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All Forum Posts by: Elvis Vasquez

Elvis Vasquez has started 30 posts and replied 138 times.

Post: Miami duplicate tax-deed sale?

Elvis VasquezPosted
  • Accountant
  • Miami, FL
  • Posts 144
  • Votes 54
Originally posted by @Wayne Brooks:

Has been that way here for years.....a few players put together “mini hedge funds” $5-$10M of investors money.....they make their money putting these investors money to work, management/renovation fees, etc.
So, it’s not their own money they’re playing with so they’re willing to pay more for properties than us little guys are.

the real questions is how are they bringing in 10%-12% in ROI while making simple thousand dollar mouse click mistakes?

Post: Miami duplicate tax-deed sale?

Elvis VasquezPosted
  • Accountant
  • Miami, FL
  • Posts 144
  • Votes 54
Originally posted by @Wayne Brooks:

Yep, as you know the deposit is pulled from their account immediately.

 I'm assuming these guys do not perform due diligence at all...

All he needed to do was research the title report before placing a bid unless he mistakenly bid on something (that's atleast a 1.5k mistake).

Who's our main competition anyway? random shell llcs who's funded by big investors?

Post: Miami duplicate tax-deed sale?

Elvis VasquezPosted
  • Accountant
  • Miami, FL
  • Posts 144
  • Votes 54
Originally posted by @Wayne Brooks:

Looks like for some reason they are showing the prior 05-08-17 sale, and I assume that buyer forfeited (realized he made a mistake), hence the rescheduled auction.

 he loses his deposit right?

Post: Miami duplicate tax-deed sale?

Elvis VasquezPosted
  • Accountant
  • Miami, FL
  • Posts 144
  • Votes 54

now it extended.....

what in the world is going on with the auctions today.

Post: Miami duplicate tax-deed sale?

Elvis VasquezPosted
  • Accountant
  • Miami, FL
  • Posts 144
  • Votes 54

Saw this earlier while doing a quick search.

this must be an error right? looks like a duplicate tax-deed sale (two different LLCs "won").


FOLIO: 3031110280150
Same folio same case ID differen't bidder number.

Post: 700k Lien - Code enforcement Miami

Elvis VasquezPosted
  • Accountant
  • Miami, FL
  • Posts 144
  • Votes 54
Originally posted by @Carlos Zapata:

@Elvis Vasquez   yes,  they can granted that it already happened to me twice,    I did it on my own,  just be there, present the facts, make the corrections,  they normally give you time to make those corrections,   good luck

 What kind of timeline did they provide you?

2-6 months?

Post: Note/Tax lien purchase: Where am I going wrong?

Elvis VasquezPosted
  • Accountant
  • Miami, FL
  • Posts 144
  • Votes 54

I'm curious as to why people buy so many liens at 0.25%.... makes no sense unless you have massive reserves to wait 3 years.... 

Is it just ignorance?

Post: SOFI Mortgage process review

Elvis VasquezPosted
  • Accountant
  • Miami, FL
  • Posts 144
  • Votes 54

I wanted to know how exactly does this process break-down compared to conventional mortgages (using SOFI)?

Are you able to purchase a house that requires minimal rehabbing?

What was your total closing cost for your mortgage?

Originally posted by @Doug Woodward:

Brand new to Bigger Pockets. Through show 19 so far, but first post.

I just got a property under a standard 1-4 residential TREC contract in Ft. Worth, TX for $45K. It is schedule for a tax sale on June 5th (next Tuesday). It was originally brought to me through a wholesaler who stepped out and put me in direct contact with the seller when they realized how tight the timeline they were dealing with was.  I called the wholesaler's title company this morning to see if they had gotten far enough to be able to issue a commitment that would allow me to close on it by Monday. After originally saying that they were ready, they came back and said that there was a federal tax lien and that would take them at least 30 days to curate.

I called the law firm handling the property tax sale and they said they could not put a hold on the sale even if I sent them the contract for purchase. Further, they said the only way to stop the sale was payment in full (~$10K) by Monday, June 4th.  I have the cash on to make that payment.

My question is -- does it make sense for me to switch this around and make it a seller finance purchase with $10K down used to pay off the taxes. I would then stretch the remaining $35K over 30 years or due upon settlement with the IRS, whichever comes first. I'm spit-balling here. I have never purchased via seller finance before, but the seller is motivated to get her IRS issue cleaned up -- roughly $31K.

I know this is a risky proposition on the $10K, but I think I am willing to gamble on this to give us enough time to work through pay-off arrangements with IRS if it is the best way to keep control of the property until we can get to clean title. We just flipped and sold a property directly across the street for $119K, and we have another property up the same street currently under contract -- so we know and like the neighborhood.

The other way, I have thought of to handle this is to have the seller take a loan (from a 3rd party) to pay the property taxes (if she is willing to take the loan) and keeping our current TREC contract in place buying us the time to work through the IRS issues and go to conventional closing once those issues are resolved.

Lastly, I am not very knowledgeable regarding tax sales, but my understanding is that the property owner has some amount of time to "redeem" the taxes that were purchased for a premium of like 25%, but I don't really want to potentially lose control of the property or add in any unnecessary costs.

Eager to hear any other thoughts or suggestions.

Thank you in advance for your feedback!

 Call the IRS Lien department and get a faxed copy of the lien amount.

Post: I need serious help!

Elvis VasquezPosted
  • Accountant
  • Miami, FL
  • Posts 144
  • Votes 54
Originally posted by @Jon Holdman:

@Sigoura Edge if the payment due was $1000 and you only sent $600 then it doesn't matter when the payment was sent.  It wasn't the full payment.

 
exactly.... lol unless this guy over-paid an extreme amount for the house I see no issue with paying $300.

I'd be damn grateful if a owner-financed a house at 4% with minimal closing costs.