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Updated almost 5 years ago, 02/18/2020

User Stats

15
Posts
3
Votes
Jared Wild
  • Rental Property Investor
  • Orlando, FL
3
Votes |
15
Posts

Is anyone selling off properties before the next recession?

Jared Wild
  • Rental Property Investor
  • Orlando, FL
Posted

Is anyone selling part of their portfolios in overvalued markets before the next recession hits? If you’re in middle income areas are you prepared to make it through the next storm?? What are your strategies??

User Stats

21
Posts
3
Votes
Jeffery Kuhl
  • Real Estate Investor
  • Fayetteville, NC
3
Votes |
21
Posts
Jeffery Kuhl
  • Real Estate Investor
  • Fayetteville, NC
Replied

@Jared Wild

Hold and renting for now

Flipping may drop off in a recession (because won't lend), but people will always be renting out multi family homes.

User Stats

2,834
Posts
3,901
Votes
Anthony Wick
  • Rental Property Investor
  • Ankeny, IA
3,901
Votes |
2,834
Posts
Anthony Wick
  • Rental Property Investor
  • Ankeny, IA
Replied

@Jared Wild

Technically, we are still in buy mode. In reality, no deals to be found since our last purchase in August 2019. I’m confident rents will remain steady, and our mortgage isn’t changing until the balloon is up in 5-8 years on most recent properties. And some on a 30 year fixed. Heck, I’m not even slowing my Vanguard and 401k investments down. Crushing it until the pullback.

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User Stats

6,023
Posts
9,404
Votes
Dennis M.#5 General Landlording & Rental Properties Contributor
  • Rental Property Investor
  • Erie, pa
9,404
Votes |
6,023
Posts
Dennis M.#5 General Landlording & Rental Properties Contributor
  • Rental Property Investor
  • Erie, pa
Replied

Fear isn’t part of my business strategy . Seems They keep making people buy God quit making land so I’m just going to keep buying regardless because I create my own economy so I don’t care .

User Stats

951
Posts
599
Votes
Kiera Underwood
  • Specialist
  • Oklahoma City, OK
599
Votes |
951
Posts
Kiera Underwood
  • Specialist
  • Oklahoma City, OK
Replied

@Jared Wild I have investors selling that are afraid of the next election so they're selling off. We hold rent rates and property values remarkably well through the lows here though, so I know other investors that are happily snagging those cash flowing deals! 

User Stats

5,037
Posts
4,675
Votes
Taylor L.
Pro Member
  • Rental Property Investor
  • RVA
4,675
Votes |
5,037
Posts
Taylor L.
Pro Member
  • Rental Property Investor
  • RVA
Replied
Originally posted by @Dennis M.:

Fear isn’t part of my business strategy . Seems They keep making people buy God quit making land so I’m just going to keep buying regardless because I create my own economy so I don’t care .

 "Fear isn't part of my business strategy."

I love that! 

User Stats

203
Posts
145
Votes
Sam B.
  • Investor
  • US
145
Votes |
203
Posts
Sam B.
  • Investor
  • US
Replied
Originally posted by @Dennis M.:

Fear isn’t part of my business strategy . Seems They keep making people buy God quit making land so I’m just going to keep buying regardless because I create my own economy so I don’t care .

LOL

User Stats

373
Posts
362
Votes
Sam Josh
  • Sunnyvale , CA
362
Votes |
373
Posts
Sam Josh
  • Sunnyvale , CA
Replied

@Jay Hinrichs

Very insightful. My properties bought in Silicon Valley in 2004, saw a 20% increase until 2007 and then a 30% decrease from those highs until 2009. Same are now 2x in value from 2007 levels. The swings are quite wide indeed and things can go south until they bounce back strong. My theory is booms are followed by busts! No second ways to that. And busts are followed by big booms. Given where we are, the next cycle will be rough. But no one knows when it’s coming.

User Stats

3,488
Posts
3,240
Votes
John Teachout
  • Rental Property Investor
  • Concord, GA
3,240
Votes |
3,488
Posts
John Teachout
  • Rental Property Investor
  • Concord, GA
Replied

What I find interesting is that if you go back 6 months in the forums you can find very similar threads regarding the impending downturn. And then go back a year, same thing, two years, same thing, three years, four years, five years.... Eventually someone will be right and then won't they look scholarly!

User Stats

562
Posts
553
Votes
Dave E.
  • Rental Property Investor
  • Indianapolis, IN
553
Votes |
562
Posts
Dave E.
  • Rental Property Investor
  • Indianapolis, IN
Replied

@Jared Wild who cares. As long as you have tenants in them an they are paying your mortgage for you the home value is less relevant. Keep them occupied, the market will rebound. Maybe just hold plans for new purchases, and then snap up some extra property after the market crashes.

User Stats

7
Posts
6
Votes
Replied

@Account Closed Not sure I'd agree with the baby boomers dyeing and the market flooding. Gen-Z is the largest generation in history coming up behind Millennials.

https://www.statista.com/stati...

User Stats

47
Posts
27
Votes
Laura George
  • Investor
  • Pekin, IN
27
Votes |
47
Posts
Laura George
  • Investor
  • Pekin, IN
Replied

@Jared Wild

We only sell

When we have to. He with the most real estate wins. Just like the board game.

User Stats

42,066
Posts
61,880
Votes
Jay Hinrichs
Professional Services
Pro Member
#4 All Forums Contributor
  • Lender
  • Lake Oswego OR Summerlin, NV
61,880
Votes |
42,066
Posts
Jay Hinrichs
Professional Services
Pro Member
#4 All Forums Contributor
  • Lender
  • Lake Oswego OR Summerlin, NV
Replied
Originally posted by @Dennis M.:

Fear isn’t part of my business strategy . Seems They keep making people buy God quit making land so I’m just going to keep buying regardless because I create my own economy so I don’t care .

Lets look at the mentality of many investors that post on BP and are buy hold. what do they say 

1. I am buy hold never going to sell.

2. appreciation I don't care about that or expect it does not matter.

So as long as you have that mind set what the market is doing ( short of not being able to rent houses because there is price compression on rental rates or vacancy is too high) no need to time the market either the deals work for  the cash flow your willing to accept at the price points you can buy for in a given deal.. And for those in markets that could or do move up waiting for some calamity in the market that all of  a sudden creates HUGE devaluations like what happened 08 to 2011  you could be waiting a long time.. I can see easy swings of 10% but those days of 50 to 80% devaluations not sure we will ever get there again unless there is some real calamity that no one can imagine right now.

And its totally regional.. like you have talked about many times your still able to buy your assets at a FRACTION of replacement value.. Why is that.. well supply demand and risk .. and each market has those dynamics that are specific to a given market.. 

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User Stats

6,023
Posts
9,404
Votes
Dennis M.#5 General Landlording & Rental Properties Contributor
  • Rental Property Investor
  • Erie, pa
9,404
Votes |
6,023
Posts
Dennis M.#5 General Landlording & Rental Properties Contributor
  • Rental Property Investor
  • Erie, pa
Replied

@Jay Hinrichs

For me in my market when I buy at 10k a house it can not really be devalued any lower , it’s an atm with a roof over it . It is a way to make 40% on my money ..even if I slash rents in half it still does better than most investors can get for a return . My tenants or buyers don’t usually get downsized in a recession they are already lower tier employees . It’s a Walmart houses for Walmart people strategy

User Stats

42,066
Posts
61,880
Votes
Jay Hinrichs
Professional Services
Pro Member
#4 All Forums Contributor
  • Lender
  • Lake Oswego OR Summerlin, NV
61,880
Votes |
42,066
Posts
Jay Hinrichs
Professional Services
Pro Member
#4 All Forums Contributor
  • Lender
  • Lake Oswego OR Summerlin, NV
Replied
Originally posted by @Dennis M.:

@Jay Hinrichs

For me in my market when I buy at 10k a house it can not really be devalued any lower , it’s an atm with a roof over it . It is a way to make 40% on my money ..even if I slash rents in half it still does better than most investors can get for a return . My tenants or buyers don’t usually get downsized in a recession they are already lower tier employees . It’s a Walmart houses for Walmart people strategy 

no argument here its just a business. Many business can make 40% ROI or far better.. I think the main difference is you can start small and scale most business you would start take more capital and could be a tad more complicated than buy house rent house. Not sure how many markets in America are like your market. Has to be a few.. I know I have personally funded a few maybe 20 in W. PA were my client is buying these houses at 8 to 20k.. I know its there and can be done.

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JLH Capital Partners
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User Stats

312
Posts
273
Votes
Gordon Starr
  • Rental Property Investor
  • Dayton, OH
273
Votes |
312
Posts
Gordon Starr
  • Rental Property Investor
  • Dayton, OH
Replied

To me it depends a lot on the kind of property you are holding and how well it cashflows! In my view, entry level housing is grossly under-served by current construction trends. If you have that and it cashflows, it does not matter where it is, you should keep it up and NOT sell.  Or, is everyone in their late 50s and 60s, and younger people aren't buying these properties and they don't (barely) cash flow. You should definitely sell and rotate into something profitable and sustainable with cash flow. Also, unload your Harley Davidson. Why buy for the schools when the kids are all out of the nest? Just my two cents, and remember, advice is cheap! Actually free on bigger pockets.

User Stats

3
Posts
0
Votes
Scott Bigelow
  • Rental Property Investor
  • Gilbert, AZ
0
Votes |
3
Posts
Scott Bigelow
  • Rental Property Investor
  • Gilbert, AZ
Replied

@Jared Wild invest in multi family. Start with a 4 plex .. they can withstand recession and cas flow better than most sigue family homes

Account Closed
  • Investor
  • United States
356
Votes |
565
Posts
Account Closed
  • Investor
  • United States
Replied
Originally posted by @Eric Spond:

@Account Closed Not sure I'd agree with the baby boomers dyeing and the market flooding. Gen-Z is the largest generation in history coming up behind Millennials.

https://www.statista.com/stati...

 Yea, but who owns all that real estate? When they offload there will be an oversupply. 

User Stats

137
Posts
118
Votes
TJ Watson
Pro Member
  • Rental Property Investor
  • SD x LV
118
Votes |
137
Posts
TJ Watson
Pro Member
  • Rental Property Investor
  • SD x LV
Replied
Originally posted by @Account Closed:

I'm actually trying to buy more, and I think my local market is overheated.  

We'll have recessions, but I don't think we will have a real estate "foreclosure wave" type crash again for quite a while, maybe a generation at least. Lending standards are just much different as far as I can tell, and there are many people circling the edges "waiting for the next recession," to try and buy up distressed deals. I think that will help keep things from bottoming out like they did 2009 etc. 

Best answer. First of all, if you can market time a recession, kudos to you (OP or whomever), I look forward to watching you nightly on CNBC as an overpaid talking head that guessed correctly. Everyone else has failed the last ~5 years when they thought "the next one" was coming. Meanwhile my VTSAX Vanguard index fund made 31% last year for a six figure investment income. Crazy recession! 

Otherwise, I believe Nicky's comments are spot on. The country has small dips / recessions every decade, anyone on this site should be 20-30 years old or older and have gone through at least one or two. It's life. But are we likely to have another "Great Recession" complete with banking meltdowns and sub prime mortgage crisis and all that death? No. I wouldn't be selling anything unless you bought something you shouldn't have, or cannot afford. Typically a small recession does not cause rents or travel to go down too much. Again, the people that -might- suffer as owners, are folks that put themselves in bad business situations. Business as usual for me. Probably even hoard more cash over the next 12+ months to wait for buying opportunities for those desperate to sell "fearing some huge recession" is coming. You can read more into Warren Buffet's mindset about buying when others are selling. 

User Stats

1,132
Posts
1,190
Votes
CJ M.
  • Rental Property Investor
  • Canton, OH
1,190
Votes |
1,132
Posts
CJ M.
  • Rental Property Investor
  • Canton, OH
Replied

@Jared Wild

Except for this recent economic boom, you do realize historically there's been a recession (6 months of economic decline) ever 4-5 years on average.

User Stats

931
Posts
597
Votes
Scott Schultz
  • Rental Property Investor
  • West Bend, WI
597
Votes |
931
Posts
Scott Schultz
  • Rental Property Investor
  • West Bend, WI
Replied

Even if we see a recessionary period, I dont expect to see  big change in real estate, many markets are super heated, BUT a recession will probably only moderate the market. I Flipped and sold foreclosures all the way through the last downturn, the difference this time is lending is not predatory not everyone has ARMs.  and more people have a lot of equity. Currently most markets in the US is short on Inventory, so lets say we see a market slowdown, so days on market increase and maybe a slight downturn in prices, and I mean slight if any, the reason prices dipped last recession is because the sellers (banks) could discount to get properties sold, setting lower comps. and many homes were abandoned and blighted. now there are not many blighted homes compared to then, yea in a down turn a few people will lose there homes, but we will probably never see in our lifetime another 5.5% foreclosure rate like at the worst point of the great recession. I hate to burst your bubble Newbies, that ship has sailed, get comfortable with making deals work today, or wait till your old and its too late for you. 

User Stats

209
Posts
276
Votes
Matt Higgins
  • Property Manager
  • Blaine
276
Votes |
209
Posts
Matt Higgins
  • Property Manager
  • Blaine
Replied

@Scott Schultz

US Credit card Debt highest ever @ almost a trillion

US household debt record @ 14.5 trillion

Highest US debt ever and the best employment numbers ever. A story for recession could easily be written off of that. What happens when companies start laying off again?

That being said I’m buying too. Interest rates are so low, the alternatives (stocks & bonds) are so bad, and in my market finding a value add is possible. You just have to be able to execute on the construction, the management, and rent raise. My belief is that if you can cash flow now, you will cash flow later, if you’re buying cash flowing assets on the low @ half of the cost of construction.

User Stats

1,901
Posts
2,547
Votes
Matt M.
  • Specialist
  • Easton, PA
2,547
Votes |
1,901
Posts
Matt M.
  • Specialist
  • Easton, PA
Replied

@Jared Wild

I’ve bought smart, so no. Even if I had to lower my rents I’m still making money.

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