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All Forum Posts by: Doug Smith

Doug Smith has started 17 posts and replied 1689 times.

Post: Letter of Intent with Loan Fee - Is this Legit

Doug SmithPosted
  • Lender
  • Tampa, FL
  • Posts 1,772
  • Votes 1,520

Some try to charge an up front fee. We only charge third-party fees like the appraisal and the borrower pays the vendor directly. We don't get paid unless the loan closes.I would be careful with a lender that charges anything but third-party fees. 

Post: Cashing out IRA to buy rental properties.

Doug SmithPosted
  • Lender
  • Tampa, FL
  • Posts 1,772
  • Votes 1,520

What @Chris Seveney said. You'll need to roll it over to a custodian (a company that holds and administers the IRA). Your IRA can borrow, but you have to be careful to not personally guarantee it. We do those types of loans. There are a lot of rules to follow, but make sure you have a great custodian.

Post: 80% Cash out DSCR

Doug SmithPosted
  • Lender
  • Tampa, FL
  • Posts 1,772
  • Votes 1,520

Most of us will go even higher...say 85%...but you have to get the property to cash flow at that level. Set the wayback machine a couple of years ago and that was pretty acheivable. Now, with taxes, insurance, and interest higher and rents not keeping up with property values, most investors are putting more down to get the properties above a 1.0X DSCR. 80% is acceptable, but the issue is getting the property to cash flow at the higher amount.

Regarding your lender pool, are you going to residential lenders that happen to dip their toes in the water of DSCR? They end to struggle with it. Go to a lender that actually knows what they are doing and specialize in investor finance.

Good luck to you. 

Post: Will Mortgage Rates Go Below 3% Again?

Doug SmithPosted
  • Lender
  • Tampa, FL
  • Posts 1,772
  • Votes 1,520

No. 

Post: New Construction Rental Property

Doug SmithPosted
  • Lender
  • Tampa, FL
  • Posts 1,772
  • Votes 1,520

We've built, ground-up, several homes and my mortgage company finances tons of new construction projects. What you spent on the land/lots can go towards your down payment and, if you've owned the land for more than 6 months, you can use the value of the property toward the cash injection requirement. Most lenders will vary how aggressive they will get based on the experience of the operator (you), but I don't know any that will lender to someone who's never done a spec build like you're contemplating. You might want to consider using your equity in the land as your contribution to a partnership with someone that brings that sorely needed experience to the table. You can usually get a lender to go 85% of cost or 70% of the As Completed Value for such a project. If you plan on holding, it's then a much easier task to roll it into a DSCR loan. The bottom line is that you'll want to learn from someone for the first handful of deals and progressively take more and more on yourself until you can fly on your own. I wish you luck!

No is an answer. I think more and more people have become "users" and take a mile after they've given an inch. Provided you are sticking to the letter and spirity of your rental agreement, you have to set boundaries People that get indignant over you setting boundaries are not worth worried about. 

Post: First time investor looking for advice

Doug SmithPosted
  • Lender
  • Tampa, FL
  • Posts 1,772
  • Votes 1,520

There is a saying in business, "If you're sitting at the poker table for more than 15 minutes and you don't know who the patsy is, you're the patsy." I'm not trying to insult you, but the terms "36-Unit Multi-Family" and "First Time Investor" should not go together. I implore you to do one of two things...1) find a partner that's been there, done that, and bought the tee-shirt so you can learn the ropes with someone who knows the pitfalls or, 2) start with a single-family or duplex with the guidance of someone that knows what they are doing. You don't wake up one morning and decide "I'm going to be a brain surgeon today!" You pay your dues and learn. I very much wish you well in your journey, but I would hate to see you jump straight to the NFL. 

Post: Applicant with 1 DUI

Doug SmithPosted
  • Lender
  • Tampa, FL
  • Posts 1,772
  • Votes 1,520

I think I would be more worried about the credit than I am about the DUI. I know some good people that have went to dinner, had a couple of drinks, drove home, and got pulled over. Dumb decision that I don't support, but I don't think 1 DUI should be a character killer. On the other hand, I've been a lender for over 30 years and I can say for certain that past predicts the future when it comes to paying bills. Rarely do you see someone with perfect credit all of a sudden have a short-term hiccup (usually due to illness or something like that). The vast, vast majority of the time, it's a pattern. I wouldn't discount that credit report. If you do rent to this person, don't act shocked when they fall behind or don't pay at all. You have to ask yourself "how desperate am I to rent this place? Can I afford to wait?"

Post: Setting up LLC in my State or out of State

Doug SmithPosted
  • Lender
  • Tampa, FL
  • Posts 1,772
  • Votes 1,520

I'm in FL too and ours are set up in FL. We do, however, have to register in the State where the property is located. Talk to your attorney and/or CPA. 

Post: Seeking Commercial funding options in Orlando

Doug SmithPosted
  • Lender
  • Tampa, FL
  • Posts 1,772
  • Votes 1,520

Hi Abby, I'm right down I4 in the Tampa area and I've done tons of commercial deals in the Orlando area...both with banks and with our company over a 30+ year career. I would certianly need to know more, but we do both SBA and more "bank style" lending. Most everyone's SBA lending is similar (7(a), 504), but we'll do up to 30 year amortizations with no balloon, credit scores to 620, and debt services to 1.0X (not DSCR the way they calculate rental loans, but the way banks calculate it. Tell me more! Doug