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365. You're Broke Because You Chase Cashflow
Episode 365

365. You're Broke Because You Chase Cashflow

The Commercial Real Estate Investor Podcast · The Commercial Real Estate Investor Podcast

March 16, 20267m 41s

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Show Notes

Key Takeaways:

Cash flow vs. value-add strategy

Relying on small monthly cash flow from rentals takes too long to replace a W2 income.

Tyler advocates focusing first on value-add and forced appreciation (creating big equity pops) rather than slow cash flow.

Example: Chattanooga office building

Bought for $1.8M, spent about $600K on soft costs and some work.

Sold off-market for $4.6M in ~18 months, making roughly $2.2M.

That profit was equivalent to about 7 years (84 months) of cash flow in one deal.

Example: Small East Nashville retail deal

Bought for $435K; 2,200 sq ft single-tenant retail.

Before closing, they secured a lease, which raised the appraised value to about $650K.

Sold for ~$625K, making close to $200K over 3 years.

The main value-add was simply getting a tenant and a lease, not major renovations.

At ~$2K/month net cash flow, it would have taken about 100 months (~8+ years) to make the same $200K from cash flow.

Role of taxes and 1031 exchanges

Concerns about capital gains tax are addressed by using a 1031 exchange to defer taxes.

Even when paying capital gains, the time value of money means big lump-sum gains now can still beat years of cash flow.

Starting with little or no capital

Tyler began as a commercial real estate broker, rolling his commissions as equity into deals (minimal cash out of pocket).

Repeating value-add deals built up his capital base to where he could now sell everything and live off net-lease cash flow (e.g., Walgreens, Starbucks).

Transition: value-add first, then cash flow

The strategy is:

Use value-add deals to rapidly grow your capital base.

Later, shift that capital into stable, cash-flowing assets (e.g., low cap rate, credit-tenant deals).

Example: Buy dirt for $618K, rezone, sell for about $1.575M, then 1031 into income-producing property and fund a self-storage project projected to net $15K/month.

Why commercial over residential

In residential, value is mostly property + land; leases don’t dramatically move value.

In commercial, value is tied to income and leases (like buying a business at a multiple of EBITDA).

This makes it possible to “create” equity by:

Signing or improving leases

Repositioning or rezoning

These levers don’t really exist in the same way in typical residential investing.

Target audience and action step

Strategy is best for those starting with $0–$100K, not for people who already have ~$10M in cash (who can go straight into cash-flow investments).

Tyler promotes his CRE Accelerator mastermind where he teaches how to:

Find value-add commercial deals

Fund them

Close and execute the business plan.