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Rethink Real Estate. For Good.

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Finance

Smart money is on impact.

April 27, 2020

Simply put, impact investing is the practice of using investment dollars to generate positive social or environmental impacts in addition to offering a competitive financial return. The idea that we can do far more with our money than merely reap monetary dividends is important, and has grown popular recently, steadily gaining traction with investors, whether small or large. As we increasingly wrestle with broad and difficult societal issues like affordable housing and climate change, issues that will impact the lives of millions of people, so too are we learning that impact investing can be an essential part of the solution.

Impact investing does not mean giving up on a good financial return. We’ve long known that what’s good for people and the environment is ultimately good for businesses and economic growth as well. And the competitive returns that investors are getting through impact investing only serves to reinforce this. This reality is highlighted by the fact that every day more institutional investors are committing an ever-growing pool of their funds to impact investing. As an example, one of the largest financial companies in the U.S., Prudential, has an Impact Investment division that should serve as a model of impact investing at the institutional level.

Catalytic and creative

In their Impact division, Prudential Financial has built a distinct portfolio of investments with the goal of both making money and having a social impact through each of those investments. The focus of this portfolio is specifically on projects that can lead to catalytic change. These investments can be higher risk and are often declined by their traditional portfolios.

Prudential has invested about $1 billion dollars into impact investments. Typically, when an institutional investor reaches a milestone like this, they’ll aspire to the goal of growing that portfolio, to say $10 million. Ommeed Sathe, the Vice President of Impact Investing at Prudential and engineer of their impact portfolio, thinks that’s the easy option to take. Instead, he’d like to push the envelope and focus on growing impact by seeking ever more catalytic and creative projects. These might include minority developers, in neighborhoods that have seen little investment or building-types that defy the norm. This is an encouraging and unusual goal for a large investment fund that hopefully will inspire other institutional funds to follow suit.

The portfolio overseen by Ommeed and his team is currently focused on both real estate and business investments, all of which would be considered socially conscious or beneficial. On the business side, companies have a social purpose, are financially inclusive, do work to retrain and reskill our workforce, and are working on sustainability. For example, in Washington D.C., they helped fund improvements to green infrastructure and create the first tradable stormwater credits, not unlike carbon tax and trade mechanisms, but done at the local level. Real estate investments include affordable housing, redevelopment and brand-new development projects that have the potential to transform the communities in which they are based.

While impact is critical, the driving goal for Prudential is to invest to make a return. These investments are meant to be competitive. But still, the focus of their impact investments portfolio is to invest in assets that more traditional portfolios would normally not invest in, not normally take a risk on.

The takeaway

It is groundbreaking for a large company to invest in this way, and further, to want to expand their reach even more. There is something to be said for the scale of change that institutional dollars can make. If investment funds push more capital into large and necessary projects such as affordable housing and mixed-use developments, especially in communities that need it most, there will be enormous benefit to everyone. And as these funds become more comfortable taking part in catalytic projects, they will discover a wide swath of investment opportunities that they may have previously overlooked. Investing for impact at this scale can have an impact we haven’t imagined before.

Listen to my full interview with Ommeed or go ahead and make your own impact investment.

Image by Rajkiran Pericherla / CC BY-SA 4.0

First in. Towards growth.

April 1, 2020

Lance Chimka, who became Director of Allegheny County Economic Development (ACED) in 2018, oversees an agency responsible for business expansion, planning, community and real estate development, and affordable housing projects for the second most populous county in Pennsylvania.  

Born and bred in Pittsburgh, Lance has long been familiar with the changes the region has gone through in its shift from a deeply embedded, industrial economy to one grounded in medical research, higher education and technologies such as robotics and cybersecurity. Soon after taking over at ACED, he noted that the local economy is hitting an important juncture, one in which Pittsburgh and local municipalities need to think beyond “eds and meds,” adding that a decade after the 2008 financial crisis “we’re in an economic expansion, but we’re not seeing some of the growth that other benchmark cities are seeing.”

Lance previously worked within the Pennsylvania Department of Community and Economic Development where he was Regional Director of the Governor’s Action Team, focusing on removing barriers to development, investment and job growth in the 11-county southwestern Pennsylvania region. And prior to working for the state, Lance led community development programs, commercial lending, business attraction and expansion activities for the ACED for a number of years.

Lance is certified as an Economic Development Finance Professional and he served in the U.S. Peace Corps, in Turkmenistan.

Information and Links

  • Lance is really proud of ACED’s partnership with RIDC to help the startup, Fifth Season, build a vertical farm in Braddock, PA. The project was profiled by Fast Company and won a NAIOP light industrial project of the year award.
  • Lance loves Pittsburgh International Airport’s microgrid project – he thinks it is both important and under-rated. Forbes loves it too.
  • And he’s inspired by the tech entrepreneurs that have led Pittsburgh into the forefront of the innovation economy, like Duolingo, MeeterFeeder or Thread.
Read the podcast transcript here

Eve Picker: [00:00:18] Hi there. Thanks so much for joining me today for the latest episode of Impact Real Estate Investing.

[00:00:24] My guest today is Lance Chimka. Lance is the relatively new and extremely energetic director of Allegheny County’s Economic Development Department, in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. He has a very contemporary take on what government ought to be doing, and that includes investing in real estate to advance the economy. Lance is building a collaborative team environment, working with developers throughout the county, lending where banks dare not go, always with his eye on economic development growth, and always with the thought of how our region can do better. Learn how Lance and his team are supporting development in a not-quite-market rate environment.

[00:01:11] Be sure to go to EvePicker.com to find out more about Lance on the show notes page for this episode. And be sure to sign up for my newsletter so you can access information about impact real estate investing and get the latest news about the exciting projects on my crowdfunding platform, Small Change.

Eve: [00:01:37] Hi, Lance. I’m really excited for the opportunity to talk to you today.

Lance Chimka: [00:01:41] Pleasure’s all mine, Eve. Thank you. I’m honored that you would have me on.

Eve: [00:01:45] We’re gonna have a great time.

Lance: [00:01:46] Absolutely. We usually do.

Eve: [00:01:48] In a not a lot of time, you’ve gone from being an intern at Allegheny County Economic Development to the organization’s director. And then you did a few odd jobs in-between. And that’s a pretty meteoric rise, wouldn’t you say?

Lance: [00:02:06] Ah, yeah. I mean, I guess it has been pretty quick. It sometimes didn’t feel that way. But I think the cool thing about that is that whole progression is absolutely vital to some of the stuff I want to get done, now. I wouldn’t have changed that course, at all. Like, understanding kind of the daily struggles of interns in my office absolutely directly informs how I work on efficiency measures here, for example. It’s been incredible and I’ve been really lucky to have incredible mentors along the way that have taught me a lot. That was one of my favorite things about public sector work, is it touches so much, that you’re able to, you’re able to learn.

Eve: [00:02:45] What led you to pursue a life in government service? Was it that first internship that you just liked so much?

Lance: [00:02:52] When I was pursuing an undergrad degree in finance, it was kind of in the boom times, the 2000s, and I didn’t want to take that route. Kinda always been a volunteer at heart, and so I joined the Peace Corps, and that was kind of the start of my real public service. And I just kind of knew, I came back to go to CMU and get a policy degree and just kind of always knew, in my heart of hearts, I would always be in some kind of public servant role. Not necessarily in government work, but that’s the path that I’ve chosen to this day, and it’s been incredibly rewarding.

Eve: [00:03:27] So, that what drives you, yeah. So, for listeners who haven’t connected the dots yet, Lance and I share a hometown, Pittsburgh, and a few decades ago, Pittsburgh was pretty well all but written off. You can listen to my podcast interview with Tom Murphy that I think just went live and you’ll get to hear the turnaround mayor talk about where we were then and what it took to shake that image. And that brings me to a statement that I read, that you made, Lance, which was, “we’re in economic expansion, but we’re not seeing some of the other growth that other benchmark cities are seeing.” And I’m just wondering what you meant by that?

Lance: [00:04:09] Not to, not to recap what you probably talked with Mayor Murphy about, but to get from the doldrums of 1983, which is really the trough of our local economy.

Eve: [00:04:19] It was the bottom, right? Yeah.

Lance: [00:04:21] Yeah. To where we’re at now, has been an amazing transformation, right? It’s been all about diversification and it’s, of a regional economy. And then we, now we have these five primary industry sectors: in financial services, IT, energy, advanced manufacturing and healthcare. And that’s really, really important because in recessionary periods, that diversified economy is very robust, and makes us the darling, and outperform benchmark cities in recessionary periods. However, the problem is that in expansionary economies we lack the kind of exponential growth that some of our other cities experience. It’s just kind of the nature of our economy currently, is slow and steady wins the race, which is fine. I think my goal is on the macro economic end, is to not throw the baby out with the bathwater, keep the diversification, keep the slow, steady growth, but then really experience some of the upside of expansionary times, which we’re in now. And I think the key to that is, and I’m really optimistic about the future of our economy, is across those five industry sectors. You have artificial intelligence, which we are an absolute worldwide hub of, cuts across all of those. And robotics, cuts across three of those, in advanced manufacturing, health care and energy. So, those eight intersection points that I think are the key to experiencing upside growth, and that’s some of the stuff I’m excited to work on.

Eve: [00:05:56] How do you work on that? How do you improve that?

Lance: [00:05:59] Great question. Especially like, how does government do that? The risk profiles associated with investments in startups are probably too, you know, too risky of an investment for governments to be making. And not to mention, we don’t have that skill set. But I think there are a lot of other ways we can invest in the city in a way to encourage that kind of growth. One of those ways is in real estate development, right? If you take something like biotech, right? A lot of times you’ve got companies that need wet lab space. You have extremely long periods to get through clinical trials. You have really expensive buildings that, you know, because of the nature of the beast, you have your non-credit tenants. So, I think when we’re making investments in real estate, we need to incentivize those kind of assets in buildings that aren’t going to happen in the open market. That’s just one example. We lack high-bay space for robotics. Some other specialty real estate that I think the public sector can play a role in: mitigating the risks for developers who have non-credit tenants, and making sure that building stock is available. Speculative development is another thing we’ve classically underperformed on. And in the kind of pace of the current economy, like, people are not waiting around 18 months to build a building, they want turnkey space ready to go. So, we’re working on a number of things to make sure that those types of building stock in speculative development is allowed for. And a lot of that is investment through tax abatements, and direct investment, and site assembly that I do here in this office. So, that’s just one example in real estate. I think you can find other examples in public infrastructure, amenities, recreational space, and being really intentional about how we connect our tech hubs through infrastructure work. Whether that’s public transit, or whether that’s, you know, really compelling a multi-modal streetscape design. Things like that.

Eve: [00:08:03] Quite a lot to think about, isn’t there?

Lance: [00:08:04] Yeah. Yeah. Keeps ’em busy.

Eve: [00:08:06] So, you also served as an advisor on Pittsburgh’s Amazon HQ2 proposal. And I’m wondering in retrospect how you feel about making it to the top 20 list, but not as an Amazon final city pick.

Lance: [00:08:20] Yeah, I mean, I feel great about it, because I think we extracted all the marketing benefit from it without any of the really, really, really painful stuff that might have been associated with it. I am proud of our approach to that. I think it was, hey, here’s a suite of stuff that we, as every Pittsburgher, there’s wide agreement that we need to invest in. And we don’t have a revenue stream to do that. So, let’s take that suite of things we need to invest in and treat this gargantuan investment coming our way as the revenue stream. You know, and I think it helped kind of distill that suite of, that wish list, if you will, for us. And now, ok, we might not have the revenue stream, but at least it helped distill what we want to be as a city, forcing us to go through that process. And I think it was overwhelming positive experience.

Eve: [00:09:13] What’s the top of the list that we should become?

Lance: [00:09:16] I think the two things that kind of rose to the top, given the time in our city and the way things are trending, are people want a really robust public transit network. I think that was clear. People want and are concerned about rapidly appreciating real estate values in some of our residential markets. And that would be exacerbated by a huge investment like that. And so I think it really rallied people around public transit, and around affordable housing. Which I think is a positive thing, you know?

Eve: [00:09:48] Yeah, no, I agree.

Lance: [00:09:50] It’s great that affordable housing is suddenly cool again. You know?

Eve: [00:09:53] Yeah.

Lance: [00:09:54] This is fantastic. People working in this field are like, wow, this great sea change, like, in a really short period of time.

Eve: [00:10:01] Yeah, that’s true. Affordable housing is a really hot button issue now, isn’t it? Everywhere.

Lance: [00:10:06] Yeah, no doubt. And it’s great. And I think ultimately, you know, we did not land that investment. I think predominately it was a numbers game, right? A population numbers game. You’re talking about …

Eve: [00:10:18] Yes.

Lance: [00:10:18] … a gigantic pool of workers, and being a small middle market city was tough for us to absorb that, A., and, you know, the facts that matters are we have zero population growth and a two million metro area, and it went to a place with a 20 million metro area and five percent growth. And a, what a, maybe a 12 million metro area, and like 10 percent growth down in D.C., right?

Eve: [00:10:42] Right.

Lance: [00:10:42] At the end of the day it was all about …

Eve: [00:10:45] The numbers.

Lance: [00:10:46] … you know, the numbers, demographics, bodies, population. And that put a fine point that we need to work on that as well, right? That’s a huge Achilles heel for us is a lack of population growth.

Eve: [00:10:56] It is and it isn’t. I mean, that part of Pittsburgh’s charm is its size. When you talk about what should Pittsburgh become, I think you should also think about what it shouldn’t become, right?

Lance: [00:11:07] Sure.

Eve: [00:11:07] It’s a pretty beautiful and rather unique city. And each city has its own strengths. I don’t know. For me, cities go beyond numbers, but perhaps not for Amazon.

Lance: [00:11:17] Yeah, well, exactly. I think, despite what they would tell you, I think they had to take a very analytic approach to that.

Eve: [00:11:23] Yes.

Lance: [00:11:24] And it’s something that like charm and culture and beauty were probably not heavily weighted …

Eve: [00:11:31] No.

Lance: [00:11:31] … on that algorithm scale, right? So. But I agree with you.

Eve: [00:11:35] Probably mobility and housing stock were right up there.

Lance: [00:11:38] Mm hmm. I imagine.

Eve: [00:11:39] You’ve barely started, but what would you like to accomplish at ACED?

Lance: [00:11:44] Oh, boy, I mean, a lot. So, our two-fold mission is this: one, is the work on the macro economic health of the city, which is really about building a diverse and growing regional economy that’s opportunity rich for everyone to tap into, right? And we addressed some of that already. The other part of our mission is much more neighborhood-based. And that’s, you know, we want to create healthy and vibrant communities. So, all of our investments, and we make those investments in the areas of housing, and industrial and commercial development, infrastructure development, parks and rec, things of that nature, all of our investments are done with that two-fold mission. So, there’s certainly a lot of things I think we can do and be more creative with the tools we have. You know, I’m a big proponent of good government, too, and I think there’s a lot we can do to make the public sector meet the needs of our citizens in a more efficient and customer-friendly way. So, that’s the other kind of side of this that I will work on is, not only mission delivery, but just, you know, government efficiency is a twisted hobby of mine that I like, I like working on.

Eve: [00:12:55] Ha! That’s a really great hobby.

Lance: [00:12:57] Yeah. I mean, everyone needs a hobby.

Eve: [00:12:59] Yeah.

Lance: [00:13:00] And to be more specific, again, I talked about the real estate assets that I think we need to incentivize. A big concern of mine is if you put communities, you can kind of classify them broadly in three buckets. And that’s, there are tons of communities that are thriving, and we need to support them. There are a number of communities that are revitalizing that need special attention. There are a lot of communities, they need stabilization. We need triage. And a lot of that is direct fallout from the 1983 exodus of people with any sort of social mobility leaving the city.

Eve: [00:13:37] Yeah. Yeah.

Lance: [00:13:37] And we have certain areas that, they have zero market. Land value is negative, right? And that presents a whole slew of economic and social problems that go along with that. And we really need to support those communities. At the same time, kind of leaving the development breadcrumbs from areas of high opportunity to establish markets, and you kind of need to string those investments along. It’s going to be a while until I can take the strength of the market that is the Strip District, for now, and pool it across the Allegheny Valley, right? And pool it down into the Mon Valley.

Eve: [00:14:14] Yeah.

Lance: [00:14:14] And in the process establish beachheads in Etna. And I need to establish that beachhead in Etna before I can really get to Tarentum and New Kensington, right? Same thing goes for the Mon Valley. I really need to establish a strong beachhead in Wilkinsburg and Braddock until I can really talk about strength of market in places like Clairton. In the meantime, we need to make sure that we are treating those communities with the respect that they deserve in addressing the blight and disinvestment they’re struggling with, and doing that in a really smart and strategic way.

Eve: [00:14:46] Well, it must be really tough making decisions because you can’t have endless resources, I’m sure. And then you have to decide where to direct those resources. And for people who don’t know who are listening, Pittsburgh was around 700,000 people strong and really lost more than half of its population in the 1980s. And it’s now still hovering just over 300,000. Although family units are smaller now.

Lance: [00:15:16] Yes.

Eve: [00:15:16] It’s still a lot of vacancy, right?

Lance: [00:15:18] Yeah, absolutely. And so, you know, there’s some opportunity there. You know, to some extent, affordable housing price per square foot is a supply demand calculation, right?

Eve: [00:15:27] Yes.

Lance: [00:15:28] The problem is the areas that are close to job centers, well-served by public transit, and have amenities like grocery stores. We’re seeing rapid appreciation there, and obviously, because they’re more desirable places to live. So, we need to make investments to ensure that those are mixed-income communities. And we also have the opportunity, though, that a lot of other cities don’t, to make proactive preservation investments in areas that have naturally occurring affordable housing. And we’re doing both of those things on the housing investment side.

Eve: [00:16:00] Real estate development is a major component of your work.

Lance: [00:16:04] Oh, yeah. I would say most of what we do has a real estate component to it. Now, one of the things we’re trying to get more engaged in, that we traditionally have not, is the workforce development arena. You know, I think one of the big transitions we talked about, like the change in public opinion around affordable housing … the innovation economy has forced site selection to go from a predominately site- and building-centric approach to predominately talent-based approach. And we, I think in the past, in the economic development community, have taken a very hands-off approach saying, hey, there are specialists in workforce development, we’re going to let them do their thing, and we’ll just, we’ll build the stuff, invest in those tangible building products. I don’t think that model works anymore. I think the workforce challenge and the future of work is such an acute need that we really need an all-hands-on-deck approach. And the more resources everyone can leverage, that and, the better. I’m just finalizing my budgets for next year and we’re probably making close to a million dollars in investments in workforce development, which doesn’t have a land and building component to it. And I’m proud of that. And I think that’s something we’ll continue to invest more heavily in. And that’s everything from workforce readiness of teens, to adults with barriers to employment, getting re-educated and prepared for the workforce. You know, we need to attack this from all angles.

Eve: [00:17:33] I was going to ask, is there a rhyme or reason to the projects you become involved in. But I think I’m hearing that your organization, you really play the role as almost a pioneer investor early on when perhaps it’s a little bit uncomfortable for private money to be involved?

Lance: [00:17:51] Oh, no doubt.

Eve: [00:17:52] Yeah.

Lance: [00:17:52] Yeah, absolutely. Our investments, I think, are predominately … well, one, we take first mover investments in site assembly. Right? For example. So, one of my big hypotheses was that people say there is no market, no real estate market in Braddock, right?

Eve: [00:18:14] Mmm Hmm.

Lance: [00:18:14] And I challenge that. I think it’s the fact that the available real estate is not the right kind of real estate. So, for example, we assembled 60 tax-delinquent, single-family structures, demolished them, consolidated them into one five-acre parcel, and worked with a very creative developer on a take-down period that worked for the finances of that kind of constrained market. And they built a 60,000 square foot high-bay light industrial building. It’s probably the first new industrial development in Braddock in, I couldn’t even tell you how long. This is a place that suffered 90 percent of population loss.

Eve: [00:18:52] Yes.

Lance: [00:18:52] Those are the type of things, in that case, we were a first mover and then worked on aggressive land conveyance strategy with the developer. And now the great thing is we have new tax base in Braddock, we new job base in Braddock, and almost more importantly, I have a comp now, I have established that land has value in Braddock.

Eve: [00:19:12] Oh yes, that’s very important.

Lance: [00:19:14] And previously that didn’t exist. So, that’s something we did in 2019. They’re going to take occupancy first quarter of 2020, and, yeah, we’re really proud of that kind of work. So, sometimes our investments are in that realm. Other times were physical investments, either through tax leverage finance or direct investment, and yes, we assume a much higher risk profile than our private sector partners.

Eve: [00:19:35] And have you been able to convince some banks to come along on the ride with you?

Lance: [00:19:39] Yeah. And I think as long as you understand their underwriting criteria, and their approach, they’re great partners. You just have to understand what their sweet spot is and work around it. We underwrite our investments in a very similar way that banks do, on the risk end. The difference being, one, we’re willing to assume more risk. And two, on the return end we think much more broadly about returns. It’s not just about debt coverage ratio. It’s about tax base expansion. It isn’t necessarily going to pay us, but is a return to the project because it’s a mission-based return.

Eve: [00:20:16] It’s a return to the region, right? As well.

Lance: [00:20:17] Exactly. We love working with banks and traditional funders. And we have the ability to be more flexible to allow them to meet their underwriting goals and and still participate in the project.

Eve: [00:20:28] What sort of projects do you hope to see more of? I mean, if things go really well and your investments pay off in the way you want them to. What sort of projects are you hoping to see arise independently in the next five years, let’s say?

Lance: [00:20:42] Yeah, I think if we do a couple of projects like that, that light industrial building in Braddock then … that’s the goal, is that you would then establish a market and I can then start making similar investments in Duquesne and McKeesport. And like I said, you just pull that market down to maybe less centrally located areas. So, yeah, more spec buildings, more high-bay light industrial for robotics industry, more wet lab for biotech and life sciences. You know, hopefully, some of our development community starts to realize that you can stand in Lawrenceville in 40 dollar square foot space and look across the river at 15 dollar square foot space. And …

Eve: [00:21:19] Yes.

Lance: [00:21:21] … start to recognize that arbitrage opportunity. Because these communities, they’re fantastic, unique, beautiful places. They are open to development. They are, you know, they’re wonderful places to do work. And they’re right adjacent to the urban core. So, you know, rethink your idea of proximity and let’s do some great projects in some of these communities that are maybe overlooked in a lot of cases.

Eve: [00:21:47] And then most importantly, it’s pretty fun to be at the leading edge, right?

Lance: [00:21:51] I think so! Sometimes, you know, that’s when you don’t have a comp and the bank starts to get real nervous …

Eve: [00:21:58] I know, I know.

Lance: [00:21:58] … that’s when, you know, they don’t find it as much fun as I do. But yeah. I mean, that’s part of the fun, is there’s additional challenge there, but it can be really, really rewarding if you pull something off.

Eve: [00:22:08] I agree. Totally agree. Yeah. We’ve also talked about how to empower people in these communities to be part of the change, the rapid change that’s occurring in cities like Pittsburgh. And I am wondering why you think that’s important?

Lance: [00:22:23] One of the big challenges we face as a society is disproportionate allocation of not only income, if you look at wealth, right? It becomes even more staggeringly problematic. So, we’re not trying to establish markets for, just because, just for tax base, right? Hopefully, the idea is then, by establishing market you can assist in families building wealth, right? And we want people to be able to participate in the benefits of these hopefully catalytic investments we’re making. How best to do that is a challenge. You know, obviously, it’s easy when you have homeownership, high levels of homeownership, because that’s, you know, your biggest asset that appreciates with change in real estate market.

Eve: [00:23:17] Yeah.

Lance: [00:23:17] If people have that asset and they want to cash out and participate in that upside return, well, great. You know, that’s building equity, that’s building wealth. And hopefully that’s life changing for the family that chooses to do that. I think the problem, because when people are very culturally, emotionally and kind of societally invested, but don’t have that asset to participate in the appreciation, how to plug those people in to our changing communities and make sure that they participate. And that’s where, you know, lots of novel ideas that I think we’ve been talking about, about microlending, and, you know, equity returns back to neighborhoods, start to become really, really compelling for that kind of segment of society and something that I really want to learn more about, and try and institute some really progressive things on that front.

Eve: [00:24:10] I’ve been talking to some people over the last year who also believe that making a space for those people, like a physical space, is really important. And they do that in different ways. Like maybe a community space or … there’s a developer that I know who very purposefully will create retail space and then look for someone in the neighborhood to fill it and really help them build their business into that space. And that, I suppose that’s another very concrete way to involve community and make them feel like they belong, right?

Lance: [00:24:47] Yeah. No, absolutely. Absolutely. And, you know, maybe that’s a, you know, a silver lining on the challenges to retail real estate now is that mixed-use buildings are kind of hoping that’s a break even spot? Right?

Eve: [00:25:01] Yeah.

Lance: [00:25:02] And so what you have is then, is a really affordable commercial …

Eve: [00:25:05] Right.

Lance: [00:25:05] … property for people to move into. You know, locally-owned, sole proprietorship businesses that provide a higher return back to the, to the owner.

Eve: [00:25:17] Yeah, yeah.

Lance: [00:25:17] Hopefully we can continue that.

Eve: [00:25:19] Yeah. And so, like, I have to ask, what’s, you know, your background? You mentioned a little bit about it, but what did you study? What got you to this place?

Lance: [00:25:29] Yeah. I grew up in Pittsburgh, to a … I was the youngest of four.

Eve: [00:25:35] You were the baby.

Lance: [00:25:36] I was the baby and I probably act like it too much. But, you know, my first education was growing up in incredibly hilarious and brilliant family. So, you know, my parents were really hardworking, great people. I went to a mix of public and Catholic schools when I was a kid. I studied finance in Washington, D.C., The Catholic University of America. Went overseas and lived in Turkmenistan for three years, which was arguably the most educative of all of my educational experience. And I came back to CMU to get a policy degree with the intention of going back to do more international development work, because I found it just fascinating. But really fell back in love with my hometown, recognized that there were parts of my city that were in as much need or possibly greater need than what we consider to be some of the, you know, the most poverty stricken places on earth. And that didn’t sit great with me. Yeah, all of those different educational life experiences, it kind of like, let me down this path. And, you know, people, like I said I have had great work mentors that have given me chances to work on stuff. I’ve just been incredibly lucky.

Eve: [00:26:51] I have a feeling it’s not just luck, but we can go with that.

Lance: [00:26:53] I think it’s mostly luck. It’s mostly luck. But yeah, like I say, it goes back to my parents. I do work hard at it because I love it. It never quite feels like work, you know. Some days it does.

Eve: [00:27:04] Yes.

Lance: [00:27:05] Most of the time it doesn’t.

Eve: [00:27:06] That’s great. And do you think on the whole, socially responsible real estate is necessary in today’s development landscape. Outside of the work you do, like everyday developers? What do you think that should look like?

Lance: [00:27:20] There’s crappy real estate development and there’s good real estate development, right?

Eve: [00:27:23] Yes.

Lance: [00:27:24] I think good real estate development is about placemaking, and placemaking is about integration into the community. Not just, you know, from a contextual design standpoint, but from a ‘community needs’ standpoint. And I think enlightened developers get that. Enlightened developers know that incorporating that kind of philosophy in the development usually leads to higher returns, too. So, I think it can be done well and it can be done profitably, right?

Eve: [00:27:52] Right.

Lance: [00:27:52] It just requires a kind of a philosophy, a mindset, and the ability to listen to people a little bit more. But in the end, they have a much better project to show for it.

Eve: [00:28:03] Creating something that’s responsible isn’t really swallowing a bitter pill, right?

Lance: [00:28:09] No, definitely not. Especially when you have your friendly local government economic development person to help you along the way and hopefully chip in where necessary.

Eve: [00:28:20] And are there any current trends in real estate that you think are interesting or most important to the future of our cities?

Lance: [00:28:28] Well, I mean, I think it’s interesting, you know, being the hub of technology that we are. I think the design considerations around places like parking garages, for example, I think are really interesting. Because the rate of technological change is forcing people to consider the fact that this structure could achieve obsolescence in five, 10 years.

Eve: [00:28:52] Yeah.

Lance: [00:28:52] Which, what previously was considered a 50 year asset. So, I find that inherently fascinating.

Eve: [00:28:58] It is fascinating, isn’t it? I just start thinking about, well, what could you do with a parking garage?

Lance: [00:29:04] Yeah, right.

Eve: [00:29:04] How many housing units could you put into those little slots?

Lance: [00:29:08] Precisely. And are they going to be livable, you know?

Eve: [00:29:10] Yeah.

Lance: [00:29:10] And how do you remediate the oil afterward? You know?

Eve: [00:29:12] That’s right.

Lance: [00:29:12] It’s a … it’s a really interesting thing. So, you see people spec-ing in higher ceiling heights than they would have previously. Flat floor plates. All these different design considerations that I find fascinating. And even more fascinating because we’re on the bleeding edge of all of the autonomous vehicle technology that is going to lead to obsolescence of those buildings. So, yeah, I mean, that’s one that I find fascinating. What else?

Eve: [00:29:39] I’m watching zoning changes across the country, and across the world. I’m pretty fascinated to see how quickly that’s going to move along. When you have cities, you know, basically outlawing single family homes. That’s quite a statement.

Lance: [00:29:53] Yes. I think Pittsburgh in particular is being very progressive in some ways with, you know, allowing for accessory dwelling units, which I know you’re probably an advocate for, and …

Eve: [00:30:05] Yeah.

Lance: [00:30:06] … and, you know, what they’ve done with the RIV district, for example, and ensuring access to the waterfront, I think is some really good things. However, in some city neighborhoods, and this gets even more acutely problematic when you move out to maybe smaller municipal governments that haven’t updated their zoning and code in a while. The thing that I find problematic is if you ask the average 10 people on the street what the vision for new development their community would look like? And then you show them what current zoning allows for, they would be horrified, right?

Eve: [00:30:40] Yes, yeah, I think that’s true in most places.

Lance: [00:30:43] It’s a huge disconnect and it’s worrisome to me.

Eve: [00:30:47] Yeah, I mean, how do, you know, it’s really expensive updating a zoning code. I’ve been involved in that. It’s a really big deal.

Lance: [00:30:53] It is. And when you multiply that by 130 municipalities with wide, varying levels of, kind of, capacity. It’s … yeah, it’s really a daunting task.

Eve: [00:31:05] Yeah. And one sign-off question, then. Given all of the possibilities, what comes next for ACED, and for you?

Lance: [00:31:14] I am very project focused. And I believe that markets are built one great project at a time and I try not to let the enormity of the challenges, you know, get me down, right? It’s just one good project at a time. We’re focused on that every day, and we’re focused on being innovative and creative every day. And there are a ton of innovative and creative people in Pittsburgh that we need to partner with and work with to solve these problems. Like I said, it’s all hands on deck.

Eve: [00:31:48] Well, thank you very much. I really enjoyed that conversation. I can’t wait to see what you do next.

Lance: [00:31:52] Awesome. Thank you so much, Eve.

Eve: [00:31:54] That was Lance Chimka. Lance is embracing his role as the head of an economic development department with energy. Our conversation reflects the way that Lance thinks. Broad and diverse ideas to get at very particular economic problems. Lance is focused on growth, first and foremost. Making sure that Pittsburgh’s growth matches other cities. But at the same time, he wants to make sure that no one is left behind. So, he thinks a lot about how to empower communities in the path of rapid change, and how to change the disproportionate allocation of wealth. I’ll be interested to see the impact that Lance’s leadership will have.

Eve: [00:32:46] You can find out more about impact real estate investing and access the show notes for today’s episode at my website, EvePicker.com. While you’re there, sign up for my newsletter to find out more about how to make money in real estate while building better cities.

[00:33:12] Thank you so much for spending your time with me today. And thank you, Lance, for sharing your thoughts with me. We’ll talk again soon. But for now, this is Eve Picker signing off to go make some change.

Image courtesy of Lance Chimka

Democratizing investment. A huge step forward.

March 25, 2020

Mark Roderick describes himself as a very “boring” corporate and securities lawyer, but he’s not. Since the JOBS Act of 2012, Mark has spent all of his time in the investment crowdfunding space. Today he is one of the leading crowdfunding and fintech lawyers in the United States. Mark writes a widely-read blog, which offers a wealth of legal and practical information for portals and issuers. He also speaks at crowdfunding events across the country, and represents industry participants across the country and around the world.

Most recently Mark launched a new firm, Lex Nova Law, a boutique corporate law firm representing crowdfunding, fintech, startups, blockchain and cryptocurrency along with more traditional legal sectors.

Along with the rest of us in the crowdfunding industry, Mark applauds the SEC for its proposed upgrades to all of the online offerings: Rule 504, Rule 506(b), Rule 506(c), Regulation A, and Regulation CF. In this podcast we focussed on Regulation CF, which promises to turn into the little engine that could when these changes take effect.

“These proposals are great for the Crowdfunding industry and for American capitalism. They’re not about Wall Street. They’re about small companies and ordinary American investors, where jobs and ideas come from” says Mark.

The proposals and the reasoning behind them take up 351 pages. You can find an SEC summary here, or the full text here. Some of the key highlights for Regulation CF include much expanded investment limits for both accredited and non-accredited investors, and an increase in the maximum amount an issuer can raise in any one year from $1.07 to $5 million.

Insights and Inspirations

  • Mark believes the latest round of changes to the crowdfunding rules will bring some fundamental changes to the industry including higher quality deals.
  • As the deals get better, so will the industry grow, and more investors join in.
  • He expects to see changes in the physical landscape in just 5 years as these rules begin to have a far-reaching effect.

Information and Links

  • Read the entire 351 pages of proposed changes to the online crowdfunding rules here and a more digestible summary here.
  • Mark’s investment crowdfunding blog provides a wealth of information for those in the industry.
Read the podcast transcript here

Eve Picker: [00:00:08] Hi there. Thanks so much for joining me today for the latest episode of Impact Real Estate Investing.

[00:00:14] My guest today is Mark Roderick, founder of Lex Nova Law and one of the top online crowdfunding experts in the country. I asked Mark to join me today to discuss the very exciting changes proposed by the Securities and Exchange Commission to regulation crowdfunding. In case you haven’t heard of it, regulation crowdfunding, or Reg CF, is the securities regulation that is really the first step taken by the S.E.C. towards democratizing investment. The additional changes proposed will give this regulation real legs.

[00:00:57] Be sure to go to EvePicker.com to find out more about Mark on the show notes page for this episode. And be sure to sign up for my newsletter, so you can access information about impact real estate investing and get the latest news about the exciting projects on my crowdfunding platform, Small Change.

Eve: [00:01:18] Hello, Mark, it’s delightful having you on my show.

Mark Roderick: [00:01:21] Well, thank you very much. It is delightful sort of being there.

Eve: [00:01:25] Very good.

Mark: [00:01:26] Virtually.

Eve: [00:01:25] Just sort of. Yeah. Okay. Today, we’re going to talk about raising equity online, which is a pretty wonky subject, but you and I like it. And raising equity online is also known as equity or investment crowdfunding. You said these proposals are great for the crowdfunding industry and for American capitalism. They’re not about Wall Street. They’re about small companies and ordinary American investors, where jobs and ideas come from. And you were referring to some proposed changes to equity online raising funds. And according to the S.E.C., a majority of entrepreneurs and emerging businesses raise capital using an exempt offering framework under the Securities Act. And they raise everything from seed capital for new businesses, to funding growth on the path to an initial public offering, and, also, raise equity for real estate. So, I wanted to talk about the rule changes and why you think they’re so great.

Mark: [00:02:35] Well, okay. Big question and a big, big topic. I mean, maybe I’ll just start at the granular level and then kind of work backwards. If you are in or around the existing industry, And I’m going to call it the Title 3 industry or the Reg CF industry, as opposed to what we might call the Rule 506(c) accredited investor industry. The accredited investor industry in real estate is super-healthy. People are raising a lot of money and platforms are profitable and all kinds of wonderful things are going on. In contrast, the Reg CF world, the industry, it’s sort of, you know, like when you cross the railroad tracks and crossed into the less affluent part of town. It’s a very, almost, I don’t want to get too hyperbolic, but, you know, it’s a little bit of a desolate landscape.

Eve: [00:03:41] Oh yes.

Mark: [00:03:41] It’s very difficult to make money for funding portals, and it’s a vicious cycle as opposed to a virtuous cycle. So, it’s hard to make money. Very small companies with very limited resources are applying because of the limits – we can only raise up to a million dollars a year, and in real estate, in particular, that’s not very much money. And that leads the portals, the funding portals, too many of them, not yours, I should say, but too many of them have adapted to that situation. You know, you’re trying to squeeze money out of people who don’t have any money and have led to a lot of shortcuts, and what I called gimmicks, and that is a vicious cycle because investors, who are not dumb, see that, they see that’s what’s going on. You know, they just ignore the entire industry. And that means that high quality companies are that much less likely to try to use Reg CF. And it has been a vicious cycle.

Eve: [00:04:46] Just backing up one minute. I think some of our listeners maybe not familiar with Reg CF or regulation crowd-funding. So, I just feel like I need to fill in a little bit. Regulation crowdfunding and other online crowdfunding rules grew out of the Jobs Act of 2012, and the intent was really to move online crowdfunding for donations to crowdfunding for investment, right? And so regulation crowdfunding is the rule that lets anyone over the age of 18 invest, but really kind of limits how much they can invest, and how much the company raising money can raise. Those limits, I think, have been the real stumbling block, right?

Mark: [00:05:31] Yeah.

Eve: [00:05:32] So, this has translated into smaller offerings, just like you said, which these funding platforms, which are very heavily regulated to use that rule, it means that they can’t make a lot of money. And that’s kind of where you left off, right?

Mark: [00:05:50] That is exactly right.

Eve: [00:05:52] The new rules, which you seemed very excited about last week, I think, will make some big changes in that landscape.

Mark: [00:06:01] Yeah. They will make a couple changes that are, I think, taken together, just gonna be very, very important and are really going to, to continue that bad metaphor I was using, really revitalize the Regulation CF neighborhood. These are the two most significant changes. As you said in your overview, Regulation CF or Title 3 – those are interchangeable names for the same set of rules – limit very severely how much each investor can invest. And the idea here was to protect widows and orphans from all the shady entrepreneurs out there. But even if the widow or orphan wants to invest his or her entire net worth into a questionable company, the Reg CF rules won’t allow that. To the contrary, they allow only very small investments. And that means that when you’re trying to raise money in Regulation CF, you have to find lots of investors, because each of them can only contribute a very small amount. And, you know, that’s hard. Marketing is hard.

Eve: [00:07:21] It’s very hard.

Mark: [00:07:22] It is also inconsistent with other S.E.C. rules, which in general allow accredited investors to invest as much as they want. One of the fundamental concepts in U.S. securities laws since the 1930s has been that rich people can take care of themselves. They don’t need the government to protect them. And so the term ‘accredited investor’ is sort of a stand-in for rich people. All of the other S.E.C. rules, really, allow accredited investors to make bad decisions, you know. An accredited investor can invest his or her entire network in a single deal. And people have noted, since the outset of regulation crowdfunding, that the regulation crowdfunding restrictions are inconsistent with that general concept. So, one of the changes just made by the S.E.C., or proposed, is that, what do you know, accredited investors will no longer be subject to those severe limits. In fact, they won’t be subject to any limits. So, now if you can attract some accredited investors, you know, you can get people to write big checks. So, that’s an important change. Really important change.

Eve: [00:08:40] Yeah. Yeah. I mean, I’ll give one example that has impacted us. We have quite a few account holders or investors who are accredited by definition based on their net worth. And they have very healthy networks, but they’re retired and they own their houses and their income is maybe below 100,000. And under the regulation crowdfunding Reg CF rules, one of these investors was limited to investing 4,000 a year under Reg CF. But as an accredited investor, she can invest however much she wants. That’s how weirdly bad the rule is right now.

Mark: [00:09:20] Yeah. And just to take that one person, I don’t know how much of a check that person might write, but let’s say it’s, you know, 25 or 50,000 dollars, which is not an unusual investment in the Rule 506(c) world. So ..

Eve: [00:09:34]  Yeah.

Mark: [00:09:35] … she goes from even conservatively …

Eve: [00:09:38] She couldn’t be bothered investing 4,000. She might be interested in 15,000 or 20 or 25 but not …

Mark: [00:09:44] Yeah.

Eve: [00:09:44] Yeah.

Mark: [00:09:45] So, it doesn’t take many of her, you know, the difference between four and say, even conservatively, 25. Those numbers add up quickly. That change in itself was significant. But, in addition, the second change is they’ve raised the limit from a million dollars to five million dollars. And that means bigger companies, companies with more revenue, more products, more services, more scale. Bigger companies can now start using Reg CF. Yeah, I mean, you know, Eve, that a million dollars is not very much in the real estate world. Five million dollars really is a lot. Lots and lots and lots of deals are done with equity of two or three or four million dollars. So, it vastly expands the number of ticket holders who are allowed to attend this event. And then, when you put those two together, you know, now we can do a three million dollar raise where we can raise as much as we want from accredited investors. That, suddenly, becomes an extremely viable business. And that’s the point that funding portals will now be able to make money. In fact, they’ll be able to make significant amounts of money. You know, that’s like, again, going back to that metaphor, that is pouring a lot of money into that neighborhood. And you’re going to see, in my view, just a fundamental change. You’re going to walk through the streets and say, oh, that used to be a dilapidated building. It looks nice now. And so on and so forth. And you’re going to see better business practices from the portals. I believe you’re going to see much higher quality offerings on those portals. In fact, you’re going to see websites that were formerly only in the Rule 506(c) world who had shunned Regulation CF. You’re going to see those companies getting their portal licenses and saying, hey, we can now expand our investor clientele at very little cost. You know, we’ve been marketing only to Rule 506(c) accredited investors. Now we can market to everyone. Why not?

Eve: [00:12:10] Maybe the answer, response to why not, is the regulation that is attached to, being a funding portal, and not to 506(c).

Mark: [00:12:20] Yes. I mean, it’s certainly an impediment. I mean, you’ve been living in this world for the last five years and the regulation can make you pull your hair out. But the business opportunity, it seems to me, is … the landscape just changed completely in my view, you know, I … within the last three weeks before these proposals came out someone called me, a company, you know, we want to be a funding portal. And I tell them, because I try to be very straightforward with anyone, you know, you’re not going to make any money. It’s a funding portal.

Eve: [00:12:55] Right.

Mark: [00:12:55] You know, you want to go, have to expand, vertically integrate. But it’s a very, very difficult business. And that was advice I’ve given in the last two weeks. You know, I’ve had people contact me since the proposals, and it’s totally different advice. This is a real opportunity.

Eve: [00:13:13] Yeah, yeah, yeah. Interesting.

Mark: [00:13:14] I mean, how do you see it affecting your business? You’re in the business.

Eve: [00:13:19] The thing you haven’t touched on yet is, there’s a couple of things that really matter to me. And one is, yes, the fact that accredited investors can invest whatever they want really matters, because I no longer have to offer side-by-side offerings which are very complicated and time-consuming. So, by a side-by-side offering, I mean a Reg CF plus a 506(c), at the same time. So, that can go away. I think the fact that the investor limits have been turned upside down is huge. The fact that now an investor can invest the greater of their net worth or income is absolutely enormous for my crowd. And then I think the single purpose entity rule, which we haven’t talked about yet, is huge. Until now, if you’re going to use a regulation crowdfunding offering type, your investors must invest into the actual deal, which is often not the way that real estate deals work. So, being able to collect a group of investors in a single purpose entity to invest into a project, or a series of projects, is a very big deal. And I’ve been talking to one institutional developer who was really pulling his hair out and trying to figure out how to make Reg CF work for the community he’s interested in using it for, and that particular change makes the whole thing possible. There’s more, I’m sure, testing the waters. I mean, we haven’t talked about all these things, Mark. So, the marketing rules around Reg CF are stifling. And so I want to learn more about what does it mean now to be permitted to have a demo day or to test the waters to, you know, just show the deal before you actually register it with the S.E.C.? I think all of those things really matter.

Mark: [00:15:13] Yeah. There are some other important changes, including, as you say, this so-called testing the waters. We used to have this ridiculous rule, really, that subjected, you know, these tiny Title 3 issuers to more stringent rules, you know, then the largest companies. It was crazy.

Eve: [00:15:35] Yeah.

Mark: [00:15:36] If you were talking, some developer was trying to create this little project, you know, you had to tell that person, you can’t even whisper that you are considering a Title 3 [offering] … You can’t tell anyone, you know, don’t tell your wife. And it was just this ridiculously restrictive rule. So, that is now going to be swept away. And basically, for all intents and purposes, Title 3 companies, issuers are going to be like everyone else. Yeah, you can talk to people about it. You can’t take their money. But that’s an important change for sure. The demo days. Meaning when you’re local science center has a demo day you are now actually allowed to … to attend. It was crazy that you couldn’t attend before. We should mention that they’ve taken some things away. Many Title 3 issuers, the security that they were offering, as you know, were called SAFEs – Simple Agreement for Future Equity. Very popular. The S.E.C. has been convinced by someone that that is not an appropriate instrument for a small company to issue. So, they’re going to absolutely get rid of them. Another very popular instrument – revenue sharing notes. It isn’t clear from the proposals, but it sure looks like they’re getting rid of revenue sharing notes or at least want to.

Eve: [00:17:04] Interesting.

Mark: [00:17:05] You know what the lord giveth, the lord taketh away. I know there’s going to be, during the public comment period, there’s going to be a lot of people complaining about those two things. We did take a couple steps backward, but I think we took about 10 steps forward, so, on the whole, they have made the market much more robust. Yeah, I think it’s very exciting, I, you know this is a world that, you know, you and I have both drank the Kool-Aid a long time ago. This is about providing capital for lots of people whose access to capital has hitherto been restricted. And it’s also about providing investment opportunities to ordinary Americans that have hitherto been reserved for the ultra-wealthy.

Eve: [00:17:55] Yeah.

Mark: [00:17:55] And that’s why my blog post said, you know, this is not about Wall Street. It is actually about undermining Wall Street. It is about a sort of direct to the people, democratic American capitalism. And I think this is a really good step in the right direction. I don’t see any down side personally.

Eve: [00:18:17] Yeah, so you think the number of funding portals is going to explode?

Mark: [00:18:20] I do.

Eve: [00:18:21] It’s about 50 now, right?

Mark: [00:18:23] Something like that, yeah.

Eve: [00:18:24] And in real estate?

Mark: [00:18:26] I do. I think you’re going to have some competitors, which is good. Yeah, I think there are going to be real estate funding portals, I even think, Eve, I think that the big real estate, the Rule 506(c) sites, I think they’re going to consider very seriously having subsidiaries that are funding portals.

Eve: [00:18:47] Interesting.

Mark: [00:18:48] I think it’s a natural to expand their customer base. You know, I’ve always said that portals are like retail stores. And I read a blog post once, saying a portal is like DSW. And DSW doesn’t limit the kinds of shoes that it sells, and it wants every kind of customer to walk in the door, right? And even, you know, a brand like Mercedes Benz, they don’t sell only a 100,000 dollar cars, you know, they sell a 35,000 dollars car. Why? Why do they do that? It’s not to make money from selling a 35,000 dollar car. It’s to get people into the showroom.

Eve: [00:19:33] Yes.

Mark: [00:19:33] And expand their demographic customer base. And I think that’s the natural route for portals as well. We want to accredited investors. We want non-accredited investors. We want everyone, right? I mean, that’s always make sense to me.

Eve: [00:19:46] Right. Right right, right. So, can you think of some examples of projects that you saw in the past that if they went live now, would do so much better? Or is that too hard a question?

Mark: [00:19:57] You’re, I mean, you’re the one who would know that.

Eve: [00:19:58] We have an offering live right now, which was just so complicated to put together, a side-by-side offering. And, you know, an opportunity zone fund offering. They really needed a single-purpose entity for the opportunity zone fund investors. And, of course, we couldn’t use it for Reg CF, so the Reg CF investors missed out on the opportunity zone, tax discounts. And, you know, thinking about how that would be put together under the new rules, it would be so easy.

Mark: [00:20:31] Yeah.

Eve: [00:20:31] I spent months putting it together.

Mark: [00:20:35] I mean, probably every project you’ve ever had on your platform.

Eve: [00:20:38] Yes.

Mark: [00:20:39] You would’ve had the ability to pitch it to accredited investors. Simultaneously. And you would have been legally been earning commissions on all of those transactions.

Eve: [00:20:50] Yes. Yeah. That’s a really big problem.

Mark: [00:20:53] I mean, your life would have been very different.

Eve: [00:20:54] Well, I can’t go back five years, can I?

Mark: [00:20:57] No.

Eve: [00:20:58] So, what about the whole ‘not being able to talk about the terms of the deal’? Like that’s been another really huge stumbling block when you do advertise Reg CF offering, you’re not permitted to talk about the teems. You can’t say, you know, the offering is nine percent preferred return. You’re not permitted to say that. You’re not even permitted to say the minimum investment amount. Whereas with a 506(c) offering, you can say all of that. Is that going to change?

Mark: [00:21:27] Not yet. It wouldn’t surprise me if it changed in the future. So, yeah, you’re gonna be stuck with those same advertising limitations. Now, I will just say that you can say those things.

Eve: [00:21:41] Yes, but that’s all you can say, right?

Mark: [00:21:42] But that’s all you can say.

Eve: [00:21:44] Yeah.

Mark: [00:21:45] And you can say a lot. You know, you can say come invest in this fabulous multi-family project in Downtown Pittsburgh, and it’s 72-percent leased and it’s gorgeous and it’s environmentally friendly. You can go on and on and on and say all those things.

Eve: [00:22:04] You can’t say “it’s gorgeous” because it’s in adjective, right?

Mark: [00:22:07] Ok, well, now I think, I can, I think you can say “gorgeous.”

Eve: [00:22:11] No, I can’t.

Mark: [00:22:13] The only thing you can’t say is …

Eve: [00:22:15] I got my knuckles rapped for saying “bold.” Yeah.

Mark: [00:22:20] You just can’t say, and by the way, we’re raising two million dollars for that project. You know? You can talk about the project until you’re blue in the face.

Eve: [00:22:29] Yeah. Well, that’s been pretty good for us because we want to talk about the projects, but still it is a stumbling block. I think people sit up and pay attention when you say you can invest as little as 1,000 dollars and they’re looking at an ad talking about a great project, but they don’t really know. It’s a question of will they click through? Right? It’s definitely a stumbling block.

Mark: [00:22:50] Yes. And it will continue to be.

Eve: [00:22:53] Yes. Ok. So, I want to just shift gears a little bit. We’re doing this a bit backwards. But how did you become an S.E.C. crowdfunding expert, and why?

Mark: [00:23:04] Actually, Eve, I think our stories are in some ways, similar. So, I mean, I’ve always been a boring corporate lawyer. And in being a boring corporate lawyer, I’ve represented entrepreneurs my whole career. And when you represent entrepreneurs, one of the things you spend a lot of time doing is helping them raise capital. Entrepreneurs are always looking for capital, and raising capital used to be, you know, really, really hard. It’s still really hard, but it used to be, before the crowdfunding rules, a lot harder, as as you know. And when I saw the Jobs Act on the horizon, this must happen back in like 2011, which is amazing, of course, how quickly time flies.

Eve: [00:23:50] Yes.

Mark: [00:23:51] But I said, wow, you mean you’re going to be able to use the Internet to raise money? This is huge. It’s transformative. It’s disruptive. It’s fantastic. And I drank the Kool-Aid right away and thought this would just be a great thing for the American economy. And I said, it’s going to be fun and I want to be involved with it. So, I immediately decided that that’s what I was going to do. So, I learned all about it and started writing this blog and started speaking about it in public. And I’m so enthusiastic about it, and the rest is history. So, that’s my story, which in some ways is probably similar to yours, right?

Eve: [00:24:33] Yes.

Mark: [00:24:34] You saw it and you said, aha!

Eve: [00:24:36] Yes. But not enough of us yet. Right. Still a pretty small industry.

Mark: [00:24:41] Still a pretty small industry, but it is growing, you know. People are raising, we talked about five million being a pretty good real estate deal, you know, people are raising 15 million now. And that, when, you know, when you and I got into this industry, the concept of being able to raise 15 million dollars for a deal online was unthinkable.

Eve: [00:25:06] Yes.

Mark: [00:25:06] You know, people were raising 250,000 dollars to do a fix and flip. The industry is now funding from very significant deals. And because entrepreneurs are always looking for capital, you know, the entrepreneurs of the world are really paying attention.

Eve: [00:25:26] Yes. Yeah.

Mark: [00:25:27] I’m a pretty good barometer because I am pretty well-known in the industry and I will, so when I say my phone has sort of been ringing off the hook, that’s a pretty good industry barometer.

Eve: [00:25:40] It is. Yeah.

Mark: [00:25:41] You know, it probably means lots of peoples’ phones have been ringing off the hook. And this latest change really has gotten people’s attention.

Eve: [00:25:49] Yes. Well, it should.

Mark: [00:25:52] So, I think in 2020, I really think the industry, those of us who survive the coronavirus, anyway …

Eve: [00:26:01] Oh, that’s depressing.

Mark: [00:26:02] Yeh, and I … then are going to, you know, really see a significant uptick.

Eve: [00:26:10] Yes. So, I have to ask the next round of improvements that the S.E.C. makes, what do you want to see on that list?

Mark: [00:26:17] So, I get asked that question a lot and I never have a ready answer because I’ve been doing this, you know, I’ve been practicing law for so long. I have learned not to think about possible legislative or regulatory changes because they are so rare and so unpredictable, you know. There are two things you never want to see being made. One is sausage and the other is law. I just focus on the world that I have, that I’m in, rather than on how it might be improved.

Eve: [00:26:57] I get it. The thing I think about is of regulatory burden, which is enormous for small companies. Really enormous.

Mark: [00:27:05] And how would you address that?

Eve: [00:27:08] For a small company that’s never done something like this before. As a member of FINRA, not only are you following, you know, the regulation crowdfunding rules, but you’re also following FINRA’s rules, which require many, many, many things, like WURM compliance of emails and evidencing and things I never knew existed. It’s very time consuming to learn at all, and it’s time consuming to keep it up and to do it properly. And I have a feeling that many platforms are not doing it properly because it’s just too hard. So, I think that really needs to be addressed in one way or another. You know, I don’t know what a full-blown broker/dealer compliance book looks like. I’m sure it’s worse. But in some ways I feel like FINRA wasn’t ready to handle these smaller companies, they’ve never done anything like it before. The compliance is … huge. And, you know, we’re surveilled every quarter, and they said, well, every word. And that that’s their job. So they have to, I’m not saying they shouldn’t, but it’s all required, and it’s a lot.

Mark: [00:28:19] Yeah. And I mean, maybe I would say the next significant change maybe should be from FINRA rather than from the S.E.C..

Eve: [00:28:31] Yes, possibly.

Mark: [00:28:32] I completely agree with you that FINRA didn’t know how to deal with this and they started off with a light touch, you know. The first funding portals that I represented that, they were easy to get approved. And then FINRA just didn’t know what to do. And, you know, the easy answer is from a regulatory point of view was always to make it more difficult. And so we’ve ended up in this kind of crazy situation where funding portals, small, small organizations, are subject to the same regulatory treatment as, you know, as Morgan Stanley. And it it is clearly not a good fit.

Eve: [00:29:16] That’s right. Although I have to say that they’re trying, and in their communications with Small Change, at least, the tone is more about helping us be aware of what we’re supposed to do. So, it’s not a bad tone, but still, the regulatory burden is there. In a sense, I think FINRA got lumped with this without anyone much thinking about the consequences. Does that make sense?

Mark: [00:29:39] Yes. I mean, I’m not attacking FINRA, because, as you say, they’re just doing their job. No one told them, you know, you should act differently with the respect that this particular species of FINRA member, as you know, I mean, these days we’re submitting policies and procedures to FINRA that are, you know, 75 pages long …

Eve: [00:30:03] Oh, wow.

Mark: [00:30:03] … could be a two person company where, you know.

Eve: [00:30:07] Yeah.

Mark: [00:30:07] The policies and procedures amount to the two people saying this is how we’re going to regulate ourselves. You know, there’s no one else to regulate. There’s no one to supervise.

Eve: [00:30:17] Yeah, no, no. I know. It’s a shame.

Mark: [00:30:21] It’s almost been an absurdity, but there you go.

Eve: [00:30:25] So, yeah. Let’s root for FINRA making the next change or, something happening that permits for FINRA to make the next change, because I’m not sure they’re fully in control of that themselves. I don’t really, I don’t really know. But, you know, we we pay a lot of money to a company called Smarsh to archive all our emails, all our websites, everything, so that they’re all WURM compliant. That’s a big burden for a tiny company.

Mark: [00:30:52] Well, there you go.

Eve: [00:30:52] We also pay a lot for insurance, which is crazy expensive. I have a feeling that many funding portals don’t …

Mark: [00:31:00] Just don’t do it. Yeah.

Eve: [00:31:01]  … pay for insurance, because they can’t afford it. I like to sleep at night.

Mark: [00:31:05] I guess, what from the FCC, you know, rule 204, which is that burdensome advertising rule that you were alluding to earlier. That does seem a little too harsh. The idea of it, the theory of regulation crowdfunding is that every investor should have access to exactly the same information at all time.

Eve: [00:31:29] That’s right. Yep.

Mark: [00:31:31] And so that’s why they don’t let you freely advertise. They want all attention to get focused back to the funding portal.

Eve: [00:31:39] Right.

Mark: [00:31:40] Which is supposed to be the sole source of the information. And so, yeah, I totally understand that. I’m not going to say there’s no reason for the rule. I think maybe this is an example of ideology, sort of, getting the better of practicality. The rule is just impractical. And …

Eve: [00:32:02] Yes. Yeah.

Mark: [00:32:04] The ideological purity of it I think is outweighed by the burden that it places on, again, on very, very small companies.

Eve: [00:32:13] We’ve ended this on a bad note.

Mark: [00:32:15] Yeah, but well we’re sort of searching for ways that maybe in five years from now, maybe the S.E.C. will make the rules even better.

Eve: [00:32:26] Yeah.

Mark: [00:32:26] But these little rules, you know, again, we’re dealing with tiny companies and you know, big companies have the resources to hire lawyers, like me, or even have their own in-house lawyers. But these are tiny companies. So, a lot of these rules, as you know, in your position as a funding portal end up just being tripping points, you know, traps for the unwary.

Eve: [00:32:50] Yes.

Mark: [00:32:51] Yes, we could do with fewer of them. But on a positive note, again, 2020 is going to be a very, very good year.

Eve: [00:33:00] Yes, it is. And final question, what’s next for you?

Mark: [00:33:06] What’s next for me is, you know, I’ve just started a new law firm, Lex Nova Law. Super exciting, fun, high tech, really cool, hiring more people, training more people to learn about these rules. And part of my job in the crowdfunding industry is to educate people. So, I love being on the forefront of education. And another part of my job, I think, is to make the industry better. And that means more compliant, but also more efficient. The Internet, which is what crowdfunding is all about, it requires efficiency, right? It is …

Eve: [00:33:54] Yes.

Mark: [00:33:55] It is a tough taskmaster. You know, Amazon. You try to compete with Amazon in retail, man, you find out how efficient they are. So, lawyers, the key kind of friction points in the syndication world, in the capital formation world. You know, lawyers have to become more efficient. And I work on that all the time and try to work with industry leaders to make the crowdfunding industry better for investors, in part by making it more efficient. So, that’s the answer your question

Eve: [00:33:55] Great. Well, I’ve had the privilege of working with you on that. And I agree. Efficiency really matters. Thank you so much for joining me. And I also can’t wait to see what the year holds.

Mark: [00:34:42] Thank you so much.

Eve: [00:34:44] Okay.

Mark: [00:34:44] Have a great day out in sunny Pittsburgh.

Eve: [00:34:51] That was Mark Roderick. We got into the weeds together about the proposed improvements to regulation crowdfunding. He and I both understand what these changes will mean to capital formation. As Mark said, these proposals are great for the crowdfunding industry and for American capitalism. They’re not about Wall Street. They’re about small companies and ordinary American investors, where jobs and ideas come from. You can find out more about impact real estate investing and access to the show notes for today’s episode at my website, EvePicker.com. While you’re there, sign up for my newsletter to find out more about how to make money in real estate while building better cities. Thank you so much for spending your time with me today. And thank you, Mark, for sharing your thoughts with me. We’ll talk again soon. But for now, this is Eve Picker signing off to go make some change.

Image courtesy of Mark Roderick

Why choose?

March 23, 2020

It’s becoming increasingly important for investors of all levels to make socially conscious investments ensuring that their investments align with their values. Broadly referred to as impact investing, this type of investing means supporting organizations, businesses and projects that will have a positive social or environmental impact.

While impact investing has historically been associated with high net-worth individuals, in recent years it’s gained increased popularity with middle-class investors who, though having more limited resources or capital, nevertheless wish to have their investments return more than just mere financial dividends. But, understandably, some people may find themselves torn between investing in something that will have a positive impact and investing solely based on return.

The encouraging reality is that investors don’t have to make that choice – you can make impact investments and still see market or above-market returns, and there are an increasing number of examples of ways to do this. Janine Firpo is an interesting case study of an investor that’s gone all-in on impact investing and is consistently realizing strong returns on those investments.

A case study

Janine had been working in the computer and multimedia industry since the 80s, and in 1995 she took a year off to travel. During that year, she backpacked through sub-Saharan Africa and was powerfully moved by the poverty that she saw in the region. Returning from that year abroad she had become determined to find ways to use her technology and business knowledge to help reduce poverty.

As a result, she spent more than two decades traveling the globe, helping to bring technologies and development projects to Africa, Southeast Asia and other regions with high rates of poverty in her role with several philanthropies. After this period of nearly constant travel, she retired from that career and returned to the Bay Area, where she became familiar with the broader ideas of social philanthropy and impact investing. She began to realize that she had committed herself to leading a life of value but hadn’t carried that same philosophy over to her investments.

A vision for investing

Janine felt that her investments were, in a way, working against efforts in her own life and work. With this realization, she made the decision to invest everything she had in a way that supported her values, and that might help to build the world she wanted. She shared this vision with her financial advisors but found that they were not able to fully meet her goals. So, she took back control of the assets and began to invest them herself.

Janine has since spent extensive amounts of time researching investment opportunities and finding investments that align with her thinking, and not surprisingly she has found that it can be a time-consuming and remarkably difficult project to start from scratch. In order to help make impact investing easier for others, she is currently writing a book that condenses and shares the results of her efforts, while providing step-by-step guidance for value-aligned investing.

Returns for impacting investing

When asked whether she is getting acceptable returns from these new investments, Janine responded with an emphatic, “Yes!”, noting that “this is not about giving up returns. This has never been about giving up returns.” As an example, she shared her experience with a particular holding in her portfolio. She used the website AsYouSow.org to learn more about how this holding aligned with the values she prioritized and found out that it had a rating of D (not good). She then found another holding with A and B ratings on those values and invested in that instead and found that over a 10-15-year time frame, the alternative investment actually had yielded higher returns. Clearly, a win-win for Janine, and would also be for many middle-class investors looking to protect and grow their savings and retirement funds.

To learn more about Janine Firpo’s efforts to make impact investing more accessible, listen to her full podcast interview. Or check out some of the real estate impact investment opportunities available at Small Change.

Image from Piqsels licensed CC0, Public Domain

Big change.

March 4, 2020

Ommeed Sathe is a Vice President and head of the Impact Investment unit in the Office of Corporate Social Responsibility at Prudential. He grew up in a family who felt public service, through work or volunteerism, “was fundamental.” And that rubbed off.

Just out of Harvard Law School, Ommeed was in New Orleans after Katrina and decided to put his background in urban planning to use to help the city recover. For four years he worked with the New Orleans Redevelopment Authority (NORA), working on properties around the city. It was with NORA that he began working with Prudential, and became impressed with their willingness to stay working in the community for more than twice as long as other corporations. 

Ommeed joined Prudential’s Office of Corporate Social Responsibility in 2011. His unit manages a portfolio of over $1 billion in impact investments.

The investment work he oversees at Prudential is about 80 percent stable, predictable credits with established sponsors, while 20 percent “are far more risky and untested but have the potential to create significant social impact and to pioneer new markets.” Much of their recent work has been in Newark, such as with the 1901 Hahne & Company department store, and as of 2016, his portfolio had supported the creation of over 1,000 housing units, 250 hotel rooms and 300,000 s.f of retail space in the city, where Prudential is based.

Previously Ommeed was director of real estate development for the New Orleans Redevelopment Authority, and a real estate and land use attorney with Fried, Frank, Harris, Shriver & Jacobson in NYC.

Insights and Inspirations

  • For Ommeed, investing is more than a way to make money.
  • For Ommeed, three key things define impact – the physical characteristics of a project, community engagement and whether or not the project is catalytic in nature.
  • Is bigger better? While other funds aspire to reach 10 billion dollars when the 1 billion dollar hurdle has passed, Ommeed’s aspirations differ. Rather than go bigger he’d like go riskier – with untested developers and untested ideas in untested neighborhoods.

Information and Links

  • Read about Ommeed and the business of doing good at Prudential.
  • Prudential has focused some of their impact investing in Newark, a city that has suffered through 140 years of disinvestment. They helped to restore the iconic Hahne’s Department Store in Newark. Now it’s a vibrant mixed-use center.
Read the podcast transcript here

Eve: [00:00:14] Hi there, thanks so much for joining me today for the latest episode of Impact Real Estate Investing. 

My guest today is Ommeed Sathe. Ommeed is Vice President of Impact Investments in Prudential Financial’s Office of Corporate Social Responsibility.  His unit manages a portfolio of $1 billion in impact investments.

That’s a big number and it doesn’t seem like Ommeed is slowing down.

Ommeed grew up in a family who felt public service, through work or volunteerism, “was fundamental.” And that has clearly rubbed off.

Be sure to go to rethinkrealestateforgood.co to find out more about Ommeed on the show notes page for this episode. And be sure to sign up for my newsletter so you can access information about impact real estate investing and get the latest news about the exciting projects on my crowdfunding platform, SmallChange.

Eve: [00:01:42] Well hello Ommeed, thanks for taking the time to talk to me today.

Ommeed Sathe: Absolutely, Eve, it’s a real pleasure to be with you.

Eve: Well, that’s great. So I wanted to start with your title, Vice President of Impact Investments at Prudential. What does that mean?

Ommeed: [00:01:59] Yeah, so I head up the company’s impact investing activities, and that’s obviously one of those terms that kind of sounds OK, but it doesn’t really necessarily clearly translate. But what it is, for us, is it’s a portfolio of investments we’ve made that are trying to have both a financial and a social impact. And so they are genuine investments that try to make money, but we invest them exclusively in projects that we think have outsize social investments and in particular in the types of projects that our company and traditional capital markets wouldn’t do otherwise.

So, they’re really meant not to be sort of a subset of what the company was doing already, but to be a portfolio, to be used to be catalytic and differentiated and to invest in places we wouldn’t be investing otherwise and in projects we wouldn’t be looking at otherwise.

Eve: [00:02:51] So how big is the portfolio?

Ommeed: [00:02:53] At the moment, it’s, it’s about a billion dollars.

Eve: [00:02:57] Wow, that’s pretty big. Can you give us some examples of the things you’ve invested in?

Ommeed: [00:03:02] We have sort of two halves of the portfolio. One is around very physical types of projects, affordable housing. We’ve made a lot of investments in our hometown of Newark in big transformative developments and redevelopments. And then we also do some interesting work around new ways of doing agriculture, new ways of sort of growing and feeding the planet. And that’s sort of on the physical side of the work. And on the other side of the portfolio is investments in really interesting social purpose businesses. And those have been largely focused on financial inclusion. And then on education and how do we re-skill and retrain the labor force?

Eve: [00:03:42] That’s pretty great. How would you define impact in real estate? How does Prudential define it? Like, both of you?

Ommeed: [00:03:50] Yes. So, this is actually a really fascinating question. So, I think there’s probably three ways to think about it. You can think about it just sort of on the the most, I’d say, straightforward which is, you know, units of affordable housing, square feet of redevelopment, square feet of the building, and if it’s a LEED platinum. Your, sort of, the physical characteristics of the development very much sort of very clear outputs of sort of what the real estate is. I think the second way to think about it is what’s sort of the community level and at the residents’ level. And so how are residents’ lives being impacted and living in certain places? How are services? What’s the quality and satisfaction of tenants? So very sort of a consumer impact as well as in looking at sort of the communities in which this real estate is. So, are these places where investment wasn’t being made and after you make these investments, does more investment come in? Are those investments leading to good outcomes or is it just catalyzing sort of unhealthy gentrification? Those are a couple of dimensions. And then I think the third and both, sort of, most qualitative and trickiest maybe to sort of measure, but something that really drives us is, is this work in any way catalytic? Does it change the trajectory of what a market is going towards? Does it prove that a new way or a new type of housing or new type of sort of investment strategy that could work thing be replicated in other places?

Eve: [00:05:18] That last one must be more of a hope than a metric that you can measure.

Ommeed: [00:05:23] That’s right, it’s true that it’s nothing than more of a hope. But I’ll give you some examples, maybe that last one, because I think it kind of brings it to life.

So, you know, one of the things that we’ve been looking at and I think we’ve done with the great sort of sort of architectural firms is how do you say we take lots that have been deemed substandard, often sort of ineligible even for development and develop really creative structures and housing and building models that can sort of create value on land that is otherwise essentially worthless. And are there ways to sort of replicate that and make that go to other places? Because it’s interesting, right? Like, you know, with land getting so expensive and all the prime development sites gone. If you’re trying to get more affordable housing into sort of affluent markets, sometimes figuring out really creative design solutions for substandard or non-standard lots is one way to do that. Another thing that we’ve done sort of I think has been really catalytic. We worked with some colleagues down in Washington, D.C. They had recently passed a new ordinance that required much higher levels of stormwater retention. And a lot of our city’s stormwater is actually a sort of surprisingly under-appreciated problem. Enormous source of pollution, flooding. And so, cities are starting to try to grapple with how they do this better.

[00:06:37] And so D.C. passed this ordinance requiring much higher levels of stormwater capture. You know, one of the few ways you can do that on a development is you can either sort of build in essentially bladders in the basement to capture water or green roofs on the roof. But what DC did that was really interesting was they permitted people to fill some of their obligation by making improvements to green infrastructure in other parts of the city. And so we helped fund a bunch of improvements to green infrastructure and you got essentially tradeable stormwater credits. And so this was a version of sort of what people talk about wanting to try to do with carbon by creating tax and trade mechanisms and, but done at the local level around a whole novel problem with stormwater. And so that’s sort of an example of something that I think we helped build the first green infrastructure products and create the first tradable stormwater credits. And we think that solution is really interesting. And we also think other cities will see that, and potentially try re-create a similar solution.

Eve: [00:07:35] That is catalytic. So, you know, when you were talking about unusable lots, I was thinking about an article I read recently about the downsizing of some freeways and the land that that might free up. For, you know, development use. I think that’s a really interesting thesis in this time when we’re starting to see autonomous vehicles and a lot of people who don’t want to own cars. It’s really interesting to think about where land is available, right?

Ommeed: [00:08:04] I think it is. And it’s still strange to me, actually, because there’s a sort of funny meme, right, that what will happen in Silicon Valley finally invents a technology that allows us to build the second story. And, you know, I think that spirit is kind of true even in New York City. You go around and see so many easy and obvious potential sites that you could build on. Sites that are being used for car dealerships, parking lots, abandoned, your public assets, you know, right of ways. And it’s amazing just how much of that land is there when you start to look. And it does feel like some of the lowest hanging fruit, in terms of how do we find opportunities to create more affordable products. Again, it may not be the best location in the city, but it’s certainly habitable and buildable and safe. And I think it’s been really interesting. We worked with this great architecture firm down in New Orleans the Office of John Tate, and they’ve done really interesting stuff thinking about how to do that.

Eve: [00:09:02] Yes. Yeah, I know Jonathan really well. He was, he actually did the first crowdfunding offering with us.

Ommeed: Oh, there you go, it’s a small world.

Eve: It was one of his Starter Homes on an odd lot. Pretty fascinating times. Do you have metrics that you’ve developed to test against projects that come to you?

Ommeed: [00:09:23] We do. There’s a couple of ways, and I think goes back to sort of thinking about the different impacts, you’re capturing metrics for things like the number of affordable housing units, the square feet of, extra, square feet of Y that’s fairly straightforward to capture. You know, I heard this quote the other day. I thought it sort of kind of interesting. We can grind to a fine dust that we can easily ascertain. And yet sometimes in doing that, we don’t really measure what’s most important. And I think the things that are most important are somewhat, by their nature, more ambiguous. And so some of this is actually the process of asking those questions. So, I’ll give you an example with affordable housing. You know, we know it’s desperately needed and in many affluent communities. And yet a lot of times where affordable housing gets built isn’t necessarily the, you know, the most affluent areas. Is that a good or a bad thing? Right. You know, it’s not a question that can be answered with a single metric, because it matters in terms of looking at the public education system and saying, OK, you know, are there good education resources or are there community resources? You know, there’s research by Raj Chetty that sort of speaks to just how relevant place really is the social and economic mobility.

[00:10:27] And that data is not. It’s really interesting and compelling, but it’s certainly not black or white, in terms of its implications. And so one of the things I do think we’re trying to do a better job and actually think is something that’s so under-appreciated in real estate is really to survey tenant residents and try to get data from the people who live in buildings,  about their lives getting better, what’s happening actually as a result of being in this complex here, because I think some of these questions are important questions, but they’re not solvable with the data we have. And yet, you know, every other sector of our economy, it’s you know, if you could buy shoes from Zappos, every one of those companies is has a net promoter score and wonders what it is and as careful about it and uses that as a leading indicator of telling you whether something’s working. And yet in real estate and I don’t know about you, but no landlord has ever, no only one I should say, has ever asked me, like, was I happy.

Eve: Yeah, yeah, interesting.

Ommeed: And it’s striking, the one landlord that did ask me that question was absolutely, no surprise, the single best landlord I ever had.

Eve: Often landlords are pretty scared of the tenants.

Ommeed: [00:11:32] And it’s funny, I do think one of the trends we’re seeing that I think is a really interesting trend, is that as far as people I see and real estate are really moving in this direction, that so much of real estate development used to be about the physical development of the assets, actually getting the things built and getting it through entitlements and through reviews and all of that. And so, the field really focused on the physical construction and not the management and hospitality.

But you just look at sort of food halls or even kind of we-work and co-working spaces. All of those models are fundamental, about taking spaces that exist and thinking about how do we manage them better, how do we program them better? How do we get more stuff out of the same space? More and more, I think real estate is actually moving to hospitality. That if you think about hotels, right, with hotels, you think about brands and you think about your experience. You don’t really think about hotels and associate them with the physical structure. To some extent, everything you see and experience is on the inside.

Eve: [00:12:31] Yes. So, you know, I interviewed someone a couple of weeks ago you might be interested in them in Amsterdam. He has a spin-off, an architect who spun off a company called Superlofts. You can find it on my website.

And it’s very interesting because he creates a community before he, before they even start designing the building. They start meeting with groups of people who want to buy these little condominiums and talk to them about the needs, the dreams. Almost, he said like a video – what would you like a day in your life to look like? And when they have a group of like-minded people together they will start to kind of design the physical space around them. It was fascinating.

Ommeed: That sounds amazing.

Eve: Really fascinating, beautiful architecture as well. So I think there’s a lot of really interesting innovation going on. So, why Prudential? That might be surprising to some people.

Ommeed: [00:13:25] Yeah, it is, I mean, it’s sometimes surprising to me as well. My connection to Prudential’s at a couple of levels. One, before I joined the company, I was in New Orleans working after Hurricane Katrina. And in that role, I led redevelopment for the New Orleans Redevelopment Authority. And we were tasked with trying to really catalyze neighborhood-based redevelopment in the wake of the storm. And in doing that, in that role, got to work with just about every kind of capital source around the country, philanthropic, government, private sector. And we were trying to coalesce all of that capital around really important, really transformative projects. And Pru is just one of the best people we worked with. And in that experience, and it really shaped for me how different the access to capital is by place. So I’d come from working in New York largely in the boom times ahead of the financial crisis, working on often quite foolish projects with unimaginably easy access to capital. And even if they’d worked, relatively low returns and then going to New Orleans and having really vital projects with great returns, but just in a place where there was almost no capital available. And seeing how important it was to have sort of, you know, investments and capital to try to move away from a very limited set of places which have kind of capital they need for reinvestment.

[00:14:45] You know, I think a lot of people who are urbanists, I’m sure this will sort of resonate, you know they’ve grown up in New York, San Francisco, D.C., Boston, you know real estate we call the sexy 7, right, The 7 kind of big, urban markets where capital is unbelievably plentiful. And that’s not really reflective of what it’s like to work in most urban communities around this country. You know, in most urban communities, even good projects have a hard time finding financing. And it’s even harder for projects that are really sort of aspirational at a social level because a lot of those projects are often coming from entrepreneurs or untested, who have limited ability to manage pre-development. The work that you described in terms of sort of crowdfunding and some of that I think is a really interesting angle to bringing capital into those markets. But another is sort of getting institutional money like Prudential to have dedicated programs that really start to look in these non-traditional markets and opportunities.

Eve: [00:15:41] Right. So I’ve done a lot of real estate development like that in Pittsburgh, which is a city that was in pretty bad shape when I started doing the work I did and I relied heavily on public funds and the mayor’s office and the Urban Redevelopment Authority to fill that role. But I imagine that many cities don’t have those sorts of resources for developers. And I also think those funds have dried up a little. So that makes Prudential’s role perhaps even more important.

[00:16:07] Yeah. No, it does. And I think we’re trying to push ourselves to get even more early stage with our investments. You know, I think some of the stuff we’ve done in Newark has actually been very large projects and in some other markets we’ve been able to do projects which are 50 to 100 million dollar kind of projects where we’ll be investing 10 or 20 million at a time. But where I think the real need is to have, you know, institutions like us really push to do more in pre-development to do more with sort of, you know, young and minority development firms and to really try to continue to push earlier, because the earlier you get, the more you see that acute lack of capital. You know, when you really get into the machinery of real estate, you see why and how access to capital is such a profound differentiator. It’s not really the project economics that blow things up. You know, what we see is people get stuck in pre-development.

Eve: Yes.

Ommeed: [00:16:57] You know, they get stuck having, you know, bought land and thinking it would take them a year to get permits. And now it’s two years and they don’t have money to make the payment on an acquisition loan or they’ve got to pay for another X, Y, Z of permitting or entitlement costs. And they just can’t get the project to the finish line. Typically, you know, the most underserved markets are often also the ones that are actually most difficult to operate in because they don’t have some of the robust public sectors like you saw, even saw in Pittsburgh, right, and so you couple those challenges and we really do see it as being a pretty acute need to solve.

Eve: [00:17:32] Prudential would actually go in at such an early stage of pre-development stage? That’s pretty unusual.

Ommeed: [00:17:38] I want to be clear we haven’t done it yet, and I think it’s sort of where we want to get to. You know, as we see it, adding a part of this is just the evolution of the real estate market. When we started this program seven or eight years ago, I’d say, it was really just not a lot of capital flowing in. Like, take a town like Newark, there was almost no equity capital to support redevelopment. And it really felt like even our financing at the project level was pretty transformative. Fast forward to where we are today, I’d say, if you can get a project to being at a closing even in Newark, there’s a lot of sources that’ll provide equity capital now, but it’s the money to support the pre-development and planning, entitlement, that stage of the work that’s really very, very scarce. Because that money’s so scarce, it means that the people who do big projects are going to look can be and have a certain set of values and approaches and people with new ideas and real creativity won’t be able to be even having a seat at the table.

Eve: [00:18:36] So a billion dollars now. What’s what’s the goal for this portfolio?

Ommeed: [00:18:40] There’s a couple of ways you can go, right? Like most people in financial services, you get to a billion and then you want to get to 10 billion. And bigger is just better. Actually, I think given sort of our mandate to be catalytic and creative, we’re trying to actually push to some extent to the opposite. So, not to necessarily get the portfolio bigger, but actually try to push earlier down the risk spectrum and really push ourselves to be more catalytic and more transformative and more creative rather than build to be bigger. Because I actually think this is sort of in my experience, once something gets bigger, it actually gets more vanilla, more predictable and usually if it makes sense, there will be lots of people who’d be willing to invest.

Eve: [00:19:23] Got it. That’s really fascinating. What percentage of the total Prudential portfolio is the impact portfolio?

Ommeed: [00:19:32] Good question. I’d say there’s two ways to think about that. Right, so when you’re an insurance company, you have a tremendous amount of assets. But somewhere in the neighborhood for Prudential, you know, five hundred billion dollars of assets, let’s say. But that’s not really a very accurate measure because the way insurance companies are regulated, ninety five percent of what they do has to be in very safe, predictable bonds and rated kind of loans. And so, the portfolio we manage is essentially 5 percent of the company’s risk appetite.

Eve: [00:20:06] OK. Well, I know a little bit about the work in Newark through Jonathan Tate. I’d love to hear a little bit more about that. I think what you’re doing there is tackling quite a big problem and quite a big project by the sounds of it.

Ommeed: [00:20:19] Yes. You know, so Prudential’s been headquartered here in Newark for the better part of a hundred and forty years, and obviously, the city of Newark has gone through many, sort of evolutions during that time. I think what’s interesting, right, is that you can sort of contrast what we’re doing now with maybe what people did 30 or 40 years ago. There was obviously a fairly disruptive and difficult period of urban unrest, and the riots and a lot of people fled the city, a lot of companies left the city and there was sort of a cycle of disinvestment for many, many years. And we’ve done this really interesting research, actually, you know, Newark, pre the civil unrest had more urban renewal than anywhere in the country.

[00:20:58] And you can watch these videos and they are just heart wrenching because the helicopter shots of the city. And it looks like Berlin after World War Two. And yet the voice-over on the video is so proud of what they’ve done.

Eve: Ooh.

[00:21:14] They state literally there’s been more, you know, more of urban renewal per person in New York than anywhere else in the country. And this was Newark 1950, and you see actually sort of the devastating impact of that cycle in the community. But you can really see some of that and that’s sort of just a random aside. But in the sort of reaction after the civil unrest, a lot of the investment that was made, was made and things like if you’ve ever been to Newark there’s something called the Gateway Center, which is like the Renaissance Center in Detroit. Towers, skybridges connected to transit, you know, kind of fortress style orientation to the urban environment. Instead of doing that, what we decided to try to do sort in this most recent cycle and look, you know, Pru had a role in building those gateway complexes in the 70s and so this is by no means, you know, a story that doesn’t sort of involve us.

[00:23:02] But in the most recent sort of time when a company had a choice around building a new tower, rather than build it near any of the train stations or in any of the sort of locations that would have been most accessible to commuters, we built that tower literally in sort of the heart of the city. Now it’s on Broad Street, which was aptly named, it’s the broadest street in downtown. It’s on the side of what used to be a sort of a former shopping strip. So, it’s a center where all the department stores and movie theaters used to be in downtown. In building that tower, we also made, I think, a really critical decision with the team I run, to not only just build something for ourselves but to start to invest in all of the sort of transformative developments in and around that location. And the most important of those was an old department store called the Hanes Department Store, which during its heyday was a department store that would have competed with Saks. It had a four-story grand atrium like the Grand Magasin in Paris. People would come up and have these amazing memories of putting on white gloves and dressing up and going to this department store.

[00:23:08] There was the Maple Room and the Pine Room and, you know, we just, it was this incredible legacy experience and actually even had a really interesting role as one of the first places where integration happened in the city. Shopping was actually one of those areas where integration was sort of, one of the first places to happen. So, really a pretty legendary history, but had been closed for 25 years and the building itself had completely fallen apart and we made it sort of our passion project to redevelop that building. And we were able to do it in this incredibly complicated, mixed use way. So, the first floor is retail, which is both big box retail and neighborhood retail. The second floor is offices. Third and fourth floors are housing. 40 percent of the housing was set aside for affordable housing. The retail mix is everything from fintech companies and co-working to really cutting-edge nonprofits. And then, maybe the sort of cherry that made it both the most difficult project I’ve ever worked on but also the best, was Rutgers University brought in all of their arts and design program into that building and did it in this way that I think is really unprecedented where, first of all there’s no separate entrance for the university, the public can go into those spaces. But even intermixed in the Rutgers space are private galleries and a rotating space, right in the front of their space for, you know, kind of community serviing arts nonprofits. They essentially have like six month displays where they can come in and sort of gain visibility and access to resources. And so it’s been a real labor of love. And it’s physically, that building, plus the Prudential Tower plus Military Park, plus some other things we were doing, started to re-knit together parts of the downtown. So we followed that up with another half a dozen investments that I think are sort of all, again trying to sort of replicate that playbook of mixed income, mixed use development with a mix of both sort of national needed amenities and community serving retail and office tenants that both sort of try to draw exciting new things, but also, you know, cater to some of our legacy businesses.

Eve: [00:25:13] Yeah, so common theme I’m hearing from a lot of people now is that part of the process of keeping a community whole is to provide space, a community hub, space in some way or another for a community to feel that it belongs while improvements are going on around them. Does that make sense?

Ommeed: [00:25:32] Yeah, absolutely. One of the things that we had in that building is we, we sort of restored this grand atrium and the grand atrium is actually sort of open to the public year around. And so it becomes this place where you see people, especially in winter here right like, it serves almost like, you know, the function of a town town commons and we sort of made it kind of connect both sides of the building so this is a really kind of interesting passageway.

Eve: [00:25:56] That sounds lovely, I’d love to see it. Perhaps this question is redundant, but I’m going to ask it anyway. Do you think socially responsible real estate is necessary in today’s development landscape?

Ommeed: [00:26:07] I do. And it’s got a place to play at a lot of different levels. So I think if you look at sort of the institutional level, I think given some interesting things where people are starting to sort of demand that portfolios be LEED certified and have certain environmental obligations, and I think that’s something that sort of very both important and do-able at the very sort of macro level for real estate. But then I also think, with what we’re facing as a country between the challenges around affordable housing, just radical inequity, and then honestly, we haven’t built a lot of housing in this current boom. It’s one of the most sort of striking things that’s happened is that we haven’t built enough housing, we haven’t created enough units, and that’s driving up the price for everyone. And I do think we, we need capital to be creative and thoughtful about how do you get more going on in places where it’s not and get it to a density in a scale that actually starts to bend the cost curve?

Eve: Yes.

Ommeed: [00:26:59] You know, one of the things that, you know, we get asked a lot is sort of, you know, this gentrification question.

Eve: That’s a big one.

Ommeed: [00:27:06] And again, I think that that question, it’s so much shaped by people’s experience in cities like D.C., Boston, New York, cities that are going through these incredible economic booms but have also hardly permitted any housing. If you look at New York, New York City I think last year permitted as much housing as Jersey City. That’s one city of eight million people, another three hundred thousand during, you know, year 10 of an economic boom. And so, you know, historically, when we’ve had economic booms, we’ve been able to produce a lot of housing. And the thing that’s really striking right now, we’re just not doing that as a country. And so what’s happening is because there’s no real housing production and because we’ve really reduced, for reasons that no one really quite fully understands, geographic mobility, so people aren’t moving like they used to, the jobs that are being created and the wealth that’s being created in certain places in many cases is all being swallowed back up by people’s rent.

Eve: [00:27:59] Interesting.

Ommeed: [00:28:00] The cost of living. And so, you know, I think we are really as a society, not doing what we need to do in terms of connecting people to economic growth.

Eve: [00:28:09] Do you have any ideas about that? I talked to an architect in Australia who’s kind of plugging away building affordable, sustainable buildings and making sure that the first buyers are city-serving civil servants who need to be close in. People are taking it from every angle.

Ommeed: [00:28:29] There’s no silver bullet. Sure, I do think one of the things that we have to rethink from a design perspective is density.

You go to a city like Vancouver, I mean, I think there’s really different ways in which density can be expressed at the street level. And people’s experience, you know, people are very poor at actually gauging how dense something is. So, one of those things is I think actually becoming comfortable saying like, you know, we do want to sort of start to think about infill and densification and how do we do that? I do think some of the stuff that’s happening on the West Coast about accessory dwelling units and trying to come up not with sort of solutions that, you know, are project solutions, but are actually these kind of decentralized solutions, making it much more easy for people to add a unit, or what Minneapolis did with eliminating single family zoning.

Eve: Yeah.

[00:29:19] I think it’s really, really interesting. A few other things we’ve seen that we’re really excited by – in Texas and Colorado and a few other places, we’ve seen this interesting move to take assets that were built in say the 1970s and 80s as large market-rate rental and kind of reverse convert those to affordable housing. And the way that works is that basically in exchange for really substantial tax abatements, buyers go ahead and dedicate a portion of those units to being affordable and they end up working out roughly the same to what it would be if they bought those buildings and invested lots into to aesthetic renovations and tried to remarket them as luxury. So, these are essentially perfectly lovely units built except with carpet and cherry wood that rather than ripping all that out and trying to convert them into luxury housing, you leave them like they are and convert them into good quality, you know, mixed income developments.

Eve: Yeah, yeah, yeah.

Ommeed: [00:30:16] I think some of the reverse conversions are really interesting too, as another theme as to how we can get affordability on scale.

Eve: [00:30:22] You know, in Melbourne, Australia, years ago, I was really fascinated, there was, the zoning department implemented densification along major roads where there was infrastructure. It’s actually a really sprawly city. And so, what they permitted was much higher density buildings, housing, along roads that had bus and train tram. It’s been really interesting watching it unfold, you know you can really see the physical spaces changing. But it’s a really smart move to take existing infrastructure in a very big city, which is going to be very expensive to increase, and find a way to create density around it. I thought that was pretty smart.

Ommeed: [00:31:06] Yeah, it does sound like a really elegant solution.

Eve: [00:31:09] There’s another neighborhood there that I know has now put an overlay district in place where they are not permitting anymore parking spaces moving forward. They’re really trying to eliminate them completely. It’s a very dense, mixed-use neighborhood, very close to the central business district. So, they’re making some pretty bold moves with zoning to try and handle what is sort of a rapid sprawl.

And of course, that means if you can live close in and you can have a smaller unit and you don’t need a car because you’ve got access to infrastructure and it’s more affordable. Right.

Ommeed: [00:31:42] Right. You know, it’s interesting, I question required parking. Most of the development we’ve done has has either had minimal or no parking associated with it because the zoning codes here were permissive and it’s a real driver of, as you said, you know, you can create more units, you can reduce the cost. Parking minimums are, I think, a hidden and really destructive part of many zoning codes.

Eve: [00:32:05] They’ve been very destructive, not just for housing, but even when you think about retail strip malls with seas of parking in front of them which are really all about parking minimums.

So are there any other current trends in real estate development that you think are important?

Ommeed: [00:32:19] We’ve talked about a lot and it’s not so much a real estate trend, but this decline in human mobility and our declining mobility rates, I think is just one of those fascinating social trends that I think has implications for place and how we do things that I don’t think we fully quite grapple with. I do also think that, you know, we’re entering an increasingly dark age for retail.

Eve: Yes, we are.

Ommeed: [00:32:44] You know, there’s aesthetic implications to that but it’s hard to imagine true vibrant urban places without vibrant retail corridors. And so trying to figure out sort of what else can we do on ground floors? We see this problem in Newark, almost every square foot of retail we’ve had has had to be filled by a food and beverages. And even then, after a while, you reach saturation. So, what can you do with spaces that actually are interesting and inviting, and, you know, if you are pessimistic on the future retail?

Eve: [00:33:14] This is a dilemma, because other countries we’re not really, not really seeing the demise of retail in the same way. It’s really a shame for us. Right. It’s very difficult.

Ommeed: Very difficult.

Eve: You also engage the community, right, in your work in Newark?

Ommeed: [00:33:30] We do. One of the things that’s been interesting in Newark is that I think there’s this big cadre of, you know, of what people would call sort of anchor institutions, and that have been a nice kind of vehicle to sort of get all of those different institutions to really try to, sort of, really think differently about this community engagement and not sort of recreate what happened in the 1950s and 60s in terms of just sort of having this kind of urban renewal from the top down.I think part of what we’ve tried to do in insurance in the beginning is, in finding a way to sort of help smaller infill neighborhood based projects, you actually get to interact with people in community and get just an insight, at a much more human level, into what’s sort of driving people and what needs there are felt. I think wherever you can, trying to sort of really, I think encourage transparency.

[00:34:21] We’ve, you know, we’ve been really fortunate, I think, to have good leadership at the Mayoral level in Newark and I think they have really forced and encouraged that same kind of community convening, but also done it in a way that, I think, you know, too often those meetings are either sort of lip service or not willing to sort of push back on these issues, let’s say, around gentrification. And what I think the Mayor has done a really good job of here is both coming up with good policies around inclusion and local hiring, but also signing up for the fact that, look, inclusive growth also means we have to be able to grow and do things the right way and that if you look at a city like Newark, almost everything we’ve built has been vacant buildings are vacant lots.

[00:35:04] You know, there’s still a long arch before you get into displacement. And actually, if you’re adding units of affordability and doing that, you can be constructive in taking the edge off of those pressures.And so I think there’s been a really good set of conversations that aren’t trying to sort of demonize either side, but trying to get to a pretty reasonable resolution. So, we’ve been fortunate here.

Eve: [00:35:28] So I’m going to just ask a wrap-up question. Where do you think the future of real estate impact investing lies for the country? It’s really just a little blip right now. Right?

Ommeed: [00:35:39] Hmm. I think it can be two things at the same time. I do think there’s a real role for institutional capital in pushing more investment into things like affordable housing preservation and sustainable large scale development and I think that’s largely about sort of preserving existing assets and upgrading existing assets and I think that’s one scenario that impact real estate can do. And then I think there’s a need for the kind of catalytic capital that we have to really push money into the places where there’s just very little capital availability. I think you could see two, sort of very different approaches, depending on sort of the type of capital of the scale and the places they go, but both are needed.

Eve: [00:36:23] Well, it sounds like a fascinating job you have and probably most people listening to this, are very surprised that Prudential is kind of taking a lead in this and I’m looking forward to seeing what else you invest in. It sounds pretty fabulous.

Ommeed: [00:37:37] Well, thank you. I’m so excited to go look at sort of some of the examples you mentioned.

Eve: Ok, we’ll talk again soon, OK?

Ommeed: Thanks.

Eve: That was Ommeed Sathe. For Ommeed, investing is more than a way to make money. It’s a way to make a difference. His portfolio at Prudential has already supported the creation of well over 1,000 housing, 250 hotel rooms and plenty of retail space in Newark.  But most importantly while other funds aspire to reach 10 billion dollars once the 1 billion hurdle has passed, Ommeed’s aspirations differ. Rather than go bigger he’d like go riskier – with untested developers and untested ideas in untested neighborhoods.

You can find out more about impact real estate investing and access the show notes for today’s episode at my website, rethinkrealestateforgood.co.  While you’re there sign up for my newsletter to find out more about how to make money in real estate and while building better cities.

Thank you so much for spending your time with me today, and thank you Ommeed, for sharing your thoughts with me.

We’ll talk again soon, but for now, this is Eve Picker signing off to go make some change.

Image courtesy of Ommeed Sathe

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