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Updated almost 15 years ago on . Most recent reply
![Tony Thompson's profile image](https://bpimg.biggerpockets.com/no_overlay/uploads/social_user/user_avatar/33718/1621366656-avatar-cashflowminded.jpg?twic=v1/output=image/cover=128x128&v=2)
Dave Ramsey's Real Estate Story?
I understand that Dave Ramsey offers "average" advice to people that don't know how to use a credit card.
But, Dave Ramsey apparently used to be a real estate investor. I did a quick google search and found that he had a "$4,000,000 portfolio by age 26", and it came crashing down in his early 30's.
Does he have a book or are there any sources about this phase in his life...about why he failed? Did he give up? Is he still doing REI?
Most Popular Reply
![Dennis Treacy's profile image](https://bpimg.biggerpockets.com/no_overlay/uploads/social_user/user_avatar/37243/1621388465-avatar-dennis3456.jpg?twic=v1/output=image/cover=128x128&v=2)
Dave ended up in the dumps along with a few other REI folks I personally know. Before that tax code change. Guys like Dave made their money on selling limited partnerships on insanely over leverage real estate. The limited partners mostly highly paid professionals who needed big tax right offs bought in by paying the monthly mortgage for the owner investor.
Here is how the investors made the big bucks. First find a totally worthless rental building, the bigger the better. Buy it for what it was worth (just about nothing), next fix the place just enough to make it habitable.
Next sign leases with folk who were at least breathing, make the rent as high as believable, next go to a lender who was not being properly regulated, was allowed to lend money based on the new value of the building which was now based on a totally rented fully leased building.
Easy slam dunk deal, the investor is holding $100's of thousand of borrowed tax free money, and the limited partners paid the mortgage, plus the other expenses involved in the building. The professionals got a huge write off by owning the losses of the building, without being on the mortgage docs or owning the building.
The investor had easy management, he did not worry about collecting rent, or upkeep as the limited partners paid the freight.
The tenants never complained as most did not pay the rent anyway.
But Uncle Sam threw a monkey wrench into the deal. The new tax code disallowed loses from real estate for these professionals who earned above $125k and that is all of them.
The limited partners stopped paying the mortgage, and walked away free.
My friend had 2.6 million dollars of mortgages to pay on negative cashflow buildings. He of course also ran away with his credit totally destroyed forever, and the lenders mostly failed.
This my friends was called the S+L crisis.
Dave probably pays cash because his credit is shot to hell, my friend has a $1million judgment on his credit to this day.
Don't worry about him though, he has quite a few college rental buildings hidden in land trusts to keep the lenders a bay, he paid cash for them, he had squirreled a few of those limited partnership bucks away.
How history repeats itself.