From Tech to Real Estate Investment?

Hello,

I am Sophomore studying CS at a top tier college in the US. As a result, much of experience I have is related to data science and programming. I have done 'big data' machine learning at BB and research at my school's business school. I have a very good GPA. I have been interested in Quant investing, but I am starting to wonder how profitable that industry will be.

Recently, I have been interested in real estate investing and I am wondering if there is any chance I can get and internship this summer or 8 weeks in the winter (even at a small place).

Where should I start looking? Should I look for real estate investment start ups? I applied to one big startup.
Where can I find lists of investment places to apply to. I am interested in applying tech to RE, but I really just want to gain some investment knowledge. I can probably apply the data part myself in the future! --lol.

I also feel like it will be tough for me to get a job because every place that see me applying will be like did this kid apply here by mistake? Should I try messaging heads of companies on linkedin?

My apologizes for the bad post.

 

Might be beneficial to target companies already applying data science to real estate instead of taking an internship where you’ll get real estate capital markets exposure. The big companies would be Zillow and Redfin. There are several start ups working on this kind of problem as well

 

Yes, that is the reason I want to try RE. I feel like there is a lot of areas in RE that could use tech. Also, everyone is so focused on Finance rn, I feel like RE is a better opportunity.

 

I'll go ahead and say it - real estate is not a good fit for your skill set, at all. Your talents would go to waste in this industry. The quantitative analysis used in real estate is not difficult at all and can be taught to any decently smart person in their first year or two as an analyst. Real estate as an industry is very slow to adapt to tech trends, so I think you'd find that frustrating as well.

Also, very importantly, you will not be paid nearly as much as you would in traditional finance or tech for your skillset.

If you ask me, the easy and obvious choice for someone like you is a career path at a quant fund (Citadel, DE Shaw, AQR, etc).

 

quant funds are so hard to get a job at...lol

I was thinking starting my own RE place that uses tech. Of course, this could only happen once I gain industry experience.

I want to intern at a RE asset management place to get a feel of the industry. Even for 8 weeks full time in the winter. Where should I look for this?

 
Most Helpful

"Top tier" university, high GPA, and BB experience tell me that you might be cut out for it. You'll never know unless you try.

Why not make the big bucks as a software engineer/on Wall Street and start investing in RE on the side? That's a great way to learn the industry. You don't need to spend your life in RE and work your way up to buy property.... you just need the balance sheet. That could turn into a company if you wanted. Check out www.biggerpockets.com for more info on that.

Re: "Using tech" at your "RE Place" - we all use tech. The latest and greatest. It just isn't that sophisticated. No matter how perfect your model is or how well you interpret data. Bottom line: you are not going to have an edge in large real estate deals with superior tech. You're still going up against the Blackstones and Carlyles of the world with the deepest pockets and smartest employees.

Speaking of the giants, here's the list you asked for:

https://www.perenews.com/database/#/PERE-50

 

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