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All Forum Posts by: Caleb Teachout

Caleb Teachout has started 1 posts and replied 26 times.

Post: New Investor in Gary, IN...yes Gary

Caleb TeachoutPosted
  • Rental Property Investor
  • Gary, IN
  • Posts 35
  • Votes 32

Hi Gang, I also am buying single family homes in Gary. @Dusty Cady for lenders I've had good luck with PrimeLending and Caliber Home Loans. I have an incredible property manager - CVS. Curt and Vicki Shefulsky. They are full service, can do everything up to managing and executing a gut rehab/ BRRRR project, etc. Title companies I've used are Indiana Title and Meridian. Both were good.

@Michael Stockwell are you still working on getting started? Feel free to hit me up any time. Happy to chat. 

@Doug Phillips I'd love to hear an update on what you have going on these days in Gary. I may be able to connect you with more buyers including myself. 

@Deana Johnson I'd love to also hear an update on your Gary investing and projects if you have time to write :) Thanks!

Post: Mortgage Calculator for Seller Finance HELP

Caleb TeachoutPosted
  • Rental Property Investor
  • Gary, IN
  • Posts 35
  • Votes 32

@Bas DeVries I made a spreadsheet for you.

Based on your criteria it looks like what you have is a 175k loan amortized over 832 months (69.333 years) at 3%. That results in a $500.00 monthly payment and a 5 year balloon amount of $170,959.58.

Link to spreadsheet below if you want to look at how this stuff is calculated. Should answer all your questions in this post, and I'll be happy to try to answer any other questions about it.

It can also serve as a calculator for any other amortizations.

https://drive.google.com/file/d/1FFUF3412NmU7iK6gAcGYVJ4Poy6yhzvY/view?usp=drivesdk

Please take this with a grain of salt, I'm not a qualified expert, just a dude with excel. Best of luck!

Post: Pay extra/invest the extra?

Caleb TeachoutPosted
  • Rental Property Investor
  • Gary, IN
  • Posts 35
  • Votes 32

Borrowed from Investor Cody Reilly from one of the facebook groups I follow. This was an answer to the question of what to do with $1million in cash - buy a property outright or leverage it? 

"If we both have 1mm and we both want to find a property with gross rents of 20% and you pay for yours cash and now have 200k a year in cashflow.
I take my million and park it in a property that's 5m with 20% gross rents at a million a year is grossing what you paid for your whole building.
So in two years I've bought back that million, had larger appreciation because its a larger property, higher depreciation, and in 20 years ill own that whole property with less money down.

Does that make sense? Both short and long its a better play. "

Post: Market in North Miami & North Miami Beach

Caleb TeachoutPosted
  • Rental Property Investor
  • Gary, IN
  • Posts 35
  • Votes 32

Hi Nasreen, How are things going? Any progress towards your goal of buying property in Miami? My wife and I are shopping there as well now.

Post: Stocks vs. Real Estate

Caleb TeachoutPosted
  • Rental Property Investor
  • Gary, IN
  • Posts 35
  • Votes 32

Excerpt from a post I made on the stock investing forum "The Motley Fool." The audience is stock investors who are equally passionate and successful in stocks as the BP community is in REI. Many of them think going all in on REI is as silly as going all in on stocks would be to Brandon Turner (relax Brandon, it's a joke!)

My goal is to discuss the powerful polarization of investors towards either stocks or real estate. Post begins below. Mind you this was posted behind enemy lines in the forums of the Motley Fool, the stock investing equivalent of BP. Enjoy.

................................................................................

Below is the start of a saga about Real Estate Investing - wrought with accusations... Against who you might ask? Everybody that is successful in stocks. What a stereotype! Wow! Perhaps I'm biting off more than I can chew, but here goes.


Speaking of buying property, I've noticed something on the Motley Fool boards that has surprised me. The more I read about stock investing, the more I observe that many authors of stock investing articles are utterly averse to real estate investing. I'm reading that houses are often liabilities rather than assets, that they are an anchor that takes away from quality of life and peace of mind, that they don't yield returns that can compare to the equities market.

I've recently read and listened to several real estate books as well as hundreds of forum posts, articles, and podcasts from Bigger Pockets (A wildly successful club - the Motley Fool doppelganger in Real Estate), and finally bought my first house at the ripe age of 22. I myself could hardly hope to be called a "real estate investor" at this point, but it's a start.

......................................

I think a majority of Motley Fool investors would agree that REI is a way to diversify and hedge your portfolio against the equities market, but not much more than that. Most don't seem to really consider it an investment, or at least not a worthwhile one.

Interestingly, our friends at Bigger Pockets have a reciprocal view. The gospel over at Bigger Pockets is that REI is the number one way to achieve financial freedom and long-term wealth. Stocks are nice too I guess, but they are a mere afterthought. Why tie up all that capital in a Roth IRA when you could be using it to buy up, rehab, rent out, and refinance properties, one after another? Real estate has magical properties of leverage, creativity, and scale-ability that you just won't find in stock investing.

Real estate is wildly complex and scary if you don't know what you're doing. Then again, so is stock investing. There are many smart, successful investors on both sides of the aisle. I believe that in a sense, which ever type of investment you think is better, will be. Perhaps it's a self-fulfilling prophecy. Both types of investing require a lifetime of self-education. Whichever class of assets you are better at investing in will probably be a better investment for you. Simple as that.

......................................

In summary, there seems to be a powerful polarization among investors toward either stocks or real estate. I haven't met many people that are passionate/successful with BOTH classes of investments, but perhaps I will meet some investors here who match that description after all. 


Caleb Teachout
Stay Scheming

Post: Looking for landlording steps from A to Z

Caleb TeachoutPosted
  • Rental Property Investor
  • Gary, IN
  • Posts 35
  • Votes 32

Broad question there but a good one. I'm wondering the same thing as I will be looking to rent out my primary residence next year. Best of luck.