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Updated almost 8 years ago on . Most recent reply

Buying on actuals vs pro forma
I've always heard and believed that you should only buy on actuals. But I've been hearing more and more of the experts buying at a low cap rate(5-5.5 and even lower)
Therefore I'm assuming they're buying on what the property can achieve in the future.
There is a property that I've been looking at that have rents that are $100-125 below market.
And I believe I could comfortably get $75 more per door without having to do any improvements.
A lot of the tenants are month to month, so I could implement this pretty quickly.
How are these experts buying at such a low cap, and still giving their investor a good rate of return?
And is it unreasonable for me to buy on what I believe I can get the NOI to pretty quickly?
Most Popular Reply

Barri Griffiths It's hard to know motivations for investors. You have to balance cap-rate against location. A 5.5 cap in San Francisco is insanely good. A 5.5 cap in urban Memphis is likely insanely bad. So you *might* be seeing investors taking appreciation gains from SF/NYC/etc. and putting them into *less hot* (but still good) markets. There's also an argument that money is still cheap and interest rates will rise. In short, there are a ton of potential reasons. And we are nearly 10 years into a housing recovery, you can't expect cap rates to stay idle during a decade long appreciation market. Banks are also becoming a little more lenient than 5 years ago so that helps market competition. People that walked-away or short-sold their home 7 years ago have had 7 years to rebuild their credit. Again, increasing competition. But now I'm rambling...
And banks still pay squat in for a checking/money market account and very few people want to lock their money up in bonds... 🤷🏻♂️🤷♂️