The SauceTown Investor Podcast

Investing explained through the biggest financial crimes and crashes in history.

Welcome to The Saucetown Investor Podcast—where real estate, investing, history, and white-collar crime collide.

I’m a real estate investor, blogger, and lifelong learner obsessed with understanding how wealth is built, lost, and transferred across generations. I break down complex topics into clear, actionable lessons so you can invest smarter and think deeper about money.

📊 What You’ll Learn Here
✅ Real estate investing strategies that actually work
✅ Stock market history and legendary investing case studies
✅ White-collar crimes and financial scandals explained
✅ Book breakdowns from the best investing and business minds
✅ Deep dives into financial empires, collapses, and comebacks

🎧 Why This Podcast Exists

This podcast is for curious thinkers who want to understand how money really moves
🔥 New Episodes Every Week

👉 Drop a comment: What topic should we break down next?


The SauceTown Investor Podcast

Happy 4th of July from all of us at Saucetown Properties & The Saucetown Investor!

America was built on freedom, opportunity, and the belief that anyone can build a better future.

Whether you're celebrating with family, firing up the grill, watching fireworks, or just taking a well-earned break.. we hope you have an amazing Independence Day.

Thank you to our incredible community of investors, homeowners, business partners, and supporters. We're grateful to have you on this journey with us.

🎆 Stay safe, enjoy the holiday, and here's to creating more opportunities together.

Happy Fourth of July!

👇 How are you celebrating today? Let us know in the comments!

#Happy4thOfJuly #IndependenceDay #RealEstate #RealEstateInvesting #Investing #Freedom #SaucetownProperties #TheSaucetownInvestor

8 hours ago | [YT] | 1

The SauceTown Investor Podcast

We all know someone like this.

The person who hears about someone getting rich, landing a promotion, or building a happy relationship and immediately looks for the flaw.

"They just got lucky."

"They must be hiding something behind closed doors."

DJ Khaled turned the word "They" into a cultural meme, but the psychology behind it is very real.

When you see the world as a zero-sum game, someone else's win starts to feel like your loss.

One thing I've learned over the years is that cutting people out of your life who constantly root against others is an act of self-preservation. But the harder challenge is looking in the mirror and making sure you haven't slipped into that same victim mentality yourself.

What do you think?

Is rooting against other people's success always a losing strategy, or is some skepticism healthy in today's world?

Read more of my thoughts here:
mattcox444.substack.com/?utm_source=navbar&utm_med…

2 days ago | [YT] | 1

The SauceTown Investor Podcast

Most people misunderstand risk.

They think risk is quitting the job, starting the business, moving to a new city, or investing in something uncertain. But that's only one type of risk.

The other type is much harder to see.

It's spending the next decade doing something you already know isn't working. It's staying where you are because the discomfort is familiar. It's confusing certainty with safety.

When Julius Caesar crossed the Rubicon, he wasn't choosing between risk and safety. He was choosing between one uncertain future and another.

So are we.

Every major decision in life is a tradeoff between visible risks and invisible risks. The visible risks get all the attention because they're immediate. The invisible risks compound quietly in the background.

That's why some of the biggest regrets in life don't come from failure. They come from opportunities we talked ourselves out of pursuing.

The cost of action is obvious.

The cost of inaction usually arrives with interest.

Full breakdown at mattcox444.substack.com

1 week ago | [YT] | 1

The SauceTown Investor Podcast

We spend a lot of time blaming technology for making people more disconnected.

But every once in a while, the algorithm gets it exactly right.

A random afternoon in Flatiron looking for a baseball game turned into a friendship that has lasted years and a front-row seat to watching someone chase a dream most people would have given up on.

While working in the service industry, Ediva was quietly writing *Killer Butterfly*. Long shifts. Limited time. Plenty of reasons to quit.

She didn't.

What impressed me wasn't just the talent. It was the persistence.

Most people never see the work that goes into creating something meaningful. They only see the finished product.

The reality is that books, businesses, careers, and success stories are usually built in the margins.. early mornings, late nights, and years of effort when nobody is paying attention.

It also makes me wonder how many extraordinary people we walk past every day without realizing it.

Have you ever had a random encounter that ended up changing the course of your life?

Let me know in the comments.

Check the link in the comments section to secure your copy of *Killer Butterfly* and read the full piece over on my blog at mattcox444.substack.com.

1 week ago | [YT] | 1

The SauceTown Investor Podcast

We’ve officially closed on a 12-unit property in Tigard, Oregon.

Acquisition is step one.. execution is where it all matters.

Strong way to head into the weekend, folks.

2 weeks ago | [YT] | 3