From Active Investor to Private Equity Fund Manager: Lon Welsh's Evolution cover
← All Episodes

From Active Investor to Private Equity Fund Manager: Lon Welsh's Evolution

Season 4 · Episode 170August 5, 202532m

Read the full transcript →

Show Notes

Lon Welsh spent eight years as a strategy consultant before going into real estate full time in 2002. He started a brokerage called Your Castle Real Estate in 2004, grew it to 750 agents (the largest independent in Colorado), and sold it to private equity about three and a half years ago. Around the same time, he sold his title company to Compass. He then launched Ironton Capital, a private equity fund built for the active real estate investor who wants to move to passive without giving up portfolio shape.

Ironton runs three funds in parallel. Lon describes the structure as a synthetic way to recreate whatever cash flow and growth profile a client used to get from owning property directly.

What landed in this conversation:

  1. The three-fund stack. Short-term income fund pays roughly 8 percent, high liquidity, underpinned by hard money lending through a partner running a $270 million, 300-loan book. Medium-term income fund pays 11 to 13 percent with a one-year lock and 90-day notice, underpinned by medical accounts receivable (not real estate at all). Long-term growth fund targets capital gains over a five-year horizon through equity positions in development and rehab projects. A typical limited partner ends up allocated across all three to mirror the cash flow plus growth profile they had as an active operator.
  2. Why medical receivables are the non-correlated piece. Ironton's medium-term fund advances about a third of the value on a basket of about 95 small medical claims (call it $30,000 each) from a clinic. The claims are cross-collateralized, so a 2 to 3 percent fraud rate gets absorbed by the other 97 claims in the basket. The economics do not move with interest rates, real estate cycles, or geopolitics. For an investor sitting heavy in real estate, this is the kind of allocation that lets you actually sleep through a Fed surprise.
  3. The diversification dividend. A typical Ironton fund holds about 30 assets across 10 to 12 sponsors in roughly 15 states, mostly Sunbelt. Two-thirds multifamily, the rest industrial with the occasional storage or specific hospitality segment. Last fall when two hurricanes hit Tampa within a couple of weeks, Ironton's exposure was 3 percent of one fund. The other 97 percent of the portfolio was fine. That is what diversification actually buys you.
  4. The mistakes he owns. Three of them. First, holding the brokerage four or five years too long before launching the passive investing firm. He says he was on autopilot, making cash, and did not want to start something new. Second, taking too long to make the active-to-passive shift personally; he is 57 and no longer needs to slay the dragon. Third, the first Ironton fund only had eight investments (not enough diversification), and one of those was a Sugar Land Houston office building purchased three months before COVID broke out. Lost everything on that one. On the other side of the same fund, a build-to-rent project he underwrote at low-20s returns delivered 54 percent because the timing happened to be perfect. Lon says the same luck-versus-skill question is what every passive investor should ask when a sponsor trots out a grand-slam story.

Books that shaped him: Rich Dad Poor Dad by Robert Kiyosaki (the crystallizing read 25 years ago), and Captivate by Vanessa Van Edwards for the communication side of running a fund. Lon has written 13 of his own books, five of them on Colorado real estate; download a free copy of The Complete Guide to Passive Diversified Real Estate Investing at irontoncapital.com/reunderground.

Reach Lon at irontoncapital.com, email lonwelsh@irontoncapital.com, or text him at 303-619-0633. He offers 15-minute strategy calls to anyone considering passive investing.

Real Estate Underground with Ed Mathews. Find us wherever you get your podcasts, at clarkst.com/podcast or elevista.com/podcast

Elevista - Speed as a Service™
Elevista Connect is the first AI-powered lead conversion system built for real estate investors.

🎧 Subscribe to Real Estate Underground for weekly insights on building wealth through real estate, without sacrificing your sanity.

Additional Resources:

Social Media:

  • LinkedIn -> Ed Mathews (President at Clark St and Elevista)

Heads up: If you find this week's book intriguing and you buy using our link, we receive a small commission that helps support the show. Thank you!

Last call

Your competition is calling your leads right now.

Every minute you wait, another investor picks up the phone first. Katie calls back in under 60 seconds, 24/7.

View pricing

No credit card required