Amancio Ortega — The Man Behind Zara
Zara, Pull & Bear, Massimo Dutti, Stradivarius, Oysho, Bershka
Invest in recession-resilient Mobile Home Parks with Vintage Capital
Invest in recession-resilient Mobile Home Parks with Vintage Capital. Invest direct or in a fund of 20+ underlying assets. 1031s are also available. Access stable, income-generating properties with consistent demand and low tenant turnover.
Now is the time to act: Current market conditions are creating opportunities to acquire properties at attractive valuations.
Our fund targets a 15%-17% IRR and makes monthly distributions, which provides a steady income stream alongside strong upside potential and tax-efficient benefits.
Why Mobile Home Parks?
Recession-Resilient: Affordable housing demand drives stable returns in any economy
High Tenant Retention: The average MHP tenant stays 10-12 years (compared to 2-3 in Multifamily)
Proven Expertise: $80MM+ track record in mobile home park investments.
Tax-Smart Investing: Bonus depreciation offers tax advantages.
Amancio Ortega was born on March 28 1936 in Busdongo de Arbas, León, Spain.
At the tender age of 14, he starts working for a local shirtmaker named Gala.
At the age of 27, he started his own dressmaking workshop.
At 39, he starts the first Zara store.
This was followed by expanding internationally, more than a decade later.
During his 50s and 60s, he creates Pull and Bear, acquires Massimo Dutti, creates Lefties, Bershka, buys Stradivarius, launches Oysho and takes Inditex public on the Spanish stock market.
Today, Amancio Ortega is worth more than $110 billion.
One Lesson from Amancio Ortega
Stay Humble and Be Patient
More often than not, Ortega is seeing visiting the same coffee shop, or having lunch with employees.
Being successful does not mean you cannot be humble. He still enjoys luxurious items. He still lives his life to the fullest.
But he chooses to be humble.
I believe that is a good way to live.
Patience is also worth its weight in gold. He was patient enough and worked for success most of his life. Unlike the youngest billionaire, he only started his venture at 39.
It’s never too late.