BiggerPockets Real Estate Podcast - 623: 10th Grade Dropout to 400-Unit Apartment Complexes (WITHOUT Raising Money) w/Sofia Castro
Episode Date: June 16, 2022Multifamily real estate investors almost always raise money for their deals, right? Some would call it almost impossible to try and build a huge real estate portfolio without borrowing money or partne...ring up to take down bigger properties. Sofia Castro, along with her husband, not only built a multifamily portfolio using their own money, but did so starting with a severe disadvantage. Both Sofia and her husband were high school dropouts, living without much money, and practically no experience. A local entrepreneur took Sofia and her husband under his wing, teaching them both how to become leasing brokers. From there, they started building their entrepreneurial endeavor, eventually selling their business a couple of decades later for a whopping billion dollars. With cash in hand and real estate experience under their belt, they began buying apartment complexes to flip them as condos. Once the recession hit, Sofia knew this was the wrong business to be in, so she pivoted heavily towards multifamily rental investing, specifically investing in “core deals”. Now, she has a streamlined process for finding deals, buying deals, and screening tenants. She gives some out-of-the-box, but highly useful tips on tenant screening, property management, and why “value-add” real estate isn’t all it’s chopped up to be. In This Episode We Cover: “Core deals” explained and why they often beat value-add properties What are cap rates and why understanding them is crucial when buying multifamily Condo conversions and the risk of flipping during downtimes in the economy Tenant screening tips that will get you the best tenants who pay on time, every month The right way to do property management and why you shouldn’t immediately outsource How to buy in the right real estate markets, plus the metrics Sofia looks for when investing And So Much More! Links from the Show BiggerPockets Youtube Channel BiggerPockets Forums BiggerPockets Pro Membership BiggerPockets Bookstore BiggerPockets Bootcamps BiggerPockets Podcast David’s YouTube Channel Ask David Your Real Estate Investing Question Listen to All Your Favorite BiggerPockets Podcasts in One Place Subscribe to The “On The Market” YouTube Channel David’s BiggerPockets Profile David's Instagram Dave's BiggerPockets Profile Dave's Instagram Rob's Youtube Rob's Instagram Rob's TikTok Rob's Twitter Rob's BiggerPockets Profile Steer Clear of Social Media Scams Should You Self-Manage Your Properties or Hire a Pro? The Beginner’s Guide to Buying Your First Multifamily Property Should You Raise Private Capital for Your Next Investment Project? Books Mentioned in the Show ABCs to Real Estate Investing by Ken McElroy Think and Grow Rich by Napoleon Hill Connect with Sofia Sofia's Instagram: @officialsofiacastro Sofia's LinkedIn Sofia's Facebook Sofia's Website Click here to check the full show notes: https://www.biggerpockets.com/blog/real-estate-623 Interested in learning more about today’s sponsors or becoming a BiggerPockets partner yourself? Check out our sponsor page! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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This is the Bigger Pockets podcast show 623.
We know exactly how our properties are being managed.
We are the ones that are making the decisions on when the rents are increasing,
how much the rents are going to increase,
when we're going to do a cap-backs,
when we're going to replace our conditionings,
whatever the case may be,
we have to be involved with that.
We do not allow the property management to make those decisions.
We have to come together.
We have a meeting about it.
then we collaborate and then it gets executed. So that's the best way to do it. But how do you do that
if you didn't manage before? What's going on, everyone? This is David Green. You are host of the
Bigger Pockets podcast here with a banger for you today. I'm going to get right into it. Today's guest
is incredibly impressive, fantastic, and still seemed pretty humble as we went through the interview.
Rob and I will be interviewing Sophia Castro, who is in the multifamily space and has created
an empire. I don't know any other way to say it based off of a business that she and her husband
built and sold and then reinvested into real estate. So if you're somebody who has goals to
turn active income into passive income, maybe you listen to the episode that we just did with
Cody Sanchez and you're interested in how to create a business. Well, this is a great exit
strategy where you could take that money and put it into real estate. And Sophia tells us just
how she did it. Frankly, I'm still a little shell shocked. Rob, what are you feeling? All of it
was just like really nuts. You know what I mean? Like she, I mean, she was so casual about it. And again,
like you said, very humble. Like she talked about how she sold her company for a billion dollar
valuation. And it's like, oh, okay. That's, I don't think I've ever met anyone that sold a company
for that much. And then she's got a portfolio worth $750 million or something like that. So,
really just all around like a true masterclass in what it is to be a multifamily investor. Yeah, in today's
show we kind of break into how people typically start off building wealth in the multifamily space and then
what you can transition into later so that what she says it's not as much of a heavy lift. You can
actually enjoy it more. And my favorite part, why you want to listen all the way to the end is we get
into a very good discussion about how to handle property management. We kind of break down the
fallacy that it's either self-management or it's leverage that there's actually a path to get along
that process. And you don't want to miss this out because this can save you a ton of
time, energy, and headache once you actually do start making momentum.
Rob, what were your favorite parts of the show?
You know, I think one of the things that she talked about, she has, I mean, she's at this
point had thousands, if not tens of thousands of tenants. So she gives us her very, you know,
very proprietary secret sauce on how to screen tenants, you know, and how that looks on the
property management side of things too. You know, she gives us an inside look at how she went
from self-managing her whole portfolio to then handing it off to another property
management company and how she trained them to think like her. Yeah, that was really, really good.
Frankly, there was more information than we could get to in today's show. And this interview was
fantastic. So I'm excited for you to hear it. Today's quick dip is go to biggerpox.com
slash scam, S-C-A-M. Look, we love that you trust us here. We work very hard to build the trust
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and have what it takes to put it into action. But there are bad people in the
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So different personalities on BiggerPockets like Rob and I have fake profiles made that are not us.
The screen name is different.
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Well, yeah, on that note, I actually want to say more than likely, it is possible, but let's just assume that it's not going to happen.
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That's it. Look at the spelling of the handle. And if you're still not sure, ask the person if you think
it's me or Rob to send you a voice note. You know what our voices sound like. It'd be very, very difficult
to replicate that. So that's something I've done when I've had high profile people reach out to me and I
sure it's legit, is I just, if I know their voice, I have them send a voice message via
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All right, with that being said, let's bring in Sophia.
Sophia Castro, welcome to the Bigger Pockets podcast.
Hello there.
Thank you so much.
So excited for the invite to this podcast.
Looking forward to giving all my knowledge and value to your audience.
Really excited.
Yeah, so are we.
Let's get started by giving our audience an idea of what your overall portfolio looks like.
Can you tell us what type of assets you invest in and what your portfolio looks like today?
Sure.
So you want the most recent one because, you know, like I've been in the industry for quite a while.
and I've changed our portfolio probably about four or five times now, but today we have a complete
different portfolio than what I started with. So today's portfolio, we have about $750 million
in our portfolio of core deals. And if you don't know what core deals are, these are more
A assets where their vintage is newer and needs no value ads. They're pretty, you know,
probably 10 years, the oldest that I have in the portfolio right now. And our newest is something
that has just been built only three months ago. And we actually have one that's being built
from ground up, which is our first development ever. And that one should be done probably in the
next 12 months. So how many properties do you currently own in and then how many units in those?
So right now we have about 12 properties.
Each of them carry probably the smallest one that we have at the moment is about 163 units.
All the other ones are, you know, the 300s, 400s.
The largest one is 422 units in one property.
We have right now about 2,500 units more or less in total.
Okay, wonderful.
And are you using a syndication model to acquire
these? Not at all. At the moment, we have never used syndication. We've used our own money. We've been
very blessed that we have created our wealth in a different business, and we were able to carry that
on into real estate at the same time as having another business. So we would, this business that we
had that we've sold, and I'm sure we'll get into it, we were able to get the cash flow from
that business and put it into real estate instead of spending it.
We've decided to open, you know, a different brand from the other business and just invest all of our money into multifamily.
And now we've been doing this for since 2003.
That is incredibly impressive.
So I kind of wanted to ask here, just kind of curious.
So you mentioned right now that a large portion of your portfolio, I believe you called them core properties.
And you said that they're not really value ads.
They're a little bit more on the premium side.
Can you help me understand, I guess, the benefit of,
doing that versus going in a grabbing a value add property.
Because I imagine on something like that, do the returns differ greatly because you're
sort of buying it, you know, already fixed up and ready to go?
Yes, definitely.
So the core value deals, you know, these are A asset class, very new vintage.
So you come in not needing to do much.
But so what is the difference?
In today's market, it's completely different than.
it was many years ago.
And the reason why we got into core value deals,
core deals, I'm sorry,
is because of the market.
So what happened was we used to love value ads,
because value ads you would come in,
you knew that you would put in cap X
and that you would increase the valuation
of the property immediately
and also your cap rate would increase.
But in this market that we went through after COVID,
those value ads typically are your workforce housing,
housing and those tenant base was the ones that got hurt the most when it came down to this market
that was unpredictable and this, you know, black swan that we didn't know we were going through.
So when you wanted to increase rent after COVID, which you know the market was extremely
healthy to increase rent across the board, it didn't matter if you were in an A asset or if you
were in a D asset. It didn't matter. Rents were increasing across the board at the same.
exact speed and it didn't matter what you were making your income was you know that you were bringing in
so what we were finding was that when we were increasing these rents to the value ad deals
these tenants couldn't afford it they wanted to they didn't mind paying it they just their income
just didn't match with the increase increase of rent so what we were finding was that when we
would underwrite these deal they couldn't meet the three times income
that we underwrite at.
So we decided, oh, don't a minute, we didn't like the core deals before because you would
buy these core deals at a 3% cap normally.
That's what you would, where you would buy value ads at 6, 8% cap, right?
So we're like, oh, wait a minute.
And also price levels, they're completely different.
But in today's market, it doesn't matter again if you buy an A or a D asset.
You're still making, you're still buying at a 3% cap.
So we're like, what are we doing?
3% cap and you buy a deal that you put zero cap X,
or you buy at a three cap where you know that you have a heavy lifting
to improve the property.
Core value, your tenants are your, you know,
they're making a good amount of money on a constant basis.
They're not having problems with their income.
B, C, D, asset tenants, they're not getting income increases
and they can't afford to accept.
the income, I mean the increase in rents. So we started evaluating our portfolio. We're like,
wait a minute, we need to change our core values here. We're going to switch out from value ads
to core deals and because of those things. And one of the main reasons is that when we
underwrite our deals and we always underwrite our tenants, like if we're lending them
alone for 12 months. So not a lot of people like to underwrite their deals once they're renewing
those leases. So you get a lot of, you know, evictions or late pays. And it's a lot of work when you have
to do all those things. So because of that reason, we started looking into core deals. Now,
not a lot of people when they're in multifamily, they can't afford to move up to core deals just
because it's, of course, more expensive, but the rate of return on your money are the same
in this market today is the same. So we did the stretch. We sold out some of the apartments that we
had that didn't fit that core values, and we, you know, disposed of those and purchased new deals
that fit the new core value that we have in our portfolio. So if I'm hearing this correctly,
I mean, there's obviously it's very nuanced, but A, with the core deals, very stable, secure,
and just an easier target for, or like an easier demographic where you can increase rents
and, you know, they will, they do it because they have their, you know, better professions
or whatever, it may be a better livelihood.
Whereas on the value ad side of things, because of the amount of rent increases that were
happening during the, you know, last year and a couple years ago, when you go an ad,
they can't necessarily keep up with like the quote unquote inflation of like the new market rent.
Is that about right?
Correct.
Exactly this.
Yes, exactly the scenario.
Okay, great.
And so one of the things you talked about that I just wanted to get some clarity on because I know there are a lot of people listening here.
We do talk about cap rates quite a bit.
So do you think you could just give us like a quick rundown of the concept behind a cap rate and, you know, why a 3% cap would be significant in one of the deals that you were talking about?
Yeah, so cap rate, like I'm sure most of your audience knows, it's the return on your cash money.
Like, you're not putting debt on the deal.
This is if you're going in purchasing the property with no debt.
That's what your cap rate return is.
A 3% return is if you invest $1,000, which you have to buy the property in full with no debt,
you're making 3% on that $1,000.
Of course, you're not buying no deal at $1,000, but I just want to make it easy for people out there to do that.
their math. So when you're buying a deal, your return a 3% and you're saying, if I have to put in this
much work and it's going to be a heavy lift and I'm going to make a 3% on my money,
or do I want to buy something a little bit more expensive, still making 3%, but I'm not putting
in that heavy lift of having to improve your tenant base the whole nine yards, which one are you going to
pick. So that based on cap rates is your return on your investment. So you want to be as smart as
possible. You want to, you know, try to work smarter than harder when you invest in a property.
So where would, if you're going to get your same return, where would you go? Heavy lift or
easier lift than. So that's how we evaluate when we look at our cap rate is the heavy lift that
you're going to put into it to get the same return. I think a lot of people ask the question,
why would you ever buy something at a three cap or a 3% return if there was no financing
versus a six cap where you could get twice as much, especially new investors? This is the question
they're all looking at is, how do I get the highest return on my money possible? And I've always
understood cap rate to be the desirability of the cash flow. So the more desirable the cash flow is,
the lower the cap rate's going to be because the more competition there will be for that asset.
And like you're mentioning, like a really nice core, maybe we call it luxury property where you're
getting the best tenants and the rents go up the most and you have the least headaches and you can
run it with the least like what you call heavy lift, the lower the cap rate will be because
that is a more desirable cash flow than if you get a higher cap, but it's a lot more work to do.
And I'd like to differentiate here because what you're doing is the goal of
every investor. It's you started off grinding and adding value and like what you're talking about
with apartment complexes, improving the units, raising the rent, and then probably refinancing at some
point is sort of like the burr method for multifamily. We would use that in the single family space
with a rehab, but it's work that you're doing. When you get to the point where you can put your
money into properties that don't take as much work, but that maybe have a lower return, that's
actually where most investors are trying to get to. And then I'm curious to get your
opinion on your experience when you do get something at a lower cap that's a nicer property.
Do you find that over a five or 10 year period it catches up to and passes what would
have looked like a better return on a value add property in the beginning?
Yes.
So it's a little bit of a, you can't, yes, you do find that that later on it does increase
more.
And, but for those beginners out there that want to get the cash flow for us.
us is our number one. That's all we look at the same way as when we first started. When we got
into this deal, into investing in multifamily, our number one was what is going to be the cash
flow for this property. And that should be everyone's number one. So when we used to buy at the
very beginning, we were buying very small duplexes because we had the mentality that we wanted
to buy the property's cash, right? That was just a mindset.
that you're going to get more return on your money than leveraging it with the bank.
As we went on, we understood that leveraging the proper way because you could leverage wrong
and a disaster could happen. But when you leverage correctly, your cash flow and later on the
value to the property is going to be way better if you do leverage yourself than buying
all cash and trying to go after that, the cap rate. So cash on cash,
return is really what we look at also because we don't buy all of our properties free and clear.
We definitely leverage across the board just because we could be buying more property and
having more cash flow when you leverage.
But yes, so when you do buy, like say value ads and you do improve these property the proper
way and don't over improve them, you do get a better return on the long run because
you're able to improve that property to, you're buying it at a lower valuation where they're
missing out what that cap, that cap X that you're going to put into it. And then you could
quadruper the value if you do it correctly. So yes, value ads do give you better returns on the long
run. But core values are deals, I'm sorry, the core deals, you're able to have a more
steady return and it is favorable on the value increasing also. So it really depends on what market
you're in and what you're investing for. So many different core values for investing that could
value ads are great. Core deals are great. What are you in it for? Long term, short term.
are you wanting to do those value ads so that you can increase the property value and get a nice
chunk of return in the next two to three years value adds your deal when you buy core deals
your values are not going to increase as rapid as your value adds because of course you just
bought a property that it was below value and you're increasing it so again it's a hard question
to answer because there's just different core values that you're investing for.
But they're all great.
Yeah, that all makes 100%.
It's very relevant for me because we just went into escrow on a hotel in New York.
And it needs a lot of work.
And they were trying to sell it to us at a three cap.
And we're like, well, no, I don't think so.
You know, this is going to need a significant remodel.
So we've been going back and forth.
And we finally landed on a price.
But if we pull it off, then, you know, it'll increase.
substantially over the next couple of years. So very cool. Thank you for the master class there on
cap rates. I think a lot of people are going to appreciate that at home. I wanted to kind of jump
back a little bit here and discuss. You mentioned that you sold one of your businesses, and that is
sort of what propelled you into this massive portfolio, very impressive portfolio that you have.
Can you tell us a little bit about that business? Was it in real estate? Was it in the same world?
No, it was not at all. This is a business. So my husband and my
are we met when I was 18 and he was 22 years old. We both come from very humble beginnings.
My husband's a ninth grade dropout. I was a 10th grade dropout. No college degree. And when we
met, for some reason he was a very strong entrepreneur mindset, very positive thinker,
never allowed negativity to get in his life. And he was just determined that he was not going
live that humble life that his family comes from. And so when we met, I just completely fell into
his mindset. And I said, hey, let's do this together. We could create a business. I don't know how.
We don't have the money. We don't have the knowledge. But if you think that we could do it,
let's go for it. So we started going into businesses and really didn't know anything about it.
And we came across an ad on the USA Today on leasing broker, manual. It was a manual, not a, not a
franchise, not nothing. It was just a manual how to become a leasing equipment broker.
And we said, you know what? This is interesting. My husband loved finance. We were looking
for a business that was going to give us enough freedom to have our own business to be able to
create financial freedom with being to get into real estate, but getting into real estate that
you needed funds. So we tried this business and the owner of the business fell in love with my
husband and really gave him, mentored him into this business. And when we got in it, we just
knew that we needed to take it to the next level. And we just kept on perseverance to this
business. And we created a business that we were able to sell 25 years later. We started in 95,
I believe. And in 2019, we sold it for a $1 billion evaluation. Yeah. And that, yeah, that's
Yeah, that's a first for me.
I don't think I've ever heard, ever met anyone in real life that has sold a business for a billion dollars.
Congratulations.
Yeah.
I would have to go into really a lot of details because it just didn't go from, it went from
leasing to medical finance.
We started lending doctors working capital.
So we pivot with that business throughout the years and just kept on, you know,
giving it more, stepping it up and stepping up.
and it was able to, the business today is still running, still doing amazing.
Today it's evaluated at $6 billion.
So, I mean, they're doing amazing and it's going to continue to do amazing.
So yes, but we decided that we really wanted to get full time into real estate investing.
And it was just our passion, our, we love it, we know it really well.
And we just felt that it was our time to start, you know, have our financial freedom the way that we really wanted it.
So can you tell us maybe like a summary of what that business was, how it operated,
and then why you wanted to get out of that and into real estate?
You know, again, it's because it was our passion.
That business required a lot of our physical time in there.
We had to, my husband's time was really, really involved seven days a week,
24 hours a day, really to get that business running the way it was.
So we just had already a portfolio at that time.
We already had a portfolio of probably about $100 million.
And we just knew that we could grow multifamily and have financial freedom and be able to travel, be able to do what we wanted to do from wherever we're at.
We didn't physically need to be in the properties or at an office.
We could be traveling the world and still have that mailbox money that we call.
monthly and not have to be there, not struggling of running a business, employees. So it was just
something, you know, that we really love. We just love real estate. We think it's the best thing ever.
Yeah. So you kind of mentioned, all right, I guess I thought you sold and then you kind of snowballed
into sort of what your portfolio is. But you mentioned you had a $100 million portfolio already. So
can you tell us like a little bit about that trajectory? What was the first?
first property that that kicked off the portfolio and then maybe just like you know how did that
progression look yeah so in 2005 2004 2005 something like that we got approached by some
friends that we knew that said hey we have an opportunity we need an equity partner to go into condo
conversions and we were like I said we were dying to get into real estate we had not we had done a
couple of fix and flips, little single family homes, but nothing major. And in that time, we had
enough savings that we said, yeah, we could go in and being that we had our business,
that we had all the banks on our side and we were able to get debt very easily, we're like,
yeah, we'll come in. We're dying to get into real estate. We really know zero about condo
conversion, but we're willing to go in and go in a partnership with you guys. Well, we did that. And
we bought over $81 million, I believe, in the portfolio of condo conversions.
We had bought apartment buildings, taken out all the tenants, and then we were deeding each
door to sell them as condos.
And back then, I'm not sure if you guys were in the market, but that was like the
hottest thing in real estate to do.
Well, what happened was during the time that we started converting all these units into
condos, the financial crisis came around and kind of almost made us go into bankruptcy because
nobody wanted to buy. We didn't have any cash flow on these buildings because we had
evacuated everyone out because we were doing condo conversions. And we were like, what do we do
now? We had our business that was still doing really well, thank God. But we had put our business as a
guarantor to all this debt. We had our personal guarantee and we were like, what do we do now?
That this is, we can't lose everything that we have just saved for and worked so hard to lose it in
one day because of this whole crisis. So in that moment, we for some reason clicked in and said,
okay, we're going to get tenants back into these properties and we need to rent and get some
cash flow to at least help us out. My husband went back into.
to our business. He never left it, but went into the business and really focused on growing that
business to continue giving us more cash flow so we could afford the debt that we got into
with all the condo conversion. So in that time, I went into the management side alongside our
other partners and we started learning what multifamily rental income properties were all about.
And we're like, oh my God, what are we doing? This is where we need to focus. And
is buying rental properties, not buying condo conversions.
So in that time, we waited from 2008 all the way to 2011.
We had to work our way out of the problems that we were in with those condo conversions.
We sold them all as apartment buildings.
We actually kept two that were cash flowing.
And we sold all the other ones.
We would come to the table with money.
Instead of getting money, we were coming to the table with money, got rid of all the bad ones,
and we stayed with the ones that were making us some cash flow.
Very little because we had bought the wrong, with the wrong money.
You know, we bought it too high back then.
So it wasn't really cash flowing,
but it was giving us enough that we understood what cash flow was all about.
So in 2011, I went in, myself and my husband decided that we were going to go into real estate
heavily on rental properties.
And my daughter had dropped out of college because she wanted to be an entrepreneur.
So I said, come along.
Me and her went and we started buying.
up all these foreclosures. Small little townhouses. We bought 16 homes. And we said, what are we doing?
Every time a tenant will leave, we kind of like stayed with no rent. So we said, we have these other
multifamilies. Why don't we just go straight to multifamily? And we started in 2013 only buying,
you know, like five doors up. Then we got a portfolio from 2011 to 2017. We were able to acquire
probably about, I don't know, that's when we had about 300-something doors.
We sold that portfolio because, again, it was really value ad, very heavy value ads.
And we had already converted all of them.
They didn't need no work.
We had already done all the capacts.
And we sold that portfolio and was able to make $18 million profit on that portfolio.
So from there, we went on to only buy.
hundred plus apartment buildings and started then we used to manage all of our properties we had
our management company in-house and in 2019 when we sold the building I mean I'm sorry when
we sold the business we decided that we were going to give up management also turn it over to a
third-party management and now do acid management to the management company and really scale the
to the next level, which is where we're at today.
And we're nowhere near done buying or acquiring apartment buildings.
We'll keep on doing that for a while, for a long time.
So that's how that portfolio started and where we're at today with the business.
That's really great.
So if I kind of, I mean, extrapolate here.
I mean, it sounds like you've had, you know, thousands of tenants over the course of your,
you know, your real estate.
I mean, maybe even tens of thousands at this point.
over the course of your real estate portfolio.
So I got to imagine that a really big component of your business is actually like the tenant
screening and getting the right tenants in there in that piece of it because obviously the
tenants, you know, they pay you rent and the rent pays the bills.
So is there a process that you've sort of developed over the years on how you approach,
you know, filling vacancies with the correct tenants?
Yes.
This is a really, I'm going to give you our number one.
We have a few steps.
but our number one is like what I had told you before.
We were in the finance business,
so we understand what it is to have a tenant that has to pay you on a monthly basis.
So the way that we approach our tenants is that when we look at that tenant,
we underwrite them like if we were giving them a loan for 12 months.
Because in all actuality,
you're allowing them to live in your apartment building
or your single family rental, whichever one it is, for 12 months.
and if they don't pay you, you still have to pay your debt.
You still have expenses on the property no matter what.
So we make sure for us not to have a lot of evictions or late pays,
we underwrite our tenant as that 12-month loan.
And we make sure that they have three times the income.
And that's hard.
It's hard in a lot of markets because due to the income that they're receiving
or if you have a vacancy, you're desperate to fill it, right?
And you're like, oh, my God, I'm going to make an exception.
I'm just going to let them in.
They only made two times the income for the rent, but it's okay.
I need to fill my unit.
Well, guess what?
Two months later, you're going to have a vacancy.
You're going to have an eviction, and they're going to live in your unit for three months
or as long as it takes to get an eviction or to get them to pay up.
So I try to explain this to a lot of newbies.
When you when you have a vacancy, don't go desperate because when you go desperate,
you're going to still have it vacant.
And at, but at the beginning, when you have it vacant, you don't have nobody destroying your
unit or living there for free.
So make sure you underwrite them.
Number one is their three-time income that it could afford the rent.
Number one, everything else, you know, we do the criminal background check.
We make sure that they're been in the.
in their business, in their employment for two years plus,
or in the same industry for a long period of time.
So we have different criteria,
but I tell you,
the number one that you need to worry about,
to everyone listening,
underwrite your tenant as if you were giving them a 12-month loan.
And you will be in good shape.
Does this mean that you, I mean,
are you turning away just an incredible amount of applicants
compared to the standard multifamily owner?
Yes, I would say so.
I would say that we probably are very strict with that
because we've had our rodeos already
where we have accepted been lenient on accepting that
and at the long run you fail anyway.
So what are you doing?
So that's been our number one.
Do we turn down a lot?
Yes.
And we rather have that unit vacant for an extra week or so
and find that right tenant than having it filled a week earlier and having the wrong tenant in your unit.
You know, this highlights one of the principles that I live by in my investing career
that you don't want real estate to be your financial savior.
You don't want to rely on income from real estate to live your life and pay your day-to-day bills,
especially in the beginning.
Because when you're doing that and you have a vacancy, the emotions that you experience are horrible.
It's a panic. I have to get it filled or I can't make my rent payment. When you're living that close to the bottom, you don't make good decisions when you're that afraid. The right way to look at it is a very long-term thing. Yes, I have vacancy now, but that's a better problem than a wrong tenant, than an eviction, than a trash unit. And you hold out, you get the right person, and you learn what you're looking for and you do better on the next round. So I just want to sort of highlight that element of what you're talking about here.
And that's one of the reasons that I tell people you should be investing from a position of financial
strength. You should have reserves. You should have money set aside. That's when real estate works the
best because you avoid those emotions of panic. Rob, would you say in your career that, like,
have you ever made a bad decision because you thought I have to get something filled or have you
avoided that? Oh, yeah, very early on in my Airbnb career. I mean, you know, obviously vacancy is like a
big thing, right? You want to book your Airbnb so you can make money. It's the point of all real estate,
really, but a lot of the times what we were doing is, you know, we were just lowering the rates
because we're like, yeah, you know what, I'd rather make 50 bucks than nothing at all, or I'd rather
make 75 bucks than nothing at all. In light clockwork, every time we did that, the type of guess
that that brought into the units just never really panned out in my favor at all, you know?
And it really is one of those things that have just learned the hard way so many times to the
point where now it's kind of just like a, you know what, I don't want to make the 200 bucks. It really
depends on the property. Some properties that bare minimum I'll take might be 150 bucks a night on
properties like our Scottsdale property where the average is $2,000 a night. The minimum I'm probably
going to take on that is like $1,200 because at the end of the day, you kind of have to evaluate
what's worth it and like when that trouble pricing comes into play. So for us, this is obviously
something that you figure out with every new property, especially in Airbnb, because you're always
adjusting the pricing strategy.
But you know, you learn very quickly to just go for the premium and, you know,
accept that you'll have vacancy every so often.
Yep.
I think that's such an extreme important piece when you're going to start investing in multifamily,
in rental property, in real estate in general.
And David, you're so right with what you said.
If everyone just follows that, you would be so successful at the end of your investment.
You're going to be so happy.
and you're not going to have those negative outcomes that people say,
oh my God, I hate being a landlord.
It was so much work.
And, you know, I failed.
And I didn't make the return that I thought because they do all those mistakes.
But if you do exactly what David said and follow those rules and stick to them,
you have to stick to them.
You would love being a real estate investor for a lifetime.
So when you're screening for tenants,
what are some things that in your experience, Sophia,
you've learned are really good to look for. Any tips that you can offer for how to do a good job
with this element of the business? You know, time in business or time in their employment and the
industry that they're in was something that we also noticed that was a very steady tenant was
if that tenant has been in the same job or industry for a long period of time, we found that those
were very steady tenants. Now you see a tenant that comes in and has been in his job. And it's
for one year and, you know, and it's an electrician. But the prior job, he was a plumber and, you know,
stayed in it for six months. And the other one, he was there for two months and he was a janitor.
And so those type of things, you see that they're inconsistent, they're going to be an
inconsistent tenant. So I really, really, you know, nailed down on income, on their, their
steadiness of their employment or they could be entrepreneurs.
and have their own business.
But those two things, they just go hand in hand
and you're going to see the consistency of a good tenant
when it comes down to checking those two items.
Number one, though, like I said,
stick with the three-time income for rent.
It's going to be the number one best thing that you ever do.
If that's anything I ever have to tell somebody is that.
That's my number one.
But the second one is the consistency of their employment.
Sure. Makes a lot of sense. I wanted to ask a little bit on the property management side, too.
I mean, you self-managed for a large portion of it. Now you have property managers.
Do you own that property management company? Because it seems at your level, with the amount of units you have, bringing that in-house might start making sense. Have you gone down that route before?
So I started with my own property management. That's the way we started was, but we had smaller units. I had, you know, my,
own maintenance employee employees property manager, assistant property manager. I had the accountant,
project managers all in house, you know, my own property management. And what I noticed as I
started growing was that we were spending so much time on management with the employees,
that it was taking away from being investors,
looking at the asset management,
making sure what type of assets
were really making sense investing in.
Even though I tell everyone,
you need to manage your own properties
for a period of time
because the heartbeat of being a multifamily
or a real estate investor in rental properties,
you have to know how to manage
because management is the heartbeat of it.
If you don't manage your properties properly,
you're not going to succeed.
So I definitely believe that you have to manage
so that when you do bring in that third party management,
you know how to manage them
so that they can manage the properties the way you want that manage,
not the way that the management property wants to manage them.
But if you don't manage that, your own property,
how can you tell them how you want it?
And having our own property management
at this point in time, yeah, it could make sense,
but I'm not in the property management business,
and I don't want to be in it.
So at that time, it just doesn't make sense for me
or myself, my husband, to own a property management
because then we're going to have to gear ourselves
and concentrate on running the management company again.
And that's not what we're in this for.
We're in this to invest in multifamily rental properties,
to, you know, have,
financial freedom and create generational wealth with these properties, not property management.
But a lot of people do love property management. And if you have that insight or if you have that
passion that you want to own your property management because you do enjoy having a property
management alongside your investment, perfect. But for us, it just made no sense because
that's not the career we wanted. You know, something I noticed is the question. Is the question
question people ask is the wrong one and you made a point that highlights the right question.
What I typically hear people say is do you self-manage or do you hire a property manager?
Which sounds innocent enough when you're first asking it.
Here's the problem.
If you self-manage, you got yourself a job.
Well, more of a job.
There's always something that you have to do with real estate.
It's ever completely passive.
But yes, it's a job.
And in my subjective opinion, it's the worst job of the whole thing.
Property management is just like the first thing that you want to get.
customize and taking care of. Yeah. I always say it's like the lymph note of real estate. They just have to
absorb all of the worst parts of it and make it work. So God bless the good property managers out
there. Yeah. And you know, I think that a lot of people stop being landlords or purchase
properties because they do a bad job in property management and they get turned off. It makes you hate it.
Yeah. Yeah. You have to protect your emotions when it comes to this because if you get a bad experience or you get a bad taste in your
mouth, you won't do it and you'll lose a lot of money just because you let yourself start to hate the job.
So, but the other option is I'm going to hire a property manager and they're the experts.
I'm going to let them do their job is usually a mistake too.
I think so.
Because they're looking to do this with as minimal time effort and energy as they possibly can because
they run on thin margins and they're not going to do it well.
So what happens is you can lose money from the poor job they're doing.
Your vacancies are higher.
I just found out I had to replace a few people.
I won't go too deep into my own tangent.
But I have a property in California that nobody was checking the property manager on.
The rent was 1,800 they were collecting.
Market rate was $2,600.
That's how far it went because nobody was managing the manager, right?
And I know this is true.
It doesn't mean that I'm perfect about doing it.
I have to hire people to manage my investments.
And I've had the last couple I've had to fire.
So that's just an example of that's $700 a month that I'm losing.
for years because nobody was looking at property management. And that's an example. The right
question, the right way to approach it is what you said. I will learn it and then I will teach someone
else how to do it the way that I want it done and you end up having leveraged it out. But when you
skip that middle step and you just jump to a property manager like, hey, you do this.
If they're not really good, which most of them are not really good, you're not going to get a good
result, you're going to lose money. And the way you mention it is what I wish every listener would do
is start off doing it, learn what works, give very clear expectations and standards to the company,
oversee to make sure that they are doing that. And then you end up getting the best of both worlds.
Is that in line with how you've experienced it? A hundred percent, yes. So I actually, when we did give up
property management, we interviewed probably about six property management companies, third party
management and we sat with them actually and told them, listen, we have been managing our own
property. We're very experienced that we just don't want to be property managers, but we want to
be very involved with you at a high level. We only want to deal with your regionals and your
regionals need to communicate with us on a weekly basis. We want to be very involved. All of the
CAPX projects we will be involved with. We will be the ones running those projects. And a lot of
companies told us, oh, I'm so sorry, we can't manage that way. And we were like,
that's fine. We'll find somebody that will. And luckily enough, we did find that company.
And we have been extremely happy with them. We actually, a lot of people don't like,
you know, institutions don't like to carry only one property management for all of their
property. They like to spread it around. In our case, we have stuck with two property management
companies only because they have been working with us extremely well.
They do exactly what we communicate with them and we collaborate.
We give them our opinion.
They give us theirs.
We come to the middle if we need to and we collaborate with one another.
And we have meetings on a weekly basis on one subject and on the other week we have it
on other subjects.
So we acid manage the management company.
And it's worked out beautiful because.
we don't have to deal with all the headaches of employees, of all the property management,
things that, you know, you have to implement and everything else.
But we know exactly how our properties are being managed.
We are the ones that are making the decisions on when the rents are increasing,
how much the rents are going to increase, when we're going to do a capax,
when we're going to replace our conditionings, whatever the case may be,
we have to be involved with that.
we do not allow the property management to make those decisions. We have to come together. We have a
meeting about it and then we collaborate and then it gets executed. So that's the best way to do it.
But how do you do that if you didn't manage before? That's exactly right. And additionally,
doing it that way will keep you involved. It will reduce your anxiety, but it won't make you
hate real estate. So what I typically find is I don't mind making the decision. If it was like,
hey, are we going to do A or B? Are we going to replace an air conditioner or not? I'll ask a couple
questions. I'll figure out what I want and I'll make a decision. That is not draining to me.
And I think most investors, they actually enjoy that. What is draining is calling three different
HVAC companies to get quotes on the air conditioner and scheduling with the tenant to make sure that
they can actually, like, that's the park that makes you hate real estate. So if you can
make the decision and then leverage off the execution of it, you get sort of the best of both worlds.
Yes, and dealing with the employees. Oh my God. At that property level, it's difficult too. A lot of people
hate that. But yes, exactly what you said is the, it's the best of both worlds. I love being involved
when it comes down to like what you said, making decisions, knowing what's going on with the property,
you know, seeing what's going to move that needle in the property. And, you know, it's fun. It's interesting.
you're seeing that you're able to move the needles by making different little moves.
But you're not there.
You don't need to be at the actual property physically or worry about being there every single day.
So it's fun.
It's actually an enjoyment to manage your management company.
Yeah.
So shameless plug here.
Rob and I are looking to hire someone that can execute the stuff that we need for the Airbnb's
that we are buying because I see Rob in his element.
He's very good with seeing, has the vision.
He sees the details.
He knows how things need to look.
But then I watch as he actually got us to go execute it.
And I just see like his energy levels just as his anxiety levels go like this.
I love it.
I love the tone of it.
But you know what?
I am very much an extreme version of like I like to learn it and master it before I give it away.
Because I think it's master and then delegate because then I can actually teach and give some
insight on how to do it the way that I want to.
You know what I mean?
Yeah.
And exactly what we did.
That's exactly what I advise all newbies.
And, you know, even when you're scaling and you're making that decision of like what we did,
you need to know what you're going to be handing off.
You have to be involved because that's your investment.
Nobody else is going to care for that investment as much as you're going to care for it.
So in order to really get the maximum amount of your investment to get your returns,
you have to be involved.
You're the only one that's good, you know, has that.
investment in there and you're the only one that wants it to grow.
Everybody else is just working.
They're just employees.
But yes, being involved with a management company, though, is the best of both world.
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So let's kind of wrap up with this last line of questions.
Obviously, if you're trying, if what you're saying is it's all about finding the right tenant
and then you're saying, and that's about finding someone who has stable employment that makes
good wages.
If you continue this reverse engineering process, the next question is, well, how do you buy
in an area where those companies are and they're hiring those people where they want to live?
So what advice do you have when it comes to choosing the location you want to get the tenant you
want to get the result you want.
So we do a lot.
That part there, my husband is the one that really takes on that part.
He does all the acquisitions and of our company.
So, but we, we do is that we try to look at a market that is trending very high in
rental.
That it's, it's favorable.
People are wanting to move there because of employment, because of schools, the
hospitals, uh, location.
And we go five mile radius.
And we kind of.
of study the locations. Right now, we're very heavily invested in Florida. We live in Florida.
I was born and raised. My husband was raised in Florida since he was seven years old. So we know Florida
extremely well. But we kind of, the sunbelt area is where we go. We also follow landlord laws.
You know, what's going on with the landlord laws. Is it favorable to the landlord?
also taxes are a big thing for us so we kind of stay in you know the sunbelt area because of all those
little details that i just told you just really match our investment core values um so you know
hospital schools employment um how the market is performing in rental um we like to go obviously
to where market rents are at its peak because everybody's not, they're okay paying higher rents
than in the other suburbs or, you know, areas that rents are not as high. So for us,
it's cash flow. So those are the things that we look for in particular when we're going to invest.
Rob, what do you think? Yeah, just one final thread I want to pull out here with the,
with kind of the property management side of things. And then now you're, you know, kind of talked about
how you're scouting everything.
at one point, like, do you feel like you're ever done developing systems, you know,
especially whenever you're working with like this new property management company that you've
been working with for a while? I guess they're not new. But did that force a level of organization
that you didn't have or was it pretty seamless to move your processes and your systems from
your original property management company to this? And like, or do you feel like you figured it out
and you've just got a very well-oiled machine at this point? Well, at this point, we have it pretty
figured out. So, but do we implement new strategies and come up with new things all the time?
If you don't continue to evolve with the environment, with the market, you're going to stay
behind and it's going to be like the Kodak, you know? Kodak stayed behind and all the new
technology took over. So we're always evolving and learning new technologies or new techniques
to implement into our strategies of investments. But,
At this moment where, you know, we've been in it for a long time.
It's very, it's already like an oil machine for us.
But like I just said, we always learn.
We always growing.
We never stop, you know, getting information, doing research and learning what's happening
in the markets.
You know, right now, if we didn't do all these new changes, we would stay behind.
And we probably wouldn't be where we're at today and continue to grow.
because right now we're implementing new strategies.
We're learning about development.
We've never done a development deal.
And now we're one ground up and now we have another lot that we just purchased.
And we're looking now for new land to start doing, you know, ground up deals.
Learning new techniques about it.
We are starting to do more research on how it works and moving on with the time.
because before, like, you would buy a property and the replacement cost was way cheaper to buy an
existing building than to do a ground up.
And today's environment, regardless that the materials cost, the labor cost, everything is
extremely higher, it's still cheaper to develop from ground up than it is to purchase
an existing building.
So those are things that we didn't really know much about and we're learning and we're seeing
that, you know, that we really do like this whole new development thing.
So always learning.
Never stop learning because if you stop, you're going to stay stunt.
That's awesome.
All right.
Well, thank you for sharing that.
And I just, I'm going to highlight another thing you said because you're giving us so many
nuggets here today.
It is everyone sort of understands when you say, yeah, you need to grow with the times like,
yeah, yeah, yeah, blockbuster Netflix. I hear it all the time. Kodak, right? But with real estate
specifically, there's this enchantment that comes along with, you get a couple properties,
you're done. You just get easy money. You go to the beach, you drink mitesies, you watch
dancing with the stars, you pat yourself on the back for three years of hard work and you're done.
And it is not that way. Things change. Tenants are looking for different stuff. Your properties can
fall apart. Like what you're saying is exactly right. You have to be.
willing to continue evolving. Now, it's better and it's less work than work in a W-2 job
where you're having to evolve much more. But real estate is not isolated from this reality of
life that things change and you have to keep up. It's so refreshing to see a person that has
sold a property for a billion dollars and now has 12 properties that have over 100 units each
one and didn't do what was syndication. Frankly, I don't know if I've even interviewed somebody
who didn't use the syndication road to get to where you're at. That is at the pinnacle of where
we all want to be and is saying, yeah, at this point, we have to keep evolving. It doesn't ever end. You're
always going to be doing this. When you're 90 years old, the world's going to be changing. And you have to be
doing your best to try to keep up with it just so you can stay relevant. So thank you for have the
humility to acknowledge that and kind of like putting an arrow right through the lie that so many gurus put
out there where they say, hey, take my course, spend $100,000, I'll teach you how to work hard for a year.
and then you'll never have to work again.
And I just, so many people I see get crushed by that.
So appreciate that.
All right, we're going to move into the last segment of our show.
It is the world famous, famous for.
Sophie, in this segment of the show, Rob and I will take turns asking you questions
to get to know you a little bit better and hopefully pull even more nuggets out of that beautiful
mind of yours.
Question number one, what is your favorite real estate book?
You know, that one's a tough one because I have a few, but my number one that I always
love to give, especially people that are beginning, is the ABCs to real estate investing from
Ken McRoy and Robert Kirsaki.
Yeah, I love that book because it gives you the details exactly what you need to know to
really start investing and understanding the terms, which is one of the most important
things when you go out there to start investing.
And it just gives you so much knowledge that you're able to,
say, okay, I understand a little bit. Let me, you know, start doing it. So I would have to say that's
my number one to give to new beginners. Awesome. What about your favorite business book?
So my favorite business book is think and grow rich. That book for me at the very beginning when I was
going into, yeah, Napoleon Hill. I love it. It was one of the ones. I've read it maybe
three, four times now. I still sometimes get in my car and put the audio.
because it just gives you that mindset that, you know, of being able to do things without, you know, learn from your failures.
And I really think that book is great for people that are getting into business or in business.
Okay.
Awesome.
So aside from, you know, building one of the biggest real estate empires we've ever seen on this show, what are some of your favorite hobbies, Sophia?
So my favorite hobbies, I love boating.
You know, we live in South Florida, but going out on a boat on the weekend or even on my days,
if I have a couple of days off, going out there and just enjoying the water and the scenery
and being on a boat is one of my favorite hobbies of all times, the ocean.
That's awesome.
All right.
In your opinion, what sets apart successful investors from those who give up and fail or never get started?
Oh, so those are.
are people that don't believe in themselves and can't learn from failure.
They don't have the tenacity to be able to fail, learn from it, pick up, and keep on going.
Are the ones that succeed.
The ones that don't are the ones that fail, don't learn from their mistakes.
And they kind of like throw that sand over their head and they dig that whole deeper
and they just think that the world is over because they made one mistake or one failure came across their front of their of their journey.
So, you know, the tenacity being positive.
We have a saying that is PMA, positive mental attitude.
And learn from your mistakes.
Failures are one of your biggest attributes in life is learning.
What did I do wrong so that now I could do it even better?
It's amazing.
Yep. I think the greatest factor of success is failure, but we're all too scared to do it. So we all got to fail sometimes. Very strong note to end here. Lastly, Sophia. Can you tell us where people can find out more about you on the internet or where can they learn more about who Sophia is? Yes, I would love that. So on Instagram, my handle is official Sophia Castro and Sophia is spelled S-O-F-O-F-E.
IA. In LinkedIn, they could find me under Sophia Castro. And Facebook, IA, it's also official
Sophia Castro. I also have my website that they could go to that is official sophiacastro.com
and they will be able to reach out to me on any of the handles, social media, send me a message
and I'll get back to you, but I would love for you guys to follow. And I always love to empower women
to get into multifamily, and I know you men are here, no, no, nothing against men, but, you know,
being a woman, a Latin women, you know, they're always kind of like the women sit back and
either become a housewife, which there's nothing wrong with that. That's a bigger job than anything
else, but it's not for me. But I love to encourage women to get into real estate investing,
even if it's in a small scale, um, just because it's,
It's such a great way to create generational wealth to leave to your family for many years to come
that continues to just give cash flow.
So women out there, if you're out there, follow me, men.
I also love to speak to men that want to get into real estate and want their wives to get
involved and they don't want to.
But anybody that's into multifamily investing, please follow me.
I'd love to be able to give you any kind of knowledge that I have.
gone through and that I have in my little pocket here that I could give you guys. Well, thank you for
that. Rob, if people want to find out more about you, where can they go? Uh, they can find me on the
YouTube's over at Rob Built. That's R-O-B-U-I-L-T. You can also find me on Instagram over at Robbilt as
well, spelled the same way. And if you want to just change that spelling a little bit over on
TikTok, my handle is Robbilt-O. At a little O at the end, someone snagged my handle.
though everyone at bigger pockets knows that now because we've said it like a hundred times but that's all right
thank you for that rob you could find me online i'm at david green 24 i also have a youtube it's
david green real estate pretty easy to know i've started i've hired a social media company to
manage my instagram my youtube and some other things so check those out leave me a comment tell me
what you think if this is money well spent or if i need to replace them with somebody else and then
if you'd like to make some passive income you can go to invest with david green dot com fill out the
registration form there and you can learn how you can be a partner with Rob and I in our real estate.
Lastly, I will just say this public service announcement. I know that I have fake accounts on
Instagram. So does Rob, so does Sophia. Lots of people have these. Look very closely at the screen name
of anybody that requests to follow you or messages you because it's usually not the real person.
And then we will never ask you for your money via Instagram in crypto, in Forex, in NFTs,
and whatever the new flavor of the month is,
there's a lot of scammers going out there.
So please be careful, protect yourself and look very closely.
I applied for that blue check mark for the 20th time and was denied again.
And so this is just going to keep happening until that goes down.
Sophia, this has been a fantastic interview.
Really appreciate you sharing what you have.
Do you have any final words you want to leave us with before we let you go?
Well, I just want to tell your followers.
Thank you so much.
You know, you guys, I love your website, your bigger pocket.
It just has so much information that I'm a huge fan, even though that I've been in the business for so long, I still go in there to read all your information.
It's awesome.
Thank you so much for providing this.
And I want to just tell everybody, you know, really look into becoming a passive investor.
If you don't want to be a full-time investor, because it's an asset that's going to be around for a lifetime.
and it's going to create generational wealth for your families for years to come.
Nothing can replace real estate, no technology, no nothing.
Roof over your head is always going to be needed.
So don't get scared.
Try it.
It's amazing.
It's changed my life, my whole family's life.
So I really want all of you to go out there and do the same because if we did it, you can too.
Awesome.
Robbie, that's words from you?
You know, you always ask me this after someone gives us.
a very profound. I do that on purpose. No, thank you. I know. I'm always like, dang it. What do you want for
me? That was so cool. Sophia, thank you so much. This was a really great episode. And I had like,
towards the end there, like 20 more questions. I was just like, oh, I wish I could ask this. But we'll
have you on again someday. Well, once you decide to discard this portfolio and rebuy another one.
Well, love, anytime you invite me, I will say yes. All right. Well, let you get out of here.
Sophia. Really appreciate your time. This is David Green for Rob the Detail Diva Abasolo,
signing off. I made Rob laugh today. I can check that box.
Scamilicious, baby. Thank you all for listening to the Bigger Pockets Real Estate podcast.
Make sure you get all our new episodes by subscribing on YouTube, Apple, Spotify, or any other
podcast platform. Our new episodes come out Monday, Wednesday, and Friday. I'm the host and
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All host and participant opinions are their own. Investment in any asset, real estate included involves risk.
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