Skip to content
×
PRO
Pro Members Get Full Access!
Get off the sidelines and take action in real estate investing with BiggerPockets Pro. Our comprehensive suite of tools and resources minimize mistakes, support informed decisions, and propel you to success.
Advanced networking features
Market and Deal Finder tools
Property analysis calculators
Landlord Command Center
$0
TODAY
$69.00/month when billed monthly.
$32.50/month when billed annually.
7 day free trial. Cancel anytime
Already a Pro Member? Sign in here

Join Over 3 Million Real Estate Investors

Create a free BiggerPockets account to comment, participate, and connect with over 3 million real estate investors.
Use your real name
By signing up, you indicate that you agree to the BiggerPockets Terms & Conditions.
The community here is like my own little personal real estate army that I can depend upon to help me through ANY problems I come across.
Real Estate Deal Analysis & Advice
All Forum Categories
Followed Discussions
Followed Categories
Followed People
Followed Locations
Market News & Data
General Info
Real Estate Strategies
Landlording & Rental Properties
Real Estate Professionals
Financial, Tax, & Legal
Real Estate Classifieds
Reviews & Feedback

Updated over 4 years ago, 04/18/2020

User Stats

53
Posts
40
Votes
Ryan Haley
  • Financial Advisor
  • Woodland Park, CO
40
Votes |
53
Posts

Purchase, Hold, and Sale of 4-Plex in Columbus, Ohio

Ryan Haley
  • Financial Advisor
  • Woodland Park, CO
Posted

Investment Info:

Small multi-family (2-4 units) buy & hold investment in Columbus.

Purchase price: $125,000
Cash invested: $125,000
Sale price: $175,000

All-cash, out-of-state purchase of 4-unit multifamily, intending to hold indefinitely, using a local Realtor and associated Property Management company. Rent-stabilized and improved tenant quality, with top-line revenue of $2700/month. Moderate CapEx and property improvements. Strong market conditions led to sale after 28 months of ownership, with the below returns:

-Total Return over 2.5 Years (Net): 43%
-IRR: 18%
-NPV: $54,000
-Cumulative Cap Rate: 11%

What made you interested in investing in this type of deal?

I wanted a high-cashflow rental property for passive income, in a strong market, and at a price point I could afford on an all-cash basis.

How did you find this deal and how did you negotiate it?

A mentor/consultant guided me through the process, after he had built a team and purchased many properties in that area.

How did you finance this deal?

I paid all-cash with a combination of savings, non-retirement investments, and cash value from a life insurance policy.

How did you add value to the deal?

Rent-stabilized the property, increased tenant quality, and made some moderate repairs and CapEx

What was the outcome?

A phenomenal net return over less than two and a half years .

Lessons learned? Challenges?

Cash is king, cashflow is queen, tenant quality is key, and a conservative margin of safety is the ace up your sleeve!

User Stats

1,047
Posts
1,309
Votes
Brandon Goldsmith
Agent
  • Real Estate Agent
  • Columbus, OH
1,309
Votes |
1,047
Posts
Brandon Goldsmith
Agent
  • Real Estate Agent
  • Columbus, OH
Replied

Congrats! Columbus is a great place to be right now. As an out of state investor, what type of criteria and other determining factors do you usually look for in a market/ potential investment property in multi-family?

User Stats

53
Posts
40
Votes
Ryan Haley
  • Financial Advisor
  • Woodland Park, CO
40
Votes |
53
Posts
Ryan Haley
  • Financial Advisor
  • Woodland Park, CO
Replied

@Brandon Goldsmith Thanks! Columbus is definitely a solid market, but I did notice that it tightened considerably, even within about 6 months of my purchase. So, it was a good time to be a seller recently, but it's been tougher to find those really great deals in the past couple years as a buyer (and obviously now, COVID-19 could completely change everything). One of the biggest factors as an out-of-state investor is the local team on the ground (esp. Property Manager), since you're really at their mercy as an absentee landlord. One thing I really look for in my team is that they are all REIs themselves and own properties in that market. As I mentioned, the thing I learned is that tenant quality (and by association, location) is critical. A seemingly huge gross profit/rent-to-price ratio can be reduced significantly by an extremely high expense ration as the result of tenant behavior, vacancy, and completely unexpected "one-off" or "random" events, that somehow happen consistently. It's rarely the same thing, but it's always something; if that makes sense. 

When doing a top-down market analysis, you want to look at fundamental supply and demand characteristics: healthy and growing population base, demographic trends, diversified employment sectors (so if one industry goes down–like the auto industry in Detroit–the whole town doesn't go down with it), talented and educated workforce. Then, I look at places with high rent-to-price ratios with solid B or C class tenants. Personally, as a cash investor, I'm especially interested in places with low price points. Ideally, you want to ideally be in a landlord-friendly state regarding tenancy and evictions laws, as well as a generally business-friendly environment regarding tax laws and public policy. There's probably a whole lot more that could be said, but hopefully that answers some of your questions. 

BiggerPockets logo
8-Week Virtual Series To Supercharge Your 2025.
|
BiggerPockets
EARLY BIRD PRICING ON SALE NOW - Get live expert coaching, exclusive mastermind groups, and proven strategies to scale your portfolio.

User Stats

327
Posts
124
Votes
Michael Ohara
  • Investor
  • Hawaii
124
Votes |
327
Posts
Michael Ohara
  • Investor
  • Hawaii
Replied

Great job!

User Stats

286
Posts
253
Votes
Ryan Mainwaring
  • Rental Property Investor
  • Blacklick, OH
253
Votes |
286
Posts
Ryan Mainwaring
  • Rental Property Investor
  • Blacklick, OH
Replied

@Ryan Haley Congrats.  Where was your property?  Have you done any more in columbus?

User Stats

5,446
Posts
6,411
Votes
Remington Lyman
Agent
  • Real Estate Agent
  • Columbus, OH
6,411
Votes |
5,446
Posts
Remington Lyman
Agent
  • Real Estate Agent
  • Columbus, OH
Replied
Originally posted by @Ryan Haley:

Investment Info:

Small multi-family (2-4 units) buy & hold investment in Columbus.

Purchase price: $125,000
Cash invested: $125,000
Sale price: $175,000

All-cash, out-of-state purchase of 4-unit multifamily, intending to hold indefinitely, using a local Realtor and associated Property Management company. Rent-stabilized and improved tenant quality, with top-line revenue of $2700/month. Moderate CapEx and property improvements. Strong market conditions led to sale after 28 months of ownership, with the below returns:

-Total Return over 2.5 Years (Net): 43%
-IRR: 18%
-NPV: $54,000
-Cumulative Cap Rate: 11%

What made you interested in investing in this type of deal?

I wanted a high-cashflow rental property for passive income, in a strong market, and at a price point I could afford on an all-cash basis.

How did you find this deal and how did you negotiate it?

A mentor/consultant guided me through the process, after he had built a team and purchased many properties in that area.

How did you finance this deal?

I paid all-cash with a combination of savings, non-retirement investments, and cash value from a life insurance policy.

How did you add value to the deal?

Rent-stabilized the property, increased tenant quality, and made some moderate repairs and CapEx

What was the outcome?

A phenomenal net return over less than two and a half years .

Lessons learned? Challenges?

Cash is king, cashflow is queen, tenant quality is key, and a conservative margin of safety is the ace up your sleeve!

 Congrats! Where did you find the deal and what neighborhood is it in?

  • Remington Lyman
business profile image
Reafco
5.0 stars
12 Reviews

User Stats

1,615
Posts
1,479
Votes
Zeke Liston
Agent
Pro Member
  • Real Estate Agent
  • Columbus, OH
1,479
Votes |
1,615
Posts
Zeke Liston
Agent
Pro Member
  • Real Estate Agent
  • Columbus, OH
Replied

Congrats @Ryan Haley, are you looking for the next one now? 

business profile image
Verti
5.0 stars
26 Reviews

User Stats

53
Posts
40
Votes
Ryan Haley
  • Financial Advisor
  • Woodland Park, CO
40
Votes |
53
Posts
Ryan Haley
  • Financial Advisor
  • Woodland Park, CO
Replied

@Ryan Mainwaring It was in the Whitehall general area

User Stats

53
Posts
40
Votes
Ryan Haley
  • Financial Advisor
  • Woodland Park, CO
40
Votes |
53
Posts
Ryan Haley
  • Financial Advisor
  • Woodland Park, CO
Replied

@Remington Lyman Through a local Realtor and my friend. It was in Whitehall.

User Stats

5,446
Posts
6,411
Votes
Remington Lyman
Agent
  • Real Estate Agent
  • Columbus, OH
6,411
Votes |
5,446
Posts
Remington Lyman
Agent
  • Real Estate Agent
  • Columbus, OH
Replied
Originally posted by @Ryan Haley:

@Remington Lyman Through a local Realtor and my friend. It was in Whitehall.

 Nice! I think I had an offer on this deal.

  • Remington Lyman
business profile image
Reafco
5.0 stars
12 Reviews

User Stats

3,202
Posts
1,576
Votes
Robert Ellis
Agent
  • Developer
  • Columbus, OH
1,576
Votes |
3,202
Posts
Robert Ellis
Agent
  • Developer
  • Columbus, OH
Replied
Originally posted by @Ryan Haley:

@Remington Lyman Through a local Realtor and my friend. It was in Whitehall.

Nice, Whitehall has seen a lot of investors entering the neighborhood in the last few years happy to hear you found a good deal! 

  • Robert Ellis

User Stats

53
Posts
40
Votes
Ryan Haley
  • Financial Advisor
  • Woodland Park, CO
40
Votes |
53
Posts
Ryan Haley
  • Financial Advisor
  • Woodland Park, CO
Replied
Originally posted by @Zeke Liston:

Congrats @Ryan Haley, are you looking for the next one now? 

I've told my Realtor to keep me in mind for any good deals, but I'm probably going to wait and see how things develop over the next few months before I buy anything. I think there will be potentially amazing opportunities presented b/c of COVID, but it usually takes the RE market awhile to price things in, as it tends to lag the financial and other markets.

User Stats

3,202
Posts
1,576
Votes
Robert Ellis
Agent
  • Developer
  • Columbus, OH
1,576
Votes |
3,202
Posts
Robert Ellis
Agent
  • Developer
  • Columbus, OH
Replied
Originally posted by @Ryan Haley:
Originally posted by @Zeke Liston:

Congrats @Ryan Haley, are you looking for the next one now? 

I've told my Realtor to keep me in mind for any good deals, but I'm probably going to wait and see how things develop over the next few months before I buy anything. I think there will be potentially amazing opportunities presented b/c of COVID, but it usually takes the RE market awhile to price things in, as it tends to lag the financial and other markets.

I somewhat agree. I can already see the affects with a somewhat softening of the market in columbus. There are currently 167 active properties listed for sale in the MLS. In the last 30 days 49 properties sold. That's 3.4 months of supply. The residential single family home market only has 1.5 months of supply. It will be interesting to see how that is affected but some of my investors have definilty laid off investing because of it. Less buyers in the market, we will see how it will affect sellers because from all the local property managers i'm talking to they collected over 90% of rents for april.

  • Robert Ellis
BiggerPockets logo
Join Our Private Community for Passive Investors
|
BiggerPockets
Get first-hand insights and real sponsor reviews from other investors