that where their NOI goes up so much that even if the cap rate went up by a
point and a half, heaven forbid, but it will at some point, I'm sure, that that numerator still
overtook that denominator. But wow, when it moves in the same direction, it's incredible.
Yes. And that's what we look for, right? We're like, okay, where's the tide the strongest,
where cap rates compressing, where can I expect to get a little bit of bonus.
And then when we find the area, the location, the asset class, whatever it is, we say,
now who's the strongest swimmer that I can get in there to manage this thing?
That's a sound strategy.
You don't have to pick between the two.
You look for ways that you get both working together.
Yeah, that's right.
That's absolutely right.
The problem with the cap rate, though, is a lot of those factors are way outside our control.
You know, the cap rate might be based on interest rates, national demand, the economy,
I mean, all kinds of things in the region and nationally that we can't control.
I look at cap rate in the commercial space as very similar to comps in the residential space.
When the market's doing great, other houses are selling for more.
It naturally elevates the value of your house because the other ones did it.
And then when the market drops, all those other houses sell for less.
Your property loses value.
You can't control it, just like commercial investors can't control the cap rate.
But if you are investing in residential real estate and the comps drop, it doesn't matter as long as your property's cash flowing.
If it's making money, you can wait.
It's very similar in the commercial space.
Yeah, it's going to be hard to exit if cap rates increase a lot and your property value goes down.
But your net operating income will keep you alive.
You're not going to drown as long as you can swim.
I've never really put an analogy like that together, Paul.
I think that that's a pretty sound one.
I like that.
I'd like to blog on that with your permission.
I love that.
That's the tide and the swimmer.
That's excellent.
Absolutely.
Okay, where are we?
What path are we on now?
Well, we talked about going big.
And now I'm going to talk about something that people aren't going to want to hear, get a job.
Now, a lot of people are listening to Vigure Pockets podcast because they don't want to get a job.
They don't want to work for the man anymore.
But there is a sound strategy to get into self-storage or other commercial assets by getting a job.
Gary Keller, you know, Jay Papazon's partner, of course, he started.
started out by getting a job as a realtor.
The top multifamily guys in America, Rick Graff,
started out as a porter at an apartment building,
and he worked his way up to CEO of Pinnacle.
And so there are great ways to get a job.
One would be getting a job as a commercial property broker.
Another would be a lender.
Another job would be working for an asset manager.
Property manager would be a great one.
I know a guy who ditched $120,000 a year mortgage loan officer job to work for $60,000 a year
as a property manager at Adela self-storage.
And his goal was to do that, to learn the business, to buy a self-storage facility and then operate it.
So that's his way of working his way into the business.
Getting a job means you learn the, you know, you get the terms right, you meet the people,
you understand the lenders, the math, all those things.
And you might even end up getting to partner with your boss someday.
Who knows?
So getting a job is the fifth path.
The sixth path of the seven is taking the passive path.
Now, the passive path in my mind is a very good path for people who have a full-time job,
a career.
They're making a lot of money.
They might be enjoying their retirement.
And they are not in a position to really focus on this.
You know, it's one thing to own some single family homes or a,
Airbnb on the side. But to buy a large commercial asset in your spare time, that's a little dicey
to me. It seems a little risky to say the least, especially if you're using other people's money.
So the passive path allows people to find a sponsor or a syndicator, vet them really well,
and then go invest with them. One of my favorite books on this is Brian Burke's hands-off,
the hands-off investor. I know you had them on the show before. And his book,
the hands-off investor, I keep right here by my desk because he's got lots of strategies to vet
sponsors. And so that is a fabulous path for a lot of people as well. Now, of course, you could also
be the sponsor, but that would be more of another path. But that would be something you'd want to
do after you've done a lot of this other groundwork to learn the business. The seventh path is
finding a mentor or a paid coach. Now, a mentor would be somebody where you might go in
and say, look, I'll work for you evenings,
I'm really good at this, whether it's spreadsheets or web design,
social media, podcasting, you know, you go in and work for them.
And in turn, they train you on the business.
So that's one way to do it that no money often changes hands.
Often, if you do a fabulous job, if you find yourself being indispensable to them,
they'll hire you because they'll feel guilty.
one of the top realtors in San Francisco, commercial realtors, started out this way.
She quit her job in 2008 as a CPA, and she actually began working for free as a mentee under a
commercial real estate firm, and she worked her way up to being one of the top brokers in San Francisco.
The other way is a paid coach.
And a paid coach, of course, is hiring somebody to be your paid mentor.
I've paid $25,000 or more two different times in my career to get a paid coach.
And I find that this is a fabulous way to jumpstart your career.
And the paid coaching route, David, will also sometimes fold into some of the other paths.
For example, if I have a paid coach, I might be able to be a deal finder for them or a capital
raiser, you know, as long as I'm a legitimate co-GP for them.
And so the paid coaching route and the mentor route will be the seventh path.
And these are the different ways I find that people get into self-storage or other commercial real estate asset types.
All right.
I mean, that's pretty detailed analysis there.
That's really good stuff.
All right.
You talk about the power of a dollar when it comes to real estate investing.
Tell us what you mean by that.
David, I never dreamed what the value of a dollar could mean.
Jeff Bezos tied practically for the wealthiest guy in the world, went around the Amazon facilities,
and he took the light bulb out of the vending machines.
Now, why would he do that?
Well, he reasoned that the light bulb was taking up electricity, and it needed a maintenance person to change it out,
and there was a cost of the light bulb itself, all to advertise some snack company like Lance snacks.
See, he realizes that a dollar a month saved is $12 a year.
And Amazon's PE ratio, their price to earnings ratio right now, is about 56.
So a dollar a month saved, $12 a year, that translates to $672 in his wealth and in the wealth of his shareholders.
Well, the value formula in commercial real estate is quite similar because if you can, and this
This is why I think most of the Forbes 400 invests in commercial real estate, David.
The value for it, imagine this.
You add a dollar a month to the bottom line of your multifamily or your self-storage mobile home part.
Okay.
That's $12 per year.
Mama told me I was good in math.
And so $12 a year, that doesn't sound like much.
But divide that by the cap rate, and they're typically running like 5%.
Now, let's say 6%.
So $12 divided by 6%.
0.06. Now it's getting into real money. It's $200 added to the asset value. But it's even better than that.
Because if you have leverage, let's say 60% leverage, then the value to you as the investor could be
two and a half times as much. So that $1 saved or gained per month in that asset could translate
to huge dollars for you. I already used U-Haul as an example, adding U-Haul,
can add $600,000 to the value of your facility.
But just raising rates, just raising rents, let's say you're 20 or 30% below market.
If you can raise rents, 20 or 30%, in many cases, you can almost double the value of your
equity, or just adding a climate-controlled building or gravelling a parking lot.
I heard of a story where somebody gravelled, I think they actually paved an acre out front of
their facility and they set it up for boat and RV storage and they added 120,000 a year to their
income. Well, there was no increase in cost once they built that, which was about $100,000 to build
it. So $120,000 a year, that's an additional $2 million added to the value that facility.
In fact, it practically doubled the equity. Just adding that boat and RV storage. You know,
the previous owner could have done that, David. They easily could have.
I've added boat and RV storage, but they didn't do it for whatever reason.
This is the power of seeing the intrinsic value as an expert in being able to extract that,
which we talked about before.
You know, I heard someone say something the other day.
I don't remember who it was, and it's such a simple statement.
I was almost embarrassed. I never thought of it on my own.
But they were talking about, and I'm going to add live a little to their point, they said,
most of us would do, like we'd give our right arm to add 15 to 20 percent.
of increased revenue in our business. We would work so hard to bring in extra money to the top
line. But taxes come right out of the bottom line. And we often don't even think about ways to
save money in taxes, but generating 20% additional revenue is probably going to be less
savings when it's all said and done than saving just 10% in taxes. So can you share a little bit
about the way that real estate helps you save taxes and how important that is when it comes to
accumulating wealth. Absolutely. So I think another reason the Forbes 400 generally invests in
commercial real estate is there are so many tax benefits. The tax code is written to incentivize
investors and business owners to do what the government wants people to do. And so it's written
actually to favor real estate investors. It really is. And so there's,
a lot of different ways, strategies and tips you can use to save money on taxes. The first one
is kind of funny. It's hiring a tax strategist. Now, I know a guy named Ed, and Ed was paying about
$120,000 a year in taxes, and he stumbled into some of these strategies I'm about to talk about,
and he went to his CPA and said, hey, he met him for lunch and said, could I do this? And the CPA said,
yeah, yeah, you could do that. Probably should. And he got kind of irritated and he said,
okay, what about this? And he said, yeah, that would be a good idea too. And he said, you've been doing
my taxes for like a decade. Why didn't you tell me this? And the CPA said, you pay me to do your taxes,
not be your tax strategist. Well, as you can imagine, that was their last lunch together. He went out
and found a tax strategist and he said he hasn't paid a dime. He hasn't paid a dime in taxes since that.
And he's talking about legitimate tax savings now, not just something under the table.
So hire a tax strategist first.
The next thing would be have a direct investment.
If you get a K-1 from your commercial real estate deal, then you are getting the pass-through
savings.
And we're going to talk about some of those from the asset.
So the asset passes through the savings to you as an effective partner if you are getting a K-1.
Another strategy is return of capital, and this is kind of obvious.
But one of the waterfall methods and a waterfall is the repayment to investors from a syndication is to pay back the return of capital first.
And by giving them back, let's say they invest $100,000, that $100,000 and they're making, let's say, $8,000 a year.
Well, that $8,000 a year comes back tax-free because it's a return of capital first.
And we all know the time value of money if you don't have to pay taxes.
In the early years, that can be a significant opportunity to reinvest that money and pay the taxes later.
Another strategy, and the big one I want to highlight, is accelerated depreciation through a cost segregation study.
And without getting into a lot of detail, I'll just tell you that assets, commercial and residential assets have building structure, but they also have personal property.
And the government allows you to segregate those and extract out the personal property.
So like in an apartment, you know, it might be lighting and flooring in cabinets and countertops
and even some electrical and the appliances and the roofs.
Those can all be depreciated much more quickly than the building itself.
And so because of the 2017 tax law changes, a lot of that, at least right now, as we're doing the show,
can still be depreciated or counted as a paper loss, if you will, early on, like in year one.
And so by doing this, investors can have, you know, they can be getting a return.
They can be getting cash in their bank account, but they can have a loss on their tax return
for many years.
This is a really powerful strategy.
And this is one that surprises me sometimes that people don't use, but they could.
Another strategy is to correctly classify fully deductible repairs.
So you might have an accountant over there who's just counting something as maintenance
when it can be a capital expense or capital expense when it could be maintenance.
Just make sure you're classifying all those well because in the 2017 tax law reform,
they also broadened the section 179 rules,
which means basically, for example, a roof instead of taking it as a cost over
15 years can actually happen, you know, can all be compressed into year one in some cases.
And there's all kinds of other things that can be done like that.
Of course, refinancing is another strategy.
You can free up some or all of your equity.
You can refinance, let's call it lazy equity or gains.
You can refinance it.
And there's no tax on that to the investor, just like refinancing your house.
And so commercial operators in self-storage and otherwise can refinance back some or all
the equity to the investors, the investors can go put that back into use without paying taxes on it.
Of course, another strategy we all know is the 1031 exchange, and that's exchanging one property
for another of so-called like kind. You know, the 2017 tax reform eliminated the 1031 exchange
for all kinds of different asset types, but not for real estate, thankfully. So the 1031 exchange,
I have a friend who invest with me.
He's been kicking the can down the road since the 70s on some money he invested.
And he keeps re-upping his 1031 exchange every time he sells an asset and it allows him to continue not to pay taxes until he dies.
Well, you know, they say death and taxes are the worst things out there.
Well, death cannot be a problem for the tax man as well because under the current laws,
you can get a step up in basis.
And so if the month before you pass away,
if you sell all your assets and pay the tax so you can give your kids cash,
that sounds like a good strategy,
but you have to pay massive taxes in some cases,
especially if you've been kicking that can down the road.
But under the current laws,
you can get a step up and basis,
and the value of the assets are actually recalibrated to the value at your death.
And so there's no capital gains,
and there's no deprecate.
appreciation recapture to your heirs if you decide to go that way. Another strategy is using
self-directed IRAs. There's Roth IRAs. There's SEP IRAs. I talked to a government employee the
other day who had his retirement plan with the government for decades. He had no idea you could
invest in real estate because Wall Street doesn't want people to know they can invest in real
estate, but you can through a self-directed IRA or 401K. Another powerful strategy is to
avoid passive loss limitations by becoming a qualified real estate professional.
So if you don't know about this, if you or your spouse can become a qualified real estate
professional by working in real estate over 750 hours a year, and by doing that more hours
than anything else you do professionally, you can get massive tax savings. You can even use
losses like I've been talking about against your active income. And so there are a significant
benefits to this. And this is why a lot of these real estate investors never or rarely pay taxes,
at least for many, many years. That's a great breakdown of how it works. It's not, I say this all
the time. It's not when someone says I didn't pay taxes, they're not cheating. Right.
Not doing anything unethical. There's actually more risk associated with this because you're buying
an asset that could go bad. And there's more work associated with it. So what you're describing when you
said, hey, I'm going to buy a self-storage facility. Then I'm going to pay a contractor to put out a
bunch of concrete. Then I'm going to rent out that space to a U-Haul, and people can pay to put their
boats and their RVs and all those places there. The reason that you get compensated for that
from the government as far as the depreciation is that there's some risk. What if nobody puts their
boat there? What if you did a bad job and you didn't look at the demographics first? But the
government wants you to because more people will buy a boat if they have a place to put it.
more people will buy an RV. Every time that happens, there's a sales tax that gets generated where the
government makes more money. More people now work at these boat places. More boat mechanics will have a job.
More salespeople will have a job. Someone will have to build a building to hold all the boats in before they
sell them. And all of those places will generate tax revenue. It's often missed by short-sighted people
who say greedy real estate investors don't pay taxes. How much more revenue those investors are creating
for the government as a whole that everybody needs by,
the value of a property and improving. Do you have anything you want to add on that concept?
No, I think that's absolutely true. And Tom Wheelwright's one of my favorite tax strategists.
And he talks about this. And he says, you know, that the government is actually motivating us to do what they want us to do.
And that was a light bulb moment for me. And I'm really glad that you brought that out, David.
Yeah, it would be like if I told an agent on my team, hey, you don't have to pay me any of your commission if you go start a new David Green team in this area.
collect commissions from those 30 agents instead of the one that was here. It's very short-sighted
of, well, they don't have to pay any commissions. That's not fair. How come I do? But if you're going to go
build a new expansion partner that's going to have 30 new agents to generate revenue for the company,
you could too. And that's what investors do is we step in in a capitalistic environment
and make it better, right? In a socialistic environment, you have less of that. Now, the government's
responsible for making those improvements. And most people recognize the government doesn't do as good
of a job as the private citizens do.
It's what I always say is what's your experience like when you go to the DMV.
You know, like that's what happens when the government ends up running the actual experience
of what you're getting versus me.
I go to AAA and it's a privately run company and I go right in there.
I get my registration done and I get out.
So just for all of you investors out there that are hearing this and you might have a little
bit of guilt like, I don't feel good about this.
No, you're generating so much more revenue than others would be by improving property.
So if that's what you want to do, you need to go to biggerpoggets.com slash storage and check out Paul's book.
Paul, I think this might have been the most detailed interview I've ever done with an author of a Bigger Pockets book.
So if anyone is listening, have they already heard everything that's in the book or should they still go buy it?
I think they need to buy the book because there's a lot of details, including 40 reasons.
I love self-storage.
One of those is that, you know, there's no toilets, tenants, and trash to deal with.
Yeah, there are tenants, but the eviction laws are totally different.
And there's a lot of reasons that I think people could and should buy the book,
including some of the barriers to entry to self-storage and how to overcome those
and how to get training, mentoring.
There's all kinds of stuff in the book that we didn't cover on this show.
Well, thank you very much, Paul.
This has been a blast.
Go to biggerparks.com slash storage.
Check out the self-storage book.
I'm going to let you get out of here because we went into overtime already.
Is there anything you want to add before we go?
Yeah, I just want to say that we talked about this briefly in the pre-show,
and that is when I woke up in 1997, I just made a couple million dollars selling my company
to a public firm.
I wasn't any happier than I was before.
A study I read recently said that if you make over, one person says 65, another person
95.
If you make over, let's say, 100,000 a year, you're not going to be any happier at 105,000 versus a million and five.
And so you need a bigger why.
And I just want to encourage whatever you're doing when you're listening to this, whether you're an investor, a syndicator, or just listening to the show,
I want to encourage everybody to have a bigger why.
We are meant to leave a mark on history and make this world a better place.
And when I found out, David, about human trafficking, I was shocked. Do you know if you took the record profits?
Not the average. The record profits of Apple, General Motors, Nike, and Starbucks. And you combine those together, triple that number.
That's the estimated annual revenues generated by human trafficking every year. And so my company, Wellings Capital, is trying to do something to use our commercial real estate profits to fight human trafficking.
and rescue its victims.
And I would encourage you to find your big why,
something you're passionate about,
something you're excited about,
and get behind that,
because that is going to be a way that,
you know, is going to make you happier
when you get to your goal.
I love that.
Thank you very much for sharing that.
As someone who worked in law enforcement,
it is a much bigger deal than what people realize.
It's happening around you, the listener, right now,
and you don't know it.
It's actually very prevalent.
And oftentimes, even by the time you rescue somebody, it's obviously a better life for them
than what they were living.
But it's in many ways almost irreversible damage has been done.
So being able to stop that from happening before it starts is incredibly important to the
people.
And it's one of those things where the victims don't make themselves known.
They're not going to get on social media and go say this horrible thing happened to me.
There's so much shame.
There's so much embarrassment.
they've been beat down so much and their self-worth is taking such a hit that they're not going to get out there and say,
I was a victim of something like what we typically see on social media.
I remember maybe 10 years ago, there was that African warlord that was taken over other villages.
I can't remember his name right now.
Joseph.
Coney was it?
Everyone knew about it.
It was just really popular thing to say, I stand against Joseph Coney.
This is not like that.
You won't know it's happening.
And so these organizations that are out there protecting those people are very near and dear to my heart.
And I really appreciate you, Paul, calling attention to this.
This is something where your dollars will actually make a big difference.
All right, go get the book, BiggerPockets.com slash storage.
And Paul, where can people find out more about you?
You know, like I mentioned earlier, I spent years trying to figure out how to get into commercial real estate.
So I've created a guide for people who want to learn how to get into commercial real estate.
You can get that at my website, Wellings, Capital, W-E-L-L-L-I.
I NGS, wellingscapital.com slash resources.
There you have it.
This is David Green for Paul.
No tenants, trash, or toilets more.
Signing up.
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