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All Forum Posts by: James N Beliak

James N Beliak has started 1 posts and replied 12 times.

Post: Member since Summer 2023

James N Beliak
Pro Member
Posted
  • Toronto, Ontario
  • Posts 12
  • Votes 10
Quote from @Cody Neustaedter:
Quote from @James N Beliak:
Quote from @Cody Neustaedter:

Hey @James N Beliak look into RBC's Vacation home mortgage. If you wanted to get into the Airbnb space you could buy a STR using only 10% down. When I was working with RBC they said as long as you use the property yourself they would be fine with it. This was in 2021 so they are probably more strict about it now, but still something to look into.

The interest rate for an investment property in the U.S. can be quite high if you are a foreigner and using a DSCR loan.

If you are looking for affordability in Canada you should check out the prairie provinces. Winnipeg is a "tenant friendly" city but we have a ton of people investing here because it’s affordable and you can screen tenants to get away from the squatters. 

Hi Cody,
I appreciate the advice to look into RBC’s vacation home mortgage. 
Thank you for the advice about checking out other parts of Canada. 
I was just looking at investing in Calgary, in a new Townhome, but have not been serious about it. The prices there are about a third of the cost of one in Toronto. 
Thank you again,
James

 Alberta city's have seen a lot of money move their recently as a lot of people see Alberta's economic policy's as being favorable over the next few years. Definitely lots of opportunity in Calgary!   

Cody,
thank you. 
James

Post: Member since Summer 2023

James N Beliak
Pro Member
Posted
  • Toronto, Ontario
  • Posts 12
  • Votes 10
Quote from @Cody Neustaedter:

Hey @James N Beliak look into RBC's Vacation home mortgage. If you wanted to get into the Airbnb space you could buy a STR using only 10% down. When I was working with RBC they said as long as you use the property yourself they would be fine with it. This was in 2021 so they are probably more strict about it now, but still something to look into.

The interest rate for an investment property in the U.S. can be quite high if you are a foreigner and using a DSCR loan.

If you are looking for affordability in Canada you should check out the prairie provinces. Winnipeg is a "tenant friendly" city but we have a ton of people investing here because it’s affordable and you can screen tenants to get away from the squatters. 

Hi Cody,
I appreciate the advice to look into RBC’s vacation home mortgage. 
Thank you for the advice about checking out other parts of Canada. 
I was just looking at investing in Calgary, in a new Townhome, but have not been serious about it. The prices there are about a third of the cost of one in Toronto. 
Thank you again,
James

Post: Member since Summer 2023

James N Beliak
Pro Member
Posted
  • Toronto, Ontario
  • Posts 12
  • Votes 10
Quote from @Michael Smythe:

@James N Beliak we have several Canadian clients that either have a Michigan LLC ($50 setup, $25 annual) or they use the IRS W-8BEN-E form.

https://www.irs.gov/pub/irs-pdf/fw8bene.pdf

Michael,
thank you for the information.  
James

Post: Member since Summer 2023

James N Beliak
Pro Member
Posted
  • Toronto, Ontario
  • Posts 12
  • Votes 10
Quote from @Francis Faucher:
Quote from @James N Beliak:
Quote from @Francis Faucher:
Quote from @James N Beliak:

Hi everyone. My name is James. Besides our home , I own a condominium and some property with other investors. I have done the Rookie Boot Camp which was very beneficial to me  and I am now doing the Multi Family Boot Camp.
I was interested in buying some US property in Tennessee, Ohio & Florida. I was looking to Rent to Retirement and another similar company. 
However, liability issues came up about a Canadian owning US property outside of an LLC , but also the heavy taxation of an LLC for a Canadian. There is a solution for Canadians, from NCH out of Nevada to use a regular corporation to hold limited partnerships. Apparently, there are other strategies I don't know about yet.
The issue with high interest rates is they are even higher for foreign investors. Therefore , the down payment amount has to be higher so the property cash flows to break even. 
 I also would like to take advantage of Vendor Takebacks or other forms of using other peoples’ money. The process continues. 
Best wishes to Everyone. 


 Hi James,

I'm from Canada too, interested to invest in the US Market.

In terms of structure, having a C Corp is not necessarily the best option, because of the FAPI Rule. You might end up paying taxes on the personal side for money you wouldn't even distribute to yourself. 

One of the structure that was recommended by a US-CAN CPA to avoid double taxation and stay protected was the following: Real estate A is owned by LLC A, Real estate B is owned by LLC B, Real Estate C is owned by LLC C (or you can put some of them together instead of having many LLCs). All the LLCs are owned by a USA Limited partnership. The Limited partnership is owned 1% by your GP (Either LLC or C Corp) the LLC or C Corp is 100% owned by you. The other 99% of the limited partnership is owned by the LP which would be yourself in Canada.

Only drawdown with all that is the cost and you have many returns to do every year. That could be hard on the cash flow. Other solution is to start your Visa application and then get a SSN OR you could buy in your personal name and have an Umbrella Insurance if ever you get sued. 

If ever you receive any other recommendation, I'd be more than open to hear it because I'm currently in that process right now! 

Let's talk!

Francis

Francis,
I may not have stated it in my post, but that is the similar advice I got too from a Nevada law firm. Thank you. I want to thank Rent To Retirement & Zach, who got me a free consultation for.
The costs to do this do reduce cash flow as well as the administrative time to file the different returns/reports are real, but it is worth it to reduce liability for the long term. 
But further concern for me was that interest rates (which for a US resident doing an investment loan without the other methods available in the USA, is high) the interest rate is higher for a nonresident. That meant that a higher down payment is required to cashflow. I therefore, didn’t do anything. I have been looking here in Ontario, Canada for now. But I have found that to get a mortgage through my holding company based on the merits of the deal does not necessarily get me as good a rate as a personal mortgage. I am still a newbie to this and do have get out my comfort zone to pursue this. 

 Thank you Francis. 
james


 Thanks for your reply James!

I don't know Ontario's market, but here in Quebec, all the laws are tenant friendly. Even for evictions for non-payment, it takes months and months and months and months. They live here for "free". The tenant decides if he/she wants to stay, meaning you can't decide to take back the apartment, renovate it and rent it at a higher price, unless the tenant agrees to leave (which is usually really pricy). That's the main reason why I decided to look south. In some states (usually red states), the laws are favorable for landlords. 

In terms of financing, what you will usually see is a lower LTV and somewhat a higher interest rate. Now, what most lender told me is that if you have an LLC that is owned 25%+ (some are 50%+) by a US Resident, they would finance based on that person and you would get the same financing as a US person (rates, LTV, etc). One of the project we did in Florida was like that. They didn't really care about us, but they looked at the US Person (FICO Score, experience, etc). That being said, even if you own 50% of the LLC, you can have a different agreement or charge several fees to that LLC or to your project to receive more than 50% of the profit. Example, analysis fees, marketing fees, management fees, etc. All these fees needs to be arm's length rate of course and need to be documented.

The interest rate is one portion of your deal. FINDING THE DEAL is what you should look first, because if you have a really good deal, it would still make sense, even with a higher interest rate. Let's take an example, a property at 115k, let's pretend it's turnkey for now. 

Purchase Price: 115k
Cash down: 30% (foreigner) = 34 500
Loan: 80 500
Payment (Interest rate 8%, 30yr fixed): 591/mo
Payment (Interest rate 9%, 30yr fixed): 648/mo

See? The difference is only $57/mo and the only metric I changed is the interest rate. Of course, I haven't include the taxes, the insurance, the property management, maintenance reserve, vacancy, etc. My point was simply to make you understand that a difference of 1% in the interest rate, should not be the only criteria you look at, but finding a good deal is. 

Because Imagine if you could rent that property for $1250/mo let's say because you found a good deal. That would give you about $600 for the remaining expenses (650 goes to the mortgage). Let's assume 8% Management fee, that's 100 less. 500 remaining. Let's assume another 100 for maintenance reserve, 400 remaining. On that 400, you need to pay taxes and Insurance. That's where you need to find states that are investor friendly where the prices and taxes are not too high for the rent you can get. Let's say you now have about another 100 for taxes and insurance. You now have 300 remaining. There's a lot of buffer for mistakes you did in your calculations.

Personally, needing to pay a higher interest rate should not be the main concern, because usually, if you have good deals (I mean real good deals, not the good deals according to your broker), you should end up not too bad at the end. 

Same thing for multi residential or bigger project. How many times I bought projects or land that people assumed were too expensive, but after what I did in renos or ground up, my IRR was higher than most investors had when they bought their "cheap" asset.

Anyways, hope that sort of helped and if you have any questions do not hesitate!

Francis


 Francis, 

Thank you for your reply. Very interesting. I continue to avoid the US market for now. A big part is the process of corporations and & LPs and that I am fairly inexperienced in investing and what to start simpler. The new legislation for higher taxation of capital gains, to 66.67%, with no exemption for corporations (individuals get 250k per year) is another excuse I am using for now. And I find initially, I am getting easier financing as an individual.  

I did not know that Quebec laws were so tenant friendly. Where I worked, we used a property management company that was very on top of the collection of rents. If they did not pay, they would take them to the rental board fairly quickly. 
I thank you for the analysis example, showing that interest rate changes of one or more percent will not necessarily kill a deal if the deal has adequate cash flow in the first place. 
also the suggestion of umbrella insurance. 
Francis, thank you. 
James

Post: Member since Summer 2023

James N Beliak
Pro Member
Posted
  • Toronto, Ontario
  • Posts 12
  • Votes 10
Quote from @Francis Faucher:
Quote from @James N Beliak:

Hi everyone. My name is James. Besides our home , I own a condominium and some property with other investors. I have done the Rookie Boot Camp which was very beneficial to me  and I am now doing the Multi Family Boot Camp.
I was interested in buying some US property in Tennessee, Ohio & Florida. I was looking to Rent to Retirement and another similar company. 
However, liability issues came up about a Canadian owning US property outside of an LLC , but also the heavy taxation of an LLC for a Canadian. There is a solution for Canadians, from NCH out of Nevada to use a regular corporation to hold limited partnerships. Apparently, there are other strategies I don't know about yet.
The issue with high interest rates is they are even higher for foreign investors. Therefore , the down payment amount has to be higher so the property cash flows to break even. 
 I also would like to take advantage of Vendor Takebacks or other forms of using other peoples’ money. The process continues. 
Best wishes to Everyone. 


 Hi James,

I'm from Canada too, interested to invest in the US Market.

In terms of structure, having a C Corp is not necessarily the best option, because of the FAPI Rule. You might end up paying taxes on the personal side for money you wouldn't even distribute to yourself. 

One of the structure that was recommended by a US-CAN CPA to avoid double taxation and stay protected was the following: Real estate A is owned by LLC A, Real estate B is owned by LLC B, Real Estate C is owned by LLC C (or you can put some of them together instead of having many LLCs). All the LLCs are owned by a USA Limited partnership. The Limited partnership is owned 1% by your GP (Either LLC or C Corp) the LLC or C Corp is 100% owned by you. The other 99% of the limited partnership is owned by the LP which would be yourself in Canada.

Only drawdown with all that is the cost and you have many returns to do every year. That could be hard on the cash flow. Other solution is to start your Visa application and then get a SSN OR you could buy in your personal name and have an Umbrella Insurance if ever you get sued. 

If ever you receive any other recommendation, I'd be more than open to hear it because I'm currently in that process right now! 

Let's talk!

Francis

Francis,
I may not have stated it in my post, but that is the similar advice I got too from a Nevada law firm. Thank you. I want to thank Rent To Retirement & Zach, who got me a free consultation for.
The costs to do this do reduce cash flow as well as the administrative time to file the different returns/reports are real, but it is worth it to reduce liability for the long term. 
But further concern for me was that interest rates (which for a US resident doing an investment loan without the other methods available in the USA, is high) the interest rate is higher for a nonresident. That meant that a higher down payment is required to cashflow. I therefore, didn’t do anything. I have been looking here in Ontario, Canada for now. But I have found that to get a mortgage through my holding company based on the merits of the deal does not necessarily get me as good a rate as a personal mortgage. I am still a newbie to this and do have get out my comfort zone to pursue this. 

 Thank you Francis. 
james

Post: Member since Summer 2023

James N Beliak
Pro Member
Posted
  • Toronto, Ontario
  • Posts 12
  • Votes 10
Quote from @Giuseppe Pavone:

@James N Beliak I'm a Canadian living in Florida now, investing full-time down here.  Have you spoken to RBC or other Canadian banks?  I remember RBC had a couple of good options for Canadians wanting to buy in the US.  I had a friend who just purchased a 2nd home in Florida with RBC and got a great interest rate and they use your Canadian credit but it's a US mortgage.  Good luck!

Giuseppe Pavone,
thank you for that advice!

Post: Member since Summer 2023

James N Beliak
Pro Member
Posted
  • Toronto, Ontario
  • Posts 12
  • Votes 10
Quote from @Samuel Diouf:

Hey James, no worries.

If you work with an investment focused agent, they will connect you with great PM's who will be able to manage the units.

Samuel, thanks again. 

Post: Member since Summer 2023

James N Beliak
Pro Member
Posted
  • Toronto, Ontario
  • Posts 12
  • Votes 10
Quote from @Samuel Diouf:

Hey James, 

Columbus, OH is a great option to consider. Multiple, billion dollar companies are investing substantial amounts of money into our area, such as Intel, Google, and Amazon. Which in turn will bring plenty of other investors and general business to the market.

Why do you want to go with a company if you are learning the game?


 Hi Samuel,

Sorry I haven’t gotten back to you in 2 months  

One of the important factors to have when having a property out of my state or country is reliable property management. Since I have little experience doing it, I believe it is very important and that would be why I was considering Rent to Retirement. I recently completed the Multi Family bootcamp where for multiple units, property management is especially important. 

Post: Member since Summer 2023

James N Beliak
Pro Member
Posted
  • Toronto, Ontario
  • Posts 12
  • Votes 10

Hi Jessie,

You right that there is a way to partner with a US citizen in order to do LLC investing and take advantage of potentially lower interest rates. I need to do more research and decide if I am going to invest in a market in the US.
Thank you. James

Post: Member since Summer 2023

James N Beliak
Pro Member
Posted
  • Toronto, Ontario
  • Posts 12
  • Votes 10

Zach thank you.