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All Forum Posts by: Frank Oudheusden

Frank Oudheusden has started 10 posts and replied 46 times.

Post: The story of my first deal...

Frank OudheusdenPosted
  • Investor
  • Philadelphia, PA
  • Posts 46
  • Votes 11

Tear Off Roof - 2 years ago
Energy Efficient Furnace - 5 years ago
Hot Water Heat - Neither New or Old - Prob has 5-6 years left

Property was built in 1920. Had maybe 2-3 owners it's entire life. The title search yeilded NOTHING (meaning the current owner has had it prior since before 1973). It has been very loved, I plan to continue that.

Post: The story of my first deal...

Frank OudheusdenPosted
  • Investor
  • Philadelphia, PA
  • Posts 46
  • Votes 11

I saw a SFH listing pop up late on a Thursday afternoon, I forwarded it to Mark (a realtor, property manager, mentor I've been working with in my target area). Later that evening Mark returned my call while I was the metro into downtown Washington DC to see a friend play a concert at a local bar. I decided to pursue it knowing full well that if it panned out I was going to have a hectic evening.

Sure enough, Mark visited the property immediately and I was walking on the street listening to the play-by-play of each room. I did a quick fundamental analysis in my head and all the numbers seemed to work out and we proceeded with a bid. Mark drew up the paperwork fast as I scrambled to find a FedEx/Kinkos 5 blocks from the bar. I was in the middle of doing the paperwork when BAM! the store manager informed me it was closing. He told me where I could find a 24/7 branch and my fiance, roommate and I proceeded to walk the 15 blocks to the next FedEx/Kinkos. It was during this long walk that I began to freak out. Everyone tells you that the first deal will make you sick despite the fact you have comfort in knowing that the math works. Was I really going to put in a full-priced, no contingency (except financing) offer on a house I didn't even see pictures of...in the middle of the night...in a smelly FedEx store? I made a call to another investor and he confirmed my math was good and reassured me that it was worth the shot. I completed the paperwork despite having the internet machine eat my credit card (a serious meltdown moment).

We grabbed a cab and made it back up town with 10 min to spare before my friends band came on.

The next day I was informed the deal was done and we took it down! Most of the conservative variables we used to analyze the property are coming in better than expected and the returns should be solid. I got that initial boost of confidence most newbie investors strive for, the decisions I made were based on months of reading, asking questions, making spreadsheets and analyzing properties in that market.

The best thing I could take away from this experience is that sometimes being ready to pull the trigger is a lot more than just over coming the initial fear of bidding; sometimes it's about being prepared to do whatever you need to just to have that opportunity.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~

SFH - 4BR/1.5B - 1300sqft
Purchased for $49900 (30 fixed - 20% down) [rentable condition as-is]
Rent Comparable - $1150/month
10% property management
8% vacancy
15% repair/maintenance
$400 insurance
$2300 taxes
$5k rehab

Estimated Cash Flow - $358/month pre-tax
Estimated Cap Rate - 13%
Estimated Cash-On-Cash Return - 17% (includes estimated down payment, closing costs, reserves, llc formation, rehab)
Estimated Full ROI - $23% (tax write-offs, mortgage pay-down)

There is probably some captured equity in there too. A 10% cap valuation would put this property at $65k.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Now onto learning about LLCs and actually closing this thing.

Special Thanks to Mark.

Post: Where to get a CPA?

Frank OudheusdenPosted
  • Investor
  • Philadelphia, PA
  • Posts 46
  • Votes 11

I am a new investor who lives in Maryland but wants to purchase an investment property in NY. I am lining up my team and have a realtor, attorney, insurance broker, morgage broker, etc in the NY area but am wondering if it would be better to use a CPA in NY or MD.

I'm assuming sound tax advice would come from someone who knows the real estate tax laws of both states pretty well. Is this a real problem or something I could do with a CPA anywhere?

Post: Newbie from Columbia, MD - Investing in Rochester, NY

Frank OudheusdenPosted
  • Investor
  • Philadelphia, PA
  • Posts 46
  • Votes 11

Joshua,

I hope you didn't own WFR last year! $15 to under $2 in less than 12 months. Good ole poly-silicon prices.

From what I've read it would be advantageous to have a property manager inspect the properties with me so I can have a clear idea from his point of view what needs to be done with the property.

Is that a realistic expectation of a property manager for a first-time fourplex owner or something that is just written about? or maybe just expected on a larger deal?

-Frank-

Post: Newbie from Columbia, MD - Investing in Rochester, NY

Frank OudheusdenPosted
  • Investor
  • Philadelphia, PA
  • Posts 46
  • Votes 11

My name is Frank Oudheusden and I live in Columbia, MD. I am a New Product Introduction Engineer working for a solar power company (MEMC/SunEdison). I help develop rooftop racking structures for commercial solar projects.

I went to RIT in Rochester, NY for my engineering degree and discovered what a great rental market it is. I am planning to purchase my first multi-family investment property there at the end of 2012.

My immediate goal is to go through the entire process with this first property (finding, negotiating, purchasing, working with a property manager, forming an LLC, taxes, etc) so I'm 100% sure this is for me. I'll work on the financial independent cash-flow after that sometime. Big goals, small steps.

I've read my books on the subject (20-25) and I feel confident that my analysis tools are getting more sophisticated and more accurate. Overall I think a 4-unit multi-family residential will be my first target.

Glad I found these forums and like minded people. I have many questions.
-Frank-