Robert M. White, Jr. founded Real Capital
Analytics Inc.in 2000 to bring greater transparency to the investment markets
by providing real-time data of capital flows and prices of commercial properties.
He is a noted authority on the real estate capital markets who is frequently
cited in the press and has authored numerous articles for industry publications
and the firm’s own Capital Trends publications.
Bob is a Counselor of Real Estate (CRE),
a Fellow of the Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors (FRICS) and a Fellow
of the Homer Hoyt Institute. He serves on the board of directors for the
Pension Real Estate Association (PREA) and the advisory board for the Real
Estate Research Institution (RERI). Before founding RCA, Bob spent 14
years in the real estate investment banking and brokerage industry. He is a
graduate of the McIntire School of Commerce at the University of Virginia.
How
Bob and I met:
Within the first year after Bob launched RCA, a NYC commercial
real estate broker, who was working on finding RCA an office space to house
their growing team, introduced me to him. At the point we met there were four employees
(including Bob). Today RCA team is more than 200 strong in their offices in New
York; San Jose, CA; London and Singapore.
When Bob told me what RCA was doing I
instantly recognized the need for it in the industry. I also immediately liked and trusted Bob and
then started spreading the word about RCA.
As they say, the rest is history but I’d like to write a little
more.
I love that RCA has become an
industry standard – for information, analytics and commentary based on their
research. RCA has recorded over $18 trillion of commercial property
transactions linked to over 200,000 investor and lender profiles and has earned
a reputation of having the most timely and reliable transaction data and
providing valuable intelligence on market pricing, capital flows and investment
trends.
Bob
is one of those special guys that come into your life very rarely. He is smart,
a good businessman and generous with his people. He is also generous with his
time – meeting with people who have ideas about launching a service to the
commercial real estate industry – listening, sharing his experiences with
starting and growing RCA or folks who are at an inflection point in their career.
Little known: Bob is an active member of the main group
for miniature-building enthusiasts, the Souvenir Building Collectors Society.
His collection of hundreds of buildings is displayed around the RCA’s New York
City office. It’s amazing. Buildings from all over the world; many
recognizable and iconic. He loves to
show people the buildings – if you’re in NYC and have a passion for buildings (hey,
we’re in the commercial real estate business!).
Give the office a call. I’m sure
you’ll be invited up for a tour.
As
my career and life have gone through phases, Bob has always been there for me –
as a mentor, a trusted advisor and most importantly as a friend.
Q. How did you get your start in the
commercial real estate industry?
A. Ever since I was a kid, playing with Tonka
Trucks, I always wanted to be in real estate. When I was young I had a drafting
board – I always figured I’d be a developer of some type. After graduating with a degree in finance
from The University of Virginia I got a job on Wall Street. I wasn’t doing real
estate but got to break in to the industry when I accepted a job at Eastdil. I didn’t know anything about real estate or
the difference between a net or gross lease but learned a lot of what I know
through my experiences there.
Q.
What advice would you give to someone who has been in the industry for a
short time or a student looking to get her or his start?
A. Being
well read is very important. There are so many aspects of real estate to know
about and, fortunately, there’s so much information out there - especially in
the articles written by industry ‘deal junkies.’
The
second piece of advice: Network. Real estate is really a social industry.
People love to talk. There are so many deals, so many things that happen
because of relationships. That probably
happens across a lot of industries but I think even more so in real estate.
Q. As you look back on your career is there
anything you wish you had done differently? If so, what?
A. Not
really. There are certainly some regrets
and mistakes but overall the trajectory and the growth was fantastic. It’s nothing like there was a job I shouldn’t
have taken at some fork in the road.
I’ve always loved being in real estate. At Eastdil I had so many
different experiences. Then, joining
some of my former Eastdil colleagues, in the early days of Granite Partners and
helping to grow that firm. That was probably my first entrepreneurial
experience before RCA.
Q. How long did you have the idea before you
launched RCA?
A. Actually it was years. I can still go back and
visualize some of the early stages. It
really started at Granite partners. I made a decision to track down every deal;
put every deal we knew about, heard about, read about in a spreadsheet and take
a more cerebral, analytical approach. I was always interested in quantifying
the industry. All my friends on Wall
Street, whether they were in M&A or bonds could quantify their industry.
But, there were no stats on a national basis on how big the commercial real
estate industry was - on the transactions. I knew it was significant and
probably compared very well to things like M&A but nobody had a clue. I
really had a quest to quantify that.
Q. Is it true that the genesis of RCA was an
excel spreadsheet?
A. Absolutely.
It was a crisis when we hit 64,000 rows of data, which was, at the time,
the limit of Excel.
Q. Who
have been the biggest influences on your career? How? Why?
A. I’ve had many influencers. You, Steve, came and found RCA at a very
early stage when there were only a handful of us and we didn’t even have our
own office space. You took us under your wing and gave us advice and made a lot
of introductions. There have been certain people whom I consider mentors that
gave me good advice along the way. Certainly my father, who was a real estate lawyer,
has always been a big influence. His ethics, how he treats people, the right
way to conduct yourself and how to run a business and, maybe most importantly, to
honor your word. He passed away 15 years
ago but he lived long enough to see that RCA was becoming successful – I’m very
glad for that. Throughout my whole career and especially since I started RCA so
many senior people in the industry saw what we were doing, saw the need for it
and appreciated what we were doing. Those folks were very encouraging and very
helpful in the early days of RCA.
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