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All Forum Posts by: Eric Boshart

Eric Boshart has started 12 posts and replied 62 times.

Post: Innovation in the Hard Money Lending Space

Eric BoshartPosted
  • Lender
  • Fort Worth, TX
  • Posts 77
  • Votes 20

@Noah Thacher great point. I've worked with "best rate" lenders instead of "best service" lenders, and the difference is palpable.

Post: Innovation in the Hard Money Lending Space

Eric BoshartPosted
  • Lender
  • Fort Worth, TX
  • Posts 77
  • Votes 20

Thanks very much for the insight. I agree JV partnerships (taking equity upside on the backend) would certainly be appealing, and I could adjust the return to meet the higher risk profile.

Strictly rehab loans usually require you to sit behind a first lien holder correct, because typically they would finance the purchase with a bank/different lender. Again, I think that would be fine as long as you're adjusting the return. 

Very interesting!

Post: Innovation in the Hard Money Lending Space

Eric BoshartPosted
  • Lender
  • Fort Worth, TX
  • Posts 77
  • Votes 20

Love the 24-hour decision framework. Thanks for the reply! If I ever choose to invest in Kansas City I know who to call.

Post: Innovation in the Hard Money Lending Space

Eric BoshartPosted
  • Lender
  • Fort Worth, TX
  • Posts 77
  • Votes 20

Hi BP Community,

I got my start in RE investing by providing a loan to an experienced flipper. Since then, I became the borrower, using many different hard money lenders on BRRRR's in the area. Lately, I've considered getting back into the hard money/private money lending space in a more scalable way. However, I'm struggling to figure out how to be innovative in the space as there are probably over 100 hard money lenders just in the DFW area alone, and they're all racing to the bottom in the terms of pricing, which leaves little profitability on a per-loan basis. The material I'm digesting that covers this topic isn't really providing me any creative new ways to add margin or serve the community better than what's already out there.

I'm turning to the BP community to see if any of you have had experience with innovative hard money lenders or have ideas on how to gain a competitive advantage and offer a superior product than what exists presently.


Thanks!

Post: Need Advice on Offloading a Property

Eric BoshartPosted
  • Lender
  • Fort Worth, TX
  • Posts 77
  • Votes 20

Thank you everyone for the well-informed advice and input!

Post: Need Advice on Offloading a Property

Eric BoshartPosted
  • Lender
  • Fort Worth, TX
  • Posts 77
  • Votes 20

Hi BP Community, I am currently in the process of offloading a property in north Texas. It was one of the misses my brother and I have experienced throughout our investment journey, and it really forced us to eat some humble pie. We're much better investors because of it, but the process has been pretty grueling. I'd love any and all advice. I'll try to keep the details short.

Last year we purchased a portfolio: a single family home, a 6-plex, and a 5-plex. They were in such bad shape that we were considering tearing all of them down. However, we got a really good quote from a contractor we trusted, so we decided to move forward with repairing them. The plan was to BRRRR this portfolio. This was our first dabble in commercial properties, and it was our contractor's first dabble as well (Mistake #1). We also decided to use the architect the previous owners had used because he already had drafted a set of plans for each property. This would save us some money. We didn't know that the city didn't like those plans (Mistake #2).

The contractor eventually was in over his skis between having to increase the diameter of the public sewer line to ADA compliance to the required indoor sprinkler systems, so a few weeks after closing on the property, he had to walk away from the project.

As we scrambled to find a new contractor and to get our plans approved by the city, our holding and soft costs ballooned. It took six months to find a contractor we trust and to get the city to give us a thumbs up. 

Once we did start the work, prices for material and labor had skyrocketed. Because of this, we used locals for the unskilled labor (demo and clean-out), but because I live an hour away from the property, I wasn't able to monitor them closely (Mistake #3). They had only completed half the work of cleaning out, so trash and debris were scattered throughout the lawn. The city did not like this at all and fined us heavily. We then had to pay twice for the work.

We also had used a lender that had good initial terms but were very strict and delayed about releasing reimbursement funds for the rehab completed (Mistake #4). This put us out of pocket considerably and hurt other areas of our business.

Eventually we decided to offload the properties. We put it on the MLS and got no real offers because of the amount of work it would take to fix these, and because we had civil penalties imposed already, when people called into the city to inquire about the property, they would tell them that it's under close watch from the building inspectors, which no investor wants to hear.

We decided to delist and offload them off the market at a reduced price, and eventually got all three under contract. The buyer was using a bank line, so it was a 30-day close with inspections and appraisals. Much to our surprise, the single family appraised less than what he was buying it for, so he only picked up the 6-plex and the 5-plex.

We have now gone through about 10 wholesalers trying to offload this single family home at our payoff amount with the lender and have had no luck. Even at that number, we will still be losing a good amount because of all the holding costs, city fines, the work we put into it, and the construction fence the city forced us to rent.

We are considering putting it back on the MLS at a further reduced price, because it has been about 7 months and we know market conditions have only improved, but with both the over-exposure in the off-market world and the city deterring potential buyers, it's tough to see this actually being sold. We also no longer have the cash to rehab this ourselves.

We explored tearing it down and selling the lot, but the lot comps in the area are very weak.

We can get foreclosed on, or close at a heavily reduced price and refinance our personal homes to meet the payoff amount at closing, but we are trying to exhaust every option before doing either of these things.

Is there any other option I am not exploring here? We still think it's a viable deal for a skilled contractor to take on and flip, supported by real comps. Plus, we went through the headache for getting the plans approved, demo, clean-out, foundation, and roof. Now it just needs a fresh pair of hands to realize.

As mentioned, we have grown so much as people and as investors throughout this process. We can gripe at the city and the contractors and the lender, but responsibility is 100% on my brother and I. We can't wait to get back out there and find some good ones!

Thanks for reading.

Post: For-Profit with a Non-Profit Arm Question

Eric BoshartPosted
  • Lender
  • Fort Worth, TX
  • Posts 77
  • Votes 20

Hi BP Community,

My partner and I are real estate investors in Texas, and we're currently assessing the viability of a one-for-one giving model, where a buyer would purchase a new-build, and we would use as much of the profit as needed to build a home in certain regions in Peru (where my family is from). 

I would like to fund the first one through a pay-to-enter raffle sweepstakes. It would allow us to go through the construction process a little more carefully (as we're using new technology) and would hopefully establish a marketing presence for us. However, according to law, only non-profits can create pay-to-enter raffles, and the excess proceeds can only be used for the non-profit purpose. I definitely want to create a for-profit entity that has a giving component, similar to TOMS. Anything creative I can do to get over this hump? Any feedback would be so much appreciated. Thanks a bunch!

Post: Investing in Sub2's for AirBnb

Eric BoshartPosted
  • Lender
  • Fort Worth, TX
  • Posts 77
  • Votes 20

Hi BP Community,

I'm an investor here in the DFW metroplex, and I've been reading a lot about Sub2 deals. I thought they might be a great way to generate positive cashflow through AirBnB for a minimal cost. Does anyone see any potential hiccups with this? I'm aware of the dreaded "Due on Sale" clause but am not as worried about that as long as I keep my mortgage payments on time. The arbitrage between the mortgage payment and the AirBnB money is what's most appealing. Curious to get everyone's thoughts! Thanks as always.

Post: Where should I domicile my LLC if I'll be providing hard money?

Eric BoshartPosted
  • Lender
  • Fort Worth, TX
  • Posts 77
  • Votes 20

Thank you so much everyone for the time. I am consulting with a tax attorney, but from what I've seen, I should domicile in my home state (which you are right, have lower filing fees), and register as a foreign entity in the states in which I operate.

The rumors were true...this site is the BEST!

Post: Where should I domicile my LLC if I'll be providing hard money?

Eric BoshartPosted
  • Lender
  • Fort Worth, TX
  • Posts 77
  • Votes 20

Hi all, my first post here. I am planning on providing hard money loans to a number of investors/flippers across the country, the first close being in Pennsylvania in the coming weeks. I live in California.

I'm confused as to where to house my LLC. I've heard Delaware because it's inexpensive to file and the taxes are lower, but I've also gotten the advice to just house it where I live (California). I'm reluctant to house it in Pennsylvania because I know I won't only be doing business there, and also I don't have an address there or registered agent.

Lastly, will I have to register the LLC in each state that I am active in? I'm not actually purchasing property, so I'm not sure what the ramifications are. I've heard you don't have to register where the property

Any advice would be extremely helpful, keeping in mind that it might be best just to consult a tax attorney.

Thank you!