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All Forum Posts by: David Ronquille

David Ronquille has started 6 posts and replied 14 times.

Post: Rental property, sale or hold?

David RonquillePosted
  • Marrero, LA
  • Posts 16
  • Votes 0

Hello all, Can someone please advise me?

I started buying rental property for years ago. my first purchase was an owner finance of two properties one being a duplex and the other being a single-family for 15 years. I paid 120,000 for the single-family that needs some renovations. Currently the rent only covers the mortgage, insurance, and property taxes. Since then I have bought two more duplexes and one four-plex. my question is my tenant in the single-family wants to purchase the house. I am debating if I should sell it or not? If I did sell it, I would sell it for 150,000 take the cash and pay off the four Plex, which would bring my mortgage down to 11 years instead of 28 years. Although I have no cash flow on the single-family, I do gain $6000 a year in Equity in the single-family. My mortgage on the four Plex would only change by $60 a month. Any advice would be helpful thank you

Post: Looking for Advice Please!

David RonquillePosted
  • Marrero, LA
  • Posts 16
  • Votes 0
No, they are all less than 15 mins from my house. The 5,000 is all bills are payed. That’s not including repairs on the property either.

Post: Looking for Advice Please!

David RonquillePosted
  • Marrero, LA
  • Posts 16
  • Votes 0
Sorry

Post: Looking for Advice Please!

David RonquillePosted
  • Marrero, LA
  • Posts 16
  • Votes 0
My main question is, if I buy the the other half of the double (witch is a really good deal) all the profits will go to pay the line of credit and the credit card. But then after that year I would be clearing $5000 a month.

Post: Looking for Advice Please!

David RonquillePosted
  • Marrero, LA
  • Posts 16
  • Votes 0

Hi my name is David,

I'm looking for advice. In 2016 my aunt had two property's and wanted out because she was to old to deal with it, but she did not want sell because she needed the income. So i took them over (owner finance) one is a double the other is a single. All three together the rent, insurance and property tax is $2,500 a month. Rent is $3,150 (1,100 - 1,150 & 900) so I'm only clearing $650 a month. Then a year later i purchased a half of a townhouse for $70,000 I put $14,000 down. Payed $3,000 closing cost and it rented for $1,000. The note is $465 so I clear $535 a mouth. I was bring in 1,150 a month plus the two i have from my aunt are financed for 15 years, so I'm paying the mortgage down about $1,000 a month. Two months ago I purchased a fourplex and double, the fourplex I payed $200,000 closing and down payment cost me $50,000. I put about $30,000 in it. It makes $3400 monthly and cost $1,410 so clear $1990 on it. The double cost $128,500 closing and down payment cost me $31,500 it makes $1,400 a month. Monthly and cost $820 so it clears $580. And it needs about 20,000 in repairs to get it $1,900 a month. But I will leave it as is for now, until I have the money or have to fix it. And now the other half is for sale of the townhouse i already own. I see no choice but to but it, because I'll own the whole building. But I'll have to use a line credit, If I do all profits for a whole year will go to pay the line of credit and credit card back to fix it. After all said and done the profits will be around $5,000 a month. Looking for advice please!

Post: Looking for avice Please

David RonquillePosted
  • Marrero, LA
  • Posts 16
  • Votes 0

Hi my name is David,

I'm looking for advice. In 2016 my aunt had two property's and wanted out because she was to old to deal with it, but she did not want sell because she needed the income. So i took them over (owner finance) one is a double the other is a single. All three together the rent, insurance and property tax is $2,500 a month. Rent is $3,150 (1,100 - 1,150 & 900) so I'm only clearing $650 a month. Then a year later i purchased a half of a townhouse for $70,000 I put $14,000 down. Payed $3,000 closing cost and it rented for $1,000. The note is $465 so I clear $535 a mouth. I was bring in 1,150 a month plus the two i have from my aunt are financed for 15 years, so I'm paying the mortgage down about $1,000 a month. Two months ago I purchased a fourplex and double, the fourplex I payed $200,000 closing and down payment cost me $50,000. I put about $30,000 in it. It makes $3400 monthly and cost $1,410 so clear $1990 on it. The double cost $128,500 closing and down payment cost me $31,500 it makes $1,400 a month. Monthly and cost $820 so it clears $580. And it needs about 20,000 in repairs to get it $1,900 a month. But I will leave it as is for now, until I have the money or have to fix it. And now the other half is for sale of the townhouse i already own. I see no choice but to but it, because I'll own the whole building. But I'll have to use a line credit, If I do all profits for a whole year will go to pay the line of credit and credit card back to fix it. After all said and done the profits will be around $5,000 a month. Looking for advice please!

Post: Looking for Advice Please!

David RonquillePosted
  • Marrero, LA
  • Posts 16
  • Votes 0

Hi my name is David,

        I'm looking for advice. In 2016 my aunt had two property's and wanted out because she was to old to deal with it, but she did not want sell because she needed the income. So i took them over (owner finance) one is a double the other is a single. All three together the rent, insurance and property tax is $2,500 a month. Rent is $3,150 (1,100 - 1,150 & 900) so I'm only clearing $650 a month. Then a year later i purchased a half of a townhouse for $70,000 I put $14,000 down. Payed $3,000 closing cost and it rented for $1,000. The note is $465 so I clear $535 a mouth. I was bring in 1,150 a month plus the two i have from my aunt are financed for 15 years, so I'm paying the mortgage down about $1,000 a month. Two months ago I purchased a fourplex and double, the fourplex I payed $200,000 closing and down payment cost me $50,000. I put about $30,000 in it. It makes $3400 monthly and cost $1,410 so clear $1990 on it. The double cost $128,500 closing and down payment cost me $31,500 it makes $1,400 a month. Monthly and cost $820 so it clears $580. And it needs about 20,000 in repairs to get it $1,900 a month. But I will leave it as is for now, until I have the money or have to fix it. And now the other half is for sale of the townhouse i already own. I see no choice but to but it, because I'll own the whole building. But I'll have to use a line credit, If I do all profits for a whole year will go to pay the line of credit and credit card back to fix it. After all said and done the profits will be around $5,000 a month. Looking for advice please!

Post: Rent box & late fees

David RonquillePosted
  • Marrero, LA
  • Posts 16
  • Votes 0
Hi, I’m a new landlord and, just purchased a four Plex I’ve remodeled one side and left existing tenants in the other side. One of the tenants is a problem tenant, and on on government assistance. recently she got in an altercation with one of the other tenants causing them to break their lease and moved out. I’m really not happy with the Tenant any advice on how to get them out? Or Handel this type of situation? Any advice is greatly appreciated. Thanks in advance!

Post: Condominium

David RonquillePosted
  • Marrero, LA
  • Posts 16
  • Votes 0
Looking for advice, Is a condominium a good rental?

Post: Advice

David RonquillePosted
  • Marrero, LA
  • Posts 16
  • Votes 0
Originally posted by @Robert Leonard:

Welcome to BP @David Ronquille!

Your investment objective is an important part of your decision in what's the best option for you David.  By that I mean, what are you trying to accomplish?  Whatever you decide is best for you, I can say, you should keep somewhere in the ball park of 20% of your cash as cash reserves for the unexpected - and you should expect the unexpected.

I'll give you my take on three big factors:

1. YOUR CASH

As a cash buyer, you are at the head of the line when you make offers.    BUT, there are a lot of cash buyers out there and proven ability to close is a factor in which cash offer is better than the next, when all other things are close or equal.

a. Flip.  Having cash on hand gives you options.  You have the funds to put "skin in the game." A term used by hard money lenders (HMLs) to require that you have something to lose if they deal goes bad just like they do.  HMLs will fund a flip project when you have money to put into the deal and that will allow you to take on a larger project that requires more than the cash you have on hand.  Experience is a prerequisite for most, so while it opens some doors, it won't open the floodgates of deal funding.

b. Rental.  The cash buying advantage goes well when paired with my next point.

2. YOUR CREDIT

a. Flip.  Your credit will be a factor with many PMLs when you consider that way of funding deals.  

b. Your credit, if good, can give you some options that are very attractive for buying rental properties.  With your good credit, you can buy with your cash and then refinance with a smaller bank or credit union who will finance this "unconventional" strategy.  Then you put your money back to work on the next one and repeat as you build your portfolio of income producing properties.  There are a lot of details to make such a strategy work, but I'm just offering an overview to give you some food for thought.

3. YOUR TIME

Do you have time on your hands, as in being retired or semi-retired.  Does your job or business require a lot of hours/week or do you work a steady 40 hours and make a high income?  This goes back to my question of what are you trying to accomplish.  

a. Flip.  Especially when you first start, it will take a lot of time to manage the renovation projects that often come with any properties you buy.  There are the rare exceptions when you buy properties that need only paint and flooring, but usually the distress that creates the opportunity is a matter of the condition of the property.

b. Rental You will see the greatest returns on paper, for the hardest properties to manage profitably. If you choose to buy rental properties, you will need to decide if you will manage them or if someone else will? Thinking of buying the highest ROI properties in the rough areas and just handing them over to a PM and let them take the punishment, is a common mistake. The difficulty of finding a good PM company is one of the most common complaints you will hear from investors. Sometimes investors are looking for others to work miracles for 8-10% of monthly rent. If your personality, time available and strategies make PM easy for you, you may enjoy managing your own properties? There are advocates of either if you ask, but it comes down to an individual situation and decision.

I feel like I need another paragraph on YOUR TEAM that addresses a lot of the concerns I mentioned, but I already feel like this is too long.  I hope this helps you figure out what you want to do?  Pace yourself.  Do your homework and make sure you keep that cash reserve I mentioned, you will be glad you did.  Only invest in what you understand.  Don't do anything with your money because I said so or anyone else says so.  Do what you understand well enough to be confident of a profitable outcome.  Feel free to reach out any time I might be able to be of some help to you - I'm always glad to help when I can!