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All Forum Posts by: Graziano Casale

Graziano Casale has started 7 posts and replied 40 times.

Ric, sorry to hear that. At least you were able to evict it.

Small claim court seems like a worth approach

Post: Newbie Investing Out of State

Graziano CasalePosted
  • Investor
  • Pasadena, CA
  • Posts 42
  • Votes 16

Hey Curt, welcome to the Indy market! Glad to help if I can

And I don't mind talking Ironman or Marathon neither :) Did few myself

Great job! Congrats

Welcome to the Investing OOS from LA :)

Post: First Buy and Hold with beginner luck

Graziano CasalePosted
  • Investor
  • Pasadena, CA
  • Posts 42
  • Votes 16

Investment Info:

Single-family residence buy & hold investment.

Purchase price: $127,000
Cash invested: $28,717

Beginner luck at full speed! Found this property on the MLS, got a motivated seller that turned in a high return situation.

Good things happen when you take action

What made you interested in investing in this type of deal?

This property met my criteria: SFH, B neighborhood, 1% rule

How did you find this deal and how did you negotiate it?

I found it on the MLS.
It was listed on 08/28 for $145k, and on 9/13 it dropped the price at $140k. When I saw the price drop I started my due diligence thinking of a motivated seller.
We started with a low ball offer at $120k, and after 2 rounds of counter offer we agreed at $127k by 09/25.
The main reason it was sitting on the market was that the Seller wanted to stay in the house and pay rent till June 2020.

How did you finance this deal?

Conventional loan, 20% down, 4.75% interest rate, 30 years fixed.
Process was very slow. Something I learned is to clarify in advance with the lender from which account the money will be coming from. This created an extra week of delay, which was in this case a week of rent lost.

How did you add value to the deal?

Right now sitting and collecting monthly check, didn't turn around the unit yet.

What was the outcome?

When we agreed on the Rent back, I discounted him $600 year and make the tenant in charge of the repairs up to the deductible.
So I didn't have to hire a PM.
This boosted my CoC.
It turned out that Tenant has renewed the lease for one more year. I didn't spend a single $ other than Mortgage, Taxes and Insurance.

Lessons learned? Challenges?

Lesson 1: don't be afraid of a low ball offer. Worst case they say no.
Lesson 2. Investing in good neighborhood gives you better property in the long term. The unit has appreciated in less than one year more than 5%!
Lesson 3: make sure your agent has your best interest in mind. My agent helped me with the Lease agreement for example and that was big for me.

Did you work with any real estate professionals (agents, lenders, etc.) that you'd recommend to others?

I would definitely recommend my Agent. DM me for reference

Post: First Buy and Hold with beginner luck

Graziano CasalePosted
  • Investor
  • Pasadena, CA
  • Posts 42
  • Votes 16

Investment Info:

Single-family residence buy & hold investment.

Purchase price: $127,000
Cash invested: $28,717

Beginner luck at full speed! Found this property on the MLS, got a motivated seller that turned in a high return situation.

Good things happen when you take action

What made you interested in investing in this type of deal?

This property met my criteria: SFH, B neighborhood, 1% rule

How did you find this deal and how did you negotiate it?

I found it on the MLS.
It was listed on 08/28 for $145k, and on 9/13 it dropped the price at $140k. When I saw the price drop I started my due diligenc thinking of a motivated seller.
We started with a low ball offer at $120k, and after 2 rounds of counter offer we agreed at $127k by 09/25.
The main reason it was sitting on the market was that the Seller wanted to stay in the house and pay rent till June 2020.
It turned out to be my 'advantage', since as investor I didn't mind he renting back

How did you finance this deal?

Conventional loan, 20% down, 4.75% interest rate, 30 years fixed.
Process was very slow. Something I learned is to clarify in advance with the lender from which account the money will be coming from. This created an extra week of delay, which was in this case a week of rent lost.

How did you add value to the deal?

Right now sitting and collecting monthly check, didn't turn around the unit yet.

What was the outcome?

When we agreed on the Rent back, I discounted him $600 year and make the tenant in charge of the repairs up to the deductible.
So I didn't have to hire a PM.
This boosted my CoC.
It turned out that Tenant has renewed the lease for one more year. I didn't spend a single $ other than Mortgage, Taxes and Insurance.

Lessons learned? Challenges?

Lesson 1: don't be afraid of a low ball offer. Worst case they say no.
Lesson 2. Investing in good neighborhood gives you better property in the long term. The unit has appreciated in less than one year more than 5%!
Lesson 3: make sure your agent has your best interest in mind. My agent helped me with the Lease agreement for example and that was big for me.

Did you work with any real estate professionals (agents, lenders, etc.) that you'd recommend to others?

I would definitely recommend my Agent. DM me for reference

Post: KNOW YOUR BUYING CRITERIA

Graziano CasalePosted
  • Investor
  • Pasadena, CA
  • Posts 42
  • Votes 16

Doesn't really matter the asset you are buying, defining Criteria is really important

Great post, thank you for sharing

Post: Real estate meet ups for Indianapolis investors

Graziano CasalePosted
  • Investor
  • Pasadena, CA
  • Posts 42
  • Votes 16

@Nathan Cruz

Since it’s virtual, it would be pretty easy to create one! It might be a great idea to boost network and know how

Graz

Post: Areas to invest in Indianapolis

Graziano CasalePosted
  • Investor
  • Pasadena, CA
  • Posts 42
  • Votes 16

@Layne T. I agree a lot with Layne!

I would probably add Greenwood to the list

Glad to help if you have any question

Post: OOS Investing from California - partner?

Graziano CasalePosted
  • Investor
  • Pasadena, CA
  • Posts 42
  • Votes 16

@Kyle Marek

Hi Kyle

Like you I'm in Cali, although SoCal and I'm investing in Midwest (Indianapolis). Currently own 4 SFH and looking to grow.

If you want to chat, send me a DM.

I’m open to a partnership or just to share info

Good luck

Graz

Post: Choosing OOS Market for Rentals

Graziano CasalePosted
  • Investor
  • Pasadena, CA
  • Posts 42
  • Votes 16

@Mark Weinstein

I would go back to the basics of economic: supply and demand

If there is growing population and low unemployment you have solid base.

Another important factor is definitely some Landlord friendly state, especially for OOS investors.

Good luck

Graz