The Code To Winning

HOW I BUILT 30 MILLION PORTFOLIO &120 UNITS IN MULTI-FAMILY REAL ESTATE || BRANDON LOCASCIO || EPISODE 071

39 min
Dec 18, 20254 months ago
Listen to Episode
Summary

Brandon Locascio, a 38-year-old real estate investor from Los Angeles, shares his journey from mortgage sales during the 2008 financial crisis to building a $30 million multifamily portfolio with over 120 units. He emphasizes the importance of focus, transparency with investors, and understanding core business fundamentals as key strategies for scaling real estate investments.

Insights
  • Focus on a single business model and geographic market accelerates growth faster than diversifying across multiple property types and locations
  • Building investor trust requires complete transparency through quarterly statements, open communication channels, and treating real estate as a systematic business rather than opportunistic ventures
  • The shift from flipping houses to multifamily investing provides passive income and portfolio appreciation, eliminating the constant deal-chasing cycle of active real estate trading
  • Starting with modest capital ($20,000-$25,000) and leveraging partnerships allows entry into real estate without requiring significant personal wealth
  • High interest rate environments require larger down payments (50% vs 30%) and careful underwriting to ensure deals maintain positive cash flow even with tenant vacancies
Trends
Multifamily real estate investment gaining popularity among high-net-worth individuals seeking diversification from stock market exposureShift toward hands-off real estate investing models where professional operators manage properties while investors provide capitalIncreasing importance of transparent investor communication and open-door policies for capital partners in real estate syndicationsRising adoption of enterprise-level property management software (Yardi) as portfolios scale beyond $10 million in assetsGeographic arbitrage strategy focusing on rent-controlled-free markets (Sacramento area) versus restrictive markets (San Francisco, LA)Interest rate sensitivity driving underwriting changes, with operators requiring larger equity cushions and focusing on break-even analysisReal estate education through digital platforms (YouTube, podcasts) influencing investment decisions of younger entrepreneursConsolidation of real estate operations through partnerships and team building as portfolios approach $30+ million in value
Topics
Multifamily Real Estate InvestingReal Estate Portfolio ScalingInvestor Capital Acquisition (OPM)Property Underwriting in High Interest Rate EnvironmentReal Estate Market Selection and Geographic ArbitrageHouse Flipping vs. Buy-and-Hold StrategyReal Estate Syndication and Investor RelationsCommercial Real Estate FinancingProperty Management Systems and OperationsReal Estate Brokerage and SalesMortgage Industry and 2008 Financial CrisisReal Estate Partnerships and Joint VenturesRent Control Regulations and Market DynamicsReal Estate Event Marketing and NetworkingLong-term Wealth Building vs. Quick Gains
Companies
RE/MAX
Brandon's father owns a RE/MAX office; family background in real estate brokerage
Yardi
Enterprise property management software adopted by Brandon's company for integrated accounting and operations
QuickBooks
Accounting software previously used by Brandon's company before upgrading to Yardi at scale
LoopNet
Commercial real estate listing platform recommended for researching multifamily property deals and market trends
Realtor.com
Real estate listing platform recommended for researching property availability and market pricing
People
Grant Cardone
Real estate investor and influencer whose YouTube content and Monday show inspired Brandon's multifamily investment s...
Warren Buffett
Long-term investment philosophy and business focus cited as inspiration for Brandon's patient, disciplined approach t...
Chuck (Brandon's Brother)
Business partner in BCGK company; co-invested in first Bakersfield property deal with Brandon
Greg
Partner in BCGK real estate company alongside Brandon, Chuck, and Kevin
Kevin
Partner in BCGK real estate company alongside Brandon, Chuck, and Greg
Jarek
Client who approached Brandon about flipping homes; became business partner in house flipping ventures
Elon Musk
Referenced as example of successful entrepreneur; Brandon would only do virtual interview with Warren Buffett, not Elon
Quotes
"You got to focus in this business. Because what happens is once you do get your feet wet, you start seeing shiny objects everywhere."
Brandon LocascioMid-episode
"If you're McDonald's and you're obsessed about opening up McDonald's franchises and you know your business to a T, you're going to beat a guy that's like, I'm going to open up a sushi bar and then a burger place."
Brandon LocascioMid-episode
"Don't get rich quick, get rich."
Grant Cardone (referenced)Mid-episode
"If you can set these deals up, I don't want to say you forget about them, but if you have good systems and processes, they kind of run on their own."
Brandon LocascioLate-episode
"I got to get known. I need more people. I need more investors. I need more brokers to send me deals. I need more contractors to want to work on my deals."
Brandon LocascioClosing segment
Full Transcript
I grew up in a real estate family and it was funny because, you know, the joke in our family has always been you could throw a stick and find a realtor, right? Like my both my parents were in real estate. My dad owns a Remax office, but they're both in real estate. My uncles are in real estate. My grandma was in real estate. Everybody's always kind of done real estate. My buddy came to me and this is in 2005. My buddy comes to me and says, hey, my older brother is working at a mortgage company and they're looking for people to come do sales. And so the first thing I said to him was, well, the first thing I said was sounds great if there's no oil. But the second thing I said to him was, what's a mortgage? Right. And so even coming from the family background all those years and have that subconscious, you know, experience of going to jobs and doing all these things. When I was 18, I still really didn't know much about the business. Once I got the bug and started working in mortgage, everything kind of just snowballed from there. Obviously, in your 20 years experience, having assets worth $30 million that you're managing and owning as well. What would you say then are the systems and disciplines that it took for you to be able to scale to like over 120 units? Well, you got to focus in this business because what happens is once you do get your feet wet, you start. The code to winning insights you need today to seize the world tomorrow. Today, if you are interested in learning a lot about real estate, acquiring, buying property, multifamily units, buying multiple units as well. This is the episode for you. I have a gentleman coming out of Los Angeles right here in the city of angels. He goes by the name of Brandon Lacasio, like pistachio, Italian background. Obviously born and raised here in the United States. But yeah, we're going to learn a bit more about that. So if you're curious in learning a bit more about that in the real estate field, this is the episode for you. So without further ado, the man himself, thank you for joining us in the studio. How are you doing, boss? Man, hell of an intro there. Thank you for having me, man. I'm like, you got it all. First of all, my hat is off to you how professional you are. Because we talked about doing this last night. and within about an hour all of a sudden i've got a whole write-up in my inbox directions everything i mean i can tell that you're serious about your podcast you know like you and i can see why you have a big following because you guys are just on it oh dude so my hat's off to you on that one i appreciate that yeah every time i show people how much we we spend in terms of like marketing in terms of you know a production team reels editors all this different stuff and like big investment right yeah what was that a big investment it's it's super big it's super big but like professional like being professional is like one of the biggest thing we care about we care about studios like this so that's why we always come back to the studios we have a good experience with so now i appreciate that a lot what an amazing location too by the way right i mean it doesn't start to be looking at the skyline here so great day perfect perfect time to do a podcast love it love it boss can you tell us a bit more about your background your upbringing and how do you kind of like went into this entrepreneurial journey yeah so i grew up in a real estate family And it was funny because, uh, you know, the joke in our family has always been, you know, you could throw a stick and find a realtor, right? Like my, both my parents were in real estate. My dad owns a Remax office, but they're both in real estate. My uncles are in real estate. My grandma was in real estate. Everybody's always kind of done real estate. And so growing up, you know, I was the little kid that was on the job sites, you know, going to their open houses. But it's funny because even when you do that, it's almost kind of subconscious when you're, when you're younger. Right. So over time, you know, high school comes and it's a question of going to college or what you're going to do. And I, I remember it was the summer after I graduated high school and I'm sitting there, I'm working at an oil place, like where they change the oil, like a lube center or whatever. And I'm working all these long days. I'm getting like getting home drenched in oil, just like dirty as hell, just hot as hell. And I'm just like, what the, what am I doing? You know, and granted, I just graduated high school a few months ago, but my buddy came to me and this is in 2005. My buddy comes to me and says, Hey, um, my older brother is working at a mortgage company and they're looking for people to come do sales. And so the first thing I said to him was, well, the first thing I said was sounds great if there's no oil. But the second thing I said to him was what's a mortgage. Right. And so even coming from the family background, all those years and have that subconscious, you know, experience of going to jobs and doing all these things. When I was 18, I still don't really know much about the business. And so anyway, flash forward, I ended up going to work there and, you know, we'll get into it. The rest was kind of history because once I got the bug and started working in mortgage, everything kind of just snowballed from there. Awesome. And you said 2005, were you down with high school at that time? Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Just graduated high school. Bro, I thought you just graduated high school 2015. You look pretty young. Oh, appreciate that, man. So I'm 38. I've got three kids, one hopefully soon on the way. um so appreciate that man so you know listen um yeah i don't know maybe it's the lemon water and the saunas or something but i try to stay young but the kids are giving me gray hair already so you know it's just what it is bro no that's awesome no i was gonna say you're probably 25 or something so no that's that's awesome i'm glad you're doing super well you're looking pretty young it's very important especially in california it must be the sun as well because i mean utah's got very fluctuating weather we actually have very good falls we have very good winters summers and so forth but i just loved like i left cold utah and i came in like i had to go to the beach for a quick scenery you know 100 see i think of utah i think of it as like always hot kind of like vegas but it's not the case right i mean obviously salt lake is different we were talking about you know saint george earlier but you know saint george is definitely a little hotter awesome man i appreciate now that we're in mortgage can you tell us and walk us through the background of actually entering and like now in in real estate when was your first deal and how did you end up like just getting where you at right now. Yeah. So, you know, look, I got in the mortgage business, right. As the market was about to collapse. Right. I didn't know that at the time, but you know, when I got in, you could, you know, pick up the phone and find 10 clients that wanted to refinance their property. Right. And so it was just kind of an easy time to be in that game and kind of learn it. But within, you know, this is out in Temecula within probably about 20 months or something, a little less than two years of being in, you know, I remember I was sitting there one day and I'm working on a loan file and an appraiser calls and he says, Hey, we're not going to be able to bring in the value on this thing. And I went, what are you talking about? I thought that values just keep going up and up and up and everything gets approved, right? Cause that was the market we were in in 05. And it was just about going into 2007 that all of a sudden the whole market started shifting. And so now I was going, okay, well, what do I do? I just got into this business. Things were going well. It started making some big bucks for an 18, 19 year old. And so that was when I decided to basically go get my real estate license, um, which I didn't know at the time would come in handy as far as all the wave of foreclosures and short sales and whole other transforming market. But yeah, so I kind of got thrown into it. And I always tell everybody that, you know, I could have started a market that was going up for 10 years, but it kind of sharpened me fast to get in kind of like right now. Obviously we're not having all the, you know, loan programs and stuff that we're not in a, in a, in a, you know, what do they call that? The, the great recession, I think is what we call the 05, 08, you know, the 08 crisis. But, you know, my point is, I got in at a good time, because I got a little taste of the business. And then I quickly got my ass kicked. You know, I quickly got, you know, punched in the face. And it was like, wow, the market's changing. And because of that, I had to learn to be nimble. I had to learn to shift my business. And I subsequently went into real estate brokerage. Okay. And when was that when you went in real estate? Was that after? Because the Great Recession, I remember it clearly, actually, I wasn't even in the country. I've been in America for like 11 years. Okay. Because of the global impact that it had 2007, 8, 09, just the crash, Lehman Brothers, like financial, everything was a disaster. But the ripple effect that had from like the US to Europe, Africa, everywhere else, it was just like a ripple effect. And I'm, you know, I'm glad you did mention that. When was that pivotal moment when you decided you wanted to go to that different field and when did you start? So I started in 2008 in real estate. So it was pretty fast right when that was happening. I got my real estate license in 07, but right in 08, I was full-time in real estate. I was like, okay, I'm out of loans. Let me go into real estate. Bank foreclosures are here and I better figure this out if I'm going to stay in this biz. And how was that? It was interesting. It was a whole different scenario. I mean, you know, if you, you realize at the time, like in Temecula, you had houses that were probably, I don't know, pick a number, six, 600, $700,000 houses that almost overnight were $300,000 houses. And now any one neighborhood like had 50 dead lawns and bank foreclosures. I mean, the Inland Empire got hit pretty hard out there. So it was a whole different landscape. And again, what did I know? I didn't know what a bank deal was. I didn't know what a short sale was. And so I had to learn all these things and, you know, kind of get with the program or get out of the business was pretty much how it was at that time. And have you always been in multifamily or was your first home like an actual family home, single home? More residential, yeah. So my background started in a residential. And I think over time, I gravitated towards more the investment side of things. I don't know what it was, but growing up, I always wanted to be like a big developer, a big real estate investor. I want to buy the Lakers here someday. So we'll see. Maybe we'll buy it together. I was about to say, Ginny Plus just sold it like two months ago. 10 billion, right? I'm like, every time one of these teams trade and I see the new number, I'm like, okay, I better change the vision board number. I'm like, this thing just got more expensive. By the time I get around to buying it, it's going to be 30 billion or something. It's crazy. But no, I always wanted to be more on the investment side. And it kind of took a lot of years, right? I mean, again, I've been a real estate broker now for like 20 years. And so probably the first 10, 12 years of my career was strictly sales. But when you're in this business and you see all of these clients and all these people around you that are flipping homes, that are buying apartment buildings, that are developing land, you kind of start to take notes on that. And you kind of see what's working, what's not working. You kind of realize that you know you can go out every day and chase a commission and that fine And if you a good broker maybe you have a lot of commissions coming in on a regular basis but you still always kind of like living and dying by the next deal right i wanted to build something to where if i decide tomorrow i taking a month off or if i'm just chilling out for a little bit i know that those checks are going to show up and so that was what always attracted me to more the investment side no dude i'd actually love that and so when was your first residential property like when was that investment which year was that? So my, well, my first house that I flipped was probably so funny story. I flipped a mobile home, by the way, I've lived a mobile home in like 2011, probably. And went on this listing little old lady was going into retirement or to assisted living. And she wanted to sell this. I mean, I, this place was like, I think she wanted to list it for like 10 grand or something right that. And so I don't even know why I was there, but I chose you a point I was in my career where I was like, I talked to her and it was probably cause she was nice, but I talked to her on the phone. It's like this little random thing. And I'm like, let me drive out there and see her. So I get there and her family was there and they're getting ready to move her out. And they were like, Hey, yeah, we want to list it, whatever. And something just told me, maybe I should buy it. And so I called my dad at the time and I'm like, Hey, come out here. Let's buy this, this mobile home. I think we could do something with it. And I remember he was telling me, he's like, dude, he was about to hang up on me. He's like, there's, I'm not driving out there for that. He's like, just, just chill. Like, you know, like, like I'm not, you know, and, and so the next thing I know, we're writing the lady a $4,000 check and we bought a mobile home. And so that was, that was probably really the first deal that I bought. And we ultimately sold it for like 15 grand and made a couple bucks on it. So it worked out for us and they were happy because they got their money. But I would say that, um, as far as when I really started taking off in investments or when I really started getting my feet wet, like more conventionally in the deal, in the, in the business was a couple of years after that. So, uh, I had a client that, um, same type thing, right? It all kind of revolves around clients in this business. But I had a client who moved to Orange County, was trying to relocate, and he wanted to start a business flipping homes. And he wanted me to be his agent. And so I was thinking about it for a while. And I don't know what kind of got me on the idea other than I've been like, hey, I got the bug from the mobile home. And I'm like, what am I doing? I'm chasing commissions. And I said to him, I said, hey, Jarek, we got to have a meeting, man. I got to talk to you. So we were sitting down just like this one day and I looked at him right in the eye and I said, listen, I don't want to be your broker. And he kind of looked at me like, what did I piss you off? I said, I don't want to be your broker. I want to be your partner because I'm ready to build an empire. I want to buy properties. I'm glad that you want to start doing this, but I'm telling you right now, I'm not going to be your broker, but I will go out there with you and we'll start flipping some homes. And he was kind of taken back a little bit. Right. And he was kind of like, what the hell was just calling this guy to like help me as my realtor. But I was like, dude, listen, there's something here. And I think we can make some money. And I think if you zoom out from that just for a second, I've found over my 20 year career already that a lot of the best opportunities that have happened, um, have really come together because I had really the balls to ask a tough question or to, um, you know, take a position in a deal or the client or whatever. But I had, I had the ability to say, Hey, there's something here. I'm going to think differently about it. Right. And I'm going to capitalize on it. Um, I think a lot of people go through life and they don't realize that they're missing opportunities that are right in front of them because they're not willing to take that next step. And so I think like, you know, for me, it was, here's a guy that has some money. He wants to start flipping homes. I know this market better than he does. He needs someone like me. Let's start a business together versus me being his agent. And so it just kind of snowballed after that. But that was kind of my really first foray into, you know, now I'm going to become a house flipper. Dude, that's absolutely inspiring. And then obviously in your 20 years experience, having assets worth $30 million that you're managing and owning as well. What would you say then are the systems and disciplines that it took for you to be able to upscale to like over 120 units? Well, you got to focus in this business. Because what happens is once you do get your feet wet, you start seeing shiny objects everywhere. So you're like, Oh, I flipped a house. Hey, I bought an apartment building. Maybe I should buy that self storage. Maybe I should look at a mobile home park. Maybe I should do that, that, that, that, that, that. Maybe I should fly to Detroit or to Tallahassee or whatever. Right. And a lot of guys do operate that way. Um, for some of them, it works out, but I've always found for me that when I focused, whether it's geographically. So I write right now, we only buy in California, right? We have a division up in Sacramento area. That's where a lot of our apartments are. And then we do a lot here in LA and SoCal. But the point is I've noticed that when I focus, whether it's geographically or on the business model, I can go farther faster than, say, you if you're not focused that same way. And I've spent a lot of time seeking mentorship from some of the biggest names in the space, one-on-one mentorships, coaching, whatever. And most of these guys stick with their core business. They might have other stuff that they do, but there's a core business there that really drives their growth because it's just a simple principle of, you know, if you're McDonald's and you're obsessed about opening up McDonald's franchises and you know your business to a T, you're going to beat a guy that's like, I'm going to open up a sushi bar and then, and then a burger place and then a whatever. Right. And so to answer your question more specifically, you know, my, my investing career really took off when I said, okay, I'm just going to lean into the multifamily game. I'm going to learn everything about it. I'm going to buy the shittiest, smallest property I can find initially to get my, to get in the game. And, and I'm just going to put one foot after the and focus on getting great at that. And I think a lot of us feel like, especially younger kids, it's hard to think in longer terms as far as years. And so I think we're all guilty of sometimes saying, man, like right now, right? It's almost 2026. Man, I wanna have this huge year in 2026. I have to do everything in 2026, right? But you'll be surprised at how fast you turn around and five years has gone by, 10 years has gone by. And so if you actually kind of slow down a little bit and take a breath and focus, you'll get through that time period and you'll be much further ahead is my point. And so that's kind of what I've taken away from it is you've got to have focus because if you're too spread out, if you're chasing all the shiny objects, you're just not going to go as fast as the next guy. I couldn't agree more. And just to add on that, I think that's one of the things that many young entrepreneurs are struggling with because obviously if you're raised up in the social media aspect of things, I mean, you and I have seen MySpace, but for those who are born past like the Snapchat stuff, and, you know, there's a lot of talent there, but usually because you're so accustomed to the instant gratification, that dopamine, where you need to get successful right now, it seems to be killing people rather than actually helping them success because when you just get that one quick spike, that's why there was a massive suicide rate that was happening with all these, the crypto, when the bears just like took over and like people were just making significant losses and like young 20 year olds losing their life, mainly because they were super successful at a young age. And I think sometimes with what you're saying, playing the long game, I mean, Warren Buffett is the perfect example of just play the long game. Can you imagine? Look what he's done. Insane, insane what he's done. He's such an inspiration. I often tell people, I'll fly anywhere in the country. I'm so passionate with what I do and I'm great at like, you know, connecting and doing this stuff. But I said, oh, only one person I would do a virtual for. that's Warren Buffett. Yeah. That's the only, not even Elon's other thing. Yeah, exactly. Warren Buffett is the only exception. And not because I can't do it in person. It's because I know he's older right now. And so I want to make him as convenient because he's such a, you know, a man-to-one hero to many people. And the nice thing about that, there's no political affiliation. So everyone seems to really appreciate what he has done. Which is rare in today's day and age, by the way. Well, and by the way, just on that point, you know, Grant Cardone, who I also follow, he has a saying that's don't get rich quick, get rich. for sure right and there's powerful words there because uh it's exactly what you said you know uh years fly by and all of a sudden you're like damn i tried this thing and that thing and that thing and that lack of focus will kill you every time i love that gc i was going to interview him last month and yeah something just happened yeah no i'm a big fan of his dude i love gc well and gc kind of got me started a little bit also on multifamily i was watching youtube videos this is five six seven years ago just all the time man all this you know he did his monday show we'd get on every Monday with, uh, with Jared and, uh, and, and captain Ryan, and they'll just spit game on the whiteboard and, you know, talk about multi-band. I started watching and watching. And I remember I called my brother cause we just bought a couple little houses as rentals. And I called him. I was like, Chuck, this is bullshit. We gotta, we gotta get some units. And he was like, all right. And you know, nice thing you know, we're buying stuff in Bakersfield, you know, and it was funny how it came together, but a big part of it was looking up to Grant and him kind of, I think making it relatable you know because so many people before him it's like you see you see these big things but they're very like they're closed in a little bit you know they weren't out there and now they're much more out there a lot of a lot of people but but one of the reasons why I also like him he's just been the same person from like years ago he's very consistent like that's the same personality that I remember seeing on YouTube like in 2013 whatever it may be he's just consistent you know nothing has changed he's had the same you know outrageous Just exciting. Hate him or love him. He's the same guy. Hate him or do it, never ignored. Yeah, exactly. Yeah, yeah. All right. So one of the things, obviously, I noticed there's a lot of stuff where people are like, you can get real estate, no money down, all that kind of stuff. Of course, I've interviewed so many in this space and people are breaking down credit card hacks. They're breaking down all these different hacks as well. What are the steps that have helped you acquire so much of units What are ways that you done that Well it really things it one it opm other people money because when you get into the investment space you quickly realize that there's a lot of people that want to like for example a lot of people that want to be in multifamily real estate but they don't know how to start or they don't have the time to become the expert so it for example if you're the expert in multifamily and i'm a doctor a lawyer a plumber or whatever, and I'm making my income over here, I probably want to be, I may have some interest in being in that space, but I don't have the time to go look, look for deals and deal with contractors and have tenants call me about toilets, termites, and whatever the other one is, but you know, the expression. And so I think for me, again, I really invested hard into learning the business inside and out. And so when I first started, I just used all my own money, but you quickly run out of your own money. I mean, most of us, again, if you're Warren Buffett, no, but you know, the rest of us quickly run out of money. And so it was one of those things where because I had spent the first few years of buying multifamily with my own cash, learning my own mistakes and what worked. Then when I started going bigger, I could go to people and sit down with them and say, hey, here's what's working. Here's what we want to do with this new asset. It was a new acquisition. And they got behind it fast. It was very easy for people to say, hey, I'll put 50 grand into that deal. I'll put a hundred thousand in that deal. I'll, I'll, I'll, whatever, you know, jump in at whatever the amount was. And so, um, I realized part of that question is, you know, even if you go before that, right. Like if someone wants to start and they don't even have enough money to buy their first deal. Um, but I would say this, you know, living here in Los Angeles, stuff's really expensive, right? I went to Bakersfield. I bought an $80,000 house. I put 20,000 down. I actually met my brother cause we, he was putting the loan in his name. And so I called him, he's in san francisco i'm in la and i said hey chuck um let's buy this blah blah blah and he thinks i'm crazy at this point um you know he was like what you want to go to bakersfield and buy something and i was like just meet me there so i met him showed him this little 80 000 house i wanted to buy and we were sitting there like some starbucks or something and i had a little duffel bag and i had i had 20 000 in cash in it i was like dude here you go you put five in i got 20 let's just bang out the 25 000 down payment and and let's buy this sucker and he was just looking at me like, dude, you're probably insane, but he's like, whatever, let's buy it. So, so that was how we started. And so I guess it goes back to, if somebody wants to get into this business, you know, and they want to start off like we did with maybe using their own money before they start going to other people, because that is a big responsibility, right? To go to other people and ask them to invest. You don't have to be a millionaire. You don't have to have $500,000. We had 20 grand, 25 grand, you know, it was only five for my brother. He got a pretty good deal. he signed a loan and he put five grand and I put 20 grand. And so, you know, we both got a good deal. But the point is, is like, you don't have to start with these massive numbers, whether you do it in Bakersfield, California, or you go to Cincinnati, you know, you can find, you can still in today's day and age, find reasonable prices. If you're serious about starting in real estate investing, you probably got to have something, right? You got to have some amount of cash. But that's not always true either, because let's say that you and I were going to partner on a deal and I had, and you had good credit and I didn't for some reason, and you can get the loan kind of like my brother and I did, maybe I just put in the 25 grand and you, and you just bring the loan. So it's all about that creativity. Right. And, and, and, and that's why I love having partners is because everybody can kind of bring something to the table and then you can kind of start getting some momentum. And how many partners do you have right now? I have three partners right now. Okay. Yeah. So our company is called BCGK. Yeah. Brandon, Chuck, Greg, Kevin, you know, it's very, there it is brandon shot great kevin you know right on the nose but uh but yeah that's that's our company awesome and so um i think i i also mentioned to you one of the things i like more than anything because i mean i'll go on social media and you hear people do say all these different stuff and i mean nothing wrong with that but i just like basic fundamentals because i feel like uh especially with my audience there's a bunch of entrepreneurs in different fields of course but just to break it down before i ask this question in utah one of the things very very common is that people usually do have good great credit yeah and also people are very self-reliant in the sense where people always have like a small business or something so you either go do sales because everyone's like majority is a mormon culture so you go serve your mission you come back and you do door-to-door sales because you're already accustomed to that as well which i did both yeah one of the things is the fact that people will buy a home and then they'll rent like their basement basements are very common in utah and almost all the homes have that because of the snow and like just how climate and the environment is. So majority of people, even if they aren't like big entrepreneurs, they'll actually have a home that they'll rent a portion out as well before people end up like getting a duplex one or two. Almost everyone has like one or two homes. But now for those that don't, if you kind of break down the basic fundamentals, what are probably the first few steps that you would do today right now? I have great credit and I earn about like a million dollars a year what's the first step in order to acquire a multi-family unit well first i would start looking at properties right because you'll be surprised even just looking at properties you know uh reviewing the listing packages uh talking to the brokers going to some open houses you know with multi-family it's a little different it's not always open houses but you know you need to start getting educated because wherever you're gonna buy whatever you're gonna buy you need to start figuring out what it is right you're gonna build a car you better figure out how cars run, you know, and how they're built, right? So I would recommend if you have an interest in real estate, start watching some podcasts like this, you know, go to some of the real estate conferences, you know, talk to the local brokers in your area, drive some properties on the weekend, but you want to start figuring out where you want to buy probably first, because every market has its own differences, own competition, property types, you know, regulations or laws, depending if you're buying in California, Texas, that's a big difference, right? Even in California, one of the reasons we buy a lot of property in Sacramento or outside of Sacramento in these middle-class suburbs is because there's no local rent control and they're pretty flexible. So you can get permits reasonably quickly. The rules are not totally slanted to the tenants. Whereas if we were to buy in San Francisco or LA, it might be a little bit different, right? And so So I think the thing is you really need to understand how the business works and start learning it. And you also need to start studying your market. And you'd be surprised if you picked up, you know, if you open the computer right now, went to loop net or realtor.com and just said, Hey, show me triplexes in the area. You'll get a good feel for what's going on. You'll start to see a trend, right? Like these types of deals are going for 200. Okay. And these types of deals, why is this one 250? Why is this one on 180? You pick up the phone, you talk to the brokers, and you'll be surprised at how much information you actually get when you start talking to people and you start taking notes and like, okay, this is what's going on in the marketplace. And then what have you found more success in throughout your real estate career in 20 plus years? Has it been flipping? Has it been like renting? Has it been investing? What has found more success on your end? Multifamily, man. It's been number one, multifamily. It's why I'm the multifamily guy. Grant Cardone, huh? Grant Cardone, there you go. GC was right. What can I say? I can't argue with the guy, you know? I drank the Kool-Aid, you know? See, the whole thing is once you, okay, If you go from selling houses, for example, like I did, to flipping houses, flipping houses are great, right? But it's kind of a different type of commission you're chasing. You're still having to buy the property, fix it up. There's no income coming in. You're hoping you're going to sell it for X amount. Sometimes you flip a house and you make $100,000. Sometimes you make $50,000. Sometimes you break even or lose a little bit of money, right? And hopefully that doesn't happen a lot if you're doing a handful of them. But you're always still kind of chasing the next deal. Now, don't get me wrong. If you build up a flipping business and you systematize it, right, and you get it to start kind of semi running without you and you have a great contractor and a team that can find the deals, it can kind of be a little bit on autopilot. But typically, again, you're still it's kind of like you're still chasing that next deal constantly. Whereas what I do, I can buy one or two deals a year. Like this year, I bought two deals. I bought a 50 unit for 8 million bucks. I bought a 32 unit, uh, uh, excuse me, 29 unit for 3.2 million. So, you know, roughly speaking about 80 units this year, only had to do two escrows, you know, cost 11 million bucks. These are nice deals, but you know, the money that we think we'll make on these two deals. And we're talking six, seven, eight, $9 million. Now we got to hold them for five years. We got to fix them up. we got to do certain things. But the, the, what happens is once you start coming over to this side of things and building a portfolio, whether it's multifamily, whether it's commercial or whatever, you kind of just start, it's almost like playing the real life monopoly game, right? You just buy these things, pop them over here, buy these things. And all of a sudden you turn around and we've had deals that like this year, right? I sold a deal. I bought two that I just told you about, but I sold one. Um, I only owned it for three years. Uh, it was in Bakersfield as well. I paid 900,000 for it. And in after three years, I sold it for 1.6 and it cash flowed every month. I only had a couple hundred grand of my own money into it. And, you know, almost pulled a million bucks back out of it. And during the three years I was down here running around chasing commissions, doing podcasts, whatever that thing was up there, just working on its own, you know, rents were coming in. And I did a little bit of work. Don't get me wrong. I was up there a few times, you know, we had to renovate a few things, but it kind of was self-sufficient. And that's kind of the reason I like this business. If you can set these deals up, I don't want to say you forget about them, but if you have good systems and processes, they kind of run on their own. And so then you just kind of do what you doing And then Hey one day we can refinance this one or we can sell it and make a million bucks or whatever the case may be So it going to keep paying you until you get that big pop down the road versus the smaller deals which I still flip homes actually. I mean, I've got two on the market right now, uh, here in town. And so I do that more now just to kind of have what I call the smaller money, you know, turn over a couple of flips, make a hundred thousand here, a hundred thousand there. And then it's more money. I can go buy some more apartments with or whatever. It kind of keeps the office bills paid and things like that. But it's a mindset shift. It's a totally different thing. But I've never met anybody, whether they're buying hotels or commercial or multifamily, that once they get into the idea of building this massive portfolio, I've never met anybody that looks back because it will totally change your life. If you lean in and you can build something and learn how to scale it, which is a GC thing, right uncle gc is all about scale go big right um but if you can learn how to scale it and and really stick with it it becomes bulletproof dude i love that you mentioned um what's it san francisco and sacramento and i stayed literally in between called tracy i don't know if you know i've been through tracy i've studied the central valley so i know exactly where tracy is i know all those towns in there and now we golfed on at uh at livermore and so okay tracy livermore pleasant and because i lived in cali for a while yeah and i mean i lived in utah before i went there but i had to show you this license that that's funny man which is still not yet expired but yeah no that area because we we sold solar for many years down there door-to-door yet again good place to do it around and it was perfect because you started having pg&e ripping people off and so you're coming there with a solar saying hey listen here's a system that's going to be half of what you're currently paying you own the thing and you get way more and it's literally from the sun directly so it was a no-brainer well like obviously around the period of time where it was hot before everything went down and under like two years ago so perfect exit yet again right but no i'm glad you mentioned that like obviously uh people are listening to opm another gc school gc building trust, building rapport, getting investors to believe in what you're currently doing and the project in trying to acquire a multifamily unit. What are the steps that we can do to help people do that? Well, there's a few things. So first of all, you got to be transparent, right? Anytime that you're asking somebody to give you their hard earned money, part of their retirement fund, their kids college fund, or whatever it might be, you need to be very transparent with the process. So like when our investors invest with us, you know, there's quarterly statements that come out, all the financials. They can look at the bank statements. They can drive to the properties. A lot of our investors do. They'll send me a picture. Hey, I was in town. I'm in front of the property. So everything's very transparent. We also do weekly calls with our core team, but we invite it. It's open to any of the investors. So if they want to pop in one Wednesday and hear us, you know, argue about which vendor we're going to select for something or solve one of our problems we're working on, they can they can pop on. So I think from my standpoint, the first thing is like you need to be an open book. That's number one. Number two, you really need to understand your core business, because remember, if you don't understand the core business, whether you have a track record or whether you've invested in the upfront training or there's some reason or you have someone on your team that understands it. you need to be proficient in that core business. If an investor can go out and buy their own apartment building and deal with their own headaches and, and, and make a nice return without you, they're going to do it. But if you can offer them something where it's like fairly hands off for them, they know you're honest and transparent. They know that you understand your business and you treat it like a business. And maybe the most important part, you're giving them a nice return, then they're not going to have anywhere else to go. because I'm telling you what I've seen out there is that people are tired of the stock market. They don't really understand crypto. A lot of our investors have made a lot of money in both of those places, but they understand the value of being in a hard asset and they understand the value of diversifying their portfolio and taking some of the risk out of the stock market holding, selling some of that Tesla stock that's been on fire, but parting with a little bit of it and getting it into a real asset on a real estate deal. Dude, these are golden nuggets, man. That's that's good stuff you know i i just like i like those because i've been doing a lot of um ig um questionnaires where i ask people and often people just like basic fundamentals because i'll have all these successful people but sometimes they'll tell us how successful they are and people are like we just heard this guy's resume and so i'm i'm grateful we kind of breaking down yeah because that's the entire purpose of the podcast where it's educational right people get value out of that as well we use a bunch of big words and don't go into any details they're like okay whatever he buys apartments you know but why did i watch this you know for the view i mean it is a nice but now with with high interest rate environment how do you go around underwriting deals differently right now well you got to put more down number one that was a big change you know 24 months ago when rates shot up or whatever it is now, you know, we used to buy an apartment complex and put 30% down. And then when the rates first shot up instantly, the deals that we were in, we put closer to 50% down. And we kind of had to and kind of wanted to because the rates got so high, it was so expensive. And we didn't want the risk of them going up even further and getting caught being over levered or having a large loan that we had to refinance later. So that was one thing we had to start putting, you know, bigger down payments. And I think just really back to the fundamental of like, when you're buying a property, you know, the whole reason you go to multifamily is that if I have, use the number, if I have 10 tenants, right, I got a 10plex, I got 10 people that rent from me, you know, you need to do the math up front on how many of these guys have to stop paying me before I'll have a problem making my mortgage payment, right? If two people move out, and you're going to be upside down on your mortgage, you're probably paying too much for the deal or your loan's not making sense for some reason. But I always look at these deals in terms of staying power. Rates will come down. Property values will go up. If you're fixing things up or raising rents or whatever, right over time, you catch that appreciation. And there's things you can do to make them go up faster. But the bottom line is that you want to make sure you understand what your break even is on your rents, because that's really important. And it's important in a high interest rate environment, making sure that you're going to cover that. But, but Hey, what I've seen recently though, rates are starting to come down. I mean, we just on the deal, we just closed got a 6%, which wasn't bad for a big commercial deal, you know, year ago, it might've been a six and a half. So we were happy to get that, that half point discount, so to speak. Love that, man. Second, last question before we wrap up, you have your eye towards a hundred million dollar portfolio. The roadmap is, is inspiring. What are the strategies that you're going to implement to try and achieve that? I got to get known. Like GC says, man, I got to get known. I need more people. I need more investors. I need more brokers to send me deals. I need more contractors to want to work on my deals. I just, I need to do more. And so that's why now I'm shifting more of my time doing things like this, right? Having a real estate event that's coming up in February, getting on other people's podcasts. Jump coming to my event as well. Coming to your event in Salt Lake City, December 12th and 13th. Let's go guys. So, but yeah, but that's the whole thing, right? Because I can't do it by myself. I need more people to want to join and come along on the journey, right? And so that's really the big thing is, and really the back end of it is new systems and processes, because you realize in this business that the same way you managed three properties or a smaller portfolio, it starts to change, right? Like for us, when we got to $10 million of property, some of our systems were breaking down. Some of our people couldn't keep up anymore. And so we had to get new team members. We had to invest in new technology, new systems, like accounting is a perfect example. We used to use QuickBooks. Now we use Yardi, which is all integrated. So it's just you have to do those types of things. And so bottom line is I'm investing hard right now and getting known, marketing, branding, going to events, throwing events, and really building a solid team in the background. So I can be out here doing stuff like this. and when i'm sure when we wrap up i'll have a text with all the good things that are hopefully going on at our apartment building so that's that's the bottom line awesome stuff when's the event february when february 21st so we're gonna have a big real estate event february 21st here in la we're gonna have some like rock solid speakers that are gonna come talk about development wholesale flipping multi-family of course and uh yeah i'm gonna be dropping some more info about that so if people are watching this not to not to do a self-promotion here but people after i'm self-promoted but if people are watching it and they do find me through the gram you know we'll be we'll be dropping some announcements on that awesome stuff well brandon if you could let our viewers know by looking at the camera letting us know where they get a hold of you if you want to learn about real estate connecting um funding and so forth what's the best way to contact you best way would be through instagram go to at mr locatio that's m-r-l-o-c-a-s-c-i-o i'm sure we'll drop the link on that but yeah go to my instagram we got links to all of our pages upcoming webinars our real estate event on february 21st and uh yeah love to connect with anybody awesome stuff the code to winning insights you need today to seize the world tomorrow learning about multifamily the description section will also have the link to his uh social media platform company website and also the event as well click the link below if you want to find out a bit more regarding that as well but yeah the code to winning insights you need today to seize the world tomorrow brandon licasio pleasure so thank you thank you my friend