Cap rates on most real estate asset classes have dropped 40% over the past five years. This has made cash flow very hard to achieve. Ground up construction, on the other hand, has much higher cap rates. The key is mitigating risk by being in the right markets with the right assets. Today’s guest, Neal Bawa, the Mad Scientist of Multifamily, has been doing ground up construction in smaller markets in several different asset classes in order to generate attractive returns for investors.
Neal Bawa is a technologist who is universally known in the real estate circles as the Mad Scientist of Multifamily and serves as CEO / Founder at Grocapitus Investments, an iconic, data-driven commercial real estate investment company. Besides being one of the most...
Prepare yourself for a fascinating conversation between Brian Hamrick and Neal Bawa as they take us through several disruptive trends that are going to change the way people live and invest. They’ll be discussing Hybrid Work and how they’ve only seen the tip of the iceberg in people working from home and companies allowing them to do so.
We have some incredibly powerful information to share with you today on disruptive forces and trends that will be dramatically altering the course of real estate investing for the next ten years, and I’m so excited to have Neal Bawa back on the show to share it with...
Recent Updates in the Market Multi-family rentals have increased by 2% annually in the previous three decades. During the following ten years, they had a 3% growth. Their growth rate grew by 12% in the last year, six times more than the 30-year average. Given these...
Multi-family rentals have increased by 2% annually in the previous three decades. During the following ten years, they had a 3% growth. Their growth rate grew by 12% in the last year, six times more than the 30-year average. Given these figures, multi-family occupancy should be declining; yet, last month had the highest occupancy in multi-family history, with 97.3% of all units filled. We are now seeing the highest rent growth and occupancy rates in history.