He Sold Everything... Here's What He's Buying
Graham Stephan built his entire brand on real estate, starting with a $59,000 house renovation and turning that into a multi-million dollar empire. Now he's walking away—not from one property, but from everything. He's selling his entire LA rental portfolio, shutting down businesses, and offloading his forever home to simplify his investments. When someone like Graham abandons the very thing that made him, it raises urgent questions: What does he see that everyone else is missing? And perhaps more importantly, where is he putting the money instead?
Key Takeaways
Graham Stephan is liquidating his entire LA real estate portfolio after realizing his net cash flow after expenses, taxes, insurance, and maintenance is only 4–5%—a return he could replicate with a Treasury bond without the headaches.
Real estate's illusion of safety hides massive leverage risk, operational burden, and trapped equity; equities offer superior risk-adjusted returns, full liquidity, and zero operational load.
Graham is shifting to a passive, diversified portfolio: 40–45% US stocks (S&P 500), 28% international/emerging markets (betting on AI democratization), 25% cash/Treasuries, and 5–10% Bitcoin as an asymmetric institutional bet.
The hosts are far more aggressive: Chris runs 130–300% equity exposure using margin and options, Jordan holds 80% equities with a decade of cash reserves, and Dave sits at 12% crypto with a balanced equity core.
Chris sold Collecticon (his Pokemon trade show) to Ari Emanuel's Endeavor in his largest private company exit ever, using the windfall to double down on Amazon options at the market bottom—a trade that paid off massively.
In a Nutshell
Real estate's hidden costs, illiquidity, and single-digit returns have finally driven even the most famous buy-and-hold landlord on YouTube to exit completely in favor of liquid equities, international diversification, and a meaningful Bitcoin bet—a seismic shift that validates what equity investors have been saying for years: liquidity and compounding always win.
The Real Estate Illusion: Why Graham Walked Away
Graham's 4–5% net cash flow couldn't justify the time, stress, and illiquidity.
Graham Stephan's decision to sell his entire LA rental portfolio wasn't impulsive—it was the result of a brutal financial reckoning. After accounting for maintenance, vacancies, property management fees, insurance, and taxes, his net cash flow landed at just 4–5% annually. That's Treasury bond territory, without any of the liquidity, optionality, or peace of mind. The hosts have been making this argument for years: real estate looks safe because it's tangible, but that safety is an illusion masking leverage risk and operational burden.
The hidden truth most landlords won't admit: the bulk of real estate returns come from price appreciation, not cash flow. In a market like LA where appreciation has stalled, landlords are left with anemic returns and endless headaches. Chris recounts friends who whisper off the record that after 20 years of repairs, tenant issues, and surprise costs, they're barely breaking even on cash flow. The appreciation bet was the only thing keeping them in the game. When that bet stops paying off, the entire model collapses.
Real estate's biggest vulnerability is illiquidity. You can't exit a house in a millisecond like you can a stock. You're trapped in a leveraged, illiquid asset with black swan risk lurking in every market cycle. One close friend of the hosts lost 100% of his capital in a prominent Texas commercial real estate fund when the sector froze post-pandemic. No exit, no recovery. Equities, by contrast, offer instant liquidity, true compounding, and zero operational load—advantages that become glaringly obvious the moment you need them.
Graham's New Allocation: Passive, Diversified, and Liquid
He's going 40–45% US stocks, 28% international, 25% cash, and 10% Bitcoin.
The Hosts' Portfolios: From Conservative to Degenerate
Chris runs 300% equity exposure; Jordan holds a decade of cash.
Why Emerging Markets? The AI Democratization Thesis
AI could level the playing field for developing economies faster than anyone expects.
Why Emerging Markets? The AI Democratization Thesis
Chris is intrigued by Graham's 28% allocation to international and emerging markets, citing a thesis he hasn't fully researched yet: AI and automation democratize intelligence and manufacturing capacity. Countries that historically lacked skilled labor or infrastructure could leapfrog developed economies once AI removes those barriers. Brazil, for example, has been cited as uniquely positioned to benefit from the AI super cycle. This trade flips conventional wisdom—third-world risk becomes first-world opportunity when intelligence is no longer scarce.
Collecticon Exit and the Amazon Options Play
Chris sold his Pokemon trade show and used the windfall to go all-in on Amazon at the bottom.
Chris just closed the biggest private company exit of his career: the sale of Collecticon, a Pokemon trade show he co-founded four and a half years ago, to Ari Emanuel's Endeavor (the entity behind WWE and UFC). What started in the back of a hotel banquet room became a cash-flowing juggernaut—and now it's gone. The sale eliminated 90% of Chris's monthly cash flow, forcing him back to periodically pulling money from his brokerage account to fund his lifestyle.
But the timing was perfect. Knowing the deal was 70–90% likely to close, Chris went aggressively leveraged on Amazon options during the market's worst weeks. At one point, Amazon options represented 40% of his entire liquid portfolio—short-dated, at-the-money calls expiring in one to three weeks. If Amazon had dropped $1, he would have lost 10–20% of his net worth. His account was down 40% at the trough; he doubled down. Amazon has since rallied from $198 to $260, and Chris has been rolling his options up, taking profits, and redeploying into higher strikes.
His philosophy: you only need to get one high-conviction, highly leveraged call right in your lifetime to become a top 1% investor. He did it with Nvidia last year, and he just did it again with Amazon. The Collecticon windfall gave him the psychological cushion to take that risk—even if he lost half the exit proceeds, he'd still be net positive. Now he's searching for the next asymmetric bet.
Current High-Conviction Trades
The Case Against Private Equity Right Now
Illiquidity is a death sentence when the world is changing this fast.
“The fact that you can radically change in and out of all of your portfolio in a millisecond at any moment in time is so valuable and people just underappreciate how valuable that is except during times like this.”
What's Next: Peptides, Amazon Earnings, and Healthcare SaaS
The hosts are researching the peptide super cycle and a recession-proof SaaS play.
Peptide Episode (Next Week) Chris calls peptides «the supplement that actually works» and believes it's the next GLP-1-scale movement. He met a 57-year-old who looked 37 and got a full peptide stack breakdown. Episode incoming.
Amazon Earnings (Upcoming) Earnings report next week could be a major catalyst. Chris is still holding Amazon options and ready to add more if conviction remains.
Veeva Systems (VEEV) Deep Dive Jordan bought into this healthcare SaaS company after it was cut in half in the SaaS apocalypse. He believes regulatory moats protect it from pure AI disruption and it benefits from aging population tailwinds.
Robinhood Ventures Index Research Dave is up 20% in this new fund that offers retail access to pre-IPO startups like Databricks and Airtable. 2% annual fee, no carry. Hosts want to dig deeper.
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