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Posted over 14 years ago

Buy and Hold or Flip with Private Money?

Is it better to raise private money to buy and hold or flip real estate?

Great question.

If you're thinking about this, you've already got half the battle won - you've decided to raise private money. You have picked the right financing option for building a successful and extremely profitable business. Like the old knight said at the end Indiana Jones and Last Crusade: "you have chosen wisely."

To answer our question, consider my three elements of raising private money: You, Investor, Deal

For illustrative purposes, assume we have the "You" and the "Investor"  taken care of - meaning your business plan, offering documents, marketing and other components are in place and you have an investor that is ready, willing and able to place funds with you. Now, you have to make sure that You matches Investor matches Deal.

The Deal component is what you have to focus on - how you are structuring the deal?

Consider:

  • How much funding do I need?
  • What will the project/projects look like from a cash flow standpoint?
  • What is my exit strategy for project or company?
  • What returns am I willing to pay vs. what do my investors want?

One important thing to think about when raising private money for real estate investments is your total cost of capital - that is, what does it cost you to use the private investors money?

For instance, many real estate investors will give up their shirt to get money for a deal, even if it means them not making much profit. You don't need to do this if you raise money the right way. You should always set up your deals so that you make a substantial profit. Otherwise what's the point?

Now, don't get me wrong - there's being smart and then there's being greedy. Be smart, not greedy. But don't give up more of your deals than you have to. Otherwise, you may quickly find that your private investors will become like the bears at Jellystone Park: take the picnic basket away and they get awfully mad.

Once you determine your cost of capital, you can see if you have a match: deal matches investor matches you.

For example, let's say you are going to buy an apartment building for a long term hold and raise capital to fund the initial equity and capital requirement coupled with a commercial loan - perhaps 25/75 (your investors contribute 25% of the purchase price and up front reserves and you get commercial financing for the remaining 75%, the stake you carve out for yourself must make sense in the big picture, but should be enough to make you quite happy). If you have investors that want a quick exit, say in 2 years or less, then it's probably not a good idea to put their money on this deal. You'll just have to move it out in less than 24 months. But, if you had some investors that wanted to park money for a period of 5 years or longer, then you're in business. This gives you enough time to re-position the project and or do a refinancing and cash the initial investors out safely with good returns while protecting your investment.

Similarly, if you want to flip a property but your investor wants to keep their funds in play for a long time, you'll have to find a home for their money when the property sells. This is one of the scenarios where raising equity capital makes so much sense. It allows you to keep the money in play for flipping as opposed to private mortgages. If you raise $100,000 to flip a house and sell it in two months and pay the investor 10% annualized on their money, and then it sits idle for 60 days while you find another project, the investor isn't really getting the whole 10% per year, it's actually much less (closer to 5% with 60 days on/60 days off example).

When it comes to flipping or buying and holding with private money - the answer is you should use private money for BOTH. You just have to structure the deal so that it matches with the investor and you. Once these three components are in place, growth and profits are unlimited.


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