Sam Zell — Strategies for High-Stakes Investing and Dealmaking (#407) - The Blog of Author Tim Ferriss (2024)

Posted on January 23, 2020May 18, 2023 by Tim Ferriss

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Sam Zell — Strategies for High-Stakes Investing and Dealmaking (#407) - The Blog of Author Tim Ferriss (1)

“If I can’t run it, then I don’t want to own it.” — Sam Zell

Welcome to another episode of The Tim Ferriss Show, where it is my job to sit down with world-class performers of all different types to tease out the habits, routines, favorite books, and so on that you can apply and test in your own life. This time, we have a slightly different episode. I will not be the one doing the deconstructing. Instead, we have a takeover by my very good friend, Peter Attia.

As longtime listeners of the podcast know, Dr. Peter Attia (@PeterAttiaMD) is a former ultra-endurance athlete, a compulsive self-experimenter, and one of the most fascinating human beings I know. He is also one of my go-to doctors for anything related to performance or longevity. Peter also hosts The Drive, a weekly, ultra-deep-dive podcast focusing on maximizing health, longevity, critical thinking, and a few other things. Subscribe on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you listen to podcasts.

In this episode, we have Peter interviewing Sam Zell, a legendary dealmaker and investor.Samis the Chairman of Equity Group Investments, and he was recognized by Forbes as one of the “100 Greatest Living Business Minds” in 2017. He holds a place on New York Stock Exchange’s “Wall of Innovators” for his role in building the $1 trillion REIT industry. Sam is also the author of Am I Being Too Subtle?: Straight Talk From a Business Rebel.

This is one not to miss. Please enjoy!

You can findthe transcript of this episode here. Transcripts ofall episodes can be found here.

Listen to the episode on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Overcast, Stitcher, Castbox, Google Podcasts, or on your favorite podcast platform.

#407: Sam Zell — Strategies for High-Stakes Investing and Dealmaking

This episode is brought to you by FreshBooks.I’ve been talking aboutFreshBooks — an all-in-one invoicing+payments+accounting solution — for years now. Many entrepreneurs, as well as the contractors and freelancers that I work with, use it all the time.

FreshBooksmakes it super easy to track things like expenses, project time, and client info, and then merge it all into great-looking invoices.FreshBookscan save users up to 200 hours a year on accounting and bookkeeping tasks.Right now FreshBooks is offering my listeners a free 30-day trial, and no credit card is required. Go toFreshBooks.com/timand enter “Tim Ferriss” in the “How did you hear about us?” section!

This episode of The Tim Ferriss Show is brought to you by Brave, the next-generation Web browser. Brave was built by a team of privacy-focused, performance-oriented pioneers of the Web at the direction of Brendan Eich (co-founder of Mozilla Firefox and creator of JavaScript) and Brian Bondy. Brave now has more than 10 million monthly active users — including me.

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What was your favorite quote or lesson from this episode? Please let me know in the comments.

SCROLL BELOW FOR LINKS AND SHOW NOTES…

Want to hear the last time Peter was on the podcast?Listen to our conversation here. In that interview, we discuss Centenarian Olympics, goblet squats, metformin for longevity, xenon gas for performance enhancement, archery, tearing phone books in half, and much more. (Stream below orright-click here to download.)

#398: Peter Attia, M.D. — Fasting, Metformin, Athletic Performance, and More

SELECTED LINKS FROM THE EPISODE

SHOW NOTES

  • Sam details the long journey his parents took to escape Poland just hours before the German invasion in 1939 and arrive in Chicago via Russia and Japan by 1941, and how lucky he really was to have been born in the United States. [10:04]
  • Taking the risk to leave everything behind by making a choice that history proved to be the right one, did Sam’s father ever articulate to him, in explicit or implicit terms, his decision-making process? [22:32]
  • Has Sam always been one to do what he thought was right, no matter how unpopular it might be? Did his family’s close call with extermination factor into his own outlook? [25:44]
  • Why did Sam pursue an education, and then a career, in law — and then swiftly abandon it? How did he turn what could have been a huge waste of time into a unique opportunity, and how did this lead to him setting up his own business? [31:08]
  • How Sam diverged from his father’s real estate investment strategy to land successful deals in untapped and overlooked markets. [39:46]
  • Sam recalls the first real estate deals he made with his father and the level of thought that went into them. [42:50]
  • What was the only real takeaway Sam brought out of Econ 101 class in college, and what was his philosophy around purchasing assets that were already capable of deploying yield versus developing assets? [47:10]
  • When did Sam start to appreciate the operational side of risk, and how did he manage it? [49:33]
  • The variables that can delay a project and teach an unwary developer a very expensive lesson about inflation. [50:24]
  • How did Sam meet Jay Pritzker, the man he considers “the smartest risk guy” he ever met — and what did he teach Sam about risk? [52:04]
  • Is there an asset class for which these lessons about risk don’t translate? [56:40]
  • Where did Sam meet Bob Lurie, and how did they discover the “complementary skill sets but shared values” that made them ideal business partners? [57:55]
  • Sam talks about dealing with the shock of Bob’s death from cancer in 1990, and how he and Bob’s wife committed to the philanthropy that would be his posthumous legacy. [1:03:24]
  • What’s a real estate investment trust (REIT), and what is Sam’s role in the creation of what has become a more than one trillion-dollar asset class? [1:07:35]
  • What disaster did Sam foresee as early as 1988 that turned him into a “Cassandra” among real estate investors, and what factors made it seem inevitable? [1:14:05]
  • What made the recession in 2008 different from other financial crises tied to real estate? [1:20:05]
  • Does Sam believe the state of commercial real estate occupancy or glut in supply and demand is a “canary in the coal mine” for the US economy? [1:24:22]
  • What is a leveraged buyout (LBO)? [1:25:12]
  • Why does Sam think of office-sharing firm WeWork as “the Enron of real estate,” and what tipped him off years before anyone else seemed to see it? [1:25:54]
  • Why Sam would never buy a business he couldn’t run, and why it’s important for everybody involved in a business to have some skin in the game. [1:29:31]
  • What’s the secret to Sam’s collection of loyal business collaborators — many of whom have worked with him for 20 to 30 years? [1:31:06]
  • How did Sam facilitate the needs of an employee who decided that she wanted to go to divinity school, and what is she doing today? [1:33:47]
  • Why and when did Sam get in the habit of giving year-end gifts that get remembered, and what’s changed about the process over the years? [1:34:43]
  • A big part of how Sam mitigates risk is to know as much as possible about his world. As a lifelong learner, how does he stay abreast of what’s going on in that world? [1:37:48]
  • According to Sam, a typical CEO of a Fortune 500 company travels 250 hours a year. He travels 1,000, but insists that he doesn’t take what most people would consider vacations. Where does he go, and what motivates him to go there? [1:41:26]
  • What does Sam mean when he says “We suffer from knowing the numbers,” and how does he find a balance between knowing too much and not knowing enough when it comes to business? How would he teach someone to find their own balance? [1:44:14]
  • Now in his 70s, what are Sam’s plans for retirement? [1:45:48]
  • Is Sam optimistic about where the US economy appears to be headed? Does it seem overly interwoven with the fate of China’s economy, or can it prosper with or without China? [1:46:46]
  • How does a first-generation kid like Sam inspire and encourage his kids to excel with the same intensity that his own parents directed at him? [1:53:04]
  • Outside of the day-to-day concerns of the business world, what problem is Sam most interested in solving? [1:55:05]

PEOPLE MENTIONED

Related and Recommended

The Tim Ferriss Show is one of the most popular podcasts in the world with more than 900 million downloads. It has been selected for "Best of Apple Podcasts" three times, it is often the #1 interview podcast across all of Apple Podcasts, and it's been ranked #1 out of 400,000+ podcasts on many occasions. To listen to any of the past episodes for free, check out this page.

Sam Zell — Strategies for High-Stakes Investing and Dealmaking (#407) - The Blog of Author Tim Ferriss (2024)

FAQs

What does Sam Zell invest in? ›

In 1968, Zell created a company, Equity Group Investments, to invest in properties. 1 Since its founding, Equity Group Investments, now known as Equity International, has expanded beyond real estate.

How did Sam Zell become a billionaire? ›

While studying at the University of Michigan, Zell managed a 15-unit student apartment building in exchange for a free room. His enterprise was netting $150,000 by graduation. He launched Equity Group Investments in 1968, then expanded his real estate empire nationwide over the following decades.

How does Tim Ferris make money? ›

Ferriss' primary sources of income stem from his book sales, speaking engagements, and various business investments. His books have sold millions of copies worldwide, generating substantial revenue and cementing his status as a celebrated author.

Where did Tim Ferris go to college? ›

Ferriss grew up in East Hampton, New York, and credits his poor health in childhood for sparking an interest in self-improvement. After graduating from St. Paul's School, he attended Princeton University, earning a B.A. in East Asian studies in 2000, then first worked in sales at a data storage company.

What company does Sam Zell own? ›

Samuel Zell (born Shmuel Zielonka; September 28, 1941 – May 18, 2023) was an American billionaire businessman and philanthropist primarily engaged in real estate investment. Companies founded by or controlled by Zell include Equity Residential, Equity International, EQ Office, Covanta, Tribune Media, and Anixter.

Who will succeed Sam Zell? ›

In the same press release yesterday morning in which it disclosed Zell's death, Equity Residential, a real estate investment trust that owns apartments, said board member and former CEO David Neithercut, 67, would succeed Zell as the company's chairman.

Which college did most billionaires go to? ›

RankUniversityCombined wealth
1Harvard University$4,769 billion
2Stanford University$2,899 billion
3University of Pennsylvania$1,780 billion
4Columbia University$1,501 billion
16 more rows

Who is the billionaire that gives away money? ›

Bill Gates and Melinda French Gates have a lifetime giving of $42.5 billion, with a giving focus on health and poverty alleviation. They continue to co-chair the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation despite their 2021 divorce, Forbes noted. Bill has a net worth of 125 billion, and Melinda's net worth is $10.6 billion.

Is there a billionaire that went to college? ›

Most of America”s richest citizens studied subjects related to their careers and sources of wealth. Elon Musk earned undergraduate degrees in both economics and physics. Jeff Bezos studied electrical engineering and computer science.

Is Tim Ferriss a billionaire? ›

Tim Ferriss net worth is over $100 million, most of which has been acquired through his businesses and early investments in billion-dollar companies including Alibaba, Facebook, Uber, Twitter, and more.

What is brain quicken? ›

BrainQUICKEN General Information

Developer and distributor of body supplements. The company offers bioactive and pharmaceutical-grade neural acceleration products and provides mind and muscle performance reports, enabling professional athletes to improve performance.

What is an interesting fact about Tim Ferriss? ›

Ferriss always dreamed of getting an MBA. Then he actually sat in on a business school class. Instead of paying to pursue the degree, he decided to create his own “real-world MBA.” He set up a two-year “Tim Ferriss Fund” of $120,000 — roughly the cost of two years at business school — to use for angel investing.

Is Tim Ferris a doctor? ›

Partners HealthCare System, Inc. Trained in both internal medicine and pediatrics, Tim is a practicing primary care physician and Senior Vice President for Population Health at Mass General Hospital and Partners HealthCare in Boston.

What do credit hedge funds invest in? ›

Credit shares a similar trading approach to other specialized hedge fund strategies, such as long/short equity and event-driven, but is applied to various fixed-income instruments including bank loans, corporate, municipal and government bonds, distressed debt, and securitized credit.

Who is the founder of the REIT? ›

The first REIT was American Realty Trust founded by Thomas J. Broyhill, cousin of Virginia U.S. Congressman Joel Broyhill in 1961 who pushed for the creation under Eisenhower. As of 2021, at least 39 countries around the world have established REITs.

Does allspring have a money market fund? ›

Current month-end performance is available at the funds' website, allspringglobal.com. Money market funds are sold without a front-end sales charge or contingent deferred sales charge. Other fees and expenses apply to an investment in the fund and are described in the fund's current prospectus.

How much is Sam Zell worth? ›

Zell had a personal net worth of $5.9 billion, according to the Bloomberg Billionaires Index. Zell had a penchant for scooping up cheap real estate and selling it later at a profit, a strategy he outlined in a 1978 article titled “The Grave Dancer,” which became his nickname in the industry.

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