• Retire and Expire: The Myth of Retirement Nobody Talks About
    May 20 2026
    Brian Sutton could walk away from Two Waters Capital tomorrow. He does not have to work. He could golf and drive his boat every single day for the rest of his life. He would be bored out of his mind within a month. In this episode of Lessons the Hard Way, Brian sits down with co-host Sam Chillingworth to challenge one of the most deeply held beliefs in personal finance: that retirement is the goal. Brian argues it is not. What people actually want is not retirement — it is freedom. The freedom to choose. The freedom to walk away from something you hate. The freedom to build something meaningful. And real estate is how he got there. In this episode: • Why Brian could retire today but would never want to • The "retire and expire" problem: why men who retire early often die early • What you actually want is not retirement — you want a second stream of income and freedom of choice • Tony Robbins on the basic human need for significance: what happens when retirement robs you of it • The common denominator problem: if every job is miserable, it might be a you issue • Money cannot make you happy, but not having it can sure make you unhappy — Brian's dad's rule • Why spending money does not fulfill Brian and what actually does • Two Waters Capital's mission: giving investors the financial security to make better choices • What Brian would say to anyone stuck in a job they hate right now • Stop spending $20,000 on real estate education: the free path to learning it yourself • Curiosity, confidence, and one foot in front of the other: the only formula you need Subscribe for weekly episodes. New deal autopsies and hard lessons every week. 🔗 Two Waters Capital: 2waterscapital.com 0:00 Cold open 0:36 Show intro: hard lessons most people keep private 0:57 Welcome back 1:15 The myth of retirement: let's dig in 1:34 Brian's confession 2:18 Could shut down Two Waters, golf every day, drive the boat: still would not do it 2:34 For some people retirement is an escape from a job they hate 3:10 The real argument 3:32 What you actually want 3:53 People who retired and came back to work 4:17 Retire and expire 4:55 Life is about contribution and connection 5:16 Two Waters investors who retired and are back working anyway 5:48 Tony Robbins on basic human needs 6:11 Who am I now 6:39 The empowerment of knowing you can walk away even if you do not 7:02 Job to job to job: if every job is miserable, look in the mirror 7:24 The common denominator 7:48 The secret sauce of life: contribution, passion, and gusto 8:13 What Brian is passionate about: people and building great communities 8:51 Success is a team sport: surrounding yourself with the right people 9:10 Passion number two: giving investors the financial security to make better choices 9:37 When he lost his job: real estate saved his family and gave him choices 10:02 Retire rhymes with expire: freedom and choice are the real goals 10:47 Brian is not flashy: spending money does not make him happy, building does 11:26 The mission: give people financial security to make better choices in life 11:59 Money cannot make you happy but not having it can make you unhappy: Brian's dad's rule 12:20 Money is a tool: be smart with it and it gives you freedom 13:03 Freedom of choice: what financial security actually buys you 13:20 To the person stuck in a job they hate: here is what Brian would say 14:05 Stay positive, stay curious, find people who did what you want to do 14:38 You do not need to spend $20,000 to learn real estate: start for free 14:59 Stop watching TV and get curious about how other people created income streams 15:19 Brian's secret sauce: eternally curious, loves to learn, studies successful people 15:42 Once you have the education, get out of your own way and take action 16:26 I am not a risk taker: I just educated myself until I felt confident enough to move 17:33 Two Waters moving forward: autonomous growth and what Brian is excited about 18:02 You have it in you: the power to make changes is already there 18:32 Do not quit your job tomorrow: the right way to make the transition 19:16 The retirement carrot: is it keeping you miserable on purpose? 19:41 Fill your life with choices, connections, and meaningful impact instead 20:14 Final advice: stop chasing retirement, start building financial security and freedom 21:03 Closing: thanks and see you next week retire and expire | you do not want to retire | financial freedom vs retirement | real estate passive income | how to escape your job | second stream of income | multifamily investing podcast | accredited investor education | Brian Sutton Two Waters Capital | Lessons the Hard Way podcast #lessonsthehardway #twowaterscapital #realestatepodcast #financialfreedom #retirementmyth #passiveincome #realestateinvesting #multifamilyinvesting #accreditedinvestor #wealthbuilding Powered by ATL Podcast Pros ...
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    21 mins
  • We Are Buying at 2018 Prices in 2026 | The Opportunity Nobody Is Talking About
    May 13 2026

    Brian Sutton recently sat down with The Real Estate Pros Show for a wide-ranging conversation about adversity, real estate cycles, and why Two Waters Capital believes right now is one of the best buying opportunities in nearly a decade.

    We are sharing this replay on the Lessons the Hard Way channel because the message is one every investor and operator needs to hear right now.

    In this conversation, Brian shares:

    • A short sale deal Two Waters is closing right now: buying in 2026 at 2018 pricing per door

    • What it means to turn the clock back 8 years on asset pricing and why that matters

    • Failure as fertilizer: how the messy, smelly hard times are the nutrients that grow you

    • Why he wanted to clam up and go into his shell after the losses — and why he chose not to

    • Count it all joy: the Bible verse that reframes every trial as an opportunity

    • Battle scars vs. battle wounds: the difference between people who grow and people who get stuck

    • Why it is time to be bullish in real estate right now

    • The 7-point deal filter Two Waters gives away free to anyone who texts DEAL to 404-500-6876

    • What Brian believes is the human condition at its best: contribute, connect, touch people's lives

    Special thanks to the Real Estate Pros Show for having Brian on. Go check out their channel here:

    @RealEstateProsShow

    Want to connect with Two Waters Capital directly?

    Text DEAL to 404-500-6876 for the free 7-point deal filter

    Email: invest@2waterscapital.com

    Website: 2waterscapital.com

    Subscribe to Lessons the Hard Way for weekly episodes. New deal autopsies and hard lessons every week.

    real estate investing 2026 | distressed real estate opportunity | short sale real estate | multifamily investing podcast | accredited investor education | real estate mindset | adversity and investing | Brian Sutton Two Waters Capital | real estate market 2026 | Lessons the Hard Way podcast

    #lessonsthehardway

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    #realestatepodcast

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    14 mins
  • Investing Like a Trillion Dollar Company: What Blackstone Knows That Most Investors Don’t
    May 6 2026
    Brian Sutton exited the stock market in his mid-20s. He has never gone back. This is how he got there — and what he learned along the way. In Episode 6 of Lessons the Hard Way, Brian sits down with co-host Sam Chillingworth to trace the full arc: from the 401K he realized was barely keeping up with his own contributions, to rolling it into a self-directed IRA and buying his first condo, to discovering syndications, to losing money in 20 LP deals — and finally to studying how Blackstone and the world's largest fund managers structure their investments to protect capital when deals go sideways. The lesson that ties it all together: it is less about the asset and more about the structure. In this episode: • Why Brian's 401K was growing at the same rate he was contributing — and nothing more • The financial advisor meeting that clarified nothing: funds inside funds inside fees • Self-directed IRA into real estate: rolling the retirement account and buying a condo • The evolution from single properties to syndications to the fund model • Why syndicators who came from mutual funds are now being told to invest like mutual funds • How Blackstone's biggest private equity win — buying Hilton in 2007 — was about structure, not just the asset • What the CEO of Blackstone said that changed how Brian thinks about investing • Why trillion dollar funds protect their investors even when individual deals go bad • The neighborhood philosophy: invest where people are moving in, not moving out • Two Waters' shift from finding deals then finding investors, to building a community of investors first • The take home: find the smarter investors, mirror what they do, and learn more from the falls than the wins Subscribe for weekly episodes. New deal autopsies and hard lessons every week. 🔗 Two Waters Capital: 2waterscapital.com 0:00 Cold open: "I'm a real estate junky. I just love real estate." 0:36 Show intro: hard lessons most people keep private 0:57 Welcome back: the stock market conversation nobody expected 1:14 Brian's backstory: exiting the stock market in his mid-20s 1:51 First job, first 401K: following the herd mentality 2:18 The back of the napkin math: my 401K is only growing as fast as I contribute 2:39 Wanting to retire at 50: realizing this plan will not get him there 2:58 The financial advisor meeting: funds inside funds, fees inside fees 3:44 Why investors are leaving public markets and coming to private real estate 4:10 The fee dilution problem: three layers of fees eating your returns 4:49 Rolling the 401K into a self-directed IRA: Equity Trust 4:54 Buying the first condo through the IRA: appreciation, rental income, and growth 5:39 Building the real estate portfolio faster than any mutual fund could 6:05 The evolution: from single properties to syndications to larger assets 6:37 Why syndications were appealing: cut out the middlemen, go direct 7:05 The outsized return you can not get in the stock market 7:33 The pushback: "Brian, you got out of funds — why are you going back to funds?" 7:55 The full circle moment: painful syndication losses and the fund rethink 8:21 The market reality: single syndications losing everything right now 8:36 Scrutinizing the structure: what was putting Two Waters at risk 9:09 Why Blackstone uses the fund model: the smartest money in the room 9:35 Blackstone buying Hilton: the biggest private equity transaction in history 9:59 Most investors are already in a Blackstone fund and don't know it 10:09 What the Blackstone CEO said: it is about structure, not just the asset 10:37 How trillion dollar funds protect investors when individual deals go bad 10:56 Still stuck in 20 LP single syndications: the market is the proof 12:16 Single syndication traps your money: if that one deal goes bad, kaboom 13:03 The neighborhood philosophy: invest where people are moving in 13:57 The shift in philosophy: from finding deals to building a community of investors 14:53 Creating a neighborhood of investors: like-minded capital invested on their behalf 15:29 Wrapping up: from stock market skeptic to structuring like Blackstone 15:50 The take home: find smarter investors, mirror them, learn from the falls 16:33 Reassess and adjust: what every investor sitting on losses should do right now 17:26 Why this podcast exists: mindset, skill set, and execution 17:45 Closing: another great segment real estate vs stock market investing | self directed IRA real estate | how to exit the stock market | real estate fund structure | Blackstone fund strategy | multifamily investing podcast | accredited investor education | passive real estate investing | real estate syndication vs fund | Lessons the Hard Way podcast #lessonsthehardway #twowaterscapital #realestatepodcast #realestateinvesting #stockmarketvrealestate #selfdirectedira #multifamilyinvesting #accreditedinvestor #passiveinvesting #...
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    18 mins
  • Extend and Pretend: The Psychology Behind Why Syndicators Won’t Sell
    May 6 2026
    Everyone was waiting for the distressed deal flood. It never came. And Brian Sutton knows exactly why. In Episode 5 of Lessons the Hard Way, Brian sits down with co-host Sam Chillingworth to break down the psychology behind why syndicators are holding on instead of selling — why extend and pretend took over the market — and what it actually feels like to be the operator sitting on a deal that isn't coming back. Brian also makes a confession most operators in his position would never say out loud: MUST WATCH. He still believes in the model. And he explains exactly why. In this episode: • Why the expected flood of distressed deals became a slow drip instead • The psychology of extend and pretend: denial, responsibility, and not wanting to post a loss • Two choices in a bad syndication: sell for a loss or rescue capital. • Why lenders were enabling the can-kicking just as much as operators • Brian's confession: in 20 LP deals, a lot have gone south • Why he still believes real estate generates more millionaires than any other asset class • The fund model advantage: more flexibility, more options, better capital protection • Contrarian capital: why the investors who make the most money buy when others won't • A U-shaped recovery: what that means for timing and where Two Waters is positioning now • Why this current downturn will produce the next great run in real estate • What Brian would tell any investor sitting scared on the sidelines right now Subscribe for weekly episodes. New deal autopsies and hard lessons every week. 🔗 Two Waters Capital: 2waterscapital.com 0:00 Cold open 0:36 Show intro 0:58 Welcome back: the buzzword right now is distress 1:27 Why distressed deals are trickling out instead of flooding the market 1:53 Brian was there: why he did not want to let go of his own bad deal 2:12 Nobody wants to post a loss 2:30 Single syndication in its infancy: why the market is especially fragile 2:59 The birth of coaching groups and new syndicators entering the market 3:29 Kicking the can: hoping the market comes back before investors find out 3:51 Two choices for a bad syndication: sell at a loss or rescue capital 4:34 The intention was never to lose money: giving operators credit where it is due 4:40 Survive until 25, extend and pretend: the mantras that kept deals alive 5:24 Bridge loans, capital calls, and convincing lenders to work with you 6:14 It will be a drip, not a fire hose: how the distress will slowly leak out 6:37 The psychology: what does it actually feel like to be that operator 7:05 Denial and responsibility: protecting capital vs. kicking the can 7:26 Your first loss is your least loss: when holding on stops protecting capital 7:49 Trapped in two ways: the vehicle and the psychology 8:09 Two Waters' response: learning from mistakes, moving to the fund model 8:38 Why funds give operators and LPs more options when deals go sideways 9:30 Still waiting for the next shoe to drop: operators and LPs in limbo 10:07 "The market is not coming back to save you" 10:24 Why people are not selling: denial on both the operator and LP side 10:58 LPs who signed up for passive income and stopped paying attention 11:18 Brian's confession 11:50 Why he still believes: real estate creates more millionaires than anything else 12:26 Investing direct vs. through a financial advisor: where the return actually goes 13:51 The next renaissance: real estate will come out of this downturn 14:19 Still optimistic and moving forward: Two Waters' current position 14:48 U-shaped recovery: what that looks like and why it matters for timing 15:08 Two Waters' first fund: two distressed assets bought at significant discount 15:48 Why these deals are hard to find and require deep local networks 16:12 Prices will not crater and will not rebound quickly: a slow leak for years 16:30 Investors got in for the right reasons, just potentially the wrong time 16:55 What to say to the investor sitting scared with capital on the sidelines 17:30 Contrarian capital: the investors who make the most money invest when others won't 17:59 The herd mentality of institutional capital and why it creates opportunity 18:30 Buy right in a down market and you will be rewarded for your courage 19:06 Closing thoughts: life is a journey and relationships are the point 20:07 Getting out of your own way: the hero syndrome that cost Brian the $10M deal 20:34 How that loss is shaping how Two Waters thinks about every future deal 21:14 Closing real estate syndication problems | extend and pretend real estate | distressed real estate deals 2025 | multifamily investing podcast | accredited investor education | real estate market recovery | contrarian investing real estate | syndication gone wrong | limited partner real estate | Lessons the Hard Way podcast #lessonsthehardway #twowaterscapital #realestatepodcast #realestateinvesting #syndication #...
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    22 mins
  • Extend and Pretend: The Psychology Behind Why Syndicators Won’t Sell
    Apr 29 2026
    Everyone was waiting for the distressed deal flood. It never came. And Brian Sutton knows exactly why. In Episode 5 of Lessons the Hard Way, Brian sits down with co-host Sam Chillingworth to break down the psychology behind why syndicators are holding on instead of selling — why extend and pretend took over the market — and what it actually feels like to be the operator sitting on a deal that isn't coming back. Brian also makes a confession most operators in his position would never say out loud: MUST WATCH. He still believes in the model. And he explains exactly why. In this episode: • Why the expected flood of distressed deals became a slow drip instead • The psychology of extend and pretend: denial, responsibility, and not wanting to post a loss • Two choices in a bad syndication: sell for a loss or rescue capital. • Why lenders were enabling the can-kicking just as much as operators • Brian's confession: in 20 LP deals, a lot have gone south • Why he still believes real estate generates more millionaires than any other asset class • The fund model advantage: more flexibility, more options, better capital protection • Contrarian capital: why the investors who make the most money buy when others won't • A U-shaped recovery: what that means for timing and where Two Waters is positioning now • Why this current downturn will produce the next great run in real estate • What Brian would tell any investor sitting scared on the sidelines right now Subscribe for weekly episodes. New deal autopsies and hard lessons every week. 🔗 Two Waters Capital: 2waterscapital.com 0:00 Cold open 0:36 Show intro 0:58 Welcome back: the buzzword right now is distress 1:27 Why distressed deals are trickling out instead of flooding the market 1:53 Brian was there: why he did not want to let go of his own bad deal 2:12 Nobody wants to post a loss 2:30 Single syndication in its infancy: why the market is especially fragile 2:59 The birth of coaching groups and new syndicators entering the market 3:29 Kicking the can: hoping the market comes back before investors find out 3:51 Two choices for a bad syndication: sell at a loss or rescue capital 4:34 The intention was never to lose money: giving operators credit where it is due 4:40 Survive until 25, extend and pretend: the mantras that kept deals alive 5:24 Bridge loans, capital calls, and convincing lenders to work with you 6:14 It will be a drip, not a fire hose: how the distress will slowly leak out 6:37 The psychology: what does it actually feel like to be that operator 7:05 Denial and responsibility: protecting capital vs. kicking the can 7:26 Your first loss is your least loss: when holding on stops protecting capital 7:49 Trapped in two ways: the vehicle and the psychology 8:09 Two Waters' response: learning from mistakes, moving to the fund model 8:38 Why funds give operators and LPs more options when deals go sideways 9:30 Still waiting for the next shoe to drop: operators and LPs in limbo 10:07 "The market is not coming back to save you" 10:24 Why people are not selling: denial on both the operator and LP side 10:58 LPs who signed up for passive income and stopped paying attention 11:18 Brian's confession 11:50 Why he still believes: real estate creates more millionaires than anything else 12:26 Investing direct vs. through a financial advisor: where the return actually goes 13:51 The next renaissance: real estate will come out of this downturn 14:19 Still optimistic and moving forward: Two Waters' current position 14:48 U-shaped recovery: what that looks like and why it matters for timing 15:08 Two Waters' first fund: two distressed assets bought at significant discount 15:48 Why these deals are hard to find and require deep local networks 16:12 Prices will not crater and will not rebound quickly: a slow leak for years 16:30 Investors got in for the right reasons, just potentially the wrong time 16:55 What to say to the investor sitting scared with capital on the sidelines 17:30 Contrarian capital: the investors who make the most money invest when others won't 17:59 The herd mentality of institutional capital and why it creates opportunity 18:30 Buy right in a down market and you will be rewarded for your courage 19:06 Closing thoughts: life is a journey and relationships are the point 20:07 Getting out of your own way: the hero syndrome that cost Brian the $10M deal 20:34 How that loss is shaping how Two Waters thinks about every future deal 21:14 Closing real estate syndication problems | extend and pretend real estate | distressed real estate deals 2025 | multifamily investing podcast | accredited investor education | real estate market recovery | contrarian investing real estate | syndication gone wrong | limited partner real estate | Lessons the Hard Way podcast #lessonsthehardway #twowaterscapital #realestatepodcast #realestateinvesting #syndication #...
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    22 mins
  • 55 Years in Real Estate: What Every Investor Gets Wrong About Market Cycles
    Apr 22 2026
    He started managing apartments in 1971. He bought his first 10 units for $20,000 during the market downturn of the 1970s. He rode the Tax Reform Act crash of 1986. The S&L crisis. 2008. Covid. Every single cycle. And he is still buying. In Episode 4 of Lessons the Hard Way, Sam Chillingworth sits down with Joe Beasley - 55-year multifamily veteran, longtime Two Waters Capital partner, and the man who knows where every body is buried in Atlanta real estate. Joe does not own a computer. He runs his budgets with a pencil. He knows every tenant by name. And he has more hard-won wisdom about market cycles, C and B class assets, and how to create value in a downturn than most operators will accumulate in a lifetime. In this episode: • How Joe got started in 1971: on-site manager at a 48-unit property, farming mindset, no rulebook • Buying 10 units for $20,000 during the 1970s oil embargo downturn • The carpet installation disaster and other lessons from doing it yourself • Growing to nearly 4,000 units: all class C, blue collar, pencil-and-paper • The Tax Reform Act of 1986: how it wiped out tax shelter syndications overnight • The S&L crisis, the RTC, and how the cycle reset from 1989 to 1991 • 2008 and beyond: creating value by buying distressed and renovating • Why C and B class properties outperform A on return per dollar invested • The OREO opportunity right now: buying in below 50% without lender approval • Why Joe believes we have already hit the bottom of the current cycle • The right time to buy: not at the bottom, but 2 to 5% on the way back up • The pencil budget philosophy and why Joe wants to throw every computer in the Atlantic • What Joe regrets: not mentoring his team hands-on while he still has the chance Subscribe for weekly episodes. New deal autopsies and hard lessons every week. 🔗 Two Waters Capital: 2waterscapital.com 0:00 Show intro 1:09 Welcome: introducing Joe Beasley, 55-year multifamily veteran 1:30 How Joe got started: necessity, a new baby, and a 48-unit property in 1971 2:15 The farming mindset: no rulebook, just figure it out 2:40 First lessons: cutting grass in yellowjacket country and managing older residents 3:45 Hiring the first on-site manager and scaling to more properties 4:28 The carpet installation disaster: a lesson in knowing what you don't know 7:21 The 1970s market: baby boomers, oil embargo, inflation, and opportunity 8:31 Buying the first 10 units for $20,000 during the downturn 9:25 The partner in dress slacks who showed up to a roofing job as the boss 10:59 Growing to nearly 4,000 units: all class C, blue collar properties 11:25 The Tax Reform Act of 1986: how it ended tax shelter syndications overnight 13:04 The S&L crisis, the RTC, and waiting for the reset 14:24 The cycle restarts 1989 to 1991: same pattern, every time 15:17 Atlanta's population explosion and the demand it created 16:19 2008 and the commercial mortgage-backed securities collapse 17:30 Why C and B class properties outperform A on return per dollar 18:35 The current opportunity: OREO deals and buying in below 50% 19:37 Joint venture strategy: keep the mortgage, bring in a partner 20:17 Looking outside the box: the conventional way no longer works 22:09 Why nobody is building blue collar housing and what that means for investors 23:43 Never signing personally: the risk management philosophy 25:50 Eight Atlanta properties in five years: $35 million net to investors 28:08 Knowing your tenants by name: what property management used to look like 33:12 Each cycle has its own solution: you cannot copy the last one 35:37 Has the market hit bottom? Joe says yes and explains why 37:24 The brown scale: buy not at the bottom but 2 to 5% on the way back up 39:09 Leasing season timing: why right now is the window to act 43:16 B minus to B plus: the value add play with the best risk-adjusted return 47:08 National averages vs. local reality: know your submarket 48:17 Why Brian calls Joe the man who knows where every body is buried 49:01 Joe visits a property he managed when his first daughter was born 55 years ago 50:26 The 87-year-old maintenance man who was there when the building was built 51:57 Advice for outside investors coming into Atlanta right now 53:06 Joe's philosophy: show me something and let me figure out how to make it work 54:15 Joe's one regret: not mentoring his team hands-on while he still can 55:49 Looking ahead: more deals, the next turnaround, and staying in the game 56:14 Closing real estate market cycles | multifamily investing podcast | C class real estate investing | how to survive real estate downturns | accredited investor education | Atlanta real estate investing | value add multifamily | real estate 2025 market | Joe Beasley real estate | Lessons the Hard Way podcast #lessonsthehardway #twowaterscapital #realestatepodcast #realestateinvesting #multifamilyinvesting #...
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    57 mins
  • The Problem With Single Syndications Nobody Talks About
    Apr 15 2026

    After losing $10 million on a single syndication, most operators would just go back to doing what they know. Brian Sutton didn't.

    In Episode 3 of Lessons the Hard Way, Brian sits down with co-host Sam Chillingworth to break down the single biggest structural change Two Waters Capital is making as a result of that loss and why he believes single syndications put investor capital at unnecessary risk, no matter how well you underwrite.

    The answer is the fund model. And he explains exactly why.

    Brian walks through why syndicators across the country are currently trapped in deals they cannot exit, why the "hero syndrome" keeps operators pouring good money after bad and why the fund structure eliminates the two options that destroy investors when a deal goes sideways: the capital call and the forced loss sale.

    He also addresses the pushback head-on. What happens to the investor who loves doing their own deal-by-deal analysis? Do they lose that transparency in a fund? And what is the real difference between investing with a fund like Two Waters versus just letting a financial advisor park your money in BlackRock?

    In this episode:

    • Why Two Waters Capital is done with single syndications for good

    • The two options syndicators have when a deal goes bad, and why both are brutal

    • How the fund structure eliminates the "hero syndrome" that destroys operator capital

    • How BlackRock and the world's largest fund managers protect investor capital

    • The middleman fee chain and how investing directly in a fund cuts it

    • Why even great underwriting cannot protect you from Covid or 11 Fed rate hikes

    • What accredited investors should actually be looking for before they invest

    • Trust and track record, the two things that matter most

    Subscribe for weekly episodes featuring real operators, real deals, and the lessons most people would rather keep private.

    🔗 Two Waters Capital: 2waterscapital.com

    0:00 Show intro

    0:42 Building on the $10M loss conversation

    1:41 The biggest change: no more single syndications, ever

    2:28 What single syndications do well and where they fail

    3:36 The only two options when a syndication goes bad

    4:22 How the largest fund managers in the world protect capital

    5:15 Why Two Waters is moving to a fund-only model

    6:12 Downside protection: how a fund lets you cut losses without destroying investors

    7:13 Hero syndrome: why syndicators keep pouring money into bad deals

    7:31 Investor objection: do I lose deal-by-deal analysis in a fund?

    7:56 The BlackRock comparison and how you're already invested in funds

    8:45 The middleman fee chain and how Two Waters cuts it

    9:24 Why syndications outperformed funds. The original pitch

    10:10 Best of both worlds: fund structure with operator transparency

    11:15 How the fund works operationally. Nothing changes except the vehicle

    12:07 Transparency in the fund. Investors still see what's being bought

    13:22 You cannot stress test for Covid or Fed rate hikes

    14:21 Good underwriting helps but it can't predict the unpredictable

    15:18 It comes down to trust and track record

    16:20 Why Brian chose the harder path instead of just going back to syndications

    17:24 What to walk away with. Do your due diligence and align with your values

    real estate fund vs syndication | real estate syndication risk | multifamily investing podcast | accredited investor education | single syndication problems | real estate fund structure | capital protection real estate | Two Waters Capital | Lessons the Hard Way podcast | real estate investing 2025

    #lessonsthehardway #twowaterscapital #realestatepodcast #realestateinvesting #syndication #realestatefund #accreditedinvestor #multifamilyinvesting #capitalprotection #realestatelessons

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    19 mins
  • The Toughest Lesson: My first $10M loss
    Apr 8 2026

    Total loss: $10 million. On one deal.

    In Episode 2 of Lessons the Hard Way, Brian Sutton sits down with co-host Sam Chillingworth and does something most operators will never do. He walks through every decision, every missed signal, and every moment he should have cut and didn't. From buying the property in 2020 just as Covid hit, to the eviction moratorium that froze their repositioning plan, to the Fed hiking rates 11 times in 12 months while they were sitting on a floating rate bridge loan. He kept putting his own money in. Until there was nothing left.

    This episode is for every operator sitting on a deal right now that isn't the same deal they bought. And for every investor trying to understand how a deal like this actually happens.

    In this episode:

    • How a $2M Covid discount seduced them into a deal they had already walked away from

    • The eviction moratorium that killed their repositioning plan before it started

    • What a floating rate bridge loan does to your P&L when the Fed raises rates 11 times

    • The moment Brian knew he couldn't operate his way out of it

    • Why he kept putting in his own money instead of telling investors the truth sooner

    • "Survive till 25" — and why it didn't work

    • Your first loss is your least loss — and what that means for deals right now

    • How to reevaluate a deal honestly when the market you bought in no longer exists

    Subscribe for weekly episodes featuring real operators, real deals, and the lessons most people would rather keep private.

    🔗 Two Waters Capital: 2waterscapital.com

    0:00 Cold open — "I've been nervous about this one"

    0:46 Show intro — hard lessons most people keep private

    1:29 The setup — $8M investor equity lost, $2M personal loss, $10M total

    2:10 Why Brian almost didn't do this episode

    3:36 The deal — purchased in 2020, a stagnant market they weren't sure about

    4:58 Covid hits — they walk away, then the seller drops the price $2M

    6:02 The internal story — past success breeding overconfidence

    7:16 First headwind — the eviction moratorium kills their repositioning plan

    8:34 The shipping crisis — rehab materials delayed, plan falls further behind

    9:16 The Fed raises rates 11 times — the floating rate loan becomes a problem

    10:30 Brian starts putting his own money in to cover the mortgage

    11:18 The mistake — staying locked to the original plan as the world changed

    12:01 The hard truth he couldn't tell himself — this deal no longer exists

    13:16 Why he didn't sell early — protecting investors over his own capital

    14:00 "Survive till 25" — and why it failed

    14:51 What the $10M loss did to his confidence and self-esteem

    15:49 Throwing good money after bad — the personal capital mistake

    16:29 Finding the lesson — you learn more from losses than wins

    17:18 Lesson 1 — your first loss is your least loss. Reevaluate honestly.

    19:14 Lesson 2 — diversify. Never concentrate wealth in one asset.

    20:15 The two equally bad options operators face when a deal turns

    21:16 Don't evaluate on hope — evaluate on numbers and reality

    22:07 "You misjudged once — what stops you from misjudging again?"

    23:33 A message for every operator holding a bad deal right now

    25:32 The real lesson — be transparent with investors, be honest with yourself

    27:19 What Brian is optimistic about moving forward

    real estate investing podcast | real estate deal gone wrong | multifamily investing mistakes | floating rate loan risk | real estate syndication | accredited investor | deal autopsy | commercial real estate podcast | lessons learned investing | real estate market cycle 2025

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    28 mins