BiggerPockets Real Estate Podcast - He Bought After 2008, Sold at the Peak, and JUST Bought Again
Episode Date: April 1, 2026Few investors have gotten the real estate market as right as Brian Burke. He bought heavily discounted deals after 2008, sold at the post-2020 peak, waited years to buy, and finally just made his next... big move—taking down a profitable, large investment property for 50%+ off. If he’s finally getting back into the market, should you, too? Brian has owned thousands of rental units across dozens of apartment complexes, bought and sold 500+ single-family homes, and seems to innately know the time to buy, the time to sell, and, as he puts it, the time to sit on the beach. Brian is seeing seller pressure start to peak across a specific type of investment property—loans are coming due, and banks are forcing owners’ hands. This is the opportunity we’ve all been waiting for. In today’s episode, Brian explains how to get in front of these deals before other investors, the sector seeing the biggest discounts (50%+ off), and what small, single-family investors should do now to capitalize on the growing opportunity everyone seems to be ignoring. Heaven in 2027 for investors? Brian’s been saying it for years—looks like he’s about to be proven right. In This Episode We Cover Are short sales back? How desperate sellers are giving up their properties at massive discounts How Brian scored 50%+ off on an investment property most investors overlook How to find seriously discounted properties before they reach the general public Brian’s real estate prediction for 2026 and 2027 (it could get a lot better for buyers) Are syndications…dead? What Brian says to do before you passively invest money And So Much More! Check out more resources from this show on BiggerPockets.com and https://www.biggerpockets.com/blog/real-estate-1259 Interested in learning more about today’s sponsors or becoming a BiggerPockets partner yourself? Email advertise@biggerpockets.com. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Assets are going on sale. This is how you buy them. In some segments of the real estate market,
owners are looking to unload their properties. They didn't make the right deals a couple of
years ago, and now they've run out of time. That means opportunity is coming. Someone, after all,
has to buy these properties at discount prices, some of which are 60% lower than they were
sold for just a few years ago, and that someone could be you. Today, we're speaking with one of the
most popular investors in the Bigger Pockets community about how you can spot these deals,
how to separate the good from the bad, and how to structure transactions to maximize upside
and minimize risk.
Hey, everyone, I'm Dave Meyer, Chief Investment Officer at Bigger Pockets.
Henry Washington, co-hosts of the Bigger Pockets podcast, is here too.
Henry, what's going on, man?
Hey, what's going on, and I'm excited to chat with Brian.
This will be my first time on a show with him.
And by Brian, Henry means Brian Burke, who is an extremely successful investor, who has
been in the game for several decades. Because he's seen just about everything that can possibly
happen in real estate, we like to bring on the show when the market is changing or feels uncertain
because, frankly, he's just been super right about market timing for a really long time.
So I don't know about you, Henry, but things feel super uncertain right now. So I could use a little
dose of Brian's knowledge. So let's bring on Brian Burke and hear his takes.
Brian Burke, welcome back to the Bigger Pockets podcast.
Thanks for being here.
Dave Meyer, glad to be here.
Thanks for having me on again.
Yeah, it's always fun.
Let's just start, you know, you're well known for being very good at predicting market cycles and timing your portfolio to market cycles.
So let's just get your big picture thoughts on where we sit generally with the economy in the housing market these days.
Aside from the fact that luck is a really good virtue.
Well, that's very humble.
you to admit, but you're either very good or you're very lucky. Well, one or the two. I don't know.
Sometimes it's better to be lucky than good, but I'll pick either one because they both work.
Fair enough. Okay. It's true. Big picture. Where are we? Big picture. Well, you know, I came on this show
a couple years ago and I said, end the dive in 25. It's fixed in 26 and buyer heaven in 27. And I'm not
really changing my story yet, Dave. I think I'm still pretty close. I think 26 is going to be a transition
year, you know, 25, the dive kind of stopped in commercial real estate, I think. I think 26 is going to be
a transition year where we kind of find the bottom. We go through that bottoming process. And then,
you know, we get everything set up and ready for 27 when you're going to have a little bit more
distress sales, some more sellers that are really pressured to make a move. And, you know,
a chance for buyers of not just commercial real estate, but residential as well, to have a really good
opportunity, I think, to start scaling up their portfolios. And you and I talked about this,
what, six months or a year ago about, you know, we're kind of close to the bottom. This is the
time to scale your portfolio if you're a long-term thinker. If you're one of those three to five-year
holder guys, you're too early. But if you're a 20, 30-year player, this is a really good time
to buy if you're comparing it to, say, 2021. So what is happening right now that's making you think
this? Like, what are sort of the dynamics that are going on behind the scenes that are
are changing this because I felt like, you know, we're always a year away from hitting bottom
the last like three years. You know, it's like you wait for this distress to come. And you're right.
I think it's both in commercial and residential. You're like, sellers just unrealistic. It's really
hard to get deals still. So what's sort of the catalyst that is going to change that and go from
this sort of stalemate that we've been in to one where buyers are going to finally have a bit more
leverage. Well, I think the first thing is, is that the sellers having to change their attitude.
I mean, a year ago, I knew a lot of people that were sitting on challenged assets to say the
least. It's a nice way to put it. Yeah, I see. I'm trying to be nice. You know, they were in this,
their saying was survive till 25, right? They had a different saying than I had. They were a little
more optimistic, I guess. And, you know, it was like, hey, you know, I'm just going to wait this out.
and everything's going to be fine and interest rates are going to fall and cap rates are going to
recompress and rent growth is going to come back and all these things are going to happen and they're
going to be fine. And of course, you know, when you're in that situation, you really want to believe
that because, you know, it's really difficult to admit to yourself like, I'm sitting on a house of cards,
right? Nobody wants to say that. I get it. Now I'm hearing more from people I know who are saying to
me, I'm going to have to let this go back to the bank or I'm going to have to hand in the keys or, you know,
I have to sell it a complete wipeout just to get, you know, my lender paid off.
I just had two conversations like this a week and a half ago with people I know that are in
that situation that a year prior to that, we're like, oh, yeah, you know, we're going to hang
on to them, things are going to be fine and everything's going to work itself out.
So I think that behind the scenes and the data you don't see, I think the human factors are
beginning to change where owners are coming to grips with the fact that they're going to have
to make some moves here, and they haven't been up until recently.
That makes sense to me.
It does feel like the can's just been kicked down the road a lot.
You know, people like you were saying, just hoping just from some external macroeconomic thing
to change that's going to save them.
And it just doesn't feel like it's coming.
And so, you know, as those operators, what do they do?
Do they just try and sell before they have to hand the keys back?
Or like, what's the order of operations?
Because maybe for people who want to buy, is there opportunity?
as distressed sellers are trying to unload these assets.
We just bought several senior housing properties that were through lender short sales
where this is a situation where the lender will agree to take less than loan amount.
And we bought these assets at about 45% of the loan balance, which is an extraordinary
They agreed to that?
And the lender rode off all the rest.
And I'll tell you what, I haven't bought a short sale since probably,
2011. So it's been, you know, it's been a lot of years since short sale has been kind of a word going
circulating around in real estate investing. But that's coming back. And I think we'll see more of that.
Not so much in the single family home space, though. There's a lot of home equity. So I don't
see that being an issue there. But on the commercial real estate side, I think we'll see more and more
of these types of kind of structured sales and coordinated workouts.
Yeah, that makes a lot of sense. It's unfortunate.
But it definitely makes a lot of sense. And I am hearing a lot more of investors using strategies
to buy properties like REO properties right now and doing some short sales. And, you know,
that's typically when people said they were buying REOs and short sales, there was like 2017
behind that number, right? Like 2026, that doesn't seem like a legitimate strategy. But it does
seem like it's coming back. And I'm even hearing some of that in the single family space. And I agree,
there's a lot of people that have a lot of equity. But it does seem like foreclosures are on the rise as banks
are starting to now actually foreclose on people who are behind on their mortgage. Yeah, you're actually
seeing that in the data, too. The delinquency rates are up and serious delinquency rates are up,
even on the single family side. But they're up from like zero to, you know, point zero. They're still below
2019, at least for single family, not for multifamily. Yeah, indeed, yes. And so in multifamily,
multifamily delinquency right now is the highest it's been since the great financial collapse.
And it's increasing. And I think we'll continue to increase. On the single family side,
you're just not quite seeing that. But I think what you are seeing on the single family side is some
general overall market weakness. And I think, you know, Dave, you and I've talked about this before.
And I think that general market weakness is what's presenting opportunities to single family home
investors because you can go out and, you know, put offers out on properties that, you know,
need fixing up and so on without having to bid against 86 other, you know, all cash over asking
buyers. And you can actually get, you know, a decent deal on the commercial real estate side,
there's still a lot of capital chasing these assets. And they're, you know, by and large,
if the pricing is right, they're trading. There's just a problem with pricing expectations,
I think that is still kind of hanging over the market.
You're saying the irrationality is from sellers expecting something, and you think that will come down for multifamily, generally speaking?
Yeah, that's right. I think that the psychology is changing where some of these owners are now realizing it's time to do something.
And it's going to be painful and they've been trying to push it off, but they're going to be taking some losses.
And I think that they'll start to see that play out.
So yes, that's exactly right.
Do you feel like what you saw with the retirement communities that you purchased?
Do you feel like short sales are going to be a thing within the commercial real estate asset class as well?
Because that I have not seen a lot of.
Yeah, you haven't, but I think you will.
And here's something I've been saying about this all along is the biggest problem you see,
especially in commercial multifamily, which is large apartment complexes or pretty much any multifamily
over five units is considered commercial, but I think this problem is the worst or the most widespread
in the largest of properties, over 50 units, over 200. There's a lot of distress in that sector.
And the main way that lenders have been dealing with this has been to kick the can down the road
and say, well, okay, your loan maturity is now, but if you pay us $500,000 principal reduction,
we'll give you another year. And the owners slash borrowers are, you know, their psychology behind that is,
all right, these guys are working with us, you know, they're going to help us. They're going to
hear to save the day. But really, that's not it at all. All the lenders are trying to do is maximize
their chances of principal recovery. And the moment that the market comes back enough for them to
either get all their principal back or get enough principal back that they can stomach the loss,
that's when they're forcing their hand.
And that's when I think we're going to see more short sales, even in the commercial sector.
There have been some already.
I think you'll start to see that increase.
And that's why I say buyer heaven in 27.
And I've been saying that since I think late 2024.
I know everybody's saying like, oh, the market correction is next year.
I've been saying 27 for like two or three years now because there's so much out there
that's creating the situation that has to get worked through. And a lot of it is that attitude of
kicking the can down the road. So if you're a potential buyer, how do you take advantage of this?
How do we be you, Brian? We want to be you. I want to buy stuff for 45% of loan balance.
Yeah, well, you know, in the multifamily side, I'm not buying. So well, here's a difference.
So it's sector specific, right? You have to learn how to play the cycles. This is how you be me
is you learn how to play the cycles.
And so I'll give you kind of a couple of contrasting examples, right?
I've just mentioned, you know, commercial multifamily and other types of commercial real estate
are still kind of in the figuring it out phase of their bottoming process, right?
It takes a little bit of time to kind of let all this stuff kind of work through.
You know, I started doing senior housing deals a little over a year ago because I recognized
that that market cycle was actually a little bit ahead of the commercial multi-eastern.
family market cycle and it was coming out of its cycle. And kind of to my point a minute ago,
when things start to come out of the cycle and they're starting to get better, that's when the
good deals are really found because you can start getting the, you know, the lenders are like
starting to force hands and saying it's time to move, right? Buyers are finally like, okay, you know,
we're past the bottom. We can finally sell now, but they're still selling it an incredible
discount. Maltifamily's not quite there yet. I think that happens next year and I think next year we're
going to start to see something similar happening there. So if you're, you know, if you're
sector agnostic, you go where the opportunity is. That's what I did. If you're really like dead set
multifamily is my thing. That's all I'm going to do. Then you just let the clock work that self out.
And you just spend more time this year playing more golf or spending more time on the beach.
I did that for three and a half years. I didn't buy a single multifamily deal. So, you know,
sometimes you just got to sit on the sidelines and let this play out. I think one of the things
that to your point is why the multifamily sector hasn't quite gotten down where people want it to be
to start buying is because it still seems like even with a substantial discount, some of these deals
still don't pencil. And you bought yours at such an outrageous discount. Is that because that was the
price point where the deal penciled and where buyers were actually willing to pay? Because my concern is
when these things do start to come up, even investors with new expenses and higher interest,
rates are still going to have a hard time making a discounted price work on some of these assets
that people overpaid for. It's fair. Yeah, you're absolutely right, Henry. That's a, that's a
very astute observation. And so like, on a couple examples, okay, on the deals that we bought,
you know, I'd mentioned these assets we bought like 45% of the loan balance. It was an 11%
cap rate on newer assets, like built after 2000, you know? So that number, those numbers work.
Those really, really worked.
I'll take it.
Yeah, right?
Yeah, who would it?
And this is, it's possible because we were doing principle to principle off market transactions
that were, you know, coordinated directly with the lender and that kind of stuff.
When when you're just like going out and, you know, talking to brokers and being the highest
bidder on listed assets that are widely marketed across a broad buyer pool, then the numbers
are really challenging.
It's really difficult to make those work.
And I mean, you guys know this.
You've all, you've done residential flips and you know that if you go on the MLS and try to buy a brand new property on the MLS, you're not getting into discount that allows you to do a flip profitably, right? You know, you find it in the margins, you know, writing letters and go into foreclosure sales and all the other things. That's where you find opportunity. So sometimes you've got to get a little scrappy and look for opportunity kind of across the niches because that's really where that opportunity is. And I agree with you in multi right now. It's really difficult. I don't know how you get.
five-cap deals in a 6% borrowing climate to work. You know, you've got a negative 1%
leverage and it doesn't work. Now, how do these deals work? A couple of ways. One is as
rent growth comes back, the income stream from the property will increase and that will increase
the property's value. So even if the price stays the same, kind of like the value of proposition
begins to get better because you might pay the same price for the asset but has a higher income stream
or maybe the expenses get more under control insurance believe it or not has actually started to
come slightly down in price at least across our portfolio so we've seen some relief there that
increases income so it doesn't have to be fixed by cap rate decompression necessarily although that
still may be a factor you know a little bit lower interest rates a little bit higher cap rate but a lot more
income because we have rent growth and expense compression will make a lot of difference.
I want to learn more, Brian, about these ways to get scrappy.
Like, how do investors listening to the podcast right now find these deals?
Because I'm with you.
I think they're going to be there.
But like you said, you're going to have to position yourself to get this deal flow.
We've got to take a quick break, but I'm hoping you can enlighten us right after this.
Stick with us.
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-out.
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 fund's prospectus at fundrise.com
slash flagship.
This is a paid advertisement.
You've upgraded how to buy properties, but did your insurance get the
When investors start scaling, insurance can't be an afterthought. Most policies were designed for a single property, not multiple rentals, LLC ownership, short-term stays, or properties mid-rehab. That's where blind spots can creep in. Enreg works exclusively with real estate investors. They understand portfolios, how risk compounds as you grow, and why insurance should protect your upside, not just a checkbox. One uncovered claim can undo years of progress. Before your next acquisition, review your insurance. Talk to NREG and get investor-specific coverage from specialists who actually understand real-
estate at nreg.com slash BPPod. That's NREIG.com slash BPod. What if I told you you could forget everything
you know about investment property loans? Because host financial is rewriting the rulebook, tossing out
those pesky DTI restrictions. They focus on your property's income potential. No tax returns or
personal income statements needed. Simple, efficient, and tailored for investors like you. Imagine a lender
that sees the gold mine in your property, not just the numbers on your paycheck. That
That's the host financial difference.
And they're approved in 47 different states,
so your next big deal could be just around the corner.
Ready to unlock your property's true potential?
Visit hostfinancial.com.
Don't let old school lending hold you back another day.
That's hostfinancial.com.
There are two kinds of real estate investors,
those who have reviewed their insurance,
and those who think that they have.
Most don't realize their coverage wasn't built
for how they actually invest.
Vacancy periods, rehabs,
short-term rentals or LLC-held properties.
These gaps surface only when filing claims.
That's why investors work with NRE.
They specialize exclusively in real estate investors, understanding portfolios, risk at scale, and cash flow protection.
One claim can erase years of returns.
If you own a rental property, don't assume you're covered.
Have NREG review your insurance with someone who gets investing at NREG.com slash BPPod.
That's N-R-E-I-G.com slash B-P pod.
Welcome back to the Bigger Pockets podcast.
Henry and I are here with Brian Burke talking about opportunities that he sees coming in 2027 for commercial multifamily.
I do want to get your take on the residential market, Brian, as well.
But before the break, you talked about getting scrappy, finding opportunity in the margins.
Can you give us some specific examples, maybe some actionable things that the audience can do to position themselves to at least see these deals when they start to materialize?
Yeah, I think no matter what it is that you're buying, you've got to be out there and, you know, looking for this stuff actively.
It's not going to come to you.
I think that's probably the biggest thing.
People want to say like, well, you know, I'm going to wait for the email to come into my inbox about this great off market deal.
Too late.
Yeah.
Right.
Exactly.
It's like that's probably not a deal.
I mean, you're looking at a deal that everybody else passed on and now it's hit your inbox.
So, you know, you got to get yourself out there.
So some specific examples of what we've done.
So going to conferences and talking to people, especially where owners are present, I think is really good.
Even brokers.
And I don't want to discount brokers.
I say that they don't earn their commissions because they do. I mean, brokers are out there talking to
all kinds of people. And if you can have conversations with brokers and be well positioned to be that
buyer that gets the call when the broker says, you know what, our deal just fell apart.
Yescro got canceled and we're desperate. They got to get this thing back in contract. We know you
can perform, that kind of stuff. There's a lot of deals to be found just like that. Now, that requires
a lot of reputational capital, right? Yeah. How can you get your
yourself in front of lenders, special servicers, banks. What a great way is management companies.
People always want to be like, oh, property management companies, they all suck and this and they,
well, come on. I mean, property management companies are the ones that are getting called by these
lenders to say, you know, we're going to take over this asset. We need you to come manage it.
You want to know these property management companies. And they can sometimes give you leads
into things. So try to go through the management company side. I bought a several.
several REO apartment complexes back in 2011, 2012, after the great financial collapse at
extraordinary discounts that were brought to me by the property manager that was brought in
by the lender. It's a great way. Another way, like on the residential side, is foreclosures.
I've bought probably over five or six hundred houses at foreclosure auctions on the courthouse
steps where, you know, you're bidding, you know, against other professionals, not a lot of
amateurs who are just driving the price up to the moon. So, you know, there's, there's a lot of
different channels you can, you can look for these assets, but they all require an extensive
amount of work and the deals won't just come to you. Brian, I want to, I want to play a little
game with you. Since I am not a large-scale multifamily buyer, I'm just a normal real estate
investor. And I want to try to connect the dots for maybe somebody else who's just your average
everyday normal real estate investor, but wants to prepare themselves for taking advantage of some of these
opportunities. So I'm just going to spit off to use some of the things that I think I might do if I
wanted to get in front of these opportunities. And then you tell me with your experience if these are
good ideas or if they make sense. Or if they're dumb. Yes. Yes, please feel free.
So here's how I'm thinking about it. If I have an idea that some of these things might be coming, especially if I'm a backyard investor. So let's kind of narrow it down. I'm not nationwide. I want to buy in my market. First place I would start with are banks that I currently have a relationship with. Maybe I have loans there, maybe I have deposits there, and letting them know, to let me know, because if I'm a good operator, to let me know if some of these opportunities come up and they're looking for good operators to take over some of these assets to,
Put me on the front of their radar.
Contact me.
Let me take a look at the deal and see if it's something I could do with it.
That's probably the first place I would start because I have a warm intro already.
First of all, it really depends upon the bank that you're talking to.
If you're talking to Chase, Bank of America, et cetera, they've got REO departments.
They don't, yeah, 100%.
Yeah, they'll, you know, they're not even going to deal with you.
Most banks, what they do is they have a specific broker list that they'll go to when they have a
have an asset that comes back and they hand it off to a broker for that broker to list it
and sell it on the open market. And they've got this whole channel set up already. Now, where you may
find that this would work is if you're at like a local, a smaller local bank, maybe something that
has one or two branches. That is what I was thinking. And they have a lot of small multifamily and
small balance commercial lending. If they're lending out $50 million on 200 unit apartment complexes,
you're wasting your time. But if they're loaning out, you know, a million five on a 10-unit deal or,
you know, a $700,000 loan on a commercial strip, you know, small little strip center kind of a
thing or a little retail property, there you might get some traction if you can get in front of
the right person. And there are banks like that. So that's where I think if you're going to employ
that strategy, focus on employing it that way as opposed to any of the other larger banks.
Thanks. My two other strategies were going to be to call the title companies and find out who are the brokers that are selling the REOs because they'll at least have some exposure to who those brokers are that are representing or the agents that are representing those REO deals when they get transferred, when they get sold, and then try to build relationships with them. And the last strategy would be to manufacture warm introductions to lenders. And I do that in the residential space right now by being members of the chambers of commerce and all the cities where I
Act because all of the community banks are members there and I now magically get warm intros
or they just will take my call because I'm in the same chamber.
Yeah, now that's a good idea.
You know, getting the relationship, not like, hey, I'm looking for a deal, not like,
hey, you know, I'm a real estate investor.
And if you get an REO, you need taking off your hands, put me on the top of your
list.
That's not it.
But just general networking of having everybody know who you are and, you know, taking
your call when it's important and maybe you find out about an REO that they get. You can call your friend
who happens to be the bank president and say like, hey, what are you guys going to do with this thing?
You know, and kind of maybe you'd be able to head it off that. Oh, we're going to list it with so-and-so
broker. Oh, I know so-and-so broker. He's in the chamber too. I'll give him a call and, you know,
kind of work on it that way. I mean, I will say this. No amount of effort would I say is like a total
waste of time. You know, all the things that you mentioned are all things that you should probably
do. But if you're asking me to handicap your results and say like, okay, 80% of your results are going to
come from 20% of all the things you're talking about and you only want to focus on that 20%,
that 20% wouldn't include, you know, going to Chase Bank and saying, hey, if you get a REO,
put me on the top of your list. That's going, that's not going to be in that in that 20%. But, you know,
it only takes one, right? So you're getting yourself out there every way that you can.
is the right thing to do.
But I think you're going to get the most of your results
with management companies, brokers,
and to a lesser degree, maybe smaller bank presidents
at smaller commercial lending banks.
We do have to take one more quick break.
Stick with us.
When I bought my first rental,
I thought collecting rent would be the hard part.
Nope.
The admin crushed me.
Every night was receipts, tax forms,
and checking who was late on rent.
I kept thinking, if this is one unit,
how do people run 10?
Baselane changed that. It's BiggerPockets official banking platform that handles expense
tracking, financial reporting, rent collection, and even tenants screening all in one place.
It's the system I wish I had from day one. Sign up today at baselane.com slash bigger pockets
and get $100 bonus. Base lane is a financial technology company and is not an FDIC insured bank.
Bank banking services provided by Thread Bank, member FDIC. If you own a short-term rental,
here's something worth knowing. Not all landlord policies are built for your type of property.
And with holiday bookings, chilly weather, and higher guest turnover, having the right
coverage is more important than ever. Steadily offers insurance designed specifically for short-term
rentals, covering property damage, liability, lost rental income, and even unexpected issues like bedbugs.
Steadily works exclusively with real estate investors, so they understand the details that
make short-term rentals unique, and they build coverage to match it. A quick review of your
rates and coverage every year can help you protect your property and your cash flow.
Get a quote in minutes at biggerpockets.com slash landlord insurance. Steadily, rental property insurance
for the modern investor. People love to call real estate passive income, which is interesting
because most of the investors I know are very busy. Busy finding deals, busy managing teams,
busy worrying they pick the wrong market. Rent to retirement flips that model. They help
investors buy turnkey new construction homes, often 10% below market value in top rental markets
across the country. Their local teams handle the build, the property management, and the details,
so you don't have to. In some cases, investors even receive 50 to,
75% of their down payment back at closing, and there are interest rates as low as 3.75%.
They've been trusted partners with BiggerPockets for over a decade, and if you want to learn more,
visit BiggerPockets.com slash retirement.
What if I told you you could forget everything you know about investment property loans?
Because Host Financial is rewriting the rulebook, tossing out those pesky DTI restrictions.
They focus on your property's income potential.
No tax returns or personal income statements needed.
Simple, efficient, and tailored for investors.
like you. Imagine a lender that sees the gold mine in your property, not just the numbers on your
paycheck. That's the host financial difference. And they're approved in 47 different states, so your next
big deal could be just around the corner. Ready to unlock your property's true potential,
visit hostfinancial.com. Don't let old school lending hold you back another day. That's hostfinancial.com.
The rise of the tech savvy investors here. You don't need a huge team or tons of overhead to manage
rental properties. Just the right tools. So I want to tell you about how I use rent ready to get ahead.
For landlords who treat their time like capital and recognize the cost of sweat equity,
this tool gives you everything you need to scale.
Rent collection, tenant screening, maintenance accounting,
so that you're organized come tax season,
and you can run numbers in preparation for future deals.
And more.
All in one platform via a mobile app or desktop.
Modern landlords don't just own property.
They optimize it.
Rent Ready will keep you organized, running leaner, and ready to grow.
Start with RentReady.
Visit RentReady.com slash Bigger Pockets.
That's RentR-E-D-I-C-C-R-E-D-C-R-C-R-C-C.
com slash bigger pockets and use code BP 2025 to get rent ready's six month plan for a dollar.
Welcome back to the bigger pockets podcast here with Henry and Brian Burke talking about the
market how to take advantage. Brian is a hot topic these days, but curious your opinion on
syndications. You've obviously raised syndications, but you've been on the GP side of things,
but a lot of them aren't doing well. And I think that is given the premise, you know, the whole
financing structure of syndication is a bad name. I have my own opinion, but let me just ask you,
do you think those are coming back? Do you think syndications are things that investors should be
looking at as we go into 2027? If you're not someone who's going to go out and do these strategies,
like, could you still get in on these opportunities by investing in someone else's deal?
Our syndication is still a viable path. The answer is yes, but you have to be investing in a
syndication that's investing in a viable path. So if you're investing in assets that are just going
nowhere, like multifamilies that don't pencil, that's probably not going to work out very well for you.
And I think if it's a little bit early right now to invest in multifamily syndicates, if I'm being
quite honest, and it pains me to say this being a, you know, multi-decade multi-family syndicator,
but one that hasn't bought anything in three and a half years and still isn't, I think it's still
just a little bit early. And here's why. And this is a distinction I think is really important,
Dave, because, you know, we've talked about on this show and we've talked about on prior shows about
a distinction between owning long-term assets like smaller multifamily, single-family rentals,
those types of things in your own personal portfolio for a long-term hold.
That's much different than investing in a syndication that has a three to five-year,
you know, we're going to get a 20% IRA in this short window of time type of a mentality.
That just does not really work right now because there's still so much uncertainty about
when is the market correction going to begin to happen?
And it hasn't started yet.
So, you know, you're treading water until it does.
I would just wait, you know, and when the market starts to show clear evidence that it's recovering, that's the time to get in because your three to five year window is going to produce some really incredible results.
Do you buy on the exact day of the bottom?
No, but you don't have to.
If the market corrects for 10 years, it doesn't matter if your three-year window begins now or a year from now or two years from now.
you're still out in three years and you're still capturing the upside gain. So I think there's just
no rush to get into those right now. Except, of course, some types of real estate really are on fire
right now. And syndicates in those spaces are working out quite well. Yeah, I completely agree. I'm
glad you explain that distinction that syndication just means investors pooling their money essentially
to buy a bigger asset. So it frustrates me when people like syndications are bad. It's like, no,
you might have invested in a bad syndication.
Operators are bad.
Yeah, they're bad operators.
They're bad deals, bad market timing.
But like the concept of putting your money with other people and experienced operators,
I still think is a good one.
But to Ryan's point, you need to be able to underwrite the business plan.
You need to understand the market cycle that you're buying into.
But if you understand those things, there's nothing wrong with investing with an experienced good operator.
I mean, there's two parts to it, right?
You have to be able to evaluate the deal, right?
So evaluate the underwriting.
but you also have to evaluate the operator and evaluate the syndication itself.
And I think those are two completely different skill sets.
I mean, most people have a general understanding of how to underwrite a deal when they get into a syndication.
But is there any quick tips or tricks of the trade you can give us to like, how do we vet these operators that are putting these syndications together?
Well, I happen to know somebody that wrote a book on this entire subject that gives you about 350 pages on it,
everything you look for and Bigger Pockets published that book. It's called the hands-off investor.
I wrote that in 2020 and it's just as applicable today as it was back then, that there are a lot of
things you need to be looking at. And all the things you just mentioned, Henry, 100%. You need to be
able to look at the asset and kind of the underwriting and the sponsor. But there's one more piece
to it. You also have to be able to understand the structure. And, you know, what is the debt look like?
how much, when is the loan maturity? And where are we in the cycle? And, you know, some people would say,
oh, all floating rate loans are bad or all bridge loans are bad. It's toxic. Well, not necessarily.
They sure is hecker bad when you're doing them at the very top of a cycle. When you're,
when you're 10 or 12 years into a bull run, that's not the time to get aggressive on short-term loan
maturities and bridge loans. But at the very bottom of a cycle, they serve a very useful purpose and are
a really good tool and you have a lot less risk of maturity at the bottom of a cycle than you do
at the top. So kind of understanding and being realistic with where are you in the cycle? How is the,
is the capital being structured? What's the experience of the sponsor? What's their track record?
Have they ever suffered through a down cycle and how did that work out for them? And what did,
you know, what was the outcome and what did they learn and maybe what do they do differently now
than they did before the market cycle are important factors, but also the underlying real estate
and its very thesis. Is it a sector of real estate that's working right now with the overall
macro environment, or is it one that's just not ready for prime time yet? And you're just trying
to get ahead of it and you're taking a gamble. That's a bit of a roll of the dice. So there's a lot of
different factors to think about and you need to think about all of them. Thanks, Brian. I think that
makes a lot of sense and really good advice for people who want to get into the more passive side
of real estate investing. Still a great way to do it. Highly recommend, Brian, I did read your book
before I made my first syndication investment. I think I've read it two or three times and
highly recommend it if you want to learn how to do this stuff well. You know, you've appropriately
made some distinction between commercial and residential. You know, we've got a few minutes,
but tell us what are your thoughts on residential right now and the way that investors should be
approaching residential deals in this climate? Well, I think the residential market has gotten weaker
over the last couple of years.
You know, I think four years ago, the residential market was really hot, multiple offers,
especially in my local area in Northern California, multiple cash offers on every listing,
frequently well over the asking price.
But now we're not seeing that.
You know, I'm still a small-time house flipper.
You know, I have a little side house flipping thing going on.
And, you know, we had one of our flip houses sat on the market for 11 months before we finally
got it sold. And we made a profit on it still, but it was, it was a long, you know, that never
would have happened, you know, two years ago. You know, two years ago, it was like, if you were on
the market for more than three weeks, something was really wrong. Home sale transaction
velocity is at its lowest rate since the early 1990s, if you would believe it. And another interesting
statistic that I saw is that the percentage of homes owned as rentals is declassed.
and is at a significant low point from prior history. So that tells me that there's an opening
for residential landlords because there's fewer of them. And I get it. You know, a lot of them are
frustrated and don't want to deal with some of the landlord tenant laws, in which case you just
invest somewhere else. But, but there's fewer, you know, landlords in the single family space now.
And prices are softening. Transaction velocity is down. All of those things are kind of spelling
opportunity to me to the long-term holder. If you're a newer investor trying to just make your first
real estate deal and you're looking, you know, a lot of early real estate investors turn to single
family homes because it's accessible and understandable. It's a great place to start. That's where
I started. I think this is a better time to be deploying that strategy than it has been over the last,
you know, five or six years or so for sure. And if you're in this for the long game,
which I think you should be, then this has some compelling opportunities.
And I think this is a really good season for you to really get out there and start to build that
portfolio you've been dreaming about.
I agree with you.
And some of the things that we're seeing are, first and foremost, we're seeing some of the
best spreads on deals that we've seen in several years if you subtract COVID.
Now, what's not as good is rents aren't growing as much as we would have previously anticipated.
And so what I hear right now a lot of is flippers are getting out of the business because the market is
slowing down. And some of that is true. But when I hear that, what I really hear, it's not people are
bad at flipping. It's that flippers are bad at buying. And they're not adjusting their numbers to account for
how different the market is. And I love the single family asset class because of the protections that
it provides. Because, yes, it's a smaller asset. It's easier to understand. It's easier to hold on
to if things aren't going as you planned because it doesn't cost as much. But that only works
if you're adjusting your underwriting and you're truly buying them at a price point that allows you
to do that. And the flippers and people I see that are struggling right now, it's not that they
don't know how to renovate a house. And it's not that they don't know how to market to sell a house.
It's that they didn't buy it right. And that is killing them. Well, I couldn't have said it any
better than that, Henry. You nailed it 100%. But one thing that I think is key for people to
listen to and what you just said right there is that flippers are getting out of the business. And what
does that spell to you as an aspiring real estate investor? It's money for me, baby. Yeah,
it's one less competitor writing an offer on the property you're trying to buy. And so that's
music to your ears, right? So I think that's 100%. Now, here's one reason why I like single family
residential as an asset class. And that's because I say that the best deals out there are like a
needle in a haystack. Well, there's about 300 million haystacks in, you know, in single-family
residential. There may only be 100,000 haystacks in commercial multifamily, but there's a lot of
haystacks to look for needles, and there's a lot of deals out there. And if you look hard enough
and you look in the right places, you can find them. And that's really all it takes. And I got my
metal detector, baby. I'm good. That's what you need. Yeah, I didn't realize how easy it would be to
find a needle at a haystack if you had a battle this time. That's a good idea. All right, Brian,
well, thank you so much for being here. As always, really appreciate your insights. Thanks for
having me back. For Bigger Pockets, I'm Dave Meyer. He's Henry Washington. Thank you all so much for
listening. We'll see you next time. 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 Calicoe 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.w.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.
