Ep#55 Crafting a Profitable Strategy While Mitigating Risk in Real Estate Investing with Joel Friedland

Episode 55 November 15, 2023 00:48:18
Ep#55 Crafting a Profitable Strategy While Mitigating Risk in Real Estate Investing with Joel Friedland
The Untold Stories of Real Estate Investing
Ep#55 Crafting a Profitable Strategy While Mitigating Risk in Real Estate Investing with Joel Friedland

Nov 15 2023 | 00:48:18

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Show Notes

In today’s episode of The Untold Stories of Real Estate Investing, host Wayne Courreges III chats with the legendary Joel Friedland. Joel is a seasoned industrial real estate professional with an impressive track record spanning over 40 years. Joel takes us on a journey through his vast experience in the Chicago area, where he has visited a staggering 15,000 out of 16,000 buildings. Throughout the conversation, we delve into Joel's unique investment approach, his strategies for mitigating risk, and his insights on the current real estate market. 

With over four decades of experience in industrial real estate, Joel leverages extensive brokerage expertise to lead conservative yet profitable syndications. After co-founding and growing Epic/Savage Realty Partners, a 60+ professional firm to successful exit, he founded Brit Properties. Joel has brokered over $250 million in transactions through valued long-term relationships.  

Joel’s syndication approach uniquely utilizes 0% debt for principal conservation while targeting 8%+ cash returns. Having navigated the Great Recession, he employs a cautious strategy informed by cycles. For his investors, Joel delivers reliable cashflow, upside potential, and mitigated risk through dedication to the asset class and prudent deal structuring. His investments draw on a proven track record of 2,000+ industrial leases and sales totaling hundreds of millions acquired. Joel continually refined his real estate acumen over decades to create wealth for partners. 

Joel attended the University of Michigan. He enjoys playing golf and spending time with his family, particularly his 3 young grandchildren. 

 

Topics on Today’s Episode: 

 

Links and Resources:   

Joel Friedland 

Brit Properties 

Joel Friedland (@investingwithjoel) - Instagram 

Brit Properties - YouTube 

Joel Friedland - LinkedIn 

 

CREI Partners 

https://www.creipartners.com 

https://www.passiveinvestorcoaching.com 

linktr.ee/creipartners 

View Full Transcript

Episode Transcript

Introducer [00:00:02]: Welcome to The Untold Stories of Real Estate Investing, hosted by Wayne Courageous II, a place where active and passive investors come to hear the good, bad, and ugly of real estate investing. Our guests consist of experienced operators and investors who want others to succeed by sharing their stories. If you're looking to syndicate deals or grow your wealth passively in real estate, you've come to the right show. It's now time to sit back, take mental notes, and enjoy our next episode of The Untold Stories of Real Estate Investing. Wayne Courreges [00:00:39]: All right. Welcome back to the untold stories of real estate investing. I'm your host. Wayne courageous. Today I'm excited to have Joel Friedland with us today. Joel has a 42 year track record in industrial real estate. He has co founded Epic Savage Realty Partners in 1991, where he oversaw hiring and mentoring 60 industrial real estate professionals, many of whom became his partners. His group sold the firm to an international real estate company in 2014, and Joel started Brit Properties as an industrial real estate broker and owner. Wayne Courreges [00:01:09]: Joel has secured over 2000 industrial property leases and sales totaling over $250,000,000 in acquisitions. His greatest achievement is maintaining valued relationships with brokers, tenants, and investors. Spanning five decades. He does fully syndicated deals with 0% debt, an unheard of approach in real estate which caters to his wealthy investor base. Primarily concerned with conservative of principle, his experiences during the Great Recession in 2008 have informed his investment approach to be hyper conservative while still allowing 8% plus cash flow for his investors. Welcome to our show, Joel. Joel Friedland [00:01:48]: Hey, Wayne. Great to see you. Wayne Courreges [00:01:50]: Great seeing you. We definitely hit it off before the show, so I was like, all right, we need to start recording because there's a lot of value that I see us getting into today. So before we dig in, can you share more about your background, how you got into real estate, and really what you're focusing on these days? Joel Friedland [00:02:08]: Sure. So today, I am 64 years old, and I was a child entrepreneur. I started out I did so many entrepreneurial things. My parents are therapists, so there's like a big mental health element in my background where they were helping people who had all kinds of issues and problems, but it didn't pay that well to be a therapist. So when I was a kid, I needed to buy things, and I'd go to my parents and say, hey, I need this or I want that. And it was sort of like, we're kind of frugal because we need to be. So I started a lawn business, and I, in one weekend, went out and door to door convinced 70 families to let me cut their lawn. I was 14 years old. Joel Friedland [00:02:55]: I couldn't even drive. I learned how to cold call, and I learned it was like a talent that I had. I was very shy as a little kid, so it was amazing that I did that. So my parents were on vacation, they came home and I said, hey, I've got a business. I was 14. And they said, You've got a business? Said, yeah. I convinced a bunch of the neighbors to let me cut their lawns. And then I hired a bunch of kids to work cutting the lawns and trimming bushes and all that kind of thing. Joel Friedland [00:03:22]: So when I graduated from college, I knew I wanted to be in sales. And I accidentally met a guy that had a business in industrial real estate. He had 84 industrial buildings, 6 million sqft worth, hundreds of millions of dollars. And I cold called him to see if he was looking to hire somebody. And I went and I met him and he hired me on the spot because it was 1981, ten of the buildings were vacant, and he was struggling with 17% interest rates, and the economy was just bad. It was horrible, nobody was doing anything. And I told him I'd go door to door in industrial parks, talking to companies that might move into as empty buildings, and I filled up all of them but one in one year. So I fell in love with the business. Joel Friedland [00:04:16]: And industrial is so great. I love the multifamily business, but industrial, I've learned it over these 42 years. It's such an incredibly great business, and. Wayne Courreges [00:04:28]: It seems to keep booming, especially as online retailers and everything is shifting more online. I haven't mentioned this on our podcast, I don't believe, but my wife is a marriage family counselor, licensed professional counselor, so we have that in common too. And since COVID everything's moved to telehealth. So when we moved, like, her clients and everything's just been going online anyway. Joel Friedland [00:04:57]: Yeah, my daughter is also, by the way, in addition to my parents, my daughter is a therapist. She's a little younger than you are, and she sees people by telehealth. She's never met her. Wayne Courreges [00:05:10]: That's I mean, that's what all that Jen's doing right now is telehealth. I actually like it more because when she was doing office, like going into the office, it was fine during business hours, but when she would see some of the evening clients because when we had young kids, when I come home from work, she would go the safety of it all. I was just it when it moved to it's it's pretty amazing. And Joel, it's a different like the emotions that they're able to handle. It's not who I am. I'm like, suck it up, you'd be all right. But she's my therapist when it comes to real estate, and she is quite like those listening to this podcast probably care at some level about real estate. She's just over it. Wayne Courreges [00:06:00]: She's like, I don't care about your deals or your capital raise. And I'm like you're supposed to listen. But anyway, yeah. Joel Friedland [00:06:09]: And you come from such a different background, with the Marines background, opposites attract, for sure. Wayne Courreges [00:06:16]: Well, all right, so there's a few things I want to break down there, one of which is the broker aspect. So we talk a lot about owning assets on this podcast, but we really haven't spoken about brokerage. When I first joined CBRE back in 2007, Joel, they put me through a program called CB 101, and it was in California, and I was the only property manager there with a bunch of brokers. And these guys were new brokers, all very hungry to be that next millionaire type broker. And the mentality of it, and it really got me excited because I was like, man, I really want to be a broker. But the risk that those guys and ladies were dealing with, sort of like you have that eat what you kill type mentality. So talk to us a little bit about sort of that mentality of brokerage and the type of person who really fits that mold really well. Because again, there's different areas that you can join, commercial real estate brokerage being one. Joel Friedland [00:07:17]: Yeah, I've got a bunch of brokers in our market here in Chicago that I trained while I had my brokerage company for almost 20 years. I mentored about 60 potential new invest, new brokers, and none of them had any experience when I hired them. Some of them were MBAs, some of them had law degrees. They were all people who wanted to try something where they had sort of like an unlimited, no ceiling way to make a living. And the problem is, it's very slow in the beginning because you don't have any clients. And so you have to build your clientele. Of the 60 that I hired, there's a rule that most people understand. It's the 80 20 rule, where 80% of the people do very little and 20% do almost all of the business. Joel Friedland [00:08:14]: And that was true in brokerage. 20% of the people that I hired turned into superstars. And today those 20%, they're all multimillionaires, all of them. And these are people in their thirty s and forty s and fifty s. And the reason that they're successful is because they're great relationship builders and because they know how to negotiate. Being a broker, what you have to do is convince a client that you're going to fight for them. It's not a lot different than being a politician where politicians get up and they say, I'm going to fight for you. It's like, well, who are you fighting against? You're going to fight for me. Joel Friedland [00:08:58]: Like, who's the enemy? So you need to create an enemy, and the enemy in brokerage is the person you're negotiating against. So when a broker becomes good, they go to a meeting and they say, I'm going to fight for you. I'm going to get you the best deal. I'm going to get you the best concession package. If it's representing a tenant and if it's representing a seller, I'm going to get you the highest price I know how to find buyers and find people who will pay more than anybody else, I'm going to fight for you. And that is really the common link. It's about fighting. And if you look at the world today, the whole world is about fighting. Joel Friedland [00:09:37]: So it's the same theme. I've got a young man that I hired in 2009, and today I would say he probably makes $2 million a year in brokerage. I would say that my 20%, none of them make less than a million dollars a year as brokers. Very few of them have shifted into what you and I do. You shifted in from CBRE, I shifted in from Transwestern after we sold to them. I've been doing acquisitions like you were before you left CBRE. I've been doing acquisitions while being a broker so I could make a living while building up my group of investors and a big portfolio. Wayne Courreges [00:10:22]: Absolutely. Joel Friedland [00:10:23]: But it's the same thing. When you get investors, I'm going to fight for you, I'm going to get you the highest return and I'm going to sell the building and make you a big profit. It's all the same thing. It's this fighting thing. And so that's what it is. They're competitive if they're successful, they're aggressive if they're successful. They're very direct and they can get right to the point very fast. This one guy that worked for us early, early on, he was like a mealy mouthed guy. Joel Friedland [00:10:55]: Everything that came out of his mouth that was like half understandable and I wasn't sure what he was saying. It wasn't direct enough. And years later I ran into him. He was still a broker and he was still unsuccessful. Wayne Courreges [00:11:11]: Well, I think just my experience at commercial real estate, you're either an operator or you're that broker type person. Because in property management, I approved large checks to these brokers in our world in big office tenant leases. I mean, they're representing Google and indeed, I mean, these are large, thousands of square feet, and they're getting commission off operating expenses plus rent. So these were huge. I need it. I'm in the wrong business. But I kept going back to Joel realizing know, I would rather be and one of my mentors asked me, he's like, would you rather be the President of the United States or would you be Ross Perot? And many people may not know Ross Perot, so you can equate to like, you know, a billionaire, what would you choose? And my choice was to be the President of the United States. I love mean, it's just been ingrained for me early on. Wayne Courreges [00:12:19]: So he's then, you know, continue doing property management and stuff like that. So even recently when I was looking at I joined a mastermind that has a heavy amount of capital raisers and capital raisers very transactional sales, like fighting for investors, et cetera had that mentality, but they're very transactional, deal to deal. And I was like, I could really scale my business towards that equity, private equity type work. The problem that I have is that I really enjoy the lifecycle, the operations of the asset. And so, yes, I have to raise capital and stuff like that, but I enjoy the control and the aspect of leadership from A to Z, of the lifecycle of the property. So just an interesting way of thinking of those that are listening and may want to get into commercial real estate of are you an operator or are you a sales? And at the end of the day, you make a good point. Everyone needs to have sales and negotiation. And everything in real estate is relationships. Wayne Courreges [00:13:21]: So a lot of those can be tied together. Joel Friedland [00:13:23]: I think what you're saying is exactly right. There are two kinds of people. There are the salespeople, as you mentioned, and there are the operators. A good salesperson probably is a bad operator. That's been my experience. I've seen that dozens and dozens of times. And a good operator usually can't sell anything. So what's ideal is if you have partners, two partners or three partners who trust each other, and one or two bring the sales and one or two bring the operations. Joel Friedland [00:13:59]: The problem with the salespeople, when we started our business, I had a partner who was ten years younger, and he took the approach that anything that wasn't sales was a waste of time, which is very wrong. That's how you get in trouble, right? So he didn't really believe in the back office. He didn't care about property management. He just cared about finding the next deal and making the next $100,000. And what happens is you get in trouble when your back room gets disorganized. You've got to have a great bookkeeper or accountant or CFO. You've got to have that. And you've got to have someone who's hands on when the sewers back up and when the HVAC on the roof breaks down. Joel Friedland [00:14:47]: You've got to have that person who's in charge of that. And when the company gets big, the leader of your side of the business, the operations side, has to be a good delegator and has to be a good leader, like you're talking about. You know how to do it. You've done that. That's been your position in my end, in the sales end and in the acquisition and finding deals. We have to be good door openers. And then once the door is open, we have to be good relationship builders. And that has nothing to do with credits and debits in the accounting department. Joel Friedland [00:15:22]: Nothing. So I have learned that having a partner who's fantastic, I have one of those. His name is Eric Schneider, and I was on the phone with him this morning. He said we had a sprinkler test at the Rose Street Building, and there's thousands of gallons of water in the sprinkler system. And when they empty it out, it goes into the sewer. When they test, I know nothing about this, but he knows everything about this. He said. So I get a call from the tenant and the sewers in their bathrooms are the little drains are backing up and something very bad smelling is coming up through the drains. Joel Friedland [00:16:04]: I said, oh, no, that's terrible. I said your problem. I said, thank you. I said, thank you for taking care of it. I know that the sewer backup is a really big problem and if you weren't handling this, someone would be calling me and I wouldn't know what to do and I wouldn't want to do it. Yeah, somebody's starting a business. Warning, warning, warning. Figure out what you're not good at and make sure you have somebody. Joel Friedland [00:16:31]: Right. That's what we did. Somebody who's really great at doing the other thing and that you can trust them. Wayne Courreges [00:16:38]: Huge. So team sport, we talk about that a lot. Where do as you just said, what you are passionate about and what you love doing because you're not going to get burned out. Real estate is tough. We were talking about this before and we can go into this a little bit of the business cycles and real estate cycles, and I love those memes that are like, you're like beautiful a day one in real estate and at the end you're like, hair is grown out, you look like you've aged 50 years. But if you're doing what you love, that grit and that fire and that resolve that you need to get through any challenge, persists. Now if you're doing what you hate or you're not doing what you're passionate about doing, it gets a little more tough. The other thing too is if you're a salesperson that's great on the real estate negotiating, such if you're not having those other partners, then you can outsource like that property management, third party property management, they would be letting you know what's going on and what they're doing. Wayne Courreges [00:17:45]: So that also helps. But it goes back to that trust. You got to trust the management company too and do your due diligence on them. Hey, listeners. It's Wayne courageous. I just want to pause real quick to say thank you for listening to our show. I hope that you're getting a lot of value out of it. If I could ask you to go ahead and like, subscribe and share this podcast, that would mean a lot. Wayne Courreges [00:18:03]: It will get a lot of other investors like yourself learning about the process and the steps to successfully invest in real estate, either as a passive or an active investor. I also want to do a quick introduction of CREI Partners. I'm the managing principal for CREI Partners and we started it back in 2019 with one goal to grow your wealth passively. In real estate. We do so by buying assets in multifamily build to rent communities and RV boat storage facilities. And we do so in areas that have strong market fundamentals and also have strong partnerships with other real estate investors such as ourselves. We personally discovered that passively investing in real estate was a really great blend for people that are busy like yourself, and that you can invest passively in real estate and still reap the rewards of the returns, the tax benefits, et cetera. If you're interested in learning more about passively investing, check out our website. Wayne Courreges [00:18:55]: We do a lot of content through our Passive Investor Coaching program, through our podcast, our blogs, and just other information that we do on a daily basis. Check out Creipartners.com. Again, Creipartners.com. If you're interested in building the relationship and joining our Investor Club, there's a link there to join. We'll set up a call and continue building the relationship with you. We're super excited to have that opportunity, and I wanted us to get back to the show and hopefully again, you're enjoying the conversation and look forward to connecting soon. Thank you. So let's shift gears a little bit. Wayne Courreges [00:19:29]: So, industrial, how did industrial fared in 2008? What was your experience like during that time? And what were some of the lessons learned for people like myself who are recently just going all in on real estate investing? Joel Friedland [00:19:48]: Yeah, it was terrible. I can tell you that I had 50 buildings in 2008. And unlike multifamily, which I love, by the way, industrial is very different because industrial has two kinds of buildings. There's multitenant, which is more similar to multifamily, and then there's single tenant. I'd say at least two thirds of the buildings in industrial are single tenant, which means it's either 100% occupied or it's 100% vacant. So that's the big risk. And I had ten single tenant buildings. I was like Milt Padowski, my mentor in 1981, who had ten empty buildings. Joel Friedland [00:20:34]: I had ten empty buildings in 2008, and I had loans on all the buildings. And I'll tell you why I don't do loans anymore. I like to do my deals all cash, no debt, having to deal with the problems I had back then that I don't want to deal with again. So I've maybe gone way overboard, but I ended up on that couch back there. I lived in this house and my wife and my kids watched me go into a depression because I had 200 investors. We had $200 million worth of real estate, and of the 50 buildings, 20% were vacant because tenants went out of business or tried to break their lease or called us and said, we can't pay the rent. And I had seven banks, and none of them have a sense of humor when you can't pay the mortgage and the taxes have to be paid and the utilities have to be paid and the insurance. So I was a mess because I thought I had lost everybody's money. Joel Friedland [00:21:41]: I thought that I had 200 investors and I was going to have to tell them all that they were wiped out. And that was 2008. And 2009, and it didn't get a whole lot better until 2012 and 13. And even then, it was a slow climb back. It was like being in a dark hole and being halfway out, and it was talk about mental health. My parents, the therapist, didn't even know what to do with me. They had no idea. And I had to go for counseling, meditation, medication. Joel Friedland [00:22:14]: It was brutal. And so I learned a lesson, which was that I'm not a risk taker. I can't handle what happens if the risk turns a good situation into a bad situation. And so I learned the hard way that when things go bad, you have no control. We are not in control. Wayne Courreges [00:22:40]: Right. Joel Friedland [00:22:41]: Forces way beyond us are happening every day and cause us to have to deal with these things. And I climbed out of my hole, and I actually didn't lose everybody's money. I kept working. Perseverance was like the word of the decade for me, and I was able to bring everything back. When things got better, my investors called me and said, you did things that our other sponsors didn't do. A lot of them went bankrupt and just started over. And I appreciate how hard you've worked to bring it back, but it still hurts today. And that pain is what drives me to do my due diligence differently. Joel Friedland [00:23:30]: I've listened to your theory on due diligence about being super careful and making sure that you account for things that might go wrong that you haven't thought of yet. The HVAC system that has to be replaced, or a roof that may be older than it should be in terms of counting on it not leaking in a few years and things like that. So, yeah, it was extremely devastating. And I think today we're in a situation where that could happen at any moment. Wayne Courreges [00:24:03]: Yeah, I appreciate you being vulnerable and talking through that, because for me, it's stressful. And it's stressful not because well, it's stressful because and I see this in you, as we're getting to know each other through this podcast, is people like you and I, we're the jockeys that are being entrusted with other people's money. Now, we've invested alongside, but the fiduciary responsibility that we have are what drives us to keep pushing and pushing. And from an operator side, we try to have enough funds in reserves. We try to anticipate taxes being 100% of value. You try to underwrite these ways. And we've talked about previously on podcasts and meetups that sometimes sponsors can get a little more aggressive. But during times when times are good, those aggressiveness behaviors, aggressive behaviors is pretty overlooked because regardless of how you operate, you're winning at the end because the cap rates are compressing, et cetera. Wayne Courreges [00:25:16]: Right. So it's an interesting time. We talked about before the show, like 2019. I started our investment business while I was with CBRE. Right. So over the last four years, we've grown to about 40 million assets under management, heavily involved on operations day to day and each one has their own quirks about them and they're never as easy as what I anticipated. Right. I really liked what you said too, is like even during all that rough time is you just kept fighting, you kept going and you got through it. Wayne Courreges [00:25:57]: There are cycles in real estate and regardless of where you are, your investors are counting on you and the easy thing to do is just fold and walk away. All my debt is all non recourse. Right. And so technically we could just get back to Keys and say like, hey, we're not doing it. But that's just not who we are. That's not in our blood to give up, especially because our investors are counting on us. So anything more you want to say regarding that experience and sort of any similarities to what you're seeing in today's market? Joel Friedland [00:26:28]: Well, I am seeing today that things have been too good for too long and it just isn't realistic to believe they'll always be like that. And as a country we have way too much debt and people are living beyond their means. And there will be in my opinion, I'm just looking out, I don't know if it's two months or two years, but there will be a time when things are really rough. It's not going to be like today. In industrial, today rents have approximately doubled from where they were ten years ago. That's 10% rent growth. And I don't believe that that's sustainable. It just isn't the way the world works. Joel Friedland [00:27:13]: So I believe that something bad is going to happen and I'm prepared for it and I'm making sure that my investors are aware that I believe something bad is coming. So some of them say, well then maybe we shouldn't invest today. I believe there are good deals happening all the time, but not everywhere and not all deals are good deals. So we have to figure out which are the ones we want. And then the question is, how do you mitigate your risk? By structuring the deal so that it's a lower risk deal. And I think you're good at that. I know your philosophy, we should talk about that because there are many ways to do it. And my way of doing it is by being laser focused on one market, which is class B and C industrial buildings. Joel Friedland [00:28:07]: In the Chicago area, which I know like the back of my hand. There are 16,000 buildings and I've been to 15,000 of them, whether cold calling or going to meetings in 40 years. But how do you mitigate, how do you protect your investors against a drastic loss? And I think you figured out a way to do it by being super careful on diligence. And so are we. But this is where it gets to my issue of having zero debt. People think I'm a moron. They say, come on, real estate is a leveraged business. How do you push your returns without having debt? My answer is my investors don't want to push their returns. Joel Friedland [00:28:51]: They just don't want to lose their money. They want a good return that's better than they could get in an alternative investment to this where they don't lose their money because you can't make up the loss. Wayne Courreges [00:29:06]: This is such a great conversation. So I look at it and we do a lot of education with our investors. It's something that really why I do the podcast. We do a monthly meetup, got a book coming out. And part of that education is understanding where everybody is on their investment path, right? So I'm 38. I'm willing to be a little bit more risky on my personal investments because I would rather have the two X 2.25. I'd rather the equity multiple over a five to seven year hold period in my current cycle of business. Now, cash flow is important, but I'm okay taking on additional risk up front, doing a deep, deep value add. Wayne Courreges [00:29:58]: Going in with our operational and our construction management teams. Going in and doing complete value add, understanding that we're going to have to probably go down to a low Occupancy and there's going to be some cash flow issues. So at that point, we've got to make sure our reserves are higher. But to your investors and to a lot of investors, and there's never a right or wrong to any of this, I do feel like once you determine where your risk tolerance is, it's like stocks. You can determine where you want to invest and with the risk is likely a higher return in theory, right? That's the whole idea of the higher risk, the higher return. So having people understand where their risk tolerance is and what they're okay. In the worst case scenario, losing for that risk and for that reward is, I think, extremely important. So there are cash flow investors and then there's equity investors. Wayne Courreges [00:31:00]: And what I'm understanding from your investment, your methods and your philosophy is you're focused on, as we all should be, cash preservation. I mean, that should be for everybody, number one. But two more of the conservative, more institutional like mindset of cash flow. It may not be sexy returns, high 20% plus IRS, but the risk is lower. You're getting that cash flow, and then your investors are getting that tax depreciation. Am I off base here? Joel Friedland [00:31:36]: I'm definitely right. So let me dive into my typical investor and my typical deal. For sure, we like to own manufacturing buildings. When I say manufacturing buildings, I don't mean like smokestack. I'm talking about every town has a street called Industrial Drive, and that's where all the old industrial is. And then there's another street that's named after somebody's daughter because the developer needed a name for a street. So it's like Melanie Lane, right? And then there's another street where the big boxes. That you see on the side of the tollway. Joel Friedland [00:32:16]: And those are frontage road. We don't do the frontage road. We don't do those giant big boxes that are leased to Amazon and to Wayfair and Target for their warehouse. We do these smaller buildings that are older, built in the 1970s and 80s, lower ceiling. The big boxes have to have really tall ceilings because they use racks and they use forklift trucks. And to them, it's about cubic footage and being efficient. To my tenants, it's about floor space and being able to put their machines in various places. The machines aren't that tall. Joel Friedland [00:32:53]: Maybe they're 18ft tall at the most. So let me give you an example. We bought three buildings last week in Chicago near downtown. So we also like Infill, which is where the population density allows for hiring employees easily, getting to the center city for various reasons, being near the tollways and the highways. So the company that occupies the buildings that we bought is called Tampiko Beverage, and they manufacture Goop. It's concentrate for fruit drinks. And they have these huge tanks and wires and tubes they can't move. We call that a sticky tenant for two reasons, and we love a sticky tenant because they stay for 15, 2030 years. Joel Friedland [00:33:50]: Tampico has been in these buildings that were owned by a family for 30 years. So we bought the buildings subject to seven years of remaining lease with Tampico. And we have to give our investors an unlevered 8% return over, let's say, a ten year period. It might start at seven, it might go up 3% a year. And the investors like the yield, but they also like the idea that we're at a maximum debt ratio, loan to value ratio of 30%. And that's actually in our Ppm. We can't borrow more than that or we'd be violating our promise. And many of the buildings have zero debt. Joel Friedland [00:34:41]: It's really hard to find an 8% return without leverage anywhere. I don't know if you could find it. Wayne Courreges [00:34:50]: I'm struggling to find out. I mean, the only way to do that is just to buy it at an extremely low price versus the rent that's coming in. Right? So how are you getting those deals and getting them to even agree to sell at that price so you can get that return? I mean, it is very difficult to do that, which is why people say leverage is the way to go. Joel Friedland [00:35:15]: Yeah, so because I'm anti leverage, and my investors understand that, and that's why they invest with me. And incidentally, when an investor invests with me, I tell them one thing up front. I say, you can go into as many deals as you want with me, but you should never put more than 5% of your total net worth in my stuff. Because diversification is really important, for sure. And so I believe that people should maybe even keep it down to 3% of their net worth in any one particular investment, whether it's Apple stock, whether it's bonds, comcast bond, or a syndication with us, when I tell people we're different, what I say is we actually cold call families. We cold call, this is our niche. It's very bizarre. We find families that used to own a business, sold the business to a private equity group or a much bigger company, and then leased the building back. Joel Friedland [00:36:23]: And then a decade or two go by, and now you're in the next generation of the family, and all the kids want to get rid of the building and cash out. Grandpa, who started the business is long dead, right? He's gone. Oh, we miss Grandpa. Thank God he started the business, because now we're all rich and we own this building. And there's 16 cousins. And Uncle John and Uncle Peter hate each other because when they were in the business working for Grandpa, they got in a fight. So now you got brothers who don't get along. You got 16 kids between them and their grandchildren, and they want to get rid of it. Joel Friedland [00:37:01]: So we cold call the people who are the families that own the buildings that used to own the company in the building. And if you look at our 19 buildings, 15 of them we bought from families that had to get rid of each other. That's how you get 8% genius, because you do it off market. Wayne Courreges [00:37:23]: Yeah, it's very niche. It's very focused. A lot of people are doing that in multifamily, where you'd find the mom and pop multifamily who's trying to sell or dad's become harder to find because everything got a lot of these value add groups. But with your focus on these, especially there's 15, you said 16,000 industrial buildings. That's a big base of properties that you all can go after. And then I love the niche approach. I also love that you're still buying. So last week, we closed on 44 units in Houston, and I'm still bullish even during this time of uncertainty. Wayne Courreges [00:38:04]: And I always say that if you take the facts that are going on in the market and you try to derisk as much as you can, for example, like, this was a five year deal. Now, it definitely won't hit your risk tolerance because there is debt involved. But what we did was a seller financing 6% fixed rate for five years, interest only, no prepayment penalty. And the story behind it, Joel, was we bought it less than what they bought it for in 2018, and we found it off market direct. Well, we had a broker relationship that we've cultivated over the years. But if you're finding those niche and you're really honing in on what your investors and what is going on in the markets, you can definitely find these things. So I just love that one. You're still buying. Wayne Courreges [00:39:05]: You said you closed three deals or three properties last week. There's a lot of people sitting on the sidelines, a lot of cash sitting on the sidelines. But just through consistent strategy that you're doing, it seems to be working and I love that you're doing it with no debt. I mean, wow, if you can do it this way, I mean, like, think about that 6% seller fixed financing, right? So instead of paying that 6% to the seller for their financing, that 6% in theory would go to the investors, right? Joel Friedland [00:39:39]: Exactly. Wayne Courreges [00:39:40]: And so your equity, you think about the capital stack and how you're accomplishing it. That debt is part of that capital stack. So if you have none of that, then it just pushes those returns. So I'm thinking out loud here as I'm talking to you because I think it's not a common strategy. So I commend you for it. Joel Friedland [00:40:00]: Nobody else does it. I've not been able to find anyone else in the United States and I talk to a lot of Syndicators and I watch a lot of podcasts and I look at Crowd Street and I look at all the different platforms. Nobody does what we do. And it's because I was on the couch in 2008 and I know at my age, at 64, I'm not in a position where I can afford to start over again like I did in 2009 to save a portfolio and bring it back from the brink. So my investors are like minded. These are people who are older. I'm not trying to teach people who are young people how to invest. For sure, I deal with accredited, very wealthy people who may have, I don't know if you know this, but the top 1% of wealthy people in the United States have a net worth of $11 million or more. Joel Friedland [00:40:56]: I would say two thirds of my investors are one percenters and I'd say that the rest of them are either in the 2% or 3% range, which means 97% of the people in the world cannot invest in our deals because they don't make sense. We have a $50,000 minimum on most deals and 50,000 is 5% of a million. So if your net worth is a million, you're done with your 1st $50,000 with us. Wayne Courreges [00:41:26]: Yes. Joel Friedland [00:41:26]: So we really have a different clientele than most people because I've been doing this for 40 years. And when I was a kid, when I was in my twenty s and I was a broker and I was making 20 or 30 brokerage deals in industrial year, I would meet the owners of 20 or 30 companies. And when I started Syndicating, those are the people that I had relationships for because remember, I was fighting for them. They know I'm a fighter for them. So I'd go back to my old brokerage clients and say, hey, I'm putting together a syndication to buy a building on Trip Avenue and we're raising 2.7 million and $50,000 chunks. And very regularly it's like, well, what's your strategy? It's all cash. No mortgage, don't want to lose any money. We're all too old and we have too much money, and we don't want to lose it. Joel Friedland [00:42:16]: In case the investor will say, I'll put in 250. That's how it works. Wayne Courreges [00:42:23]: Yeah, well, you take that huge risk away with that debt side, and you're able to get the returns because you're buying right, and you're buying right because you've got a niche and you know exactly what you're going for in the locations, et cetera. So niching down every aspect of your business seems to reduce a lot of the risk. Helps you sleep at night, and you know that no one's going to be losing money because at the end of the day, you don't have to sell and you really don't need rent. At the end of day, you want to have your buildings leased. But in your case, if you don't have the debt, yes, you can tell your investors, hey, we're not doing distributions right now in a worst case scenario, but they haven't lost their principal because there's still value in that dirt and those improvements on that property. Joel Friedland [00:43:17]: Yeah, and I'll give you an analogy. I told you that I had basal cell carcinoma from too much golf over the years, too much sun exposure. Probably when I was a little kid, my mother probably thought it was doing me a favor to have me out in the sun getting burned. So the doctor says, hey, you've got this little thing and I've got to take it off. I went to a doctor, this guy in Northbrook, Illinois, who does nothing but what's called Moe's surgery. And he just does the same thing over and over and over, and he's been doing it for 25 years. And that's who I want to go to, to do surgery on my nose. I'm not going to some guy who does well. Joel Friedland [00:43:59]: I do a little bit of this with people's hands, and I do a little bit of this with people's knees. And sometimes I prescribe medications to this person and that person for this. I don't want to go to a generalist. I want to go to the guy who's done this surgery 5000 times. Wayne Courreges [00:44:18]: Absolutely. Joel Friedland [00:44:21]: That's my analogy for the day. Right. And so I just came from the stitches being taken out today, and I'm thinking about it. That doctor, Dr. Lottie in Northbrook, Illinois, is the only person that I would ever recommend someone who has this to, because I know that he has done it well and gets better and better and better and just keeps doing the same thing over and over. And so our little focus on industrial B and C in Chicago is the same idea. Wayne Courreges [00:44:52]: Absolutely. Joel Friedland [00:44:53]: I don't need Costar to tell me what something's worth because I own ten buildings on the north side of Chicago. We are the market for that. So if we buy another building that's just like that, we know how much rent we're getting on the other ten buildings and we know how much we bought them for and we know how much a potential user might buy them for if they go vacant. So I'm with you. Being careful is everything, and gambling is bad, and I think a lot of syndicators and developers become gamblers and don't know it. So I'm the anti gambler and that's the whole key. Wayne Courreges [00:45:35]: Yeah. Well, we could keep having this long conversation. It's been really enjoyable. As we sort of close up here, though, I always know what is your proudest moment in real estate investing? And then, Joel, if you can share with the audience how they can reach out to you as well, I would appreciate that. Joel Friedland [00:45:55]: I think my proudest moment was I talked to one of my investors, his name is Mike F, and he called me about three years ago and he said, I just want you to know that I was scared with you in 2008. We had a big investment with you and we trusted you. And now that we're ten or whatever years later, I want you to know how much my wife and I appreciate how hard you worked to dig your way out of the hole and I'm interested in your next deal. And I said, that means so much to me. He said, I know what you went through. We saw your personality change when you went into the depression. We were scared for you and for us for so many reasons, and we're with you. And that was a moment that was very memorable to me. Wayne Courreges [00:46:52]: Absolutely. And how can those listening reach out to you? Joel Friedland [00:46:57]: Brittproperties.com. Brit Properties. And just so you know how important property management is to us, the company, when we started it, we had to come up with a name because we sold Transwestern and needed a new company. Sold to Transwestern. And our property manager, Brad, we loved him, and we decided to call the company Britt, which stands for Brad. Really is terrific. Wayne Courreges [00:47:25]: Hey, property management, the operations is the backbone, right? Joel Friedland [00:47:29]: Backbone. Wayne Courreges [00:47:29]: It's the so, hey, I really enjoyed this. I love the vulnerability. I love the conversation about risk tolerance and how do we derisk real estate so we can preserve capital and take care of our investors through good and bad times. So appreciate it and look forward to continuing to have future conversations with you. Joel Friedland [00:47:51]: Thanks, Wayne Ditto. Introducer [00:47:53]: That's all for this episode. We hope you subscribe, share and leave a review of the show. For more information about passively investing in multifamily apartments, check out Wayne's free ebook by going to forward slash ebook. Also follow us on Facebook by searching CREI Partners. This was the untold stories of real estate investing.

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