Marshall Loeb
Analyst · Citi. Please go ahead
Good comment. And we're excited about both of those acquisitions. The land opportunity, it seems like I would – in my mind, I always put land sellers in two categories. There's the generational holders, the farmer, someone like that, and those prices are pretty sticky and probably haven't moved a lot. And if they hold it for a few more years they are probably fine with that. Where we found opportunities in one of a couple of the Austin acquisitions we made, where people were acquiring land, getting it permitted, zoned and then flipping it or selling it on a forward basis, that's where there's probably where the pricing has moved back, maybe 25%, 30%, things like that, and just you have people that are running out of time. And so we've found a couple of those. We've heard of a few more of those, a couple out West that we've looked at and are looking at where it's basically developers with usually the pattern is that don't have a lot, a lot of experience, and they've gotten out over their skis financing-wise, and they can't raise the debt or the equity because as a merchant builder, you don't really know where you could sell the building 15, 18 months from now, unlike where you could have the last few years. And then both of the acquisitions we acquired and it seems like that with land or especially the better land sites, there is always a back story and that the San Antonio land and I'll complement our team, it was – it's an infill site in San Antonio right along I-35, but it was a – we've described it as a land-rich, cash poor church. And so we help the church relocate to a corner of the site, and we probably worked on it for 4 years now. So we like our land bases there, but that's – we've looked at churches, and water parks, and horse tables, and dark horses and you name it. But that was unusual. And I'll thank Reed and Terra Warren for helping build a church in order to get a good Parkland site. And then in Tampa, odd land sites, we have experience in Fort Myers, where there was an eagle on site and you have to hire someone to observe the eagle and there are certain times of year you can build. And so we've lived through that in Fort Myers and that helped us on this site just outside Tampa and that there's an eagle on the site, and we'll and hope he stays and we'll try to not disturb him, and we have experience kind of building around that. But there's always – on the good sites, there's always something kind of atypical. And both of those were where you saw the closing this month in April, but they started three, four years ago, and that's probably what, I think, most investors don't see is how long it takes us to get the zoning permitting and usually an unusual seller situation.