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All Forum Posts by: Alex Breshears

Alex Breshears has started 7 posts and replied 310 times.

Post: Starting out with little to no money, which method is recommended

Alex Breshears
Posted
  • Lender
  • Springfield, MO
  • Posts 351
  • Votes 503

Hi Keaton! I love the enthusiam and the desire to better yourself! That is admirable. You are correct about the VA loan, they do want you to have some length of service time after the loan is closed, or you have civilian employment. Depending on your skill set and desire, there might be a few options open to you. With Covid ushering in a new way to work, have you thought about trying to find remote work opportunities for an American company while over in Japan? You could even try to do SkillBridge with someone so that way when you actually get out and are on US soil again you have some people in your network in your chosen career field.

Now as far as the loan part. That may take some creativity and out of the box thinking. First, you've done the analysis on what you can bring to the table - you have some cash and a general idea of a business plan. What about partnering up with someone to buy that first home? Maybe you have friends or family in your network that can gift you a downpayment. There are other options than the traditional mortgage route, such as buying it through the investment property route with what is known as a DSCR loan. In that case the lender is likely looking more at the asset than the borrower. This will only work if you are buying it as investment property in their eyes. Another option might be buying a primary residence with someone, but that residence has maybe an apartment above the garage or a separate mother in law suite, either the partner lives there or you can rent it out via Airbnb to help cover the mortgage. For that scenario you would need someone likely to be on the loan with you to get the best rate and terms.

I hope that helps!

Post: New to REI and looking for advice

Alex Breshears
Posted
  • Lender
  • Springfield, MO
  • Posts 351
  • Votes 503

So there is another option you may not have thought about. Many areas, especially in Florida because Boomers are moving down or needing additional care givers space. Many homes now are either adding, or even being built with, separate in law suites, maybe an apartment above a garage etc. They are still considered a SFH so you could do the 2nd home loan, and truthfully go visit through son and stay in the in law suite etc. Also - they can then potentially run that additional space as a short term rental when you are not there. You may need to dive into the STR laws and regulations down there.

Post: Looking for an advise.

Alex Breshears
Posted
  • Lender
  • Springfield, MO
  • Posts 351
  • Votes 503

Please check out Flynn Family Lending. They are a private lender in your area. They can do some cross collaterization of properties you already own (assuming there is some equity buffer in there, and the funds are going for a business purpose, like buying investment property).  They have some interesting ways to get the deal done, just they are going to be very limited if you are trying to buy the new place as a primary residence. Owner occupied property is regulated by the Federal government, so a lot of licensing and regulation, plus disclosures have to happen. If on the other hand this will be 100% a non-owner occupied property, that is then controlled at the state level, and it is a very different set of laws. Tell them I sent you and they will take care of you. I don't get anything out of it, but they know me really well!

Post: Transactional Money Lender

Alex Breshears
Posted
  • Lender
  • Springfield, MO
  • Posts 351
  • Votes 503

Hi Samantha! I just wanted to offer some insight into what you are asking for, in the way to show I understand what you are asking for. You are obtaining a first position lien with this DSCR lender, but then wanting someone to come in with a second lien for not only the downpayment (so there is no equity buffer at all), and then renovation costs plus closing costs (so essentially the lender in second position is going to owe more on the property than it is currently worth at the time of closing). I only bring this up because I am giving you an idea of how a private lender sees the numbers in this deal. Think about if something happens to that first lien and it goes into default. The interest charges, legal fees, etc will very quickly eat away at any equity buffer there is in the property, so the second lien holder has a high chance of being TOTALLY wiped out. Honestly, this might be a great situation to look for a JV partner so that way they have some of the upside potential and a say in what happens with the day to day for the property to make sure renovations happen, the value keeps climbing so their capital isn't under water. Just my two cents! Good luck to you in finding something!

Post: Brand Spankin new to REI! Would love to connect!

Alex Breshears
Posted
  • Lender
  • Springfield, MO
  • Posts 351
  • Votes 503

Hi Nick! Happy to connect. I am private lender, and while I do not lend in Ohio,  I'd be happy to chat about private lending and how that may help you on your journey in real estate investing. Active investors need to know how to cultivate private funding for deals. The private money can usually be quite flexible on terms, and really be a partner in the deal if you find an individual private lender that wants a bit more of a hands on approach. Good luck in real estate and let me know if I can help you!

Post: Beginner Investor Learning the Ropes

Alex Breshears
Posted
  • Lender
  • Springfield, MO
  • Posts 351
  • Votes 503

Welcome to the BP community!  I will tell you that everyone's start is going to be a bit different.  I actually do private lending. Why? Because I don't like babysitting other people that are adults.  Just not my strength.  So  the idea of doing fix and flips with tons of contractors and subcontractors was VERY draining for me, then throw in I gave a whack at being a long term landlord, and I can tell you with absolute certainty I will never do that again.  What I was missing very early on is sitting down and thinking about my strengths and weaknesses, and also my WHY.  My personal mantra now is that I invest passively to live actively.  If something sounds like it is going to take up a lot of my time, I better be "oh hell yeah lets do it" or I'm going to say no. I've reached a point in my life where my time and how I choose to spend it is far more valuable.  The reason I bring this up is many people at the start of their journey think of only landlord or fix and flip, and the secret really is there are TONS of ways to get involved in real estate.  My suggestion that I have learned from many false starts, find what you enjoy doing, figure out what skills you can bring to the table, and then outsource the rest, ie partners or vendors.  Good luck!

Post: New to BP looking to connect

Alex Breshears
Posted
  • Lender
  • Springfield, MO
  • Posts 351
  • Votes 503

Hello there! Welcome to BiggerPockets!  I do private lending, and I happen to know a few other private lenders who work in the Florida market, so when you are ready please feel free to send me a message and I'd be happy to connect you two!

Post: New to BP and Jacksonville FL

Alex Breshears
Posted
  • Lender
  • Springfield, MO
  • Posts 351
  • Votes 503

Hi Derrick!  I do private lending, and I know a few people who do lend in Florida, so let me know when you are ready and I can connect you! Also there is a local group JAXREIA that used to be very good, I haven't been in several years, but that may be another opportunity to network with people local to you at one of their live events.  Welcome to BiggerPockets!

Post: Need referral for a lawyer that handles private lending.

Alex Breshears
Posted
  • Lender
  • Springfield, MO
  • Posts 351
  • Votes 503

Hi Wendy! The absolute best in the business is going to be Geraci LLP. THey are based out of California but cover all 50 states. They have a program called Lightning Docs where you can generate state specific documents in their online system. I will forewarn you that they are a bit pricey, but when you are talking about legally protecting yourself from the loss of that much capital for a usual loan amount, what's $1000 to make sure you are legally covered. On their website they have a ton of articles and recorded webinars they hold about private lending as well, so they are a wealth of information! Let them know I sent you, they know me lol. I don't get anything out of it, but they might get a chuckle out of it! lol.

Post: Private lending advice

Alex Breshears
Posted
  • Lender
  • Springfield, MO
  • Posts 351
  • Votes 503

Nathan I am so glad you asked!! I have a book coming out about private lending on BiggerPockets in about 8 weeks. There are a lot of variables to think about, far too many to type in this (hence, the book).  But I can give you some guidelines and pointers. First, only lend on non-owner occupied property. Even go so far as to have the borrower in their own writing (not email, actual handwritten letter) state that the money for this loan is going to an investment property, and they will not be occupying it as their primary residence at any point.  The reason this is such a big deal is that primary residence loans are regulated at the Federal government level, not the state like non-owner occupied properties. There is very often licensing and a lot of disclosure requirements to lend on owner occupied homes. You do not want to wade into that water!   Second, make sure you thoroughly vet the borrower and the property. Do not get lulled into a false sense of security because "you know the guy" kind of feel.  At a minimum do a quick google search, Facebook stalk them, ask for professional references from someone in the local market that has has business dealings with this person. You are trying to establish what happens when their back is against the wall. If this rehab project goes sideways, over budget, over time, are they going to bury their head in the sand and hide from the problem, or are they going to step up, communicate to you as the lender that there are issues, and then take ownership of their mistakes.  I want my borrower to be the latter, not the former.  Also for the property, get an idea of what you would be comfortable lending on. For example, I know a private lender that ONLY does mobile homes. He knows that market, he knows that asset class. That's his bread and butter, where as I will not lend on mobile homes at all.  It's just my personal preference on what I want securing my money.  Third, run everything through a title company. There NEEDS to be a closing. Do not just give this person X dollars and hope they buy the property with it.  You want a clear title report, you want hazard insurance that adequately covers the property in the event is goes up in flames one day after renovations are complete, and you want your lien recorded ASAP after the closing.  At that point you can either set up the loan with a loan servicing company (which for the shorter loan term you mentioned may not work because they are very backlogged as a whole), but some way that the interest only payments can be made to you, if you decide to do monthly payments. Personally, I tell borrowers that the first loan is going to be their most expensive because we don't have history, after that it gets easier as long as that first loan goes well.  Lastly, please please please spend the money to get professional legal documents drawn up. Do not use any boiler plate stuff you find on the internet. Spend the $1000 to get docs drawn up by an attorney familiar with lending in your state. Keep in mind this likely isn't the real estate attorney performing the closing. Lending is it's own animal and real estate attorneys that perform tons of closings a day with conventional lenders just get docs emailed to them and they point where to sign. They did not draw up the documents themselves.  That should be enough to either get you started or scare you off! lol.  But just take it slow, don't be in a rush. Learn what you need to to be comfortable and look for ways to mitigate risk of loss of your funds!