I first met Larry Hull 37 years ago, at a State Association of County Retirement Systems conference in Bakersfield, California, United States. I was only 33 and working as a regional vice president for Equitec Institutional Realty Advisers, which was at that time an emerging real estate investment management concern.
After earnestly trying to sit through a rather tiring presentation by one of the 1937 Act county pension funds’ actuaries, we decided to play hooky and go to dinner together at a local Basque restaurant.
Suffice it to say, Larry and I hit it off immediately, and he almost instantly became a mentor for me. (Just three short years prior, I had lost both of my parents to cancer, and Larry and his wife, Connie, stepped in to fill that void in my life.)
A few years later, after