BiggerPockets Real Estate Podcast - 682: BiggerNews November: Was The “Office Apocalypse” All Hype? w/Kevin Fagan
Episode Date: November 1, 2022Office investments were supposed to be dead by now. 2020 was supposedly the great exodus, where on-site workers were freed of their commutes, small talk, and trips to the water cooler. We were sold a ...future where remote work was the only option, where everyone had an at-home standing desk, and nobody needed to wear pants. But, this didn't last long, as companies slowly started taking steps to get workers back into the office, making owners of the offices wealthy once again. But, with so many companies trying flexible schedules, prioritizing work from home, and renewing their video conferencing subscriptions, will office space still be the same as it was just a few years ago? On this month’s BiggerNews, we brought on Kevin Fagan, Senior Director and Head of CRE Economic Analysis at Moody’s Analytics, to give us the scoop on office investing and commercial real estate in 2022. Kevin’s team works diligently going through the data behind office investments, highlighting whether or not leases are renewed, how rents are being affected, and if office buildings are truly being abandoned. He brings some good news not only for office space investors, but for real estate investors as a whole, showing that this niche won’t be going away anytime soon. With coworking and residential conversions on the rise, office building investments could be a far smarter move than most investors would assume. In This Episode We Cover: How office space investing fared through the pandemic and how far occupancy rates fell Comparing today’s office investing environment to 2008’s and the stark differences between the two Office occupancy forecasting and when the data predicts a full recovery How unemployment rates will affect office investors and whether or not employers will force workers back into the office The best real estate markets to invest in office space and which big metros to definitely avoid The benefits of office investing compared to residential real estate and why this low-turnover niche is worth it And So Much More! Links from the Show Find an Investor-Friendly Real Estate Agent BiggerPockets Youtube Channel BiggerPockets Forums BiggerPockets Pro Membership BiggerPockets Bookstore BiggerPockets Bootcamps BiggerPockets Podcast BiggerPockets Merch Listen to All Your Favorite BiggerPockets Podcasts in One Place Learn About Real Estate, The Housing Market, and Money Management with The BiggerPockets Podcasts Get More Deals Done with The BiggerPockets Investing Tools Find a BiggerPockets Real Estate Meetup in Your Area David's BiggerPockets Profile David's Instagram Dave’s BiggerPockets Profile Dave’s Instagram Investing in Office Buildings—A Beginner’s Guide The Coming Collapse of Downtown Office Real Estate Connect with Kevin: Kevin's LinkedIn Click here to check the full show notes: https://www.biggerpockets.com/blog/real-estate-682 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
Transcript
Discussion (0)
This is the Bigger Pockets podcast show 682.
So there's this co-work, and the world more calls it Flex Office,
and I think that's more the appropriate term,
because when you hear co-working,
you think more of like the Hot Desk version of WeWork.
But Flex Office is actually a subtype of office
that's tracked as a subtype of office in places like the UK.
For a long time, for the last 20 years now, actually,
it's started in 2003, I think.
Cushman and Wakefield started tracking flex office as a, as actually property type.
What's going on to everyone?
This is David Green, your host of the Bigger Pockets Real Estate podcast here today with one of my
favorite co-host, the amazing Data Deli, Dave Meyer, with another bigger news episode.
Dave, how are you today?
I'm all right, man.
I was actually kind of sick, but I was so excited to have this conversation that I rallied
to talk about this very important topic and get a chance to hang out with everyone here.
It's one of the things I love about you is I too have been rallying after BP con.
I've been pretty sick, but the show must go on.
Oh, yeah.
At BP we've been talking about, there's like a BP flu going around.
Like, there's just a hangover for sure.
It hit me very hard.
It was a lot.
It's intense.
It was super fun.
But like, it, you know, it's like a pull forward on all of your energy.
And like, I was just feeling drained for a few days after.
And I don't sleep well, like, if I'm out of town.
So I was getting maybe three, four hours.
to sleep at night. And then you combine that with the traveling in the airports, all the hands
you're shaking, all the hugs and the pictures you're taking. Like, it was a recipe for getting sick.
But still, if I had to go back, I would do it again. I'd do it again next week.
There you go. Well, you're in Amsterdam. You know how to party. It's not going to scare you.
Real estate investors, the April 15th tax deadline is coming fast. If you own rental property
and haven't done a cost segregation study yet, you could be handing thousands of dollars to the IRS
that you don't have to. These studies let you write off as much.
as 25% of your building and generate huge tax deductions.
Costsegregation.com is an online self-guided software that makes cost segregation fast and affordable.
So it finally makes sense for smaller rental properties purchased for as low as $100,000.
With pricing under $500 and an average savings of over $25,000, it's just a no-brainer.
What's more, audit support is included by the number one cost segregation company in the U.S.,
but you must complete it before the tax deadline.
Go to costsegregation.com and use code tax deadline to get 10% off your first report.
Don't overpay the IRS.
Head to costsegregation.com before April 15th.
For decades, real estate has been a cornerstone of the world's largest portfolios.
But it's also historically been sort of complex, time-consuming, and expensive.
But imagine if real estate investing was suddenly easy, all the benefits of owning real,
tangible assets without the complexity and expense.
That's the power of the Funrise Flagship Fund.
Now, you can invest in a $1.1 billion portfolio of real estate,
starting with as little as $10.
The portfolio features 4,700 single-family rental homes spread across the booming sunbelt.
They also have 3.3 million square feet of highly sought after industrial facilities,
thanks to the e-commerce wave.
The flagship fund is one of the largest of its kind.
It's well diversified, and it's managed by a team of professionals.
And it's now available to you.
Visit fundrise.com slash BP Market to explore.
the fund's full portfolio, check out historical returns, and start investing in just minutes.
Carefully consider the investment objectives, risks, charges, and expenses of the Fundrise
Flagship Fund before investing. This and other information can be found in the funds' perspectives
at fundrise.com slash flagship. This is a paid advertisement. A lot of property managers
think their job is answering tenant emails and coordinating repairs. 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, and your trust slips too. And most PMs don't hold
themselves to performance standards. They focus on activity, not outcomes. Mind is different. They
obsess over the metrics that actually grow your cash flow. Go to mind.com slash show me to see how
mind performs and get a month of management for free. Because if you're going to hire a property
manager, hire one that manages your investment like an investment. Speaking of parties, on today's
show, we interview a very impressive guest. Kevin Fagan, one of the senior analysts at Moody's
analytics who loves commercial real estate and also has a background in architecture. So he's coming
from a very well-rounded position. Why should we be listening to this, you ask? Well, commercial
real estate is one of the juggernauts in the space of the overall impact that real estate has,
and this space is changing, much like residential real estate had the entire analysis of these
properties change when short-term rentals started to take effect. And as medium-term rentals
become more popular, we're seeing that changing how properties are valued. The same is true
of commercial space. The industry is changing, and we want to be ahead of how those changes come.
It's always better to know where you're going and get there first than to see what everybody else did and try to play catch up.
So today's episode is very fascinating.
We have a pretty impressive guest.
And Dave, I got to say, I thought this was one of your better performances.
What exactly were you doing that allowed you to come up with such good questions?
I don't know, man.
It's just someone starts talking data.
I just get laser focused in on what they're talking about and like to follow it.
But thank you.
I appreciate that.
But honestly, like you said, I really like, you know, I don't really.
invest in office space. I mean, I don't at all. I do own a couple of reits in the space, but I own
residential real estate. But I still really like this topic because I think what's going on in
the corporate world and what's going on in office space has driven a lot of changes in the economy
as a whole and subsequently residential real estate, right? Like when work from home really started
taking over during the pandemic, people started moving to the suburbs. And we started seeing residential
homes grow faster in the suburbs than in urban landfill, which was like a totally big change
from what had been happening post great recession. We saw the cities grow a lot faster than the
suburbs. And sort of my assumption going into this conversation was like, that's going to continue.
But I think Kevin shared some really interesting data and insights about what's happening in the
office space. And if you're interested in office investing, it's going to be super interesting.
You'll be really love this. But even if you're
A residential investor like me, and I think, David, you're primarily only residential.
Like, you learn a lot about this that can really inform your investing strategy that you think
you'll get a lot of nuggets from this.
Yeah, that's exactly right.
I don't like the investing approach that says, let me just see what else is doing and
copy it.
That's lazy and you end up losing money because usually by the time that you hear about
the latest trend, everybody else has already run it up, right?
The better way to invest is where are things going?
How can I see where it's going to evolve and how can I get ahead of that?
Like, imagine if you were one of the very first people to get into the short-term rental space.
You crushed it.
You made a ton of money.
You have this amazing list of reviews on Airbnb.
It's very hard for someone coming in like me now to catch up with somebody who got into this 10 years ago.
The same is true of all real estate.
And so I'm excited for how things are evolving in the commercial space and we're going to talk about that.
But before we do, today's quick tip is as we're wrapping up an interesting year in real estate,
2023 is new territory for sure. Inflation, as well as days on market and interest rates are all up.
Make sure you're tuning in weekly to hear the stories and the tactics that we are working on right now to keep you informed.
We love that you are listening to all of our content. We want to prime you for where you can make the biggest impact and that is staying real time with what is happening here on this podcast and the on the market podcast as well.
I've said it before. I will say it again. Real estate is evolving at a faster pace.
than it ever has before, which means you need information more than you ever needed it before.
We are committed to bringing it to you, so make sure you prioritize that.
Dave, any last words before we bring in, Kevin?
I'll just say I love that point because honestly, I like when it's kind of the situation
where everything's changing quickly because if you are informed, you have a big advantage.
And so I like being informed and I like that other people are not going to spend the time
or, you know, dedicate themselves to understanding the market and how to take a
advantage of it. It's more for me and you, man. It's more for everyone who's listening and staying informed. So,
I love that quick tip. Change is bad for the lazy and change is good for the prepared. Exactly.
All right, let's bring in Kevin. Welcome Kevin Fagan to the Bigger Pockets podcast. Kevin has quite the
impressive resume here. He's a senior director and head of CRE Economic Analysis at Moody's Analytics.
He has degrees from the University of Texas in. What did you get your major in there, Kevin?
architectural engineering.
Architectural engineering.
You've worked in that field for a while and actually designed buildings in California.
Is that right?
That's right.
Yep.
About a decade of that.
A decade of that.
And then you said, okay, I've had enough of this.
I'm going to own my own real estate.
You built a portfolio.
So can you give us a brief rundown of what makes up your portfolio today?
Well, it's relatively small.
It's kind of more of a side thing.
But, you know, we have a hotel, some Airbnbs, multifamily, mobile home parks and might be
branching out into some other stuff soon.
Yeah, that doesn't sound small.
at all, but thank you for being humble.
So you're here to talk with us today about commercial real estate and office space in particular.
Dave Meyer, you got to be freaking out over there with giddiness.
How are you feeling right now?
I'm excited.
I love talking about commercial real estate.
I feel like we, in bigger pockets in general, we talk a lot about commercial real estate in the
context of large multifamily investment.
Sometimes, you know, a lot of our listeners are interested in self-storage.
But honestly, we don't talk a lot about office or retail or industrial real estate.
And it's this whole other side of the real estate investing world that I personally think
our listeners should know about.
And so we're super excited to have you on here today, Kevin.
Happy to be here.
Great.
And I think it would help.
If you could tell us a little bit about just sort of the state of play for office,
like what has been going on since the pandemic?
You know, everyone knows that work from home sort of shook up the corporate.
world a little bit. So can you just give us some background on what's happened over the last few years?
Yeah, sure. Happy to. Yeah, I think the office market is really where most of the attention has been,
you know, out of all the different property types. I mean, through the pandemic, the ones that got hit
the hardest were office, I mean, excuse me, retail and hotel. And, you know, that story kind of
got played out pretty quickly because you just knew that retail was going to come back. And it did.
actually, it came back very nicely outside of malls anyway. It came out very nice, came back very
nicely with retail sales rebounding. Hotel is now the highest ADR's average daily rates we've seen
historically ever right now on average nationally for hotels. And so that's more of like a kind
of typical situation going on there. You know, the mall conversation is a secular change, but generally
that's just typical, you know, real estate. But for office now, we have this either assumed or
a big concern about a secular change. Like, how do we analyze this asset class might actually be
completely different going forward than it was, you know, you get real estate is always a story
kind of asset class. So you get guys that have been in the industry for 40, 50 years and this is
how I've always done it. Now this is a real change where you might have to think about it
differently. So I sat most of the pandemic on the rating agency side of Moody's. And my role there was a,
you know, kind of head of CRE research, so everything that we rate that touches real estate,
banks and REITs and CMBS, you know, what do we do for things where office is backing that,
you know, because all you're really worried about on the credit side is what's the worst case scenario.
And so really, I mean, we rolled up our sleeves and did hundreds and hundreds of different articles,
studies, discussions with different players in the space, like, you know, corporate tenant,
consultants and really found that the story is way more nuanced than office is dead. I mean,
those headlines you kept seeing is like, will people want to go back to the office? Yeah,
blah, blah, blah. It's a very complicated story. And remote working is 40 years old, back with IBM in
1983. And, you know, the government actually doing a lot of telework plans over the last few decades.
It's not a new story. And we really found that it's, it's, it's,
to very nuanced how remote working actually translates into more or less office demand.
And the ideal state of things is not full remote working for all kinds of very obvious reasons and some less obvious.
But bottom line is that we did not see a mass exodus of corporate office tenants out of office during the pandemic.
And we don't expect that to happen going forward either.
the data has really not continued to show that that's not the case. If you look at the last three or four
cycles, this has actually been one of the most benign cycles for the office sector, despite all of this
worry right now. So we're watching it at a bunch of different ways, but bottom line is that the
apocalypse has not arrived yet, but we have a ton of ways to watch and see if it's on its way.
You said this is one of the most benign times in office spaces. That can,
compared to 2008, one of my first jobs in real estate was cold calling office offices and trying
to get them to sign new leases with a, I worked for a tenant rep agency. And vacancy rates back in,
this was back in 2009, were insane back then. It was like 30% in downtown Denver, higher in
some places in Denver. Are vacancy rates that high now, or how do they compare to the last
downturn? Yeah. So sticking to occupancy's vacancy rates, right now, office vacancy rates
average nationally. The occupancy rate is about 82 percentish. So vacancy rate, we just
had 18.5 this last quarter. And it's been that low before. It was, you know,
Occupancy rate was 82 and the worst of the financial crisis.
It was 83 and the worst of the tech boom bust.
And then in the early 90s, it was about 81%.
But kind of peaked the trough, you know, we only saw about a 2% decline in occupancy rates this time.
The last time it was a 5% decline.
The time before that was 9.
The time before that it was 12.
So we saw these big kind of busts before.
We didn't really see it this time.
it was already relatively low coming off the financial crisis and it didn't drop dramatically.
A lot of sub-leasing going on, which is somewhat new.
But sub-leasing means that somebody is actually taking the sub-lease.
And there is a physical, or excuse me, there is actually a lease on the property.
My point is that we just really didn't see that dramatic kind of very pro-cyclical
behavior of the office market that we do in other.
because basically, you know, because of remote working, companies were able to stay going.
They didn't have to do the same kind of layoffs that they did in prior crises.
And so they kept the lease.
Maybe they did a sub-lease, but they still kept the lease.
So just in general, that bust that happened over the last couple of years did not cause a bust in the office market like it typically does.
And it's the same thing true with pricing.
Generally, in terms of leases, are they still pretty stable from where they were prior to?
of the pandemic? Yeah, so effective rents, effective means basically just taking into account
concessions and tenant improvement packages that tenants will typically get to move into a space.
You know, so effective rents declined just shy of 2% this time, 12% in the GFC, the great financial
crisis, global financial crisis, and then 27% in the tech bust. So, you know, again, just a relatively
minor adjustment in rent. And we've seen in many markets now, particularly the Sunbelt, where we've
seen office rents have been, right now there's this big dispersion of office rents going on where
definitely laggard markets like New York and San Francisco, but then a lot of markets like, you know,
in Florida and again, the Sunbelt, the Southeast, we're seeing in Phoenix, we've seen rents actually
do quite well, a really nice rent growth for office in those markets. So,
that doesn't tend to pretend an apocalypse.
Yeah, that's super interesting.
So, I mean, I do see a lot of headlines that sort of look apocalyptic.
You know, obviously, you've mentioned a few things that have kept office in a pretty
solid state over the last couple of years.
What is your, you know, generally speaking, outlook for office over the next few years?
Because we're facing a, you know, we're either in a recession or close to one.
or potentially facing one.
And do you think that's going to change the dynamics of office going forward?
Yeah, our baseline scenario on all our forecasts right now, don't assume a recession right
now.
There is, we're getting close to that.
I think our recession likelihood, our Moody's house view is about 65% right now.
I think when it hits 66 or 67% is when we're officially like baking in a recession
in the baseline scenario.
But at any rate, on our baseline, we just have.
have a very slow recovery for office to kind of come back to where it was pre-pandemic around
20, 2024, 2025. And that's based on a lot of different assumptions about office that I'll
mention in a second here. But in the downside, we're now taking a different approach where we say,
okay, in a downside scenario where you do hit a recession, companies go into cost-cutting mode.
They need to figure out a way to make some savings. And one important point I'll bring up right now is
that office costs, your cost of your real estate as a corporate tenant, on average, it's somewhere
around 4% of your gross revenue of your company. So compared to other expenses like your human capital
are four, five, six, seven times of that. You know, that's where all your expenses are. And you have to
make sure you manage that first. And all of your thoughts about expenses really need to be focused on that.
So you hear a lot of CEOs and some CFOs have famously come out and said,
we're going to slash our office space and then had to retract that later when they realize
they're getting basis points of savings.
But don't really know necessarily how they're going to implement that.
And it might come at the cost of their human capital and their ability to retain people.
And interestingly, for tech companies, it's even smaller of a percentage of their revenue,
their real estate.
So you see Google and Facebook and companies like that opening up new office.
in New York, despite all of this talk about office not being necessary, because they know
their people want to be in those high amenity, cool markets.
Again, New York is still one of those.
Maybe San Francisco is a different story these days, but the point is that, you know, real estate
is expensive, but it's not your biggest expense.
So your savings might come at the cost of other things that are a big deal to you.
And that's one of the reasons why, you know, we don't, we don't, we don't.
don't foresee an immediate exodus out of the office. So anyway, in our downside scenario,
we assume when you go into those cost-cutting mode where you have to get, you have to get some
savings somewhere, you now have precedent in a triage situation where you just, you got to cut
cost to survive. You could just have everybody work from home for a little while while you
ride out a downturn. So if you got a lease expiring, only about 10% of leases expire every year overall,
that role is actually pretty slow.
The average lease terms nine, ten years for office.
So, you know, as that churn comes through through a downturn,
we expect that churn to be higher in a downturn going forward.
So in future down cycles,
we expect more downside volatility for office.
So you can get dips that are much bigger than what we just saw now.
So, yeah, basically we have a slow recovery with a more intense downside scenario
to answer your question shortly.
That's interesting because you cited some other data about other downturns,
and it seemed like this 80 to 82% occupancy was the largest, you know,
sort of like a basement, you could say, for how low occupancy going.
How low do you think the further downside risk could be?
Right now it seems like it might be nominal,
but at least another full point of vacancy rate, you know, which sounds nominal, but it's actually
not. It's actually quite a bit. And then, you know, there's a big variance there, too.
The quality of your office can matter quite a bit. So if you're, if you have a, you know,
high amenity building with good access to transportation, you know, it's a mission critical
headquarters for a company, you're just in a better position than, you're, you're, you're just in a better position
than other, you know, offices that just don't have any of what I just described.
So we're starting to see what's a lot of people in the market, conventional wisdom,
is that there's going to be this separation of the Kurds from the way.
You know, there's going to be a barbelling going on.
We're just starting to see a little bit of that when we just objectively look at the data.
And it makes sense that that would be happening.
Some of these offices might see some pretty big value to climb where others basically are fine.
Yeah, it's, it's, I totally resonate with what you're saying about the office and being
sort of important to almost the identity of a lot of these companies, right?
Like Google has formed their identity.
You know, a lot of people talk about like your, like your hiring brand, like about having
cool offices.
And like, you know, Google's an enormous company and they're probably looking past a short
term recession and want to maintain that brand and be able to.
to attract really, attract really good talent.
There are probably, to your point, some other companies where that's not as important.
Working remote is more accepted or not as important to their hiring practices.
So it'll be super interesting to see what happens.
I asked you this before we jumped on, but one of the narratives I've heard a lot about
a potential increase in the unemployment rate.
Because right now we're seeing a lot of the standard markings of recession.
but the one thing we haven't seen is an increase in the unemployment rate.
And a lot of people think that will happen.
And if that does happen, do you think that change in the power dynamics of the labor market,
where employers now have more power over the workers,
they'll start calling more people back to the office and sort of lay down the law?
Or do you think we're sort of entrenched in the amount of work from home that is, you know,
the amount of days work from home in the economy for now.
For sure, some companies are already laying down the law, as you say.
I mean, Citibank and Goldman had people back in the office frequently last year.
And this fall is very interesting because this is really the first official time that there's no excuses.
You know, we had Omicron and then we had the summer.
And nobody wants to work in the summer.
So you kind of let your, you know, you just let you let that policy of being able to work from anywhere kind of keep going through the summer.
And now in the fall, we're seeing a lot of, you know, people calling or the C-suits are calling the people back.
And, you know, we're seeing a lot of Anchor Day strategies where, you know, you have to be there on Tuesday, but then you get to pick one other day.
And then, you know, some people are picking to be in the office more.
That's the other thing.
Like, not everybody wants to be at home with.
their family or their kids or maybe they have a small apartment. But there's a lot of motivation,
motivated factors for either being in the office or being at home. You know, we're starting to see
that change this fall. So I'm very, I'm very excited to see, you know, how this starts to play out
and new leases that get signed, what new floor plates look like. Yeah. And so the power dynamic is
definitely already shifting. And you're right, you know, as layoffs start happening, which, you know,
per crunch base, we had 42,000 tech workers already getting laid off in this last quarter.
And some of other announcements in New York are actually meta, Facebook.
They started taking down a lot more space in New York, but now they're planning to close.
One of their offices is expecting more layoffs coming.
Same thing with Goldman and some other companies announcing some layoffs.
So yeah, I think there's some bargaining power on behalf of the,
the tenants or the corporate tenants and their ability to get people back in the office.
But one important part about this is you know, you see the Castle data cited all the time,
the security card swipe company that's been posting the work utilization rates where Texas is in the 60% utilization rate now.
And New York has been climbing its way up from like the 20% finally up into like 45, 50% now.
And people want to kind of correlate that.
that utilization rate to vacancy rate.
I've seen that happen in many, many studies now,
and there's just no indication that that's really going to be the case.
So if everybody's coming in on a Tuesday Anchor Day, and that's your strategy,
how are you going to cut space?
You know, you really have to have a dynamic hoteling desk kind of situation
and then add no new collaborative space in order to actually make that vacancy rate match
that utilization rate.
Just to be clear, so what you're saying is like people are looking at data that shows
how frequently someone goes into the office and how how used, like you said, utilization rate,
how used in offices and trying to say like, oh, people are going to the office less.
So that must mean that office space is going to see an uptick in vacancy.
But you're saying those two things are not actually correlated.
It could be or it couldn't be.
We don't even really know the degree to which it will happen yet.
So let's just say that you have a 50% utilization rate.
what you're actually, are you going to sign for 50% less space? I mean, the answer is probably no.
We've been talking to consultancy companies that advise corporate tenants on how much space they should
take down per employee, what their floor plates should look like. And they're definitely evolving
right now. And there are studies about how important collisions among your people are so that you get
And some people say, hey, I'm more productive at home.
Why don't we just all work from home?
The reality is the aggregate productivity of your workforce is what you really care about.
And you need your people running into each other to network.
You know, if you're just starting an industry and you have no network and you have no mentorship,
it's not super easy to do that over Zoom, if not impossible.
And so, and that's important for companies, you know, collaboration really is way more important.
And I think people kind of want to write it off sometimes, but it's very important.
Every day people aren't in the office, they run into other people dramatically less.
So the advice now is to have more spaces like libraries or bigger kitchens, you know, just more confidence space.
Basically, any way you can get your people to run into each other more, you need to have that more space.
So maybe you have less private offices, but you have to take down more space on that side.
So how this utilization rate actually translates into how much space you lease as a tenant is not clear yet at all.
And it's not clear that it's going to be dramatically less.
All right.
Well, thank you.
So it sounds like, you know, this has been really helpful because I want for our audience to understand sort of the state of play for office because not as everyone is as familiar with offices there with residential real estate.
And it sounds like things didn't go as badly during the pandemic as the media has portrayed.
It did go down, but not super dramatically.
You do see additional downside risk, but you don't see the bottom really falling out.
So I'd love to turn the conversation, and I know most of your clients at Moody's are institutional investors, but I'd love for you to just tell us a little bit about, like, what are the opportunities that you see for investors in the office space going forward?
Yeah, well, I mean, the most obvious one is the topic that we've written about.
and, you know, the Fed has written about recently as well is the conversion of office space into housing.
You know, that's certainly a viable way to get more housing.
You know, we're in areas that need more housing.
But we, it's not yet, there hasn't been enough decline in value of offices.
Actually, the decline has been negligible almost.
The capital markets can, even though the.
volume is down on purchasing offices.
There hasn't been a lot that have been sold at big discounts yet.
But at any rate, if they do start, on the edges, on the fringes,
if you start to see some of these offices that might be obsolete from an amenity standpoint,
they're just not the right floorplate size,
but they happen to be the right floor plate size for apartments.
You know, you've got that kind of 26 to 28 foot floor depth or whatever on either side
of a mechanical well.
then you might actually be able to profitably convert that into office or
excuse me into multifamily.
Those are probably opportunities out there for scrappy investors.
I don't see it being widespread.
The numbers just don't work out.
We track about, like for example, we track about 1,100 properties in New York,
office properties in New York.
Of those, we, you know, did a rough justice analysis.
All this real estate analysis is very idiosyncratic to the asset itself.
And I'll get into that in a second.
But just doing rough justice, we only found about 35 of those 1,100 that were sued
for conversion into multifamily, at a profitable.
Yeah.
Wow.
Well, they have to have the value of those offices be low enough.
The rent has to be low enough.
The vacancy hit needs to be pretty high because you got to kick out a lot of tenants
or pay them out.
And then the floor plate has to be the right size, you know.
And that's not typical.
You know, you have much deeper floor plates in office than you do in multifamily.
So, you know, but look, that's just the ones that we track and we made some rough justice assumptions.
Now, but let's say that you find yourself an office building that doesn't have great amenities.
Its floor plates are a little too small.
And you're in an area that is a high rent multifamily kind of area.
Kind of a dumb example that just came to me right now is not too far away from.
for me right here is the Woolworth Building.
The Woolworth Building was the tallest building in the world in 1913.
It's 12 stories.
No, it's about 30-something stories, but it's got a very narrow tower.
And so a developer came in, I think, in 2014-ish, and bought that tower for something like
$100 million, and now the penthouse is for sale for $100 million.
So not forget about all the other apartments they were able to convert.
But the point is that you had an obsolete floor place.
in a high rent, high value as multifamily or condo kind of area, you probably will be able to find
some opportunities like that for these kind of smaller office buildings, of which there's a good
number of. So I don't see it being a big wave of conversions from, like a lot of people have
described this sort of dystopia where there's no offices anymore. And it's very like kind of, you know,
50 years down the line kind of thinking about the change of the urban.
in fabric. But, you know, office, there's still all kinds of what we call agglomeration benefits for
offices to be in dense areas. So I don't see it being a wave of conversions, but definitely on the
fringes, there's going to be some good opportunities for obsolete offices as a new use, probably
multifamily. For decades, real estate has been a cornerstone of the world's largest portfolios.
But it's also historically been sort of complex, time-consuming, and expensive. But imagine if real estate
investing was suddenly easy. All the benefits of owning real, tangible assets without the complexity
and expense. That's the power of the Funrise Flagship Fund. Now you can invest in a $1.1 billion
portfolio of real estate, starting with as little as $10. The portfolio features $4,700, a single-family
rental homes spread across the booming sunbelt. They also have 3.3 million square feet of highly
sought after industrial facilities, thanks to the e-commerce wave. The flagship fund is one of the
largest of its kind. It's well diversified, and it's managed by a team of professionals.
And it's now available to you. Visit fundrise.com slash BP Market to explore the fund's full
portfolio, check out historical returns, and start investing in just minutes.
Carefully consider the investment objectives, risks, charges, and expenses of the Fundrise
Flagship Fund before investing. This and other information can be found in the funds prospectus
at fundrise.com slash flagship. This is a paid advertisement.
You just realized your business needed to hire someone yesterday. How can you find amazing candidates
fast, easy, just use Indeed. When it comes to hiring, Indeed is all you need. That means you can
stop struggling to get your job notice on other job sites. Indeed's sponsored job posts help you stand
out and hire the right people quickly. Your job post jumps straight to the top of the page where your
ideal candidates are looking. And it works. Sponsored jobs on Indeed get 45% more applications than
non-sponsored post. The best part, no monthly subscriptions or long-term contracts. You only pay for
results. And speaking of results, in the minute I've been talking to you, 23 people just got hired
through Indeed worldwide. There's no need to wait any longer. Speed up your hiring right now with Indeed.
And listeners of the show will get a $75 sponsored job credit to get your jobs more visibility
at Indeed.com slash rookie. Just go to Indeed.com slash rookie right now and support our show by saying
you heard about Indeed on this podcast. That's indeed.com slash rookie.
Terms and conditions apply. Hiring, indeed, is all you need.
New Year, clean slate, and maybe a vacancy that needs to get filled fast, that's where a veil comes in.
With Avail, rental listings can be published to 24 top rental sites with one click, completely free.
That includes places renters are already searching, like Realtor.com, Apartments.com, Redfin, and more.
No copying and pasting. No juggling multiple platforms, just one listing that shows up everywhere.
If getting rentals organized and filled fast is on the list this year, start with Avail.
Sign up for free at Avail.co slash bigger pockets.
That's AVAIL.com slash bigger pockets.
Tax season reminder for all the real estate investors listening.
If you own rental properties, short-term rentals, commercial buildings, basically anything that's not your primary residence, you need to know about cost segregation.
It's an IRS compliance strategy that lets you accelerate depreciation on your properties, which means you're paying less in taxes this year and keeping more cash in your pocket.
pocket for your next deal. Cost segregation guys is the go-to firm, having done over 12,000 of these
studies with 500 million in total depreciation identified. Head to costsegregationguise.com
slash BP to get a free proposal and see your potential tax savings. Well, if I'm hearing you
write, part of your analysis in which of these properties would be best to convert was,
are they not being used correctly now when you were going over vacancy? Was that my understanding?
Yeah, what we call the highest and best use in the real estate world.
Not the highest and best use anymore.
So it almost has to sink to a certain level before the conversion makes financial sense.
This is more of like a backup plan.
Like, okay, we can't make it work as commercial office space.
People are moving to different areas.
They're working from home.
Something has affected this industry so much.
We're going to convert to residential.
So even though only 35 of them qualified now, in this hypothetical worst case scenario,
if the market continues to trend downward, more than 35,
would have been eligible, right?
Yeah, and there's so many,
there's such a confluence of factors here
because, you know,
we were making assumptions around conversion costs
and when we were making those assumptions,
we were still in a pretty high inflationary environment.
A lot of construction had to slow down.
Some projects got put on hold
because raw materials were either inaccessible
because of supply chain issues
or if they were accessible,
they were much more expensive than planned, right?
Lend, like commercial real estate lenders
are pretty much putting,
the brakes on construction lending right now because there's a lot of Fed C-car scenario stress requirements
where they have to hold too much capital to be able to do that kind of lending. Bottom line is
there's not a lot of construction going on right now because it's expensive and also the lending
is harder to get there right now. So there's other factors, David, is what I guess I'm trying to say.
Which is important to note because we would never just walk in right now and say,
it makes more sense to go residential than commercial. Very few of them financially make sense. But
this is more of a discussion from, let's say, everybody just wants to start working from home
and Simon Seneca becomes president and he starts telling every millennial like you should never
work at a job unless it aligns with your core values and everybody quits and we have this
doomsday scenario. In that case, a lot of these factors would have changed which would make more
sense. It sounds like you're also describing from a purely Adam Smith, the invisible hand,
capitalistic type approach where we know that the government doesn't always work that way. They
may come in and give grants to certain companies. They may give credits to them if they convert it to
residential and make it low income housing. So my question would be because I think a lot of the
fear here is if I'm a commercial investor, this what if is hanging over people's heads. And then things
start to trend downward. Everybody skips 20 years into the worst case scenario and they says,
but what if we get to this point? I think converting these into residential units is a very solid
what if backup plan. Like that's what we would do. In many cities,
we don't have enough residential real estate.
So if you're a commercial real estate investor or you're considering jumping in,
throwing your money into a project that someone else is running,
are there certain cities that you think people should be avoiding because the population is
declining so there's not as much need for residential real estate?
Real estate's obviously local.
What areas would you caution people to be looking towards and which areas would you say,
hey, I'm much more bearish on this location?
Well, I mean, the migrations, the migration,
in the country is pretty evident at this point, although there seems to be some counter-migration
happening into the Wisconsin's of the world where climate change is making it more amenable to live
in those kinds of areas. But obviously, everything's going towards the sunbelt still. That's the
momentum. And so, you know, some of those markets might not have enough office space, actually. So they
might not really be the best examples of potential office to apartment, you know, to deal with
migration issues. I think, you know, potential landmines out there, and I don't want to pick on
San Francisco too much because there's some countervailing forces that could cause it to have a
nice comeback. But, you know, when crime starts to become such an issue that you start to get
the 1970s and 1980s impression of urban areas,
versus today, I mean, they're just high amenity, they're safe, it's easy to get around, it's very
convenient, you know, lots of jobs available. There's a lot of reasons why people live in dense
areas that are positive, but whenever you start to get to the level of, actually, I can't
remember who just moved out of a big sporting goods store, just moved out of, there was a headline
about it a day or two ago about, they said that essentially San Francisco has devolved into chaos.
And, you know, that's a pretty striking thing for a large business to say and then actually pull all operations out of a city.
And anecdotally, I think we all know somebody that lives in San Francisco or we went to San Francisco and got our car broken into.
Yeah, exactly.
Yeah, I'm very, very close to that area.
Yeah.
So, you know, I think when you start to have the breakdown of the benefits of living in urban areas, that's not good for office or multi-fills.
family. You know, so that's a, that's, and, you know, look, my, my, my, my, my, my, uh, my thesis advisor from
grad school is, uh, is one of the kind of OGs of urban economics. Heems, um, and he, he's, he's,
he's revising his urban economic models for there to be less of a kind of demand to be in those areas and more
of a demand to be in the little sister cities or pocket cities around there, or what we call
excerpts.
You know, there's a lot of debate on whether or not that's going to happen.
There's some examples of it.
Like Hoboken is a good example around New York is starting to be an up-and-coming,
desirable place for people, good household formation there.
You know, so I think maybe that's a good, maybe point is to say,
if you, for internal opportunity side, those excerpts around, you know, really in-demand
MSAs that have good household forms.
formation. That's probably where you see your opportunities. And by the way, like Hoboken will have old
office buildings. Um, you know, so it has, it has the anchor of New York. It has good household
formation. It's probably got some obsolete offices that can be converted into multifamily physically.
Uh, and maybe profitably too, because, you know, because of that household formation,
you got a higher demand for housing. I think it would be irresponsible not to mention that.
So I live very close to San Francisco. We sell real estate in San Francisco and around
it. And it's fascinating that as little as four or five years ago, I believe San Francisco had
the cumulative most expensive residential real estate in the country. Like it had passed up
Honolulu. It was it was it was almost impossible to get our clients anything in San Francisco.
It just didn't matter what they're willing to pay. Someone would pay more. And as and and and
basically the COVID shutdowns alone stop that. And then like you mentioned, the chaos that the
city has devolved into, it went from being the top to one of the only cities that was losing value
when everything around it was going up. And it hit across the board. It was residential. It was commercial.
It was multifamily. Then the city started making more restrictions on what people could and couldn't do
with their properties. Rent control became like insane. Like I don't know if anyone who doesn't live there
can understand how draconian some of those measures were that you could get a person in a house that
would rent for $4,500 a month that would be paying $1,100 a month and was never going to leave.
That just drove business away from that area.
And it went from what was at one point the pinnacle creme de la creme of real estate into no one
wants to touch it at this point.
And I don't want to just say it's scary, but there are things that you could have noticed
when the market was going up.
That would have been an indicator that this is shaky.
This is volatile.
This is not a solid foundation to build.
your house on, pardon the pun. So I appreciate you bringing that up as an example because it's not
as simple as looking backwards at data and saying, well, what happened? I'm going to just do that.
Because things, when they shift in the, especially in the real estate space, they shift incredibly
quickly. So that's why I'm asking questions about, well, like, what could we expect in the future?
One of the areas that I feel real estate has evolved, because even though real estate sounds just
boring and dull and just it's been the same as it always has been for 5,000 years, it actually
evolves very significantly with architectural improvements and even technological improvements. I don't
think 10, 15, 20 years ago, any of us were considering renting out a part of our home to a stranger.
Just like with Uber, like I was told as a kid, don't get in cars with strangers. It's now people only
get in cars with strangers, right? Like things change pretty significantly. I don't think the commercial
space is immune from that same thing. It has worked a very specific way for a long time, but like,
You mentioned, Kevin, we're seeing differences.
When I see new buildings built, there's much less cubicalness, individual office space.
It's much more a very large common area with a kitchen, with seating.
I mean, a lot of the new buildings that I see almost look like a, like a diner in a sense.
They've got these like little booths where people can sit with their laptop and eat and work and
everyone kind of mingles.
And then you've got a handful of very like small offices that people go into.
And then big meeting rooms.
They're almost built like like a movie theater style with.
like seats that start low and they go up and a speaker can come in and talk to the big group.
Like that's a very significant evolution in just the architectural structure of how we're making
buildings. That reflects the difference in how business is being run. So if you're a person
who's listening to this and you're nervous about investing in commercial real estate because you're
just hearing the doomsday, oh, everybody's going to work from home. The tech industry is
completely changing. We don't need commercial space anymore. Is there hope? Are there ways that you see that
that industry is going to continue to evolve to stay relevant in the modern day workforce
demands? I think that I'm glad you brought up your last series of points there because it
reminds me of something I believe is going to be a bit of a sea change in office and maybe a
good place to invest is co-working. So there's this co-work and the world more calls it flex office.
I think that's more the appropriate term because when you hear co-working, you think
more of like the hot desk version of WeWork.
But Flex Office is actually a subtype of office that's tracked as a subtype of office in places like the UK.
For a long time, for the last 20 years now, actually, starting in 2003, I think Cushman and Wakefield started tracking Flex Office as actually property type.
Because a lot of buildings there have Flex Office in it in the building because it's seen as an immense.
for a bunch of reasons. One, it's just common area space that tenants can use. Like, they can have
guests come work out of there. Maybe they have one of their people in from another city. They can work
there. As they expand and contract themselves, they can grow into that space if they need to until
they decide they want to take down more space permanently somewhere else. You know, and so it's just
generally seen as additive to a building to have a curated flex office space in it.
In the U.S., it has not at all only been WeWork that's been growing, although you might have noticed WeWork had a bit of a hiccup there.
But it hasn't been WeWork only.
There's over 300 other co-working companies in the U.S.
And a lot of them are more these sort of curated enterprise approach to it, where they'll work with the landlord, you know, and they'll make a space that's appropriate for the building.
and maybe there's even, you know, there's a relationship with the tenants in the building.
So like Apple actually, I was talking to some brokers, and Apple actually demands that there
be some co-working space in an office now, like at least 100 decks for flexibility for them.
And so I think that co-working space is good because it's doing what you just said.
It's showing you what the, it's very curated where, you know, they can change.
the space so that it's suitable for whatever the use is that it is. So it's very flexible.
And it has just the amenities that you expect now. And so I think that that space is just going
to continue to be a bigger and bigger part of offices as we go around. And that's going to be,
that's going to help hybrid as well, by the way. So if you pop into an office and you need a place
to be, maybe there's a bunch of private offices upstairs. But hey, in the first five floors,
you can just reserve a desk. I mean, these companies are, some of them are very small, by the way.
So I do think there's some investment opportunities there in that space.
There's franchises and stuff.
I've personally worked in a lot of those spaces over the course of the last 10 or 15 years and like them.
I think they actually, they work quite well for smaller companies and teams that need to get together less frequently.
This has been super helpful background, Kevin.
For our audience, why, you know, why should they consider office investing over residential or storage?
What are the benefits to investing in office space that perhaps average retail investors like most of our audience might not be aware of?
Well, just, you know, kind of stripping away all the discussion around, you know, the potential office apocalypse because of the hybrid working.
One of the main reasons that office is attractive is because they're long leases.
And you can underwrite the tenant and you can you can, you can, you can, you can, you can.
can get a tenant in there that's there for 10. I mean, for larger, I mean, the average,
the average lease term, at 30 huts and yards is 17 years. Wow. I mean,
that you're talking about some serious stability there, you know, so larger tenants tend to come
in and they want to have their costs be set. They don't want to have to worry about that cost.
They got too many other variable costs. And so that's the benefit of office fundamentally,
is that you have a long-term lease, you know, it's professionally managed. You know, there's,
you get a notification from the tenant 12 to 18 months ahead of time before their lease expires,
whether or not they're going to continue, they're going to do an extension or whatever.
So there's a lot of, there's a lot of stability in it traditionally.
You know, obviously now that might be shifting a little bit.
We haven't seen, by the way, we haven't seen lease terms start to get shorter.
There's been a lot of speculation around that.
We haven't really seen that happen yet.
Least terms are staying roughly as they are.
But that's the benefit of office.
You know, you can, it's a pretty well.
established asset class that you can have a pretty consistent, you know, expense controls.
You're not having a lot of churn like you do in multifamily. Anybody that owns a multifamily property
knows that the churn is your biggest problem. I mean, it's just, it's very expensive and it's a
pain. And there's not really anything to do with it. You can't get many people to sign five-year
leases or 10-year leases versus, you know, the typical one-year lease. So yeah, that's the, that's the
fundamental reason. And what about price point? You know, we've talked a lot about San Francisco and New York,
which obviously have extremely expensive office space that's probably prohibitive to anyone except
institutional investors. Like, are the same opportunities available in small office spaces and
smaller cities that could be more affordable and more feasible for people who are typically buying
smaller residential real estate properties? Yeah. I'll sure, I'm trying to find that one paper that we just
that we did about the opportunities for conversions.
But typically the office market is more expensive per square foot to a pretty substantial
degree.
I think the median into your-
Even investing in like small office space, like if you live in a smaller city where it is
feasible to buy like, you know, I don't know what the right size is, but let's say
10,000 square feet of office space or 20,000 square feet of office space, do you think
those smaller buildings still have the same prospects or is it really these like big cities that have
these really stable tenants that you're talking about that will sign a 17 year lease like that you
know you're talking about huge market cap companies here um is that more of the benefit because
i'm curious like do you see some of the same benefits if you're if you're releasing to a local
doctor or lawyer or you know um something like that is it the same kind of thinking uh
Yeah, it is.
I mean, so if you're going to buy an office building, I mean, the first thing you'll do is look at the rent roll.
And you'll see who's in there and what's your turn coming over, you know, the next five to ten years.
Like when are the lease expiration coming?
That's probably pretty much the most fundamental analysis.
So if you have somebody in there and you find out that it's a, you know, maybe that there's three main tenants and it's something like you described.
It's a lawyer's office.
an independent firm that's been in business for a couple decades and got a couple decades more in them.
That's the kind of analysis you're looking for. But if it's something that just got built and has no
tenants in it and now you're thinking, okay, is it an infill sort of location to where, you know,
it's a high value from, you know, locationally, this is where people want to be versus where they live
versus where, you know, they need services or whatever.
You know, otherwise, that's the kind of like smaller plays that you're talking about.
But the bigger ones, you know, you're really looking at the benefits of a agglomeration,
which are, are you in a cool market that has decent transport?
Is it not cost that too much to get to your office relative to where people live?
And is it kind of like an Austin where all these companies are starting to influx in there,
and then that's the new hot tech market?
So that's the macro analysis if you're going more of the big play and you're trying to pull down the large corporate tenants or tech tenants.
But in general, I think I was going to tell you the median apartment building in New York traded at $4.34 per square foot in 2021 in New York versus $542 for offices.
So not that far off.
But you do need a pretty big discount for those offices to come down to be convertible.
but anyway, just offices are generally substantially more expensive per square foot.
All right. Great. Well, thank you. We appreciate you coming on here. Kevin, is there anything else you think our audience should know about the office or commercial space going into 2023?
This is, I'm, well, you know, as I guess a real estate research nerd at this point, I'm very excited for the next year because we just have so many ways to see now what's really going on with office versus the speculation.
You know, is New York dead, is office dead, and the kind of back and forth articles that we've been
seen for the last couple of years. Now we can actually start seeing some real data as people
come back into the offices and new floor plates get built. And we see like we're kind of right
on the cusp of the real evolution of office right now. So I think keep your eyes open over the
next year and let's see how things play out. It's fascinating. Office space is about to get exciting
for the first time in a long time. That's right. Yeah. Well, thank you, Kevin. We appreciate you being here
for sharing your wealth of information.
What I love about somebody in your position is you've experienced real estate from several
different perspectives.
You were involved in the construction of it.
You have college degrees in the background of it.
You're working in a position that I often refer to as the crow's nest.
You're sort of up there at the top and you're the first person to see changes happening
in the market so you can yell down to everyone else, the whole land ho metaphor there.
So thanks for sharing your information with us.
Dave, I know you were saying something before I jumped in and cut you off if you
finished that.
No, I like your land-home metaphor.
All right.
Thanks a lot, Kevin.
We appreciate your time.
It's a pleasure, guys.
I appreciate it.
We'll stay in touch.
All right.
So that was our interview with Kevin Fagan, who is again, the senior director and head
of commercial real estate economic analysis at Moody and Linux.
Boy, that is a mouthful and an impressive title.
But man, guy really knows what he's talking about.
It was just dropping knowledge about office space, bringing up stuff I didn't even know
to think about.
What did you learn or take away from that?
conversation. Well, first off, that guy speaks your love language. His title, his background, everything he said. Your eyes were like wide open. Yeah. You could see me dripping with jealousy at his title. It's got so many words in it. It just sounds fancy. And a lot of like his syllable per word in his title. Like is that that would be a metric that Dave would start tracking. Like that's amazing. This guy's like, but above replacement is more than I've ever seen. I think my favorite part of our conversation was with Kevin was that he's not just looking back.
at data that has already been there and saying, well, here's what's happened. Everyone can do that,
okay? There's art and a science to every vocation. And my personal opinion when it comes to data,
the science approach is looking at what's already happened and analyzing it. The art approach
is in how you apply that information to what's going to happen moving forward. And I thought we
got into some really good conversation about, like for instance, San Francisco real estate.
It was at one point the creme de la creme, the king of real estate in the United States. And it fell
very quickly. If you did it, if you just looked at the data looking backwards, you'd be like,
San Francisco is the safest place to put your money at all. But if you had the understanding of why
it was so great and what was happening in that city politically, looking forward, you would have said,
oh, no, no, that's not where I want to put my money. I'd rather do it somewhere else. Or these are the
parts of San Francisco that I do want to put my money here. This is the strategy that will work,
but these strategies won't. So for instance, I think Salesforce had a huge building and a huge
workforce operating out of San Francisco. And I believe they broke their lease or they were planning to.
I don't know if that actually happened, but it was a very significant thing happening in the
commercial side of San Francisco. However, the residential side of San Francisco sort of kept
moving without a huge blemish. Like the values are not increasing as much as they were,
but commercially is being hit much harder than it is residentially. And we got into a conversation
with Kevin about it creatively, if that were to happen, what would we do with the Salesforce building?
What options do you have that are out there, which is what the good investors, they're always thinking about what's coming.
What options do I have? How could I be creative? Right. It's less lazy than just saying, well, my spreadsheet said, this is what I should get. So I'm just going to buy the building and trust that the spreadsheet's going to work it out for me.
Totally. Yeah, I like those creative ideas. See, I'm going to wildly speculate here, but he was talking about office conversions in New York where, you know, cost of construction are super high. I asked a question, sort of about small office.
office spaces like, you know, when I first started working at bigger pockets, we worked in probably
it was like a two-story, probably like 8,000, 10,000 square foot spot on an amazing area of Denver
and definitely not the highest and best use of that spot. And like I wonder, you know, he's talking
about these conversions of like office towers that are, you know, 100 stories in New York. I'm
curious about whether it would work in some of these smaller or tertiary cities that are like booming right
now, like, could you find these, like, three, four, five-story buildings that maybe,
maybe his analysis is not the same in those markets. Could you convert those? Because I don't
know, like, I get what he's saying, but like, they just look so tempting. You, like, drive by
these places, and you're like, that could be a cool house. Like, that should be residential.
And so I don't know. Maybe that will be the trend. I kind of hope so, because obviously in the
U.S., we need more residential. And I think there's just, there could be cool ways to convert some of this
office space. You know, that's a good example of how politics and real estate affect each other.
It's not as simple as just pure science, pure data. What does the spreadsheet say?
If the political environment is inclined to change the zoning, all of these options that you just
talked about become relevant, right? So calling your city, asking those questions, getting to know
the people that are making those decisions, and understanding the political climate of where you're
investing, right? If you understood San Francisco's political climate, you would have avoided
investing in commercial real estate there as you saw the trends of what was happening like you mentioned
with the city turning into chaos we've seen a lot of people fleeing new york recently and that's fueled
the south florida run up in prices those were actual political and macroeconomic factors that
affected real estate so we're never going to say don't look at numbers numbers are what make you money
or lose you money but it's having a deeper understanding of what is affecting the numbers so that you can
apply it and put the data on your side instead of working against you that matters and that's why you got to be
listening to podcasts like this because it'll change the way you think and it will give you the
most recent data that will help you to work backwards to figure out what causes it to change.
Well said, man. Well, yeah, I totally agree. I think what your point, your point about zoning is
particularly true. Like if you can find like mixed use zoning where you can, you have some
flexibility around that. That's like a really interesting thing to try and acquire and to hold on to.
But yeah, I couldn't agree more with trying to understand, not just politically, but like, you know, you talk about infrastructure spending, just like trends in your local market that could tell you what's going on.
Like if there are big, you know, corporations moving to your area like Austin, yeah, commercial is going to be great.
If those places are leaving, but there's still demand for housing, maybe it's a good play for conversion.
You know, you have to just like sort of understand those local trends.
As David said, it's a combination of like looking at numbers and just staying informed,
going to meetups, going to city council meetings and seeing what people are talking about.
You know, that's like the unsexy but really beneficial thing that like literally anyone can do to gain an advantage.
And it's part of being a real estate investor, right?
Like it doesn't get talked about when people are thinking about getting in real estate investing.
They watch a 30 second ad on Instagram that someone.
tells them, hey, buy some cash flow in real estate. You never have to work again. And no one ever
explains it's constantly evolving. This is an entire industry that you are getting familiar with
with a lot of nuance in it. Totally. How many real estate investors do you know that don't work?
That's a great point. Yeah. And how many do I know that have lost all of their money that were
working? It's very few. Almost all the people that lost money in real estate didn't work. And the
people that are doing well do work. It's just a different kind of work. Right. So I'd much rather be
doing this kind of work and having these conversations than sitting in line at an auto plant
stamp and metal and pretending like I'm Eminem hoping for my next big break in a rap battle.
I think this is a better overall model.
Totally.
Yeah.
I mean, you're working for yourself.
You have some control.
And yeah, I mean, I mean, personally, I love the option to work, you know, but people
still do it.
But yeah, it's like that's sort of.
And the type of work you do.
Exactly.
Yeah.
But it's fun.
Like once you get into real estate, you get started and you get to like look for these
things. You look forward to those kinds of meetings trying to find advantage, learning everything
you can about a market. It sounds daunting, but it's actually, I think, one of the fun or more fun
parts of being an investor. Absolutely. Well, thank you for joining me here, Dave. And if you were
listening, thank you for that as well. Dave, where can people find out more about you?
On Instagram or on Bigger Pockets, on Instagram, I am at the Data Deli or in Bigger Pockets.
Just look for me. I read a lot of blog posts. You can find me there. You can find me on Bigger Pockets as
well. You can also check out my new website, Davidgreen24.com, and check me out on all social media
at David Green 24. Thanks a lot, Dave. Appreciate you being here. We will have to do this again soon.
This is David Green for Dave Landho Meyer. Signing on.
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 executive producer of the show, Dave Meyer.
The show is produced by Ian K.
Copywriting is by Calicoke content.
And editing is by Exodus Media.
If you'd like to learn more about real estate investing or to sign up for our free newsletter,
please visit www.
www.
www.w.com
The content of this podcast is for informational purposes only.
All host and participant opinions are their own.
Investment in any asset, real estate included, involves risk.
So use your best judgment and consult with qualified advisors before investing.
You should only risk capital you can afford to lose.
And remember, past performance is not indicative of future results.
BiggerPockets LLC disclaims all.
liability for direct, indirect, consequential, or other damages arising from a reliance on information presented in this podcast.
