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All Forum Posts by: Andrew M.

Andrew M. has started 14 posts and replied 73 times.

Post: Our First Flip was a Success!!

Andrew M.Posted
  • Rental Property Investor
  • San Diego, CA
  • Posts 73
  • Votes 55
Great job!!

Post: 25 year old female lost

Andrew M.Posted
  • Rental Property Investor
  • San Diego, CA
  • Posts 73
  • Votes 55
Yes I know him I went to Financial peace Class about 5 years ago. Go again. It's free for life from what I understand. This time reeeeeallllyyy take in the information.

Post: Texas Exucatory Contracts a/k/a Lease Option or Contract for deed

Andrew M.Posted
  • Rental Property Investor
  • San Diego, CA
  • Posts 73
  • Votes 55
I just finished reading Real Estate Law and Asset Protection for Texas Real Estate Investors by David Willis. Google his name and visit his website, the entire book is printed online, free to view. It has a lot of valuable information on Texas executionary contracts.

Post: Failure to launch, no luck so far

Andrew M.Posted
  • Rental Property Investor
  • San Diego, CA
  • Posts 73
  • Votes 55
The problem is not your desire to buy rental property. The problem is that you're placing more importance on a depreciating liability than an appreciating asset. It sounds like a mental shift is underlying and necessary. The one and only time I've ever lost money on a rental property was when I bought too early in my career and was stretched far too thin on cash. I'm making more money than I ever though possible right now and am driving a 2004 Ford F-150. It gets from A to B safely and reliably. Read Robert Kiyosaki where he talks about buying an asset and letting it pay for your liabilities. I hate seeing people get so close to changing their lives but then getting caught in the rat race of every day life. Decide what is more important to you and your family--wealth, or things?

Post: San Antonio, TX - Appropriate type of insurance for rental house

Andrew M.Posted
  • Rental Property Investor
  • San Diego, CA
  • Posts 73
  • Votes 55
Miles Stanley I've found that Safeco offers the best dwelling/fire policies for rentals in our area. I use them for all my SFRs. Message me if your interested in the broker I use. Good luck moving forward!

Post: Interested in Real estate training and education in San Antonio

Andrew M.Posted
  • Rental Property Investor
  • San Diego, CA
  • Posts 73
  • Votes 55
Congratulations on your recent graduation and getting started in the direction of your dreams!

Post: Set For Life! - Podcast Episode 223 with Scott Trench

Andrew M.Posted
  • Rental Property Investor
  • San Diego, CA
  • Posts 73
  • Votes 55

Hey @Scott Trench! Reading this amazing book and putting goals under the intellectual microscope. The coffee and motivational scenery surely places it all into perspective. You're book is now world famous!

Post: Ramblings of a Real Estate Amateur

Andrew M.Posted
  • Rental Property Investor
  • San Diego, CA
  • Posts 73
  • Votes 55

@Jimmy Murray

Sorry for the delay! At one point, that seemed like the most attainable investment. After a few years of reading and learning, it just seemed like the natural progression. Going to try it for a few years and see where it leads! Although, there is always that thought of bigger and better...

Post: Are buy and hold's really making money? Big picture question

Andrew M.Posted
  • Rental Property Investor
  • San Diego, CA
  • Posts 73
  • Votes 55

Has anyone here purchased maybe 5-10 SFRs, used day j-o-b income to pay them off rapidly (4-8 years with income and increased cash flow from paid off properties) and hold on to them for the long term?

Post: Ramblings of a Real Estate Amateur

Andrew M.Posted
  • Rental Property Investor
  • San Diego, CA
  • Posts 73
  • Votes 55

In an effort to publicly state goals, gain insight from other (and more experienced) investors, and write down lessons learned, this is a run on stream of thoughts about all that investing involves.

My goal for 2017 was to purchase 6 buy-and-hold properties, your typical 1% deals, all within my local metro area. It started with the last 4 months of 2016 by networking, interviewing contractors, stating and writing down criteria, and processing deals. My wife and I ended up purchasing a primary residence at the end of last year that I've previously written about, and after a cash out refinance and rehab, has about $100,000 of equity. Within 5 weeks of February and early March, we closed on two deals that will each cash flow between $400-500/month (not including vacancy). Another deal may be closing by early April (with respect to the options period), and it is a far cry from what we are used to. It was built in the 1920's and is a beautiful home in a quickly appreciating part of town. Cash flow will be only slightly lower than the other two.

Items learned so far:

1. Do what you are good at. Delegate the rest. My wife is great at dealing with contractors and the arranging of schedules, therefore she does it. I find passion in finding the deals and typing the numbers into a spreadsheet displaying returns, all in cost, etc, along with the other financial aspects. Seriously, stick an arrow through my heart when a good deal gets put into the formulas! 

2. Once you give yourself a good foundation, you literally have to fight the momentum if you want to stop progressing. Deals start coming from left field and a new sense of confidence settles in. Just be sure to stick to your criteria, unless you have a very good reason to change. Be quick to make up your mind and very slow to change it.

3. Property management is amazing. We finished renovating our first house, and handed the keys to a property management team that we have built a relationship with before leaving for Bali and Australia for 3 weeks last month. This is why we invest, right??

4. I'm trying to find that balance between getting started and letting others do the labor so you can expand the business. But part of me still wants to mow the lawns of a vacant rental and do some odds and ends that the handyman charges too much for. Where is the dividing line where on one side you could easily do these tasks but are too lazy, as opposed to you are getting in the way of yourself if you don't pay someone to do it?

5. You can never have too much private money lined up.

6. Always do the right thing. The only part of your career you can't fix is your reputation.

7. If you are married, get on the same financial page as your spouse like your life depends on it. Once we did, our net worth went from very negative to positive in a short period. Even if the other person doesn't want to actively take part in the daily actions of your business, they need to be included in the overarching decisions. 

8. This is a hypothetical. If you could save $1,000 a month for real estate, how would you invest it? What about $5,000/month? What about $10,000; $20,000, $30,000/month? At what point do you scale up to multi family, larger apartments, commercial? Does it have to do with your knowledge, cash on hand, relationships built, or a combination of all the above?

A winding post with no plot, but needed to air out that laundry!