• 10 months ago
Forbes Senior Writer Jabari Young interviews Tawan Davis, CEO of The Steinbridge Group, about the future of impact investing and the role of real estate in that market.

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Transcript
00:00 Impact investment through real estate.
00:02 It's what the Steinbridge Group is doing.
00:04 We'll break it all down with its CEO, Tawan Davis.
00:07 (upbeat music)
00:09 Hello everyone, this is Jabari Young here
00:11 at the NASDAQ Market site.
00:13 And I'm proud to be joined by Tawan Davis,
00:14 the CEO of Steinbridge Group,
00:16 a privately held real estate investment
00:19 and asset management company.
00:20 They made a big announcement with us at Forge BOK
00:23 only a few months ago.
00:24 And we're gonna break down another announcement.
00:27 Thanks for joining me, sir.
00:28 Happy Black History Month.
00:28 - Well, thank you, same to you.
00:30 - So let's start there.
00:31 Black History Month is easy to say which figure,
00:34 right, you always remember.
00:35 And I think we have the notable ones.
00:37 I'm gonna say which black business leader
00:40 in Black History Month stands out when I say that.
00:42 - Powerful question.
00:44 I think that Earl Graves--
00:45 - Earl Graves.
00:46 - Is a very impactful person
00:49 given the time in which he emerged.
00:51 Earl Graves' business grew in the context
00:55 where that was unusual for African-American business leaders.
00:58 - Right.
00:59 - And he was talking about business.
01:00 He was talking about commercial opportunities.
01:02 He was talking about market empowerment.
01:04 And then his business became the defining
01:06 black enterprise today remains the defining voice
01:12 for African-Americans in business.
01:14 And years after his passing,
01:17 people still celebrate that black enterprise
01:20 as a institution and a media mechanism.
01:23 And it still continues to thrive today.
01:26 So I think that he stands out for me
01:28 as an exceptional leader in the business world.
01:30 - Earl Graves, absolutely.
01:31 Listen, Reginald Lewis, right?
01:32 - Absolutely.
01:33 - May Forbes cover.
01:34 - Absolutely.
01:35 - But the second day of Black History Month,
01:37 here you are making an announcement, right?
01:38 A $40 million investment to Virginia Union
01:41 that is aimed to unlock 100 plus,
01:44 or 100 real estate,
01:45 eight real estate that they have
01:47 on Virginia's North side, Richmond.
01:49 And this is part of a bigger, larger commitment
01:51 that you made at the Forbes BLK Summit back in November.
01:54 Thank you for that.
01:55 A hundred million commitment to HBCUs.
01:58 Let's break down that commitment,
01:59 the 40 million, which is the first iteration
02:01 of the a hundred million.
02:02 What's it gonna do?
02:03 What do you anticipate?
02:04 Break it down for me.
02:05 - Sure.
02:06 Well, let me start,
02:06 thank you for having me.
02:07 And it's good to be able to chat with you again.
02:10 Let me start talking a little bit
02:11 about who we are and what we do.
02:12 So the Steinbridge Group is an impact investment firm.
02:16 Our goal is to activate real estate
02:19 as the first mover of impact.
02:21 There's been a lot of discussion
02:24 around what impact investment means,
02:27 and a lot of response, positive and negative, to the idea.
02:31 Our thought is that impact investment
02:34 is in fact the most keen way to address
02:37 what are both economic, social,
02:40 and governmental opportunities and challenges.
02:42 The best business models come from
02:45 addressing challenges and problems.
02:48 If you think about today, we don't burn gas,
02:51 we don't burn oil in order to turn on our, to get light.
02:55 Right now, electricity solves that problem for us.
02:57 It is in fact an ESG response.
03:00 And so our view is that some of the best opportunities
03:04 to have build strong businesses with a market response
03:09 are in the impact sector.
03:10 And so those businesses, we believe,
03:12 also provide outsized returns
03:15 to investors and opportunities.
03:16 And so for us, it's not a subsector of business.
03:20 It's not a subsector of investment.
03:22 It actually is investment.
03:23 Investment that has any business strategy
03:26 that has an impact, we believe, is impact investing.
03:29 And so our thought, we also believe that there are,
03:33 that private capital needs to address and solve
03:36 many of these challenges and opportunities.
03:38 There is a limit to public
03:39 and sometimes governmental intervention.
03:42 And so the opportunity to provide private solutions,
03:45 market-based solutions to economic, social,
03:48 and governance issues is the very definition
03:50 of impact investment, which is why over the next 10 years,
03:54 people are expecting impact investment to grow
03:56 to be a $5.2 trillion market.
03:59 And it's one of the fastest growing subsectors
04:01 of investing today.
04:02 And so our firm provides real estate opportunities
04:05 for impact investors in that way.
04:08 - Yeah, when you say impact investors, right?
04:10 I mean, I am curious about the real estate portion.
04:13 What other sectors does that fall under?
04:15 - Yeah, a lot of folks think,
04:16 so broadly impact investment is defined in three categories,
04:20 environmental, social, and governance.
04:22 And so if you think of electric cars
04:24 are really believed to be an impact investing,
04:26 green energy, environmental.
04:28 So anything that has a positive impact on the environment,
04:31 anything that solves social issues.
04:33 So for example, a lot of our investing
04:35 is in the residential space.
04:37 Why?
04:37 Is because America is chronically under housed.
04:40 More than 50% of Americans spend more than 30%
04:43 of their income on housing.
04:45 That means that they are housing burden.
04:47 It used to be that it would take two years
04:50 to buy a home after marriage.
04:51 Now it takes upwards of 11 years to buy a home
04:54 after marriage.
04:55 And so Americans are dramatically impacted,
04:58 even though interest rates are at highs
05:02 that we haven't seen in a generation.
05:04 We know that over the last year, home prices are up.
05:07 And so it's making it even harder
05:08 for people to acquire homes.
05:10 Basic economics, basic finance would say
05:13 that the higher the interest rate,
05:15 the lower the housing prices.
05:17 But in fact, housing prices are up anywhere from 6% to 8%
05:21 despite record high interest rates.
05:23 And so that, the housing problem is a social issue
05:27 that we believe can be addressed
05:28 with a private capital solution.
05:29 And the last category is governance.
05:31 So anything that has to do with international affairs,
05:35 international law, international conflict,
05:37 business governance also comes into that area.
05:39 So ESG is synonymous with impact investment,
05:43 standing for environmental, social,
05:45 and governance challenges that can be responded to
05:47 by private investment.
05:48 - And I would think Steinbridge falls
05:50 under the social part of that.
05:51 - So much of what we do falls under the S for social impact.
05:54 And that's where the real estate falls in,
05:56 and particularly providing attainable housing
06:00 for working families is where our approach
06:03 to impact investment emerges.
06:05 We also are very attentive to the environmental portion.
06:08 So we focus on opportunities to build green homes.
06:13 So we do solar energy, and we try to pay attention
06:17 to how we source our materials
06:19 and how we build our communities.
06:20 And so our primary focus is probably on the S for the social
06:25 through real estate, and the second is on the environmental,
06:27 how we build and deliver those homes.
06:29 - Yeah, absolutely.
06:29 And taking it back right fast to the Virginia Union,
06:31 that particular investment, it's 40 million,
06:33 and you're gonna develop, again,
06:34 these areas around that particular HBCU.
06:38 And I'm assuming building new homes,
06:41 refurbishing ones that are probably there.
06:43 If there are there, I haven't seen that area.
06:45 Is that where this money is gonna be going?
06:46 - That's right.
06:47 So again, when you think of impact investing,
06:50 one of the ways to think about it is who do you invest with?
06:53 Where do you actually put the dollars?
06:56 There are 100 plus historically black colleges
06:58 and universities in the United States.
07:01 And they historically receive 30% less funding
07:05 than their counterparts.
07:06 If you put all of their endowments together,
07:09 they have 1% of the endowments of all of the Ivy Leagues.
07:13 And so what we're finding is that we thought
07:18 that there would be an opportunity to direct investment
07:20 toward these institutions
07:21 that often are very, very large landowners,
07:24 but have limited cash and capital resources
07:26 and opportunities.
07:27 So partnering with them and to activate their land
07:31 to economically productive uses.
07:32 And so this isn't necessarily dorms.
07:34 This isn't necessarily academic housing
07:38 or other institutional uses.
07:40 We're trying to identify ways to bring ancillary
07:43 and additional income to income streams
07:45 and to increase and bolster their endowments.
07:47 So the--
07:48 - While making the universities the centerpiece of it.
07:50 - Exactly.
07:51 So the universe, by the way,
07:52 these universities have been the centerpiece
07:54 of their communities for a generation, for generations.
07:58 Most of the historically black colleges were started
08:00 in the antebellum movement immediately
08:03 after the Civil War around 1865.
08:07 And so they were started to respond
08:08 to 4 million freed folks who now needed to be educated.
08:12 And so they were started in that era.
08:15 Virginia Union University was among the first.
08:17 In fact, Virginia Union was started
08:20 as Richmond was being vacated by the Confederacy.
08:23 So in 1865, Jefferson Davis vacated Richmond,
08:27 headed South as the Union Army came in,
08:30 set Richmond afire on his way out.
08:33 And while it was burning,
08:34 Virginia Union University was started
08:36 to educate future teachers and ministers
08:38 in the Virginia area.
08:39 And so we thought it was very appropriate
08:41 to start with him as a leader in the HBCU movement.
08:44 - And Steinbridge Group, this is an investment firm,
08:46 this is a bill to rent strategy, right?
08:49 And just the family, rental rehabilitation,
08:51 you have the urban infield.
08:53 Break that down for me.
08:54 The entire strategy, starting with the bill to rent,
08:57 because here we're allowing families, right?
08:59 And society's so strange because on the one hand,
09:03 there are people out there who would love to own a house,
09:05 but then there's a whole new generation out there
09:07 who may not wanna be tied down anymore, right?
09:09 And so renting is starting to become a little bit more,
09:12 I think that the negativity is kind of driving it.
09:14 Yes, you wanna create wealth
09:15 and maybe in time you will buy a house,
09:17 but right now when you're in your 20s and your 30s
09:19 and you're moving around from one to the other,
09:21 you're renting and you may not wanna be tied down
09:23 to a mortgage,
09:24 especially in this interest environment right now,
09:26 is that what you're kind of looking at
09:28 and how you plan on making your profits?
09:29 - Yeah, so Virginia Union, again, is a great example.
09:32 They have a hundred acres
09:34 and we are committing approximately $42 million
09:37 to activate underutilized assets
09:39 in that hundred acre ownership.
09:42 And one of the primary opportunities
09:45 is to build homes for rent in that area.
09:47 So if you take all of American renters,
09:51 somewhere around up to 63% of renters
09:54 are actually renting a house,
09:56 not renting an apartment building.
09:57 So when we think of renters in the United States,
09:59 we think of apartments,
10:00 but in fact, almost two thirds of renters
10:03 are actually renting a house, not an apartment building.
10:06 Second is that if you take all of the investable asset
10:09 classes in real estate,
10:11 single family rental is the single largest
10:14 investable asset class.
10:15 It's about four and a half trillion dollars.
10:17 Apartments are anywhere from two to $3 trillion.
10:19 And so we cannot address the overburden of rent.
10:24 We cannot address affordability
10:26 without having a strategy to address a single family
10:29 and built to rent housing.
10:30 And so that's kind of where we follow the idea
10:34 is that in order to have a meaningful impact
10:35 on working families that need places to live,
10:38 that are overburdened with rent,
10:40 you actually have to deliver not only apartments,
10:43 but people are now starting their whole families
10:45 in rental.
10:47 And so we have to deliver homes as well.
10:48 - Yeah, I was in Texas, Dallas, Texas just last week,
10:51 and I'm driving around the Plano area
10:53 'cause I'm in search of a house too, Tawan,
10:55 and I'm seeing all I see is lease, lease, lease.
10:58 And I'm like, where's the buy?
11:00 I wanna buy.
11:01 And it's lease, lease, lease.
11:02 And I'm assuming it's because people are locked out,
11:04 but they still want to maybe get involved
11:06 with the housing and not, maybe that's a way to do it.
11:09 Take it back a little bit, man.
11:10 You're from Portland, Oregon.
11:11 You grew up there.
11:12 I love Portland.
11:13 I lived there for a year.
11:14 I covered the trail blazes for Comcast Sports.
11:17 Are you a blazers fan by the phone?
11:19 - You know, it's interesting.
11:20 My family moved to Oregon in the great migration.
11:24 So when everyone else went from the South to Detroit,
11:27 to Philadelphia, to New York,
11:30 my family moved from Arkansas where we were sharecroppers,
11:33 and we had been slaves in Mississippi,
11:35 and we moved to Oregon.
11:36 And they took what I call the L route.
11:38 So they drove West across Texas,
11:41 and then up the I-5 corridor to Portland, Oregon.
11:44 And we've been there since the 1930s.
11:46 And so I'm a proud Oregon person.
11:49 People always say, are there black people in Oregon?
11:50 Well, we were probably one. - Of course, yeah.
11:51 - Of course there are, tons of them.
11:52 - There's not a lot.
11:54 - There's not a lot.
11:54 But you know, and listen, when I was up there moving around,
11:56 I had to get used to it, right?
11:57 And you have to kind of check yourself
11:59 and understand that, you know,
12:00 this is just what the demographics are.
12:02 But I love Portland.
12:03 I lived in Beaverton.
12:04 I love my little fall screen door,
12:06 fire on the mountain wings.
12:07 Don't get me going about Portland, Oregon.
12:10 I loved when I was there, and I saw it way differently.
12:13 But when you were young, at 15, you saw it differently.
12:15 What did you see?
12:16 - Well, it's interesting.
12:17 I didn't meet anyone whose family and grandparents
12:20 were from Virginia or South Carolina
12:22 until I went to college.
12:23 Everyone I grew up with,
12:25 their grandparents were from Arkansas.
12:26 There's a great book about the great migration
12:29 called "The Warmth of Other Suns."
12:30 And it tells the story of how African Americans moved
12:32 after the First World War from the South to the North,
12:35 populating the cities.
12:36 And there was a great section in the book about Arkansas
12:39 and how it moved to the Northwest
12:41 and how people moved in large numbers.
12:42 And so for me, I grew up with some remarkable people.
12:46 My grandmother, my great-grandmother,
12:48 probably had an eighth grade education.
12:50 But when she moved from Arkansas to Oregon,
12:52 she and her three sisters
12:54 each bought four or five houses a piece
12:56 to house the family as they moved North,
12:58 because there were no extended stay opportunities,
13:01 and their hotels were often unwelcoming.
13:03 And so they had to house their own families
13:05 in the migration.
13:06 And so they basically built the community
13:09 that we live in today.
13:10 What is impactful is, in fact, generations later,
13:14 particularly after the 1968 riots,
13:17 then you had the drug problem of the '70s and '80s.
13:20 You had gangs in the '80s and '90s.
13:23 And the communities began to deteriorate.
13:25 And so after they built these communities,
13:27 they unfortunately lived to see them deteriorate over time.
13:31 And then what began to happen in my lifetime
13:34 is the very communities that they built
13:36 and then deteriorated began to gentrify.
13:38 And so I go home now,
13:39 and my great-great-grandmother's home
13:40 is worth about a million and a half dollars
13:42 that she bought for $30,000 in the 1940s.
13:45 And my family and people around us
13:47 are beginning to be displaced from the communities
13:49 that they've lived for generations.
13:51 And so another reason why we are partnering
13:53 with institutions that are well-positioned
13:56 in these communities is because we're building a bridge
13:58 to these transitioning neighborhoods
14:00 so that people aren't necessarily pushed out,
14:02 so that they're not necessarily displaced,
14:04 but that they can live and work
14:06 as these neighborhoods transition
14:07 and benefit from that change.
14:09 - Yeah, I know you were seeing a lot at that age,
14:11 but what did you wanna be at age 15?
14:12 'Cause you couldn't have said,
14:13 "I wanna run a private equity investment firm."
14:16 What did you wanna be at 15?
14:17 - I tell the story often about when I asked my grandmother
14:21 when I was about 14 or 15 years old,
14:23 my family's deeply religious.
14:25 There is a scripture where the Bible says
14:28 a cattle on a thousand hill belongs to God.
14:30 And I told my grandmother, "I just want one hill.
14:32 "Matter of fact, if you give me one cow,
14:35 "I can make a difference."
14:36 And so for me, I've always had the idea
14:38 that I wanted to do something impactful.
14:41 I wanted to be in business.
14:43 I've been asked to run for Congress twice.
14:45 My father's a minister, my grandfather was a minister.
14:48 I could have gone that route.
14:49 But for me, I thought that creating opportunities
14:51 for people through business would be the way
14:53 that I would be able to have the most lasting impact.
14:55 And so I've been pretty focused.
14:56 I studied economics in undergrad.
14:58 I studied sociology and economics in grad school,
15:01 and then went to business school,
15:02 kind of in preparation to be able to run a business
15:05 that I could build that was both legitimate as an investor,
15:09 but could also provide an impact.
15:10 - So you know, I wanted to make an impact.
15:12 So no fireman, no basketball player, no police officer,
15:14 none of that, you just knew it was something
15:16 you wanted to be impactful.
15:17 - It's interesting.
15:18 Funny that we are starting with Virginia Union.
15:21 I was 11 years old, and I remember reading
15:24 maybe "Ebony" magazine, and it was Douglas Wilder
15:28 was elected the first African-American governor
15:31 of any state in the United States.
15:33 He happens to be a Virginia Union alumni.
15:37 And so in my life, I have just looked up to figures,
15:40 Douglas Wilder being one of them,
15:42 that had an impact in ways that were outside of the norm.
15:46 So I wasn't sure whether it was gonna be a fireman.
15:48 I wasn't sure whether it was gonna be a minister,
15:50 congressman, or businessman, but I was always targeted
15:52 and trying to model my life after people that I saw
15:55 that were having an impact in ways
15:57 that were outside of the norm.
15:58 And so that's been my focus.
15:59 - Absolutely, if you had to go back to yourself
16:01 at business school, what was the best piece of advice
16:03 that you received in business school?
16:04 - That everything's gonna be okay.
16:06 - Everything's okay?
16:06 - Yeah, that everything's gonna be okay.
16:07 I mean, all business, all of our professional careers
16:11 have their ups and downs.
16:12 You're gonna have some good days and bad days.
16:14 Some years you're gonna do well,
16:16 some years you're gonna do poorly,
16:17 you're gonna get some good reviews,
16:18 and you're gonna have a boss that you can't stand.
16:20 You gotta stick with it.
16:21 - Yeah.
16:22 - And you gotta focus.
16:23 And that the number one key to success
16:27 actually isn't skill, and it isn't even brains.
16:32 It's actually focus and perseverance.
16:34 - Absolutely.
16:35 - And that is so clear to me today.
16:36 And all of the young people that I deal with,
16:39 and I've mentored, I was an adjunct professor
16:41 for some time at NYU, and I tell them all,
16:44 the number one skill isn't how smart you are.
16:45 And frankly, it's not even all the time how hard you work.
16:48 It is focus and it is perseverance.
16:51 - Focus and perseverance.
16:52 Got about three, four minutes left here.
16:53 I wanna get your insight on some macro economic stuff, right?
16:57 Start with the commercial real estate sector.
16:58 I mean, this is a sector right now showing signs of trouble.
17:02 The New York Community Bank took some losses
17:04 on commercial real estate, obviously,
17:06 with the pandemic now.
17:07 Post-pandemic, people aren't going back to work as much,
17:09 so a lot of commercial real estate,
17:11 people are concerned about that.
17:12 You got about 1.2 trillion of commercial mortgages
17:15 that are scheduled to mature this year,
17:16 according to Goldman Sachs.
17:18 Barry Sternlich of Starwood Capital,
17:21 he comes out and says, I quote,
17:22 "The office market is an existential crisis right now.
17:25 "It's a three trillion asset class
17:27 "that is probably worth 1.8 trillion now.
17:30 "There's 1.2 trillion of losses spread somewhere,
17:33 "and nobody knows where it is," right?
17:35 There is prediction that this can cause
17:37 another economic recession.
17:38 What do you see?
17:39 - It's interesting.
17:40 When I started the company,
17:41 we actually didn't start in impact investing
17:44 for real estate.
17:45 - It's commercial.
17:46 - We started buying commercial offices.
17:47 - Absolutely, yeah.
17:47 - We bought almost, and structured almost $1 billion
17:50 worth of office building transactions,
17:52 including the famed Watergate building
17:54 that got Nixon in trouble.
17:55 And so we have considerable experience in the office space.
17:58 These headwinds existed prior to COVID.
18:01 There were three trends that we noticed.
18:03 Number one, people were taking less and less office space,
18:07 particularly in the major CBD markets,
18:09 Washington, DC, Boston, New York City,
18:13 they were taking smaller and smaller footprints.
18:15 Second, people were working from home more.
18:17 It was starting with Fridays.
18:18 It was starting with maybe a Monday off,
18:21 but people, there was a trend of working for home
18:23 prior to COVID.
18:24 And third, you have the WeWork phenomenon.
18:25 WeWork is the most famous example,
18:27 but these coworking spaces.
18:29 So it was happening that new businesses
18:31 and venture-backed firms weren't taking office space.
18:33 Those three trends existed prior to COVID.
18:36 The combination of COVID and very high interest rates
18:39 and the maturity of the debt is accelerating
18:41 what was already happening in the office space
18:43 and what frankly has happened around the world
18:45 in the office space.
18:46 And so our sense is that America,
18:49 like the rest of the world,
18:50 is gonna have to figure out how to repurpose
18:52 some of its major centers.
18:53 This is not just challenging for the office owners.
18:57 This is challenging for the restaurant owners
18:59 and the cleaners.
19:01 I mean, this is a major economic--
19:04 - San Francisco is an example, right?
19:06 Detroit gave you something.
19:08 You don't need to see a bankrupt city
19:10 and San Francisco's there
19:11 and hopefully they can get it together.
19:13 - And then if you also think about the tax bases
19:15 of these cities,
19:15 often the city's tax bases are driven
19:19 by commercial real estate activity,
19:20 which is true for New York City, by the way.
19:22 Much of New York City's tax base
19:23 is in its commercial activity,
19:25 including commercial real estate,
19:26 not necessarily in its residential tax collection.
19:29 And so this is gonna be a major challenge
19:32 both for municipal funding of schools
19:34 and of police departments and fire departments,
19:37 as well as office owners.
19:38 - Yeah, cities might not be in business.
19:40 - Absolutely.
19:41 - Shedding workers, right?
19:42 And then you got cities that are just empty.
19:44 Dan Gilbert has all those buildings,
19:45 downtown Detroit, right?
19:47 And so, very interesting.
19:48 And housing market, right, Fass,
19:50 again, about 143 million homes, I believe.
19:53 You need about 200 million, no, Toine?
19:58 What do you do there?
19:58 Because construction workers aren't building homes.
20:01 They're too busy building bridges and roads.
20:02 I know, 'cause it took me a long time to get here.
20:04 Traffic.
20:05 What do you do when you don't have enough homes
20:07 being built, but you need 'em?
20:09 - Well, this is why, again, economics would tell us
20:12 that high interest rates should bring down housing prices.
20:14 The inability to supply new homes
20:17 because of the cost of inputs,
20:20 the high cost of labor, and high interest rates
20:22 is gonna continue to skyrocket home prices
20:25 and home building prices,
20:27 despite the attempt to manage them through interest rates.
20:30 And so I think we're facing a real crisis.
20:32 As you said, 143 housing units in the United States,
20:36 84 million single family homes,
20:38 and a quarter of those single family homes are rental units.
20:41 So a quarter of America is renting a house,
20:44 and those prices are going up.
20:45 And so I think that we just face a real long-term trend
20:49 with increased housing prices in the United States,
20:51 which is gonna make ownership even more difficult,
20:53 particularly because of the combination
20:55 of those increased prices and high interest rates.
20:58 - Get you outta here, two things last.
20:59 Forrest, be okay, obviously,
21:00 you made that 100 million commitment.
21:02 If you had an audience here
21:03 who was real estate investors, right,
21:05 what would you tell them after what we just said?
21:07 Commercial, housing, is there a play in commercial?
21:10 What would you tell a real estate investor
21:13 that could be looking for an opportunity for you?
21:15 - I actually think that the challenges
21:20 of today's real estate market
21:22 creates the ideal impact investing opportunity
21:25 to provide housing that Americans can afford.
21:28 It is the crossroads of impact investing opportunity,
21:31 where working families cannot keep up
21:34 with the high cost of housing,
21:36 and the ability for us to deliver that housing
21:38 to the American people is challenged on multiple levels.
21:41 And so I think the opportunity to partner with us
21:43 or someone like us to deliver those homes,
21:46 and at the same time make an outsized return,
21:48 given the cycle that we're in,
21:50 I think exists for about a generation.
21:51 So we're excited.
21:52 - Absolutely, last thing here, "Good to Great,"
21:54 Jim Collins' great book.
21:55 I love it, teaches you how to go from good to great,
21:58 especially on a business angle.
21:59 What's the difference between a good real estate investor
22:02 and a great one?
22:03 - Good real estate investor
22:04 and a great real estate investor is partnership.
22:08 Because the idea that we can't do it alone,
22:10 that you have to partner all along the way from your,
22:13 you have to partner with your investors,
22:15 you have to partner with your banks and lenders,
22:18 and you all have to basically move
22:19 and roll in the same direction.
22:21 And I think that is the difference.
22:22 The real estate investors tend to be
22:25 dramatically egotistical.
22:27 (laughing)
22:27 - Aren't we all?
22:28 - They're just dramatically egotistical.
22:30 I mean, because you know, you build stuff out of the ground,
22:32 you start thinking about yourself as pretty freaking special.
22:35 The reality is that we can't move forward
22:38 without partnership across the lines,
22:41 partnering with people and with communities.
22:42 And I think that's the difference
22:44 between people who have sustained real estate businesses
22:47 and people who just ride the cycles.
22:48 - Absolutely, here at the NASDAQ Market site,
22:50 Tawan Davis, thank you so much, man, for the time.
22:52 And thank you for making an impact
22:54 through the Impact Invest,
22:55 and look forward to seeing
22:56 where the rest of the 100 million goes.
22:58 I know you got some more announcements coming.
22:59 And listen, we were just talking Philly off the camera,
23:02 so you're doing work in Philly, New York, Atlanta,
23:04 all of that, look forward to just keeping up with you.
23:06 I appreciate the time.
23:07 - Appreciate it, thanks for having me.
23:08 - Appreciate it.
23:09 (upbeat music)
23:11 (upbeat music)
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