Sunday, November 22nd, 2009

Trammel Crow: Lessons in Real Estate Investing

Jan 28th, 2009 | By Chris Mayer | Category: Financial News

“There’s as much risk in doing nothing as in doing something.”
— Trammell Crow, real estate mogul

Cycles are an inseparable part of the landscape of markets. Fortunes are often made in the valleys. I was thinking of this after I read several obituaries of Trammel Crow, who died this month. He was a guy who saw many booms and busts over his 94-year life.

Trammell Crow was a big-time developer and died a rich man. The Wall Street Journal once described him as “America’s biggest landlord.” His firm, Trammell Crow Co., estimates it built some 500 million square feet of real estate space. But it was a long road to get there from humble beginnings. His life is one of those great American success stories.

Unable to attend college because of the Great Depression, he took a number of odd jobs, including plucking chickens and unloading boxcars. Eventually, he landed a job at a bank, and then studied to become a public accountant. By 1938, at the age of 24, he was the youngest CPA in the state of Texas.

After World War II, he got his first experience in construction building grain elevators with Doggett Grain. Eventually, he managed to build his first warehouse with a partner and leased it to Rayovac Battery Co. It was his first real estate success. He was on his way.

There would be good times and hard times on this journey. The 1970s downturn nearly bankrupted him. But it didn’t take out any of his risk-taking nature. “I once heard it said that the cat that is burned on an oven range will never touch a hot one again,” he said in a 1980 interview. “True enough, but that cat won’t go near cold ovens either. The same is true for business. Failures that transform a businessman into a super-cautious individual can cripple.”

I also remember Trammell Crow from my career in banking. I started out banking when I was 22 years old. I remember working with a senior lender on a deal to finance a big real estate project. He pointed out that we had to be sure we liked the collateral because the developer might toss us the keys, like Trammell Crow. I must’ve had a somewhat puzzled look on my face because the lender asked me, “You know who Trammell Crow is, right?” And he asked it in a way that you might ask someone today if they know Barack Obama.

I honestly can’t remember what my answer was. I remember the embarrassment of not knowing who he was. Yet he was among the most famous developers in the country. A 22-year-old always thinks he knows more than he does. It’s one of those things.

Anyway, the senior lender was referring to a well-known episode Trammell Crow had with his bankers. He basically tossed a bunch of keys on the table on told them they could either give him new terms on his mortgages or take the keys. They reworked terms.

Old Crow was an American original. He left quite a legacy, and not only in the millions of square feet of real estate and the fortune he leaves behind. Many talented people came out of the Trammel Crow ranks and went on to become major real estate players. He had a huge influence on the industry.

Source: Trammel Crow: Lessons in Real Estate Investing


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By Chris Mayer

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Chris MayerChris Mayer is the editor of Capital and Crisis and Mayer's Special Situations. His contrarian essays have appeared on a number of websites and publications including the Mises Institute, the Freeman, GoldEagle.com, LewRockwell.com, FiendBear.com, PrudentBear.com and Individual Investor Magazine.

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The Daily Reckoning offers a "uniquely refreshing" perspective on the global economy, investing and the ability to live well in uncertain times. You will learn what you can expect from today's markets and how to prosper in the face of uncertainty.

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