AWM Insights Financial and Investment News

In this episode of AWM Insights, Chief Investment Officer Justin Dyer and Portfolio Manager Mena Hanna dig into the world of real estate investing, breaking down the myths and realities of building wealth through property. They explore the pitfalls of single-family rentals, the power of diversification, and what it really means to take an institutional approach to real estate. With expert insights and real-world examples, Justin and Mena reveal how to think like a pro, identify the best opportunities, and steer clear of common mistakes. Whether you're new to real estate or looking to sharpen your strategy, this conversation delivers clear, actionable guidance for navigating today’s complex markets.

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Chapters
(00:00) Institutional Approach to Real Estate Investing
(01:15) Pitfalls of Direct Single-Family Investing
(02:52) Power of Diversification in Real Estate
(05:27) Sector and Asset Class Selection
(06:26) Demand, Location, and Market Dynamics
(10:35) Navigating Macro Trends and Local Nuances
(12:57) Setting Strategy with a Top-Down View

What is AWM Insights Financial and Investment News?

A bite sized discussion on timely financial news and investment topics, to help you maximize your net worth and wealth for the next generation with Justin Dyer and Mena Hanna of AWM Capital.

Justin Dyer: Hey everyone, welcome back
to another episode of a WM Insights.

This, uh, is the Christmas episode.

Hopefully everyone is enjoying
time away with their family.

Uh, staying warm if you're in a
cold part of the country or maybe

trying to find some, some snow.

If you're in a warm part of the
country, um, your host, Justin Dyer.

Chief Investment Officer joined as
always by Menahan, our portfolio

manager here at a WM Capital.

We're gonna continue talking about
private market assets today, specifically

jumping in and diving into real estate.

I know this is, uh, a topic
most clients, most investors are

really, really interested in.

So hopefully we'll shed some
light, at least on how we.

Think about the asset class, how, how
we take an institutional approach, that

institutional professional approach
to allocating to the asset class.

Uh, and really, I guess without further
ado, Nina, let's jump jump right in.

So, uh, you know, I'll, I'll, I'll ask
you kind of a leading question to tee

up the conversation here, but yeah.

A common.

Uh, real estate approach at times.

And, and I think this ebbs and flows,
and maybe it still is depending on where

you are, but is to go buy a, a single
family rental, or let's go buy a house

and rent it out on Airbnb and, you know,
what is the general downside to, to a

or I shouldn't even say that's leading
the horse, uh, or leading the witness.

What, what would we say to that?

Yeah,

Mena Hanna: and I guess we're gonna
talk financially because doing that is a

tremendous burden on yourself, your time.

A million different things.

Justin Dyer: is not passive income.

Mena Hanna: That is not passive income at
all, even though everyone thinks it is.

And real estate also isn't really an asset
class that only goes up into the right.

My parents bought their home in
2007, and I remember how stressful

of a situation that was, even
though I was like 11 years old.

There are times where you can buy
these real estate assets, especially

if it's, you know, like you're
saying, the house next door where

there's only one tenant and you
could be footing the mortgage bill.

What you're actually paying to the bank
and not having any cash flow come in.

That's, that's one.

Call it sliver and, and potential outcome,
but it's, it's really a broader point.

If you're trying to invest like a pro
and looking at things from a smart

money lens and, and not being the
dumb money, you don't buy one asset

or two, three assets where you have
three tenants and you can lead lose,

you know, 25, 30% of your income any
day because someone loses their job.

Someone wants to move and
it's hard maybe to fill.

Uh, that property with a new tenant,
you want to buy thousands of units

and you want to buy thousands
of units in different markets.

You want to truly be in a position where
these units are producing passive income.

You want professional management, both
people that are dealing with things when

they break, fixing them at reasonable
prices, and also renting these units out.

Whenever you ultimately do have
vacancies, because people will always

move and find other properties unless
they are too cheap, and then you

have another problem on your hands.

So just looking at this from a.

Diverse.

I, I hate to beat a dead horse, but
looking at this with the lens of

diversification, because especially in
real estate, that could be the difference

between having a portfolio that is
successful and unfortunately going under

and losing potentially everything which we
see on the real estate side quite a bit.

Justin Dyer: Yeah, totally.

I mean, don't, don't, don't feel bad
talking about diversification, right.

It's, it's the one free lunch.

I know we, we mention it a lot, but it
truly is, it's there for the taking.

It is institutional best in class.

Investment management, portfolio
management, really regardless of

asset class because of, uh, a lot
of things you're talking about,

at least specific to real estate.

One other aspect, um, again, kind of,
you know, going down the diversification

side of things too, to think about
is it, oh, comparing a single family

asset or a single tenant asset?

Versus multifamily as an example.

There's just a huge step up
in diversification there.

If you owned a, an apartment building
or complex versus, you know, two

rental homes, you are so better
off still in a, in a way, a single

asset, but think about the different.

Tenant makeup, you lose one tenant
in a multifamily unit, you lose one

out of, you know, whatever, 2030
versus you have two rental units,

you lose one tenant, you're down 50%.

And so there's also an element of that
and there's, there's, there's a reason

why some of the biggest home builders in
the world nowadays, their game plan at

least, is to do these huge developments
where they're building, you know, hundreds

if not potentially thousands of, of.

Units in a, in a given project, right?

That is inherent diversification
in and of itself.

So, um, another really important
piece to, to all of this too, is

the different asset classes, right?

We're, we're talking real estate and
everyone knows what real estate is.

You can go touch it and bang on it,

Mena Hanna: but

Justin Dyer: but each asset class,
sub-asset class within real estate

has different profiles and d
different risk profiles and therefore

different return profiles, right?

Uh.

A lot of people like real
estate, but guess what?

I don't think you would like real estate
if you owned office, an office building

in 2020 and still to this day, right?

That that really hasn't come around.

So, Mina, speak a little bit about,
let's call it sector diversification

and even the quality of the
asset, the class of the asset as

well.

Mena Hanna: Yeah, I think on the
real estate side, we pay the most

attention to the asset classes
that we're actually investing in.

And as you said, the types of properties
we are not going to be going all

in buying, you know, B class B.

Office real estate in North Dakota,
that's not gonna be something we do

because we don't see the tailwinds behind,
behind that to justify the valuations

or potentially growth in the future.

So we really take a cautious
approach thinking what real

estate is going to be in demand?

This ultimately is, is a huge demand game.

A big reason why people invest in
real estate is you can't replicate it.

So you have to look at the demand side,
figure out where demand's actually

moving, and a lot of the demand
we see is on the multifamily side.

There's first of all positive, call
it tailwinds for demand, and we're

also under supplied in multifamily
in general, by millions of units.

Justin Dyer: So

Mena Hanna: When we look at the
market, that immediately sticks

out as a very favorable part of
real estate that we should actually

allocate to the way we allocate to it.

Going back to the diversification pieces.

Across markets.

Now we like to look at asset types,
whether it's Class B, your super

high-end apartments, uh, class
A, excuse me, your super high-end

apartments, class B, a notch down,
and then Class C, kind of your.

Pre 1980s buildings and look at
potentially what makes the most sense.

How different are rental prices
for each of these assets and what

price can we actually buy in at.

So I would say the real estate
side, I know I've been jargoning on

for a while, is one of those asset
classes where you can do a lot of.

Research, you can look at things
in a pretty objective way and

see what direction is the market
actually moving in and what are

the biggest areas of opportunity
that you can take and potentially

and hopefully avoid office in 2020.

Even now, office has actually been
falling for a staggering amount of time.

Ever since like 2007, it's been
on a downward spiral and avoid

that bad part of real estate end.

Capture the returns on the good side.

Justin Dyer: Yeah, totally.

And you know, it's also worth noting
this, this is a comment people

have heard time and time again.

I, I imagine when it comes
to real estate, right?

Real estate is about location,
location, location, location.

And I think that's a, a very.

True statement.

It, it's not just thrown
out there flippantly.

Um, because you can actually,
we we're, we're, we're uh,

really beating down office here.

And that's for good reason.

'cause broadly speaking, it's not
done well and it's been really hurt.

People are underwater.

There's all sorts of reasons, but
every so often there's a specific

location where office makes sense.

There's a unique angle to it.

We've done it.

Uh.

An investment like that in the past,
and we really think about whether or not

someone has an edge when we're kind of
going outside these, let's call it down

the fairway asset classes or where, where
there's a lot of data to support it.

Um, uh, just more broadly speaking.

And we ask ourselves, is there an edge?

What's the business plan?

Is there an edge in access?

Right?

Maybe it's a unique piece of land that
someone owned and we know the owner and

you can get access to that and develop it.

Or maybe there's a, a tenant that is
taking up 80% of the, the property.

Like these are all wonderful
things and really kind of the.

Inside information game.

Uh, not in, in, in any bad way, but Right.

That's what, what can happen
in these, in these markets.

And so we start to look for these things.

Uh, is there a, a local tailwind that.

For some reason, they want more
office or they want more multifamily.

Like all of those come into play into the
mix here and are really, really important

to, to, to, uh, to re to remember, right?

You don't just chase these fads or you
we're talking about multifamily, we're

talking about residential real estate.

But there are markets where that's
a terrible investment right now

because it got oversupplied overbuilt.

You know, there's all these Sunbelt
states where prices have actually

declined a little bit in, uh.

In residential real estate, multifamily,
um, part of that's 'cause of what's

happening in interest rates, but a lot
large part of that is the oversupply

that happened in those specific markets.

And so there needs to be a correction.

So all of these things go into the mix.

You really have to think about the
demand side, like you said, but

then what's also going on in the
macro environment, in what's going

on with interest rates, et cetera.

What's going on now with tariffs?

'cause that impacts building costs.

Um, real estate is one of those
asset classes full of jargon.

If you don't know what, you know,
some of these words are that,

that you were just rattling off,
you know, cap rates, et cetera.

Then you, you're, you're probably
not really well equipped to out

be allocating to this asset class.

Not at, certainly at an
institutional level and you're

probably getting, getting taken

Mena Hanna: of.

Yeah, and every property is unique
and every market, I would argue is,

is super unique going back to office.

Office is pretty negative across the
country, but if you look at class A office

in New York City, everyone wants a nice
office in New York City right now at

least, or potentially in San Francisco.

In some areas, you've seen prices for
office buildings skyrocket in these really

niche parts of the market, so you do have
to be very specific and very granular.

Obviously, real estate is.

A specific game.

Every property is different, but also
every sector is different and moves pretty

quickly, and that's why you have to have
a team that's actually looking at these.

Macro movements and is investing
and thinking about investing like

a pro and not just taking haphazard
opportunities as they developed.

You also mentioned Austin.

I think Austin was a
super easy one to see.

There was a tremendous amount
of building that was happening

in Austin at the start of COVID.

Obviously a ton of tailwinds from.

Uh, Texas being a little bit
more COVID positive and allowing

businesses to function more freely
than call it a California, but

the market got ahead of itself.

We didn't allocate at all to real
estate in Austin and a lot of the

managers that we actually talked to.

That's one of our first questions.

Are you guys doing, or
what did you do in 2021?

2022?

Did you buy Austin or did you sell Austin?

And that shows you how sometimes people
can be thoughtful and miss out on these

20, 30% declines because that's actually
what happened in some of those markets.

Call it post COVI and after the correction
kind of happened on the real estate

Justin Dyer: side.

Yeah, totally.

Great.

Great place to end there.

Uh, kind of go, going through
a quick summary, right?

Of course.

Diversification is always
present, always an ever present.

Don't ever forget about it.

It is there.

Take it.

Um, but with respect to real estate.

There's a lot of nuance.

You can ha be diversified
within a specific asset class.

Multifamily, you could be diversified
across asset classes within real estate.

Um, we generally take more of a kind
of top down viewpoint where, what's

going on in the macro, where tailwinds
supporting certain asset classes within

real estate, like multifamily, you,
you gave that example and then really.

Set our strategy for the next
few years according to that.

Um, and so we pull all that together,
create our opportunities, uh, from that,

from that mandate, and, uh, and then
start to deploy capital from there.

So hopefully that's helpful.

Um, we will pause our, our, our, our
private market series and do a little bit

of a yearend review on the next episode
and then, uh, close it all out with.

Private equity, really jumping
into what is that asset class?

How, uh, how do we think about
allocating there versus other

parts of the private market?

What are the dynamics, et cetera.

If there are any specific questions you
all have, please shoot us a text message,

Mena Hanna: 6 2 6 8 6 2 0 3 5 5.

Justin Dyer: and until next
time, have a very happy holiday.

Merry Christmas to all Own your wealth,
make an impact and always be a pro.