
Patrick Targete and his wife, Sabriya are the owners of Norfolk Capital Patrick Targete lives by a piece of advice that his mother gave him when he was just 15 years old: Make sure you own where you live.
Although she never told him how to do it, those words of wisdom resonated with him, helping him to understand the importance of creating a stable foundation for himself as an adult.
“She would say, ‘You have to create a foundation. …You don’t want to start your life saving money, you’re in school, and you’re renting an apartment and you’re having children, and then all of a sudden, a landlord calls you and tells you that you have three months to move out,” he recalled.
As he became an adult, Targete realized that real estate was the foundation of life, a way to create consistent growth and freedom for himself and his family.
This led to his decision to buy his first multifamily property through a first-time home buying program in his early 20s. He renovated the property and rented it out while living in one of the units. After two years, he refinanced and used the equity to purchase more properties.
Although Targete saw success and continued to buy properties, he realized the conventional financing route would be challenging; the deals he wanted were properties where he could create value, yet he could not move fast enough.
He had to find other ways to purchase properties and be more competitive, so he turned to private lending, which
allowed him to scale his business from a three-unit property to 500
units over the next 10 to 15 years.
After
getting into private lending, Targete realized that he could provide
help to others by providing the same service of lending that he was able
to receive, which ultimately led him to create his own private lending
firm, Norfolk Capital, with his wife, Sabriya Targete. The company
provides shortterm loans for real estate investors with the intention of
helping the community.
“I
made sure that I would mentor kids from my neighborhood, from Mattapan.
I grew up on Norfolk Street, hence the name Norfolk Capital. My office
is on the corner of Talbot and Norfolk,” he said. “I was very
intentional about mentoring guys that had the same roadblocks that I
had. I will lend to them, and then they would be able to create their
own portfolios. And then, they would pay it forward.”
Targete
explained that these short-term loans are for individuals who cannot
get conventional financing because they are under pressure to perform
quicker. The properties they are purchasing are distressed assets where
banks have strenuous underwriting procedures that slow these processes
down.
Targete and his wife are also very passionate about equitable access to capital and opportunities in underserved communities.
He
talked about why it’s important to advocate for those things and to
mentor the next generation, especially in today’s political climate.
“It’s
our duty to make sure that we help push each other forward. The main
thing is we have to be our own bank. And if you’er an accredited
investor looking to be part of fulfilling Norfolk Capitals mission of
empowering underserved markets and borrowers in our communities through
strategic real estate lending while receiving strong return we invite
you to invest,” he said.
“We have to be able to support each other to grow and
create an ecosystem amongst ourselves. This is how we move forward. We
can’t keep asking. We just got to support each other for the right
reasons.”
His wife
agrees, adding that they are trying to help people in the community gain
financial security and build generational wealth.
Sometimes
this has involved helping families with older homes in disrepair to
make the right investments in the property to strengthen that asset.
“One
of the things in our community is we seriously do not take into
consideration the importance of transferring wealth from one generation
to the next. It’s something that we see consistently and it’s fulfilling
to feel like we can help people do that,” she said.
Targete
gave his advice to Black and entrepreneurs of color who may want to
follow in the footsteps of the couple and open a business of their own.
“Find
somebody that is doing what you want to do, and get in front of them,”
he said, laying out the value of seeking mentorship. “Get in their way
and then make yourself unreplaceable. Make yourself so valuable that now
they need you.”
“The
first thing I say when I’m interviewing a mentee is, ‘What is most
important?’ Is it opportunity, capital or execution? The first answer
people tell me is capital. It’s never capital, it’s execution, always
get things done. [It’s] not about the money; it’s about the education.
It’s about the lesson. It’s about creating that network and having that
right mentor that can support you,” he said.