Jonathan Pong joins Brandon Sedloff to discuss the evolution of Realty Income from one of the original net lease REITs into a global real estate platform spanning public and private capital markets. Jonathan shares how Realty Income scaled from a roughly $15 billion enterprise value company into a global platform with more than 15,500 properties across the U.S. and Europe, while maintaining its identity as “The Monthly Dividend Company.” The conversation explores the growing institutional appetite for net lease real estate, why private capital is increasingly allocating toward durable income-oriented strategies, and how Realty Income is positioning itself through open-end funds and large-scale joint ventures with firms like GIC, Apollo, and Blackstone.
They also discuss Jonathan’s personal journey from growing up in a real estate family in Honolulu to becoming CFO of one of the largest REITs in the world. Along the way, Jonathan explains how Realty Income thinks about risk management, data advantages, tenant diversification, and the role AI could eventually play inside large real estate organizations. Brandon and Jonathan unpack why “boring” cash flows are becoming increasingly attractive in today’s market environment and what institutional investors still misunderstand about the net lease sector.
They discuss:
• How Realty Income scaled into a $90 billion enterprise value platform with over 15,500 properties globally
• Why institutional investors are increasing allocations toward net lease and income-oriented strategies
• The launch of Realty Income’s private capital business, including open-end funds and strategic JVs with GIC and Apollo
• The misconceptions investors have about tenant credit risk and portfolio diversification in net lease
• How Realty Income uses proprietary data and predictive analytics to drive underwriting and asset management decisions
• Why build-to-suit industrial and selective data center investments are major areas of focus going forward
• Jonathan’s path from Hawaii to USC, Deloitte, Cornell, equity research, and ultimately becoming CFO of Realty Income
• How large-scale relationships and repeatable execution create a competitive advantage in modern real estate markets