BiggerPockets Real Estate Podcast - 550: BiggerPockets Podcast 550: Foreclosures, Flipping, and Creating Your Rental Property “Buy Box” w/Tommy Christy
Episode Date: December 28, 2021Tommy Christy has bought more homes than most investors you know combined. While he didn’t have to put up his own money to close on the deals, he did go through the process of lead generating, offer...ing, auctioning, analyzing, and finally closing on them for his hedge fund employer. He was able to score twenty-seven hundred homes in just over two years, before realizing it was time for him to build his personal portfolio a bit more. When the market crashed in 2009, Tommy saw an opportunity to buy homes at a significant discount. He was essentially buying anything under sixty thousand dollars in California, which turned out to be a good idea seeing how much the state has appreciated in the past twelve years. Tommy knows what it takes for the hedge funds to buy a great deal, but he also knows what they’re overlooking. Even if you’re not planning on buying two-thousand plus units in two years, Tommy’s knowledge of “buy boxes” and systematizing your lead flow can help you reach a significant unit count, much faster. If you want to partner up on a deal, have a chat, or wholesale a home, get in touch with Tommy at tommy@ilovehouses.com! In This Episode We Cover: REOs vs. foreclosures vs. pre-foreclosures (and which you should look out for) Creative financing and understanding which type falls into which market cycle Developing your “buy box” and “crystal clear criteria” for real estate deals Thinking like a hedge fund so you can beat them at their own game How to scale your portfolio so you don’t just have more units, but less work Where to find the best lead sources so you can buy, BRRRR, or wholesale as you see fit And So Much More! Links from the Show BiggerPockets Forums GoBundance Zillow David Greene's Company BiggerPockets Show 551 with Josh Dorkin Wells Fargo Property Radar BiggerPockets Youtube Channel BiggerPockets Podcast 527: 300 Doors, 100% Creative Financing with Pace Morby Sacramento Bee Invitation Homes Zillow Open Door Capital BiggerPockets Podcast 543: 5 Tools To Unlock Your “Ideal Life” w/ “Traction” Author Gino Wickman Josh Dorkin BiggerPockets Podcast 325: From Major Business Failure to Buying 20 Houses a Month With Aaron Amuchastegui Jeff Brown's BiggerPockets Profile Supermarket Sweep Check the full show notes here: https://www.biggerpockets.com/show550 Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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This is the Bigger Pockets podcast show 550.
My preference right now is with all the overhead that I do, I'll continue to flip,
however many houses are necessary to feed my rental addiction.
And I want to buy, stabilize, and hold stuff while debt is low.
Replacement costs are irrationally high.
And the rents are high.
What's going on about it's Brandon Turner, host of the Bigger Pockets podcast,
the show we believe real estate investing is the greatest path towards financial
independence and wealth and freedom ever known to mankind.
Here with my co-host, Mr. David Green.
David, what's up, man?
Awesome to have you once again on the show.
How you doing?
Yeah, and we were just blessed with a little cameo of Josh Dorkin,
poking his head into the shot there.
It looks like he came over to use your pool.
He was.
So, yes, Josh is actually sitting right outside my office right now.
What's up, Josh?
Because he says, hey, what's up, everyone?
because next, the next episode that comes out, this is not episode five.
This is extra of 550, but 551.
Here's Josh.
Come on over, Josh.
What up, people?
There we go.
So Josh and I and David are going to be recording episode 551, right, when this gets over.
So yes, you heard it here first, that Josh Dorkin will be making a guest appearance on the next episode.
But not today.
So, but first, let's talk about today's show.
Today we've got an amazing interview with a good friend of David and I.
His name is Tommy Christy.
Tommy's been all those guys that is super humble.
and you talk to him and he's like, oh, yeah, you know, I do real estate.
And then you find out he buys hundreds of properties and has bought thousands of properties over his life.
And he just kills it.
So we talked today about scaling what it takes to beat hedge funds at their own game because there was a time where Tommy actually worked with the hedge funds to buy a lot of properties.
They're going to learn about how you can get around them and find good deals, even if there's those big buyers in your market.
We talk about how important to have a good criteria or a buy box is what Tommy calls it and so much more.
So all of that and more to come.
But first, let's get to today's quick tip.
Quick tip is simple.
Listen to this whole episode because it's going to change your life.
And then listen to the next episode, 551,
because it's going to be a very special episode.
So that's a quick tip.
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I can't actually prove that,
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The footsteps, the late night fridge raids.
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It's sitting there.
in the dark thinking, I could be contributing right now.
Your side room wants a side hustle.
Even your Wi-Fi is like, we could be networking.
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Everyone wins.
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That's not the job.
The job of a property manager
is protecting and growing your operating income
and earning your trust while they do it.
And that comes down to three numbers.
Occupancy, delinquency, and net promoter score.
If those numbers slip, your income slips,
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And most PMs don't hold themselves
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They focus on activity, not outcomes.
Mind is different.
They obsess over the metrics that actually grow your cash flow.
Go to mine.com slash show me to see how mine performs and get a month of management for free.
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We all joke that rentals are passive, but if you're spending nights matching receipts or guessing what a property earned last month, that's not passive at all.
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I think now it's time to jump into the show.
Anything you want to say before we bring Tommy in?
Make sure you listen all the way to the end because we get into a really good conversation
about all the strategies are available and how to pick the one that's best for where you are
at this stage in your financial and your personal life,
as well as how that sort of you can expect it to evolve as your wealth grows, as your family life changes, as your work position switches.
Different strategies work better at different phases in life.
And I think we do a pretty good job of explaining painting a picture of what that can look like as someone's career progresses.
That's true, man. It's true.
So that said, let's bring him in.
All right, Tommy, welcome to the Bigger Pockets podcast, man.
It has been many years in the making.
And I'm excited for you to be the last guest that I get to interview here on the Bigger Pockets podcast.
What's up, man?
This is the honor.
And man, I am excited to be here.
Thank you for having me.
Well, thanks.
For those I don't know what I'm talking about,
this is my last guest interview for at least quite some time.
We're actually promoting David to the host of the Bigger Pockets podcast.
So yeah, crazy times.
But I'm excited to go out on top because you guys, Tommy is somebody that I have for years
looked up to and got bits and pieces of a story.
And I've never heard the whole thing.
So I'm excited to dig into that.
But I know one thing about you, Tommy.
That is you love houses. Tell us about that.
I adore them. They make me so happy.
Like, I just, I love houses. And like, that's like a icebreaker for me all the time,
especially when you're calling like utilities and they're wanting your email address.
You're asking them to waive like an $8,000 PG&E bill or something like that.
That was the old dude. I'm just some guy that loves houses.
Yeah. Well, you literally have that in your shirt. I love houses. And your company's what?
I lovehouses.com or something.
That's one of my brands. Yeah. I like it. Well, tell me this.
I bought I Loverentals.com, and then when I went to one of the Dubbundance events, I was talking to one of the guys.
Then I bought I Love Trailerparks.com.
Did you really?
I started buying.
I love everything domains.
And then I had to buy the heart domains that go with them, which cost me more money.
That made me sad.
Oh, man.
Before we get into your story, tell us, why do you love houses?
You know, that is a really good question.
I've actually never had that question.
But I think the simple part of it is I spend a very reasonably large amount of it.
time of my life working. And, you know, you take on a percentage of your identity comes from what you do.
And I've always used my personality to knock on doors and to do everything about the houses thing.
And the I lovehouses.com brand just took on the fact that I just kept telling people I love houses.
And I went to the domain, went to the website, and I bought it.
All right.
Which I paid it pretty much for. But I just love them. It makes me happy.
All right. Well, let's get into your story and we'll learn more about, you know, your love affair with houses.
So how did you get started in this world of real estate?
What were you doing before?
And then how'd you get into it?
So I was knocking doors, trading and selling coupons in a management training program from which I was recruited for.
And I was the only person there that lasted, I think, longer than three weeks.
You quickly get promoted.
And I learned how to make $10 a door, you know, knocking on 100 doors a day.
And my brother was a banker at Wells Fargo.
And his biggest client was a trust ECL guy, a foreclosure guy, that would be in a
hurry at all times, you know, like, got to make checks, got to bounce the next auction, you know,
always had something going. And it just turned out that when my booming career of selling coupons
door to door did not pan out, that he was looking for someone like myself to set appointments for
him and learn the foreclosure business. So I told him I had a PhD from Chico State and he went to
Chico State, which is like the Harvard of the West. And she's, and his wife looks at me like,
you have a PhD. I don't think that's true. I'm going to go with that's not. I'm poor hungry and
desperate. Like, I need to learn about real estate and I was willing to do it for free. And they picked me up and
they taught me for, you know, a couple of years before I went out and figured I could do everything on
my own without having to learn the rest of the business. And then I just figured it out from there.
All right. So what was the job? You knock on a door because what they gave you a list of like
foreclosures and you knock on the door? Great question. It was pre foreclosures. They actually had a
data system where they would, they would back then you hand pull the leads off microfish and you would
get the trustee sale before someone else would. They would just go door knock stuff and say,
trustee sale is scheduled for such and such date have you guys got that taken care of and the people who said
no it was everything from probates which you know owners had passed away to job loss to everything and
they had a program where they were able to keep people in the homes because they could afford to keep
the homes as rentals in an appreciating market early 2000s so it was easy to say hey we can keep you in
the home and they just had this endless supply of money it felt like and I
I didn't do anything really, but set the appointment and then maintain the relationship during the contract.
You know, it's like an unlicensed real estate agent type thing going on at the time.
Yeah, all right.
So you started by knocking pre foreclosures.
Maybe we can set some terminology terms for those who are terminology terms.
What's pre-foreclosure?
How's that different than foreclosure?
How's they different than REOs?
Yeah, that's super relative to anybody at any level.
Like, you know, whether you're in Wyoming, whether you're in Texas, whether you're in California,
each of these systems are governed by the foreclosure process, which changes state to state.
So there's a mortgage or there's a trustee sale.
And in California, it's a trustee sale system, which they're delinquent.
And then they send you mean letters.
And then you figure out that the bank's not going to stop sending you mean letters until you pay.
And if you don't pay or the house is vacant, the mail is just going to nowhere,
then they eventually set a trustee sale date.
So there's a notice of default, then a trustee sale, which is like that 28-day warning.
That just says, here's your actual date.
No more warnings.
Here's your date of the auction.
And then we would work within the confines of that default system.
And in the mortgage states, it's done judicially.
So, you know, people will go in front of a judge.
The judge will say, you guys got to be out on such and such date unless you meet these terms.
And occupants or the owners, you know, there's a difference between the tenants and the laws are just different state to state.
So here in California, I didn't, the volume was so high, you know, early 2000s at high,
late 2000s that I didn't have to go out of state until I started doing after the crash,
you know, Vegas, Phoenix, all the major markets that the world had fallen apart.
I think one misconception with for real estate investors is just the word foreclosure is sort
of becoming this all-encompassing word that we used to describe. Right. So can we maybe sort
of divvy up the stages of the foreclosure process, which would probably be a more accurate way
to describe it? Yeah. And I think that to go down the road you're talking about, it's really,
applicable for realtors to understand it. And it's really applicable for investors to understand it.
And it's the lending side, the private money side. So in agents that have this dual threat,
they say, hey, my client wants to make an offer on this foreclosed property. Or they know I'm a
perfectly capable agent willing to take my own advice as to how I make money in real estate.
And they'll go door knock, they'll send out mailers, property radar.com. Is that like,
pure source of national foreclosures where people can get a general address and an
acknowledgement that there's a distressed lead there of any kind, whether it would be a notice
of default, a trustee sale, a judicial foreclosure notice, you know, I don't think that they
sell the blight lists, you know, that it's maybe a code enforcement lead or other, but the word
foreclosure goes super vague because an REO, which is now a bank-owned property, is considered
to foreclosure. But the foreclosure has actually already occurred. So that word foreclosure for me
in California is that notice a default time period, somewhere between three and six months,
and then the trustee sale month that they tag on there where they set their sale date,
take it to auction, and they either give you a number and you sit there and bid with your number.
In Texas, it's Super Tuesday. I think Atlanta and Georgia are a, they're a Super Tuesday state.
In California, it could happen any day. The volume's really.
low compared to some of the distressed markets. But foreclosure is a really vague, you know,
very, really, very vague word right now. I like that, David, you brought up that fact that,
like, different people say foreclosure and it means different things of different people. So,
David, how do you do? The neighbors say the word foreclosure like Eddie. Yeah. Yeah. It's amazing,
which what that word means to an investor, what it means to, you know, owner or it means to a neighbor.
I remember being a kid and my dad who had no idea how, I mean, he wasn't like an idiot,
but he didn't know how real estate worked.
I remember he's talking to my mom or me or somebody.
And I remember him saying, yeah, it's really hard to get a good deal unless you find a
foreclosure or something like that.
And so I always just, I had that in the back of my head for my whole life.
And then when I got into real estate sales, I realized that it is foreclosure is a process.
And the way that I understand it now is like, I own a house.
And if I stop making the payment, there's laws in place so that the lender can't just
take title the day after I miss my payment.
Oh, my house.
Too bad.
There's things in place that give you an opportunity to catch up.
And one of them is that they have to legally issue a notice of default.
That's where they tell you through public forums so that I can't come back and say,
they never told me, like they posted in a newspaper.
They put it in these public places that, hey, David Green is behind on his mortgage and he has
X amount of time to catch up.
Or his HOA.
Perfect.
That's the super hot one.
This is what I love about you, Tommy.
You're giving us good details.
So HOA.
When you borrow money from the bank and you sign on your deed of trust, it says in there,
I have now selected Placer Title Services, you know, First American Title Services.
And what they say is they're the trustee of that note.
It's that specific note that's foreclosable, which was that whole B of A didn't have possession
of my note.
You can't foreclose on me.
You know, you read about those 10 years ago that people are still in their homes.
Like we saw one in Tennessee this week.
They haven't paid in 10 years.
Like they've been there.
Like there's just the system's so big.
And the word foreclosure is so big.
It just applies way differently to who you're asking about.
So you get the notice of default.
And then if you don't respond in time, the holder of that note now typically says,
okay, we have to sell this property to get paid back what we're owed.
That's when you have the foreclosure.
It goes to the courthouse steps in that area.
And that's where people like you and our friend Aaron and Mucostagie will show up and you can buy the property there for what is owed on the note or whatever they're selling it for.
But it's typically an all cash offer.
You're not writing a contract like what a realtor writes that gives you contingencies.
You're not getting clean title.
All the things that protect buyer during the home buying process are not applicable.
This is why the big boys play there.
And I believe bigger pockets wrote the book bidding to buy that kind of details that process.
If it doesn't sell on the courthouse steps, nobody buys it.
now the bank will hire a realtor to go sell it, put it on the MLS, and that property is considered
REOs, meaning real estate owned, because it is now on the bank's books. The bank has taken title.
I'd say bank, it's really the lender. The lender has taken title back to that property,
and now they go find the David Green team and they say, okay, sell this house. The problem is once
that, what we call foreclosure, hits the MLS, it's no different than every other house.
So even though it will say foreclosure or REO, that does not equal great deal.
You're just comparing it to all the other homes.
And that's where I think the misconception comes in is people are, they'll see a house on Zillow that says foreclosure, which means foreclosure process.
It's going to be sold on the courthouse steps.
And they don't have the means or the intestinal fortitude to get into that world and try to buy it.
And then they'll see it on the MLS.
They're like, oh, look, it's REO.
This must mean a great deal.
Well, in 2010, it did mean that because there was a billion of them.
Yeah. There was just a ton of them, right?
Yeah, all my early stuff was all Oreos.
Like, yeah, that's all we looked for.
But that gets stuck in people's heads.
So now they think Oreo is synonymous with great deal.
But now when there's not much supply, it's just like every other house.
Let me ask you to a question.
Foreclosures have been obviously almost non-existence since COVID, right?
Because all the government shut down all the foreclosure stuff.
But now that's kind of coming to, at least we hope, coming to an end, are foreclosures coming back, Tommy?
And are they coming back hard?
You know, I want to say it's still.
And it's actually product specific.
So for instance, you're going to see private money stuff that comes up.
Like, I'm a buddy of mine lives in Colorado.
They don't do a lot of second mortgages there.
You know, it's a different beast.
So whether it's the first mortgage going to sale or a second mortgage, a private money
note, what has stopped is Fannie Freddie paper.
That's that at least 50% of the market is on that homeowner based, you know, the cheapest
money you can get, but you have to check a hundred boxes, you know, to get a mortgage, right?
And once you've checked all those boxes, those foreclosures, they're on payment plans or they're in some stage that allows them to kind of delay or postpone, really.
I think what we're seeing right now, and I would say right now still in the next one quarter to two quarters, is reverse mortgages, deceased owners, private money, and non-owner occupied mortgages are going to be coming back.
That's the stuff that's coming through now where someone's not paying and there's a distress that's been caused.
out of that. And it's hard for me to get that crystal ball out for the homeowner-occupied stuff,
like for Fannie Freddie. So, David, do you have a different opinion? Are you seeing it differently
in your market? I think that there's a lot of people that were hoping for that. And there was a lot
of gurus that were telling people that. And it isn't going to happen, in my opinion. And I think what
you just said, Tommy, there's payment plans in place. First off, absolutely true. For anything that makes
it through that, the reality is there's been so much equity created in the last couple years when
prices go this high, it won't go to foreclosure. You'll just put it on the market and someone will
buy it and you will make more money even though you fell behind on your mortgage. And so that's why
we're not going to see all this inventory happened last time because housing prices were going
down. And so you couldn't sell your house. Foreclosure was where you ended up. Significantly.
Yeah. Yeah. I'll tell you one thing that I think you're going to see in the next four quarters that
is a game changer for volume that may never hit that irrationally low amount is that.
that there's so much money available to buy these notes that before we were seeing stuff
to go on to sale for $550,000 and the opening bid was $100,000.
You know, like they dipped, they cut bids and you would have to be there.
And you show up at the auction expecting the opening bid to be $5.50.
The auction opens at $100K and you buy it.
And it's this, it was a process where they were getting rid of distressed real estate.
They didn't have a system for the middlemen that were going to mow the long.
and board up the pools and take care of the, you know, what I'm seeing now is people are buying
these notes before. And so eventually, if it goes to sale for face value and the owner of the
note takes it back and which a lot of people associate me with my invitation homes days,
is that if the note holder can afford to put that into a portfolio or they can have a
platform that allows them to stabilize the asset with the occupant as a tenant or a new tenant,
they're going to lever those right up. And they'll never hit the distressed real estate world.
They'll just become asset or platform-owned houses. I think that that will be a big portion
of what we're seeing from heavy, heavy, you know, the really big money is are people that are buying the
notes and then if they revert, just stabilize them. They're not taking a loss on stuff.
there's still, it's like cap rate based single family, which is not a world that I fully understand yet.
Sure.
That makes sense, man.
Obviously, none of us have a crystal ball.
So let's go back to the crystal ball we do have, which is our past.
What did you do after this door knocking thing?
How did you get into, like, what's the next, what was the next phase for Tommy?
Yeah.
So that was 2005-ish when I left.
And I still had three years left to think that the amazing real estate market was how good I was.
in reality, like, I think 2008 proved I may not have known everything in the world, but I did, you know, three years of terms deals.
And I think that that's really applicable to anybody listening to this show is, you know, buying it subject to the loans that are on there.
Like, you don't need to go get the debt, the credit, the whatever it is.
If you only have 70,000 bucks and you know 35 of it's going to cure the mortgage and 35 of it was going to the owner,
stabilizing that as a rental and then putting into the burr platform.
Like it's this, the terms deals is where I made my volume increase of what I was buying
pre-2009.
Let me guess this is right.
So you're saying you find the property that they're under, like they haven't paid their
mortgage.
You buy that subject two, which is something we talked about recently with Pace Morby on,
I don't know what episode it was.
I'll see if I can find it.
But you buy it subject two.
So you just bring the mortgage current and now you own a rental.
Is that what you're saying?
Now you own a rental.
That's it. And it's also, there's an equitable piece there. There's a value trade that you have with the homeowner. Sometimes the value you're offering is them not leaving at all. Or it's cash or reduced rent or, and they get to stay in that school district in a place when we have constrained. Like people would call and say, hey, I don't want to move. You know, it was my mom's house or it's emotional or whatever. They're not going to keep it. And it's really just a one-on-one, one deal at a time when? Like, how much?
much do you want for the house? Some people have a price or we are able to come to terms and
growing my portfolio on someone else's credit, which deceased borrower or not going to that level,
you know, like you cure it. The note, the deed of trust says you're allowed to pay it,
pay it current unless it hasn't gone to sale already, you know, and we do buy one at a time.
That was pre the world falling apart. And then after the world fell apart, I was able to start
buying at auction again. So it's a matter of quadrant. Like, where are you right now in that
process. Is there enough to stress? And door knocking is all quadrants. At any given time,
any one person in Utah or, you know, Midland, Texas, or wherever you are, there's vacant
houses. There are properties. There are lists available that you're buying these things. And
that was my niche was I just choose. Actually, I chose Thomas Brothers coordinates.
You know Thomas, old school Thomas Brothers guides? I have no idea what that is.
Like I would do. Oh, man. There it goes. That just tells that dates you on how old I am.
Like the time of you'd get a brother's guide and I would go to like all of a certain city and just look at all the houses in that city.
Shoot photos and keep track of them. Door knock. Just going, going where people don't want to go or don't need to go.
But on the vacant houses, you do all that by the phone. All right. So I love that you brought up this point.
And I want to stress this for a minute. It's like there are different parts of a market cycle and different things that work at different parts.
Right. So like there are strategies like subject two may work better in one market versus other.
Foreclosure could work better in one versus other. Just burr might work better in one versus
other. I think house hacking works good in pretty much every market no matter what. But most
strategies work in this type of market. So just something for people to be aware of you might
watch a YouTube video or hear a podcast. I mean, we've been doing now the bigger pockets podcast
for like this is going on the 10th year. Right. So the shows that we did 10 years ago was a
drastically different market than we find ourselves in today. So people go back and listen
to early shows and it's like, oh yeah.
Just buy them at foreclosure, you know, or, you know, whatever.
Yeah, foreclosure.
I'm like, well, right now there's no foreclosures.
Now that might come back, so it's not a bad idea to learn that stuff, which is why we're
talking about it today.
But, yeah, just interesting that that happens.
So let's talk about, so what came next.
Market crashes.
You start buying to get an auction.
Is this when the world of invitation homes comes in?
Is that when it happened?
Almost.
I actually got to recreate.
I mean, it takes a long time.
It's very personal.
Like, that house is worth 500 grand.
According to who?
You know, like it was worth 500 grand.
Now you can buy it for 200.
So people held on and the market was shooting up, you know, 30% a quarter sometimes or 30% a year.
And but when houses that were 300 grand, you can buy for 30K, that is where my next.
So my 2009 through like 11 was just my niche was anything in California I could buy under 60 grand.
I could get financing on it immediately.
So I would buy four of them, five of them, six of them.
and I would group them together and get cross-collateralized financing.
I would just get a private money lender to give me $360,000 back of the money I spent at auction.
And it's just, that's the hamster wheel.
But there was so much distress.
So I was able to build enough rentals, have enough team, and have the ability to scale that.
And then I was on a short list of people that would be candidates for the invitation
homes thing as it came up, meaning invitation homes comes in town with,
Fidelity National Title Representative and says, who in your market would be a candidate to be
able to lead our invitation homes office here? As we were, they were going to grow Tampa,
Vegas, Seattle, you know, all of these markets all at the same time. So they would group us up,
fly us out to New York. And then I was on a list of five people. Aaron was on that list too.
Oh, really? For other reasons that I think he's disclosed elsewhere how it didn't work out for him.
Yeah, crazy. Aaron and Muchisegi, who was on the show a number of times in
up bidding to buy. All right. So what is invitation home? So you, okay, so first of all,
I want you to answer that question, but let me give a summary here. So you were door knocking for
somebody. Yeah. Learning the business. Then you started buying them for yourself using creative
strategies like subject to. Then you start the market crashes. You get into just buying foreclosures
again. You could buy them for super cheap. Like lay down burrs. Like the burrs are like $60,000
burs, which were just this easy, easy, easy lending product. All right. So you buy these properties.
you're building up your portfolio. Before we get into the invitation homes things,
what was your portfolio like at that point? Great. So the best thing that I, the thing I love so much
about my portfolio is like, I just went and did a move in this last week at one of my houses
that I bought for $30,000. I bought it for $30,300 in California. And I pull up a three-bedroom,
two-bath house with a one-car garage. And I move in, my occupant is now paying what would be the
equivalent of like, if I'm looking at my purchase price, like an 80 cap, you know, like,
because you bought it for so cheap versus what it has, you know, oh, you know, what it's renting
for. But at that time, I was the highest bidder for $30,300. That means $30,400 was too much.
Like, somebody thought that that thing is not worth more than 40 in the world. And invitation
homes did not. They were like, if you're buying assets for 20% of their replacement costs,
I'm in.
And that was the Boren Buffett thing that basically said it.
He basically came out and said,
if I could buy 100,000 houses right now or 300,000 houses right now, I would.
And then dudes who have a billion dollars are like, oh, I can do that.
Like, I just need, I just need some boots on the ground.
And then they came into Fidelity.
And Fidelity came to us.
And we partnered up, myself, Daniel Claiborne and I, and we partnered up on NorCal, which
had two markets.
The Bay Area was its own market.
And Northern California was considered a market, which,
was anywhere I considered in our buybox.
But the Bay Area, I mean, the average, man, Oakland, you know, average age of the house
is 110 years old.
You know, it's a different maintenance model.
It's a different purchase.
It's a different appreciation.
All right.
So invitation homes is like this giant, basically, would you call them a hedge fund?
Is that what they are?
Yeah, they are.
So multi, I'm sure, billion dollar well-backed hedge fund that we all hated, like, I mean,
we still hate.
But we hate is you.
Like, you wouldn't partner with it.
You went and partnered with the enemy to buy a lot of houses.
Now, I don't fault you for that, right?
That's great.
Good on you.
But you're the guy that was out there buying just everything representing the hedge fund.
And what the world says everything, but we were buying in our buybox.
Yes.
You know, we had a very specific buy box of what we were allowed to buy.
And I actually bought a 50 acre ranch in Fairfield at auction.
Like as a rental.
So what I flew into Dallas for our.
national meeting. They gave me like a cowboy hat. They're like, really like, you couldn't just let that
dude have one deal. But when you go there, there's this sense of like, it's like you want to just,
you know, you live up almost to that. We bought it for 30 cents of what was owing on it at the time.
And it was, it worked out as a rental. But we have a buy box. You buy within that. And the very first day
we hit, it was August 9th of 2012. And they gave me a stack of cashier's checks. And they said,
you got to go to auction. And we bought seven that day in Sacramento County. And my buddies are
texting me. They're like, some dude just showed up here and bought seven houses in one day.
I'm like, that guy sucks. Yeah, yeah. Who's that guy? And then the crier. He's like, that's
Christie's mailing address. Like you, that's Tommy. Like, he's, he's involved.
So basically, you were a henchman for Thanos at one point in your career.
Yeah. I was a, I was that guy. And I got, I got cover of the front page on Sacramento
B, which is by no means in New York Times, you know, but I got to frame that. And now I'm on the BP
podcast. Like, it worked out. It worked out. So sometimes crime pays.
Yeah. All right. So how many, how many? How many?
did you buy then in your time working for the hedge fund or working with the hedge fund?
I did about 2,700 and 20.
Oh, dang.
And how long?
And about 25 months or so.
By the time they released me, I kind of had like a 60 day leash before I was out of my
vesting before I had to leave.
And I was only doing bulk for them then, like, which sucked because they told me to
pass on houses.
And now I end up like if David Green gets this fund together and he's like, hey, I'm
going to buy these 50 houses and they're just crap.
They weren't in my buy box.
And then I buy his whole company.
and bring it in under our, like, dang, like, I could have bought all that for 50 grand.
Green's going to make a killing on this deal, you know, like.
All right, fine.
Here's what I wanted to bring up.
You mentioned the buy box.
And this is something that I talk a lot about in various books that have written.
It's an idea of having a very clear criteria of what you want.
Can you explain?
Because this is something that obviously people listen to this are going, well, I'm not going to
buy 2,700 houses for a hedge fund.
Absolutely.
But the concept of what you were doing applies to people buying their first house.
And you explain, what is a buy box?
Why is that important?
and how do you even know what you want to buy? I mean, the buy box, it's the title of all the last
few books you've personally written. Like, why am I doing this deal? Like, because I only have
13K and I get a free 10% down loan from the city and I get a loan from the David Green
team's mortgage company for 97%. And out of that comes I own an asset with three units that I
occupy one bedroom in. And it's like, that's my product, right? You've got to figure.
out. Who am I? Like, I can flip three houses at once. I can flip one house at once. I don't want to
flip at all. I just want to buy rentals. And when you figure out your buy box, it's going to be
based off of check-in boxes. Like, when I put out 150 grand cash from the line of credit that I
have, how fast can I get that back? Or I'm going to leave it there in a nine-unit building and get a
commercial loan and this market is just through the roof. I expect a 10% appreciation and a 10%
return on my investment. Like, I'm going to buy any property that meets that criteria.
Like, it's a blended return. Are you going to get a higher blended return? So your buybox
becomes, you know, like, I only want to do 120 miles. It has nothing to do with the economics
around my house. I never want to drive further than two hours in order to be able to do a flip or you
start to define what works for you as an investor and what your product is. And I encourage people
to step a little bit out of their comfort zones and even ask them. There's like, people call me up
or message me after these and say, hey, this vacant house has been in my neighborhood for so long.
And what's the next step in doing this? It's like, that thing's free and clear. It's vacant and
boarded up. And you can get a deal like that done on terms. And that's your buybox. You can use the only 30k you have as
You give them that $30,000,000, then you borrow against it for the rehab, or you partner up with someone and you're bringing in money into the, or you bring just the deal and someone puts up all the money.
That's a lot of those middle of the night type, like, you don't have to put any money into the deal type things as, hey, if you have a really great deal and you want to be a percentage owner in this deal, or you can have the boots on the ground or you're a contractor that could just dominate, you know, like, that's one of the worlds we're struggling in right now is I don't do restorations.
that's a certain product. You know, if you're going to buy a 115-year-old house in downtown Sacramento,
like, you're going to have to go to the Historical Society and get the Corbels approved and the type of window
and the type of glass and everything approved. Like, if you just figure out, I'm going to do rehabs.
I'm going to do remodels. I can do additions, you know, like you're a contractor.
If you have your own money and you can completely dominate at auction, you just don't understand the data side of it.
You just create your buybox. And it could be complete side hustle.
one deal every 120 days, three times a year, and here's my ROI expectation on my money.
Or here's my ROI money expectation on David's money.
You know, like he's borrowing it.
David's here doing his job.
He's got a partner.
You borrow money.
What can you afford?
What kind of deal can you afford?
And that's just really creating your box.
And sometimes it just takes a coach or it takes reaching out to someone saying, here's what I
think I want to do.
Yeah.
Well, this is why this is so helpful.
Having the buy box makes like, one, like, you.
you get really good at something, right?
Like, rather than trying to be good at everything,
I'm not going to be good at foreclosures and these 150-year-old renovations
and buying farmland and doing, you know, new construction.
Oh, and I'm going to throw in some cell storage.
Like, you just cannot be good at all that stuff, right?
Even within a niche, like, I'm in mobile home parks.
That's primarily what we buy.
Like, we only buy a certain type and condition.
Like, so I call it a crystal clear criteria in my book.
So basically stands for, like, what strategy you're going to do?
Like, what are you focusing on?
What location, right?
where, what condition you want to fix your upper, you want a complete tear down, you want something
that's already nice. Property type, like, what is it? Like, it's to go single-fime house. Do you want
to buy the multi-price range? Where are you buying in? Two to 400,000, four to 800,000? And then finally,
I like to say profitability. It basically means you should define what would make it worth you buying it
so you can work backwards to find that number. And so when you have these like six things,
like figured out, like this is strategy, location, condition, property type, price range,
and profitability, now you can get really good at that thing. And then you can be,
become the best at thing and you can become known for that thing and you become you know how to analyze
it right you know how to bring other people you can get the financing for it and so like you said like
rather than trying to do everything out there like get it yeah pick your buybox credit it go sit down
with a mentor listen to a bunch of podcasts start defining what it is you do and it's going to make your
decision making process so much easier too like when i look at a mobile home park even though it's
a pretty stupid complicated analysis at the end of the day like it's like doesn't have over 100,000
the population within 20 miles. No, we won't buy it. Like, it's just like, it makes it super easy.
It's like, that matches your money. That matches. That's a different part of this is that, hey,
because of these criteria, it doesn't work. And there are people that are listening to this show right now,
they're like, it doesn't work for me. Yeah. But it works for this guy's fun. And the relationships
of having an operator like, you know, right now while you and I are on this podcast, someone on your
team is trying to maximize a lead. That is their job inside of that. And I think that,
to the people maybe that are watching this podcast right now.
It's like, how does that affect me?
I don't have a fund.
I don't have this.
But if you find that lead, I always tell people that call me like, hey, just so I can
give this clear to have clarified ahead of time, we're working on your deal because you
just need some advice or are you working on a deal that you would like to sell to us or you
would like to partner up on.
You really got to clarify, you know, what it is because it turns out that, hey, I'm like
90% sure I want to buy this thing, but I could really use some advice as to why, you know,
are the gotchas or like what do you think of this type of market or this type of product or whatever
else it is. I just love giving advice and I want it to be as personalized as possible and that I find
that in the world of realtors that see a fixture on the market and they immediately think of a
client that will fit for that product, right? Like here's the product. It's in Brandon's buybox,
right? I want those realtors to be engaged enough to say, this could work for me. I'm going to use
my own, by my own like research really. Like I'm going to trust in my own.
opinion and mentality of this is a deal. And then when those people run out of their own capital,
it gets wholesaled out. It gets partnered. It gets, you know, there's joint ventures that grow out of it.
But to know your buy box right now, it's this huge opportunity to know that a corner lot is the
perfect ADU lot. And you can add a unit and convert a garage. And that's my product. It's always
occupied during construction. It's, you know, like the risk of downside is so low. And I'm, you know,
they're an engineer by trade and they know this is my buy box. I'm comfortable with it.
And then at the end of it, I'm gainfully employed. I get a long-term loan on it.
And I didn't have any vacancy during that. Now I have significant income. It's like getting the
land for free on a deal. You just figure out what motivates you and what your buy box is and what your
commitment to time is. You know, I'm willing to do 60 hours this year committed to this thing in
order to be two more deals or one more deal.
And it's just side hustle for some people.
For some people, it's the next deal.
It's exactly how they're making the leap to be self-employed.
So it's super motivating to be part of other people's growth.
When I first spoke with you, Tommy, and you explained, I work for invitation homes and I bought, was it,
2,400 homes in 24 months or something like that.
I remember this doesn't happen very often.
Just like freezing with my mouth open as the little spitting wheel on a mask.
was going on. My whole brain was trying to recalibrate as far as how do you do due diligence
on a deal like that. My whole model is based on find an individual property, look at the
details of that property, turn those details into numbers that it would cost to fix them,
and then say, like, Brandon, is there profitability that I would want, whether it's cash flow,
appreciation, whatever the thing is that I've traveled that path many, many times. It's well
worn. And for the majority of investors, that is how we teach them because most of them are buying
one house at a time. It's a plant as need. Yes. And when you said that, I'm like, how could you do that
without being reckless? Because you don't seem reckless. And I'm sure Invitation Homes is not stupid.
They have people much smarter than me working for them. So there's obviously, like you kind of explain,
well, there's math involved. X amount of them will be good deals. X amount of them will be okay. And then
you'll have some dogs and we have a plan to get rid of the dogs.
Or can you just break down how you were able to do that much volume responsibly so we can
see what nuggets we can take out of that for our own business?
Yeah.
And I think it's more important is like, and I look at the people who are listening to the podcast
now.
It's like how is that one person who brought us one of those deals, those 2400 deals?
Like we had to have a revenue source.
I'm sorry, we had to have a lead source.
And the foreclosures were one of them.
And the two of the guys who had recruited me were British.
and when they speak, and, you know, it's like in Britain, a flashlight is a torch, you know,
like, and he's like, is this stock in the market?
And I'm like, I'm saying.
I don't even understand what you're saying.
Like, he's like, is there stock in the market?
Like, can you even get product right now was the question?
Like, should I put my money in Sacramento?
And it came down to one deal at a time.
And realtors would call us and say, hey, I want to be part of the team.
And here's my area.
Here's my, they would bring us stuff direct.
All we had to do was add it to a list and start the diligence in,
into that specific kind of deal. So we were able to take volume and have a system in place in order
to be able to turn that into a yes or a no. You know, like how soon can we make that a yes or a no?
And I love it because people that had wanted to do this all on their own, if the deal didn't work
for them, there was suddenly this dude who could just buy it on gross rental multiplier. Like,
it rents for $1,200 a month.
It rents for a thousand bucks a month, which is a $12,000 a year in gross rent.
And then you divide that by what you're paying for the asset.
It's like it was so simple to say, as long as it's a 10, just say yes.
And then we, the Blackstone went to the major investors and said, I can acquire a thousand houses below their replacement cost.
And at one point in time in the world, replacement costs will catch up.
And these will be worth more than their replacement cost.
And then during that time, I can also afford to pay a mortgage because we're going to rent them out.
So it was an appreciation plate.
And when I saw the biggest spreadsheet in the whole wide world, which was ridiculously long, if you just scroll, I'm like, nope.
Like, I'll be part of this, but no chance will this health be worth $350 again.
I'm buying it for $3.000.
you're telling me it's going to be worth six times what it's worth today.
And some dude apparently who went to a better college and has a bigger brain than me.
He was right.
Yeah, because today, I mean, those hedge funds just cleaned up.
Like, yeah, they made a ton.
I mean, I remember thinking back in the day, too, like, I think they're making a risky bet here.
Maybe they were.
But here's interesting is a lot of people might be thinking, oh, well, we missed that.
We miss those times.
No, the hedge funds are still buying.
They've just maybe moved out of California.
Maybe, I don't know, maybe there's still in California.
Of them.
Yeah.
There's more of them.
They're still buying.
I mean, I know guys that are wholesaling deals.
We might be bringing one of them on soon on the show.
I've been talking to it with them.
But like they're doing 10, 15, 20, 30 houses a month.
They're wholesaling to these hedge funds still in these other markets.
That's buy box.
It's simple.
I only buy in school districts that are greater than a six.
You can go to Zillow.
Type in any given address and find out, hey, this school district's a six or a greater.
And it's in a major market like our Charlotte market for invitation homes.
And you bring product.
direct to them. These are people who are incentivized to bring on more product. They have just as much,
like, hey, if it fits in this buy box and we believe in this market, buy this. So that's who we are
competing with. And that's why I want to be talking to Tommy about what goes on behind the scenes with
Thanos. Now we've got you and we're going to interrogate you and we're going to find out what is
the enemy doing. Because I think as we see the shortage of inventory that everyone is complaining about,
there's not a connection being made that that's because a lot of these markets that have groups like invitation homes operating in, they are sucking those homes into their inventory before they ever make the format that you and I would see the house by going on Zillow or something else.
But I encourage people to look wider.
Like if you really know your buy box, I, it's like, I bought one in Somerville, Oklahoma this month.
And Somerville, I am so tempted to be able to just keep this thing and bur it,
but I bought it in my IRA as a buy fix and sell.
But it turns out that it was such a good buy, like that I would do this product every single
time I could.
It was a $73,000 purchase of a three-bedroom, two-bath,
1972 built, 1,500 square foot home, RV storage in a pool.
Nobody's building that for 70 grand ever again.
I was injured.
but if you know your buy box, which Burr is the most motivating part of this for me right now,
I only flip houses to feed my rental addiction, which my rental company is called I Love Rentals.com.
Like that's because I brought.
So I bought and through that process, my buy box, if you went to LinkedIn two years ago,
I would say I'm a foreclosure professional.
Like let's build something together.
Do you want me to be part of your team?
Like I want to do something that I can add value to with you.
guys. And I'm now a distressed real estate professional because there's no more foreclosures
and distress is as vague as it gets. You know, there's foreclosures around that just the volume's
not there to dominate in that world. So it doesn't matter whether it's a redevelopment deal or a
bird deal or other. As a distressed real estate investor, I can do condos. We have a cannabis play.
I mean, I have, it doesn't matter what it is. If it comes through the distressed world and it
touches my desk. I underwrite it, you know, with or without the extra zero.
$100,000 house or a million dollar deal.
Clarification from my opinion. I'm curious if you agree with me, both of you too.
So when a hedge fund has their buy box, like when you were working for them or even,
even honestly, the three of us, if we have a buy box or we're like, this is what it is,
almost like 1% rule. If the thing's going to rent for one percent of whatever you can get
it for, buy it. Right? Let's just say that's a rule of thumb. Here's always been my argument.
If you're a hedge fund buying 2,700 homes in 25 months, you can afford to 10% of them lose money on.
Not that they did, but you could afford to do that because you're a hedge fund.
If you're a new investor trying to buy your very first deal and you've been saving up 30 grand for the last eight years at your job,
I don't believe you can afford to make that like rule of thumb risk.
I'm just like, oh yeah, rule of thumb works out.
I'm just going to buy it.
I hear a lot of advice to people like buy on the 1% rule or buy on the 2% rule.
And I'm like, in the beginning, I think you need to actually do the work to underwrite those deals.
You guys agree?
It is a matter.
It's just like a normal mortgage.
Can you check 10 boxes in a row?
Because if you can, you get the best mortgage.
But if you can only do seven of those, what kind of mortgage do you get?
You know, like if you know what boxes it is that you're checking, it takes something out of being a gamble to making an investment.
You know, like it's a gamble is the difference of saying like, I feel very, very.
confident that when I do this deal, all 10 of these vacant units are going to rent for $900 each.
When the rest of the market says it's 600, you know, like I think the market's going to be 50%
you know, over you're trying to gamble on what it looks like inside or other. But if you've walked
all 10 doors and you know what the rehab is and you know what the stabilization costs are and you
can check all these boxes, it's an investment. Yes. Before to lose their 3,000, you know,
another 30,000, but is it likely that when you're buying something for 80 bucks a foot and you have
significant market demand for rents? And there's a massive shortage of places that are worth living in.
A lot of these, I think there's a major risk in the market with the age of these homes and the
inability to rehabilitate them to the standards that's going to make them last another 50 years or
last another 100 years. So it's just less of a risk. It just becomes, I checked all these boxes
it totally fits in my buybox.
If it's on a sinkhole, you didn't see that coming.
But if it is, if it's any given thing.
Yeah, it makes sense.
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Tommy, what's your advice for how the lay person,
the average investor,
that I got a W-2 job,
I want to buy enough real estate to get out of that job.
I don't need to be the next grant card own,
but I need to get some properties
that's really freaking hard right now.
What's your advice for how they compete
against these hedge funds?
I actually don't see the hedge funds
as being a competitor.
That's the biggest part of the advice there.
They're buying,
and their buybox is so tight.
Like I bought, I left, I mean, I've been out of that deal now for seven years this year.
Like, and I've only sold them three houses.
And if you live in Charlotte, if you live in Vegas, there's some of these markets that they really see the appreciation in Phoenix is a great one.
You could still sell them a ton of product.
And I look at it as, you know, it's a value to hope it works.
Like you hear stories about how people sold stuff to Zillow when they took it.
You know, and of course, there's, you know, later on the end of,
selling the whole portfolio elsewhere, like the one person, one deal at a time is competitive
if you're competing on their buybox. But they're not buying ranch homes and they're not buying
multiple APN stuff like duplexes, triplexes, fourplexes, all that fanny product. And that really
works for someone who only has 30 that's going to do a house hacking deal. You're getting the cheapest
money ever, most of the time, you know, depending on how they're buying it on a product that cannot be
replaced for its same cost. And your rents are significantly higher than what your mortgages are.
If you know your product, I don't think that the hedge fund model right now is a competitor.
So in other words, yeah, like you said, to summarize, find out what they're buying and just buy something
different, right? Because they're very tight buy box and then get real. Or if you're going to go in
their buy box and sell to them and make a quick profit and go dump into something that's not in their
buy box. Yeah. So those people who are really struggling with that right now, yeah, I love that
ideas. What's a little bit unique, like unique niche that not every hedge fund in your market's going
for and then just get really good at that thing or like you said. Yeah, we love the ranch product.
I think about it right now as everyone wants their own little space. You know, the bigger pieces
that dirt, the redevelopment of a property, you know, and adding units, the just buy and fixing
and flip. The stuff that has one acre or these large lot flips are super motivating to, you know,
young families or other, it's like this.
I just want my own little bit of space.
That's what I'm looking to buy right now.
Just give your GR.
And I tell me, like, just tell me what you're looking for.
I'm not an agent.
I'm not a broker.
I can supplement your professionals that are searching.
And I'll just tell you what's coming through the distress world.
And I find these deals to come through that I can't make work.
I just, it's like, they're not going to take $590 for this thing when it's probably worth
$700 on MLS today.
You know, but for someone that's that you know that's looking for it.
totally works. And that's that wholesale mentality. Like, if it doesn't work for me, the first
checkbox is, can I make money on this? Like, can I flip this? I have 40 hours a week commitment
as a civil engineer. But I also have great income. And here's the here's my ROI expectations.
And there are just people who are gainfully employed that feel stuck or other that this is genuinely
that easy. Like, it's just that easy to be able to do deals. You know, you bring up a really good
point. Then I want to move back to your story, but I love this idea of like, if you have your buybox and a deal comes across your play because you're just doing marketing and you're out there in the market and it doesn't work for you. It doesn't mean it's a bad deal. It just means it's a bad deal for you can flip that to somebody else. Great. It's one thing I had, you know, opened our capital the last couple years. We bought a lot of very type of mobile home park. I think we wholesaled one ever. But I look back. I'm like, that was a huge missed opportunity. I could have probably made millions over the past few years for all the leads that came in and that we just threw away. We just said, nope, doesn't fit our buy box. We're not going to touch.
it. And so, yeah, going forward, we're going to get a lot more heavily into, well, it's a little
too small for us. You know, we don't buy anything under 100 lots. So, hey, this one's a 75 lot.
Who wants it? And then, like, if I can make 50 or 100 grand, like, shoot, why not?
Like, every single time. And that's that win. And I think going back to David's question really
was how does that work for me? It's like, I, we're planting seeds. You don't get to harvest until you've
planted. You know, like, I bought another business this year. And I levered up on properties that I only owed,
like 30 grand on.
You know, like if you've planted that seed and it matured its way through and you can lever
that or you can roll, a good friend of mine has like four of his properties.
We're at like 30% loaned of value.
But what if a deal comes through right now and you got to cut a check?
Are you lined up with a regional lender that gave you a line of credit?
And you could cut that check immediately.
Like what I love hearing about David telling him, like some of the deals he does, like sometimes
he's just a credit guarantee or like even talking with green about stuff he's got going in
Indiana or whatever.
You're like, you can still get a fourplex for that amount.
Like, you know, like, and people call green with that because they know that's his buybox.
Here's a city.
I've done a ton of deals in.
Like, I got flips going in five states right now and maybe 10 California counties.
We flip 30 houses at a time.
Does that mean I've touched them all?
Nope.
I don't even, I mean, some of them I know the street had written a street name, but not the house number.
or and some of my rentals, I've never even been in them.
You know, so it doesn't, it doesn't have to be this emotional connection to your rental,
which I love mine.
They make me happy.
But it is your first planting that seed.
And you can't compare it to, oh, if I, if I would have done it two years ago, yeah.
Well, the best time to plant a tree was 10 years ago.
And the second best time is right now.
There you go.
That's one my favorite quotes.
So before we move on, that is what I want everyone to hear is I keep saying this because it's that
important.
The people who bought these houses five years ago,
were like, oh, they crushed it.
I wish I could go back five years.
Nobody was saying five years ago, it's a guarantee they're going to crush it.
Many people were saying, this is stupid.
You're paying way too much, blah, blah, blah.
I don't know a human being that ever bought a property unless they got some, like,
significantly under the appraised value, like throw those out.
Everybody thought they paid too much.
Everybody thought the market was going to turn.
It never goes away.
And I don't know anyone that bought a property 10 years ago that isn't like,
man, I'm glad I did that or that isn't saying that.
Even people in 2005, the worst time to buy ever, by 2015, they were making a lot of money and they had made a lot of money.
So I just want to encourage everyone who's listening, the emotions you're feeling when you are afraid are normal.
We still feel them today.
And don't let the neighbors or your uncle's neighbor's sister nag you out on your own deal.
Like I had a lady come out in her SpongeBob pajamas and say, like, why did you pay $50,000 for this?
Like, it's everything in this neighborhood just keeps going down. And I'm like, she's negative on her own house that she owns next door.
Yeah. There is an opinion to all of that. And if it was like, hey, by the way, I promise, and I guarantee this is worth 100 grand next year. Like everybody, you know, would have that. And it wouldn't matter whether it's in a major job market or whether you cannot just get, you can't get supplies in Alaska. There's this natural floor and Maui. Like, how much does it cost to build?
build just one house in Maui, you know, so.
All right.
So you learned a whole bunch working for Thanos.
You became an evil genius.
And then your conscience hit you and you decided I'm going to become a good guy.
I'm going to love houses instead of take them all and sell them to it.
I'm being super hyperbolic right now.
But you got into buying for yourself.
So I want to ask, how did you take that information that you gained at that time in
your career and apply it to building your own wealth instead of the hedge funds?
Yeah, I would say that I always want it out. I didn't want to ever have 70 plus employees. I actually have great relationships with some of them now. And if I could start my own gig again, I would poach talent like a mofo. Like I know if somebody turned on the pain again, I could press go. And our volume would be great. But my daughter was due October 15th in 2014. And our CEO,
oh, she came in and she's like, when's your daughter do? I said, October 15th. She's,
okay, I'm exiting you on the 17th. And I'm like, okay, like I knew I got to keep my stock.
I get out. I get to go back to what I love, which is one deal at a time. You just don't get
this, you know, billion dollar fund ever. You're buying shit on the real estate.
Like it's like, you don't buy it. Like, it's, you planted a bunch of seeds one deal at a time.
I just love to making the deal. I love going back. And that's what I was really looking forward to.
back here and I just got back in trustee seals. All right. So what do you buy over the last seven
years or whatever it's been since leaving there? What do you buying? How much of you bought?
And what's your current buybox like? Well, the cycle talk we were talking about before is real.
Our cycle is different than Springfield, Missouri. That's different than Dallas, you know,
but what David was talking about is there's just a supply constraint of product that's out there.
And I think that's national. So the stuff I'm keeping, I still love irrationally low-priced houses.
I'm not making a ton of money buying $30,000 houses in Arkansas, but I buy them.
You know, I buy condos.
We have a trailer park that we bought at sale.
My preference right now is with all the overhead that I do, I'll continue to flip,
however many houses are necessary to feed my rental addiction.
And I want to buy stabilize and hold stuff while debt is low.
Replacement costs are irrationally high.
And the rents are high.
It's just a, it's a trifecta of, it's a three, two, you know, like in my world,
right here in NorCal, if it's a four-two, single-story, reasonably newish, on a court with a three-car garage in the
right school district, right? Then you start taking those away. Okay, well, it's not in right school district.
Well, it has a two-car garage. It has no garage. You know, you start taking stuff away. Can I still get my
money back out and get back on the wheel, find the next transaction? That's the, I love the stabilized ones.
It's one deal at a time still for me. I mean, every deal we work on is fully independent. It's just a
flip. You know, what I love about what you're saying is you are focusing on, I don't want to just
make it as simple as the positive, but things like I can build it or I can buy it for less
than what it would cost to replace it. It will pay for itself. I can borrow the majority of
money from somebody else at the lowest debt ever. Those are sort of like macro concepts, right?
As opposed to, I don't want to buy a house because the fence might fall over, which is a micro
concept that we all kind of get tripped up on.
There you go. Toilets are the perfect example of a micro concept that stop people from taking action.
And I think you had that unique perspective because you operated in that world where you had to buy 24 houses in 24 months.
And you could not focus on those little details. But if you look at real estate from a macro perspective, it always ends up winning. Like look at what Brandon is doing. He's another guy like you that amazes me where they bought $300 million of real estate.
Brandon could never tell me what's happening on lot number 68 of the mobile home park in this air.
area at any given. He does not know. He probably will never know, but the fund is crushing it because
they have the fundamentals in place. And so that's what I love about the mindset that you two are
bringing is it helps you override that fear of the what if. What if the toilet clogs? What if
the tenant doesn't pay their rent on time or something like that? Instead, you're focusing on
these big factors that can't change quickly. Yeah. And it is a, Brandon also hit on the fact that,
oh, I can make 20,000 bucks, you know, just moving this lead over. Like, I mean, inside of the
brokerage, I'm sure you're like, hey, I can't do a lead in Modesto for you. I'm not going to show
property for you in Modesto, but you trade that over. Every lead that comes through offers value to
somebody else in some different way. And you want that to come back. You know, it's like,
I have specific loan officers. And the goal is not, can I get $500? It's will you call them back?
Will you act like, you know, their tails on fire and you're the only water to put this thing out
until it's closed.
You know, like, can I trust you to do your part in this referral work?
And then people reach out and they grow their one deal, one seed you're planting at a time,
one at a time, like, and that's it.
And you build your portfolio that way.
It's one fourplex at a time because you're never going to have four units at a time vacant.
Or it's one single family in a certain market where you know you have a contractor you can
trust or you know you have the agent who has, you know, genuinely looked closely at this deal
in a property, you mean, a property and.
inspection report that you can rely on and you just get one deal at a time done.
So Tommy, when you're looking at a deal or creating a possible strategy, you're at the beginning
stages of whatever your endeavor is. I have my own criteria for like there's all these different
ways that real estate can make you money. I have a priority that I put those in based on my
personal position in life. So for instance, cash flow is not as important to me at this stage in my
life because I'm still working and making money, right? But headache is. I don't want to buy in a
D-class area that's going to pull my time there. Can you share with us how you prioritize the different
aspects of real estate with what you're looking for first and then second and then third and why?
Yeah, and to make it relative to the people listening that are exactly like you,
it's that can I get out of management by authorizing my property manager to make any decision
over $500, under $500, then they have to ask me past that. Do I even want to know about it, right?
can I assume that the only major employer in this community is just going to stay there forever?
No, you cannot assume that.
Like, if you understand the risks that's like the one by one by one, Brandon said, is the MSA
100,000 people or more?
You know, like, how do I, you know, how am I, how are these people going to make money to
be able to afford rent?
For us, I think it's easy for any single new investor, any current investor or other to
turn on an advertising lead through a carrot type system and get leads that come through and just
start checking some of those boxes. For me, I put it in the buy, fix, and sell box as often as
possible. But the one that warms my heart is the bur box. Is it the right product? Is it a one
bedroom, one bath on a lot four times its size that I could redevelop the lot? Then I don't mind
losing $300 a month while I break it out into four lots. Or, you know, I can, you know, I can,
buy something in Oakland that has this, you know, a significant job market. It's a hundred
year old house and play the appreciation play. And you end up making a $120,000 on a $60,000 down
payment in two years just because the appreciation's there. So you know your markets that you're
willing to go in. Some people personally want to touch them. I don't really need to touch it as long
as I'm paying someone that's a licensed professional to touch it or someone I can trust to be able to
such it. That's funny that you keep mentioning Oakland with licensed professionals. In 2021, at one point,
the David Green team was responsible for representing the buyer on 25% of the houses that were
selling in the Oakland. We were buying like all the best inventory and helping a lot of house hackers.
And so that's such a good point is our clients didn't have to worry about hardly anything because
every question they had, we'd already knew it. We already did it. We understood that buy box very,
very well. We knew these are the neighborhoods to avoid. These are the type of houses to avoid. And I think
that's a great point when you're trying to scale is you need to be looking for how do I get something
off my plate. How do I get the property manager doing that? How do I get my agent doing that? You just
don't have to do it all. And I look at the people, I mean, I get jealous to people who are gainfully
employed. Like I pay myself money and I go have to tell the truth. Like, oh, I'm a manager of what,
of a company that I own. You know, like, ah, well, shoot, you pay yourself. You know, it's like,
I go out of the, of the normal loan box.
You know, like, can you stay within that?
So if you're dual income working professional in Sacramento and you're buying homes in
Lawson, Lawton, Oklahoma, or, you know, you're buying homes wherever you're buying,
you can buy turnkey product.
There are people on Craigslist advertising turnkey product, and they'll give you a warranty.
You use their property management company.
You're putting 30% down, and it's tax strategy from that point forward.
There's just so many benefits to just getting out of your own comfort zone.
and getting over that, like really the toilet thing, like how often, I mean, is that really the problem there?
Well, let's get into a few specifics here of where you're at today.
So how many, I got a list of like five questions there.
First one, how many flips roughly or how many, yeah, how many flips are you doing a year right now at this point, like on average?
I would say 2020 really slowed us down.
You know, the type of product we were buying.
That actually paused us into 2021.
But what it did change is it changed the selling season.
Before you're like, oh, well, from Christmas until the end of January, no one really goes out and sees these houses or whatever.
So we can sell anything, you know, year around now.
And I would say that we're probably only getting out of three a month now.
You know, so we'll probably flip 35 to 40 houses this year.
I love how that's like a pause.
I was the average person listening was thinking like you did like one last year.
No, I did.
We did in 2010.
We did 200 flips, you know, and it just went down.
And sure, I could do 50.
I could do 60, but they're going to be thin margin deals, which become a bit more of that gamble.
Is this an investment or is it more of a gamble?
Like, do I think the market's going to be just fineish in March?
Well, I'm buying flips that prove I can't get out of these things in at least 90 days.
So, but I have probably 20 flips on the books right now.
For anyone wondering, Tommy is not saying the S word and we're editing it to be ish.
He just says ish at the end of everything.
It's sort of his style.
Tommy, on those little slips you're doing, are you guys paying the full capital
gains on those or do you have some form of tax strategy that is helping you save money on that?
And if it's a matter of whether you're licensed, you know, professional or not, the tax strategy I do
a little bit more of like an equity protection strategy. It's like, you know, I don't really
flip houses in my rental company. You know, it's unnecessary to have people, you know, if you're
building up this equity egg, you know, it's like inside of our rental company, whether it's an LLC
or an S corp or other, you're a product of the market. It's a 90 day turn.
That's the efficiency. And that's what I think people really want to know is, can I make a 10% net margin in 90 days and do that four times a year? And I'll get a 40% ROI. And of course, I'm paying tax on that. You know, I'm also paying staff on that and interest on that. And there's, so it, what's the net to me at the end of the day? And most of that stuff I can't get around. It's just short-term capital gains or it's realized as individual income personally.
Okay. So I'm curious if you set up your flip company underneath your rental company or maybe vice versa, could you take your flip income, pay it into your rental company and then use the depreciation from that rental company to offset the money?
I think from the standpoint of at the end of the day, I'm the taxpayer and it's coming up, you know, or down. It's whether you have retained earnings inside of that.
company that you're either working against the, you know, the timing of the year versus,
you know, when you're closing out your fiscal years. In the end, it all rolls up as ordinary
income. And there are, and you can offset your ordinary income by purchasing real estate in
your own name and using accelerated appreciation. You can. And that's the tax strategy is,
is that huge like cost segregation stuff that you're looking. Yes. So I did a lot of that this year.
And if people want to know more about it, message me and I can share. And that goes for you too,
Tommy, if you want. My hindrance there, my concern for people to really educate themselves on it a little bit is make sure that they understand how it's affecting their personal lending and lending inside of their entities, because they'll put back depreciation. Lenders will take out the depreciation or they'll put the, you know, the depreciation back in when they're taking that into account. And that's what makes the money go, you know, the world go around. Oh, you're so right. What you're describing is that if you show a loss on everything, you can't get a loan and it hurts you more than it helped you, right? Like our boy, Brian. Brian, I would be asking with him buying a house like he, he,
is like, you know, like buying a house and you can show more than what you're going to borrow
in like a private account, but they won't loan you money unless you can show you have this whole
W2 and you have this. Like you check all these boxes for that kind of lender. That's one of the nice
perks of me having my own mortgage company is we can find the programs that work around that.
We can help other people. But I love that you're pointing out that fact that it's not always a
win to avoid all taxes. Like, hey, good news. I will steer you around that problem.
prior. You know, like you get the right education about it and then you pull the trigger.
There you go. And you build backwards. Okay. Thank you. Brandon, I will allow you to continue
with your line of questioning of the witness. All right. Number of the rental units. Like,
what are you buying in terms of rentals right now? I know you said you got a, I mean, you're buying
a lot of different types of stuff, but what's that look like in terms of rentals or burs?
I did slow down the rental purchasing here and near the end of the year. The burs, just for purposes
of us sharing knowledge. I'm having trouble with people doing a 90-day burr, you know, a seasoned
where like I've owned it for a minimum of period of time because I can turn them so much faster.
I bought one in Sacramento this last quarter that was a four two single story.
It's just a perfect rental product.
And the rents are so high.
But I have to wait now until I think I can technically close on December 18th is my sixth month
or something like that.
So if you know your lending partner says about the burr stabilization, it changes what you can
buy and how long you can hold it for.
I encourage people to understand, here is my $100,000.
at the end of the year, how much is this going to be worth?
And if that's simply, I'm lending money to a guy I trust with it.
And I made 10 grand.
That's 10% interest.
I got a 10% ROI way beat the market.
So I'm probably growing.
I mean, my goals right now are probably reasonable.
Like, I want to grow by another 10 to 12 rentals a year because I love rentals.
They make me happy.
Yeah.
They have fun, man.
So what's your current portfolio look like in terms of like, you're not necessarily a dollar
amount to the penny?
What does Tommy Christie got right now?
Yeah, like, I take pride in some of the fun ones, you know, like the terms, deals are deals.
You just like, I cannot believe I got this deal, you know, like.
And a lot of people count doors or they count properties or, you know, in the end,
David and I were just talking to talk this thing through.
Like, I want the horizontal income.
I'm just not relying on it now as I'm still making money in my vertical, right?
So I'm willing to take on a deal that's losing money every month that has a significant equity position that I can buy.
So, like, I lose.
I have rentals to bring in $300 a month in California.
Like, their entire, I lose $600 a month owning this thing, you know?
So it's like, I probably have 50 properties.
I probably have 20 properties in my IRA that I don't have any debt on.
And I, because I just, I, you put a vehicle together and that thing just grows.
You can flip inside of it with the right vehicle.
I just love that you're saying that.
It's good for people to hear.
It doesn't mean if you're someone who.
who is living paycheck to paycheck, that that is a good idea for you.
And I'm about to use a sports analogy, which I'm committed in 2020 to using less everybody.
We've heard your feedback.
So I won't use too many.
But if you're a really good team and you don't need a player at any position,
you can draft a young person out of college and develop them for a couple years so that when
you need them, they're ready.
And that's what Tommy is describing.
If you're a terrible team and you just need someone who can contribute, you got to go
for a person you can plug in and play right away.
at different stages in your investing career, different strategies work. I don't need cash flow right now.
It was actually, remember the bald guy that used to be on the bigger pockets forums?
Was it Jeff Brown? Jeff Brown. Yeah. Right. He had a conversation with me like 10 years ago or
eight years ago. He was really insightful. He just said, David, you're working, you're working a lot of
overtime. Why do you need cash flow? You have plenty of cash. You need a plan for retirement when you
won't have cash flow when you're not working anymore. And it just a light bulb went off. And now
there's absolutely deals. You can get. You can get. You can get. You can. You can. You can
a $500,000 property for $400,000 that will be worth 10% more every single year in one of these
markets. If you're losing $200 or $300 a month on that, but you're gaining $50,000 a year
in equity and you don't need the cash flow, that's not a bad buy. And people have been hearing
for so long, cash flow is the only reason to buy. Great point. I don't want people to miss this
that you just made. If you're losing, first of all, obviously you have to be able to afford that,
I'm more than go buy deals that lose money. But if you were losing $2 or $300 a month on a million
property that is very different than losing two or $300 a month on $100,000 property, right?
Because the appreciation on a more expensive property is going to be 10 times what it's going
to be on the little one, right?
But it exposed as a niche here is this.
Occupied homes where tenants have another 12 months on their lease and you can't get these
tenants out.
That stuff is trading.
And you get, especially it's your primary residence and you know, you're taking advantage of it.
And you don't have to move out of your house for six months.
and you're buying something on the market for a 10% discount that in the end,
you get to move into that thing.
It's at its 13th month, but you're losing some money on its rent.
But you know, you've got to take into account depreciation.
You got to take into account the amortization, too, as you're paying that.
It's why you need to understand that as an investor, you're a business owner,
because there's different buckets you make money in business.
The appreciation is a bucket.
The loan paydown is a bucket.
The cash flow is one bucket.
But it's not just like if you're a business owner, you have accounts receivable, accounts
payable. You have deals that you're working on in the future, but you have money that you have to
spend right now to prepare for that. Maybe your salaries are really high as you're training
people so that they can make more money later. Cash flow is one important area in a business.
If you run out of cash, the whole business can die, just like if your body runs out of blood,
it's going to die. But it's not the only reason the body exists. It's not the only reason real estate
exists is just for cash flow. And that's all we're trying to talk about is Tommy's set up here
where you can sort of, you're in a luxurious position where you can make long-term decisions
that might lose a little bit of cash flow short term, but are they going to be bleeding you dry
in 10 years? In 15 years? No, they're going to be crushing it. Like, my rents in California
have more than doubled in the eight years that I've bought here, right? And so those are some
of my best cash-filling properties, but when I bought them, they were some of the worst.
Yeah. And there's a pretty, you know, you also have to have the right guidance in that, too,
because you can't go bumping rents over certain amounts of percentage in California.
In other states, it's completely different.
But you can bank on the fact that at one point in time when someone moves out or you can get a, you know, you do an owner carry deal to someone or you do a lease option or other.
There's so many creative ways.
Like, we're looking at buying a note right now against like 17 houses in the Midwest.
And it doesn't mean I get to own those houses at all.
It just means that there's some kind of income protection there.
There's equity protection there.
And then there's either there's a delinquent borrower or a willing borrower to pay.
It's just a distress asset.
I look at anything that people are coming through.
So which states do you own a property in now?
My favorite states, if I could continue to buy, are the international states.
Like, I love, like, Orlando, Florida.
Like, I love Florida in general right now.
And buy block houses in Florida, by the way.
That's different.
Like, every strategic, there's strategic advice.
What do you mean by block?
You're talking about cement block?
Stick built homes versus block homes.
Like there's just little...
Is that the hurricanes or what?
Yeah, the storms.
actually, that's just the weather, and how they age, you know, for block home.
There's a lot of rain and rain affects wood more than it.
It very much does, yeah.
The blocks, right?
Yeah, I've learned that lesson, too.
I love Oklahoma.
We're doing Tennessee right now, which has just significant population growth.
I love Tennessee.
We're doing Arkansas because it came through the auction and I liked the price.
We chose a product there.
It was like 1990 or newer, under 20K, you know, like you could just make your buy box there.
And the stuff was working. So I bought three in Arkansas, too.
Crazy man. Hey, last question before we move on to the famous four. How are you finding deals today?
What's your primary lead sources? My primary lead source is people, relationships and wholesalers.
Like, you know, like there are times when I was off, I got a plane in Memphis and those we buy houses signs and the people that are marketing stuff on.
Like, you just tell them what your product is and what your buybox is.
Brokers have on market and off market deals. If you specific,
especially commercial brokers. If you specifically know what it is you're looking for,
like, hey, any multifamily deal with the minimum of, you know, 20 units, or preferably something
I can do 100 units or more on, they know what's available. I find it's coming right now for
people. We do some advertising, but relationships and people reaching out and just offering
stuff is really the greatest source of we're qualifying right now. Awesome, man. Well, this has been a
lot of fun, man. It was cool hearing your story. You got a lot of wisdom, a lot of
knowledge over the years, but we're not quite done yet.
So let's move to the last segment of the show.
It's time for our...
Famous Four.
The Famous Four is a part of the show where we ask the same four questions every week,
550 episodes in a row.
Actually, I don't think we did it for the first few, but whatever.
We added in at some point.
So these questions you've heard before, but we're going to throw much anyway.
Number one, Tommy, do you have a favorite all-time or current favorite real estate-related book?
I think it's called 52 homes and 52 weeks.
because it was a mindset change for me was that it's really easier than you think it is to buy.
I think it may be like buy one deal.
Yeah, Dolph de Roos.
And it's like this, it was a mentality change for me.
Like I can't tell you that chapter seven was the best chapter ever and changed my life.
But I can tell you it was that if I could do that for two years, I got 104 doors.
You know, like that was that if you have the funds behind you to do it or if you have the rehab to be able to turn
those things over. Like, it's really not that difficult. Like, I'm not doing anything significantly
different than the rest of the world's doing. It's doable. Awesome, man. You know, I don't know if I'd
say that's true, Tommy. There's not a whole lot of people doing what you're doing out there in the
real estate space. Maybe because they don't all have the love for homes that you do. That's it. And
people who are doing four deals, they can do eight. And people who are doing eight deals can do 16 in a year.
You know, like, it's like talking to Brandon twice. You look like me, but you sound like Brandon.
All right. What is your favorite business book?
Man, that is a great question, too.
So I'm on the struggle bus with systems right now, and I'm into trying to kind of get our EOS stuff, you know, positioned into each one of these companies.
And I just, I'm halfway through and I'm actually really enjoying what's the integrator versus the rocket fuel?
Yeah.
Rocket fuel is the sequel or whatever to traction.
Yeah, exactly.
Start with traction into rocket fuel and just trying to get.
I'm trying to get myself spread appropriately into the parts of the business that I really enjoy the most.
So that's really got my mind frame change.
We just had Gino Wickman on the podcast.
It hasn't come out by the time we're recording this, but by the time this airs, it'll be, have been released.
I don't know.
Look back a few episodes.
Gina Wickman, the author of Rocket Fuel we had on some good stuff, man.
Yeah, that book was, they had both traction and that were a game changer for me.
So yeah, cool, man.
All right.
Well, next question.
Next question.
What are some of your hobbies?
You know, I actually, you and I, all of us are part of Go Abundance, and that gets me the only chance. I think after I had my son, my first born, I didn't get to snowboard for four years. Like, he was five before I hit the hill. That's my so easy to kind of get out, get in the hills and get lost on the snow. It's really hard to hold a phone. And I really feel like the detach, the further I able, I can get detached from anything electronic. It really helps me kind of get lost for a while. And my oldest is,
now 13 and him and I did the top of Yosemite. So it's if I could get as vague as possible with it,
it's getting out of my cute little cubicle. It's like getting out of my own way and just
getting out, you know, outdoors. But for the most part, it's snowboarding and going to Costco
because I feel like that's why I just dominate.
You're in the Costco dominator?
Can they make that into a sport? Like there used to be a TV show. What was that called where
they would run into a grocery, like a different store thing and they'd have to pick items.
I know our listeners would know what I'm talking was like, shop till you drop or something like that.
Supermarket sweep.
Yeah, supermarket sweep.
And they'd have to go fill a cart up with the most expensive items.
Like, are you saying?
And that is a bucket list item right there.
I am adding on at the end of this.
I have random bucket list item.
You've been training for that your whole life.
One of my bucket list items, which I think I was BS with Nigel about what I told them was
someday when I pay off my primary residence and pay off my house Tahoe, it's like this whole,
like I can check some boxes, right?
I can spend some irrational money.
I want to have Morgan Freeman voiceover on like a two, three minute a bite real estate career.
Or, you know, if he's not available, I'm going to use Samuel L. Jackson, you know, or like.
So I was hanging with Nigel actually at the airport restaurant.
And we talked about this.
And we were sitting there looking up what it cost to hire Morgan Freeman.
Oh, we're having a great conversation about this.
Apparently, you can do it.
But it is significantly cheaper to hire a Morgan Freeman.
Freeman impersonator.
I did not know that.
Yeah.
I mean, for 500 bucks, you can get a Morgan Freeman impersonator to say whatever you want.
But how much can I pay to get Dave Caliando or was it Frank Caliando?
Frank Caliando, yeah.
To do Morgan Freeman.
Is that cheaper than actually?
That might be more expensive than even Morgan Freeman.
That's really funny.
So they're making a movie about Kurt Warner and he was, you know, bag and groceries and then
the Rams came.
And that's going to be Tommy's story.
Like he was just out here buying houses and then one day supermarket sweep had a
resurgence and they found him and he became the gold medal winner. I'm so glad you said that. I got to add
more random on my bucket list. I was like, I just want to have that did something different than
anybody else in my real estate world. So good, man. All right. Well, last question for me of the day.
If you had to really narrow it down, what separates successful real estate investors from all
of those who fail, give up, or never get started? The separation factor. That is a really
furthering the question. I would say if it really, if the question of digging into it is inside of
real estate or other, before you can diversify, I think you've got to dominate one section of that.
Like, if you have a goal to grow your real estate team and you want to have 50 people on it,
or if you really want to have 50 doors or 50 single family residences or other, it's a,
what separates a lot of people who actually do it is taking the first step.
I mean, there's random parts of that, too, like journaling and sharing it with people.
Like, are you able to tell someone what your goals are?
I mean, are you really aimed at it to be able to accomplish those goals?
And what I found was when Miracle Morning became kind of a game changer for me was I needed to accomplish more in the morning with Miracle Morning.
And without setting aside my faith, you know, time and things like that, that I needed to have this connection and losing connection to my family in order to dominate in real estate.
Or it's like the better my business did.
Like, where did I go with my personal health?
or other. So it's, it's just a balance and understanding that your goals are very personal. Like,
if you really genuinely feel like you can't live life without $100,000 personal cash flow, like,
you might be living above your means or you might be just, you know, like, you know, misguided on,
you know, really what you're, what's separating you from the rest. So that's a great question. I mean,
I think that it really does start, though, with someone who actually makes the first step that says,
hey, I hate to bug you with this, but, you know, you seem like someone I can ask about this in this
transaction or this deal or this goal I have and and going surface don't stay surface level like
really digging in and making it reasonable making it personal so no man no it's great it's perfect
it's really good stuff man this has been a great show thank you for coming on today and I'll let
David can ask the last question get us out of here our last question where can people find out
more about you go to I lovehouses.com that's pretty easy and in the super cute little background here
that thing I bought that phone number 916 buy sell if someone you know gives me a buzz emails
probably super easy on reach out.
You know, just Tommy at I Lovehouses.com.
But, you know, I would love to add value to whatever people are working on.
So I do encourage people in your own home markets if you find someone in your home market
to reach out to.
And if you want to just talk shop or wholesale something or partner up on something joint venture-wise,
I'd love to talk to people about anything.
So I'd love being on the show.
I love you guys.
I really appreciate you guys having me on.
All right.
Well, this has been a fantastic show.
Brandon, anything you want to say before we get out of here?
No, just that this was a great interview.
to end my 10 year at bigger pockets with.
I don't know if 10 years ago.
I'm going to advertise that.
I really appreciate that.
And to very specifically,
you know,
give props to David.
Congratulations, brother.
He called it like a promotion.
Like it genuinely is a promotion to be able to lead something this big.
And I'm in awe what you guys have accomplished together.
And I'm just looking forward to the next,
you know,
to see how good it goes for both of you for the next chapter.
Well,
thanks, man.
Appreciate that.
Well,
we got our final,
the final episode of the year comes out on December 30th.
That will be my last.
episode officially as host of the podcast. So everyone, go listen to that one now if you're listening
to this in the future or wait until, I think, Sunday, I think is when it comes out or is it
Thursday. I don't even know the dates. But it's coming out next episode. So episode 552,
51 will be my last one. So go listen to that. David, Tommy.
All right. Thank you guys. Love you guys. Love you too, Tommy. This is David Green for Tommy
the Costco King Christy and Brandon the legend Turner. Signing off.
Thank you all for listening to the Bigger Pockets Real Estate podcast.
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