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All Forum Posts by: James Ormond

James Ormond has started 3 posts and replied 16 times.

Post: (New) New Member Introduction, Eastern North Carolina -Ideas for next step?

James OrmondPosted
  • Real Estate Investor
  • Greenville, NC
  • Posts 17
  • Votes 2

Exciting news Jacob! Good luck with it! I know I can't wait to get my hands dirty on my next project! Please keep in touch!

Post: (New) New Member Introduction, Eastern North Carolina -Ideas for next step?

James OrmondPosted
  • Real Estate Investor
  • Greenville, NC
  • Posts 17
  • Votes 2

Jacob Allen

G-Vegas, lol! Glad to see some activity coming out of Raleighwood :-)

I've been in the Greenville area all my life, except for a few years up in the triangle (I went to UNC). I'm pretty familiar with Raleigh. I knew there had to be some semi-local members on BP. What type of investing are you doing currently?

Post: (New) New Member Introduction, Eastern North Carolina -Ideas for next step?

James OrmondPosted
  • Real Estate Investor
  • Greenville, NC
  • Posts 17
  • Votes 2

Brandon Turner

Thanks for the clarification. I'm sure she'll be relieved that there is one less obstacle to us getting married ASAP!
BTW, I've really enjoyed reading the blogs and listening to the podcasts; you guys are doing a great job. You'll see me around; I'm going to start getting more of my thoughts and questions on the forums moving forward.

Thanks again!

Post: (New) New Member Introduction, Eastern North Carolina -Ideas for next step?

James OrmondPosted
  • Real Estate Investor
  • Greenville, NC
  • Posts 17
  • Votes 2

Hello All,

Been a member for almost a year, have read for countless hours, here at BP and also in my ever-growing RE library! I'm ready to DO something! I wanted to lay out some simple facts and ideas and see if some of the more experienced members can help me proceed efficiently.

About me: Mid 30's, employed, good credit, no debt (except current home, has ~30k in equity). I know my local market pretty well, and am comfortable with construction. Single, but soon to be engaged - shhhh...don't tell her, it's a surprise! She is finishing up Nursing school, will be employed full-time by next summer, also has good credit, very small amount of debt, never owned a home.
We live together in a 4br home that I built 5 years ago. We also have 2 rommmate "tenants" that help significantly with the mortgage. Most of my cash reserves are tied up in the house, so I will sell in order to fund the investment property(s). I was planning to wait until next spring (when she is finishing school) to sell the house, unless one or more of the roommates were to move out, in which time we will take that opportunity to list it sooner.

My plan: Acquire rental units to buy and hold, am open to MFR or SFR that will cash flow so I can re-invest and exponentially grow my portfolio longterm. Short-term, I'm trying to find a strategy that will help me acquire multiple properties relatively quickly so they can start working for us asap! We are planning to live in one of the properties as O/O to help with financing options. I would gladly live in one property that needed rehab while the work was being done, then rent and move to the next one, etc. My point here is that we are flexible and determined to do whatever makes the most sense.

Help me: Strategically figure out how to leverage, say $40k into our first few properties - I am familiar with tons of creative financing options but I'm interested specifically in conventional financing using our good credit to get started. I'm thinking that acquiring and managing our first few rentals (building experience and cash flow) will serve as an additional asset for the second wave of acquisitions (that may require more creative financing).

I am committed to getting involved on the forums and asking some of the questions that keep me up at night, so here's the first one:

Is there any benefit to us NOT being married when we start buying? For example, could she get better financing as a first time buyer for "her" property, and I do the same with "my" property purchase? Or is there not any difference if we're married? She is actually OK with purchasing something completely in her name/credit etc if that will help us longterm.

I've got a lot more questions to ask, but this is good to start. Who knows, maybe someone else was wondering the same thing?

Thanks in advance!

Post: Diary of a New Construction Project

James OrmondPosted
  • Real Estate Investor
  • Greenville, NC
  • Posts 17
  • Votes 2

Just wanted to tag along and thank you, J, for taking the time and effort to document your process. I'm excited to see the project through completion.

I built my current home as a new construction 5 years ago, mostly because I was very ambitious, had a lot of contacts in new construction, and also incredibly naive!

Thankfully it went relatively smoothly and I was able to learn a ton. Thankfully it was NOT in crazy beaurocratic Atlanta!!

Aside from the education, it was also nice that even though I finished construction at the end of 2007, right as our construction "bubble" burst, I have been somewhat insulated in the fact that I saved a significant expense contracting the project myself. If I had simply bought an existing new construction home at market price in my neighborhood, I'd have been underwater almost immediately, and still waiting to try to recoup my investment 5 yrs later.

Post: Getting Started with Buy and Hold - Southern Colorado

James OrmondPosted
  • Real Estate Investor
  • Greenville, NC
  • Posts 17
  • Votes 2

AJ Romero

First off, thanks for letting me hijack your thread! Sorry to impose but our situations seem very similar. And yes, I'm beginning to sculpt (and re-sculpt) my plan as I go ;)

I initially wanted to pursue small multi-family properties, for all of the reasons they are so highly touted, especially as a beginner. Outside of a few duplex units, there just haven't seemed to be much inventory at all in my area, and even fewer (a tiny amount) that would garner closer investigating as a possible deal.

So, there are a large amount of SFR available, and I'm starting to discover a few Foreclosures, etc that show decent numbers. For example I found a 3/2 this morning in a neighboring town, Freddie Mac (homesteps) asking price is 50k, neighboring comps are around 100k. Looks to be minimal reno needed, but obviously just a guess, haven't been inside. Not sure about rental rates in this town but I know a local property manager that will give me some honest advice. I'm thinking $700-$750 rent. If I could buy it a little cheaper than asking, this one (or one like it) could be a possibility!

I've kind of gone full circle with my "plan", now thinking SFR may be a viable option, due to many of the reasons you guys have already given.

Thanks for your input! Good luck, and I'll be sure to keep BP posted with my progress.

Post: Getting Started with Buy and Hold - Southern Colorado

James OrmondPosted
  • Real Estate Investor
  • Greenville, NC
  • Posts 17
  • Votes 2

@elizabeth colegrove,

I admire the way you have a plan and are really working it. Sometimes I think that I'm so anxious to get something going that maybe I should just start with any decently safe deal and get my feet wet- start getting some cash flow (even if it's trivial at first), start getting some equity via debt reduction, start getting some tax benefits, and maybe even some appreciation due the market slowly creeping upward.
Maybe an OK deal would be better when started now v/s searching and waiting for that one diamond...

Post: Getting Started with Buy and Hold - Southern Colorado

James OrmondPosted
  • Real Estate Investor
  • Greenville, NC
  • Posts 17
  • Votes 2

Hi AJ,

I just wanted to comment because your post seems to mirror my situation almost exactly. From months and months of reading every book I could find and spending countless hours lurking here on BP, I'm definitely leaning towards long term buy and hold properties. The way you describe your market seems to very much mirror mine. The only properties I see regularly that will cashflow (the way most of the "hardcore" investors here on BP suggest we should look for) are mostly in sketchy neighborhoods. There are plenty of decent SFR around the $100k range, and even some "ok" duplexes. The rents are right around what you're seeing...somewhere between 800-900 as a general rule. Some of these will cashflow a very small amount inititally, but I am finding it a little more difficult to find $100, much less $200 (or more) per door monthly.
I'm just not sure exactly what the best plan of attack would be for my market, and I'm having difficulty tightening up my specific business plan. Maybe some of the other more experienced investors will chime in.

Post: Buying foreclosure, bank doesn't "have" lease...help!

James OrmondPosted
  • Real Estate Investor
  • Greenville, NC
  • Posts 17
  • Votes 2

Steve,

Just curious how this situation worked out for you...Hopefully all went well. I've learned a ton from hours of reading, but it's funny how RE always presents a "new" situation for consideration.
Best of luck,

James

Post: Formal Introduction - Just Starting out in NC

James OrmondPosted
  • Real Estate Investor
  • Greenville, NC
  • Posts 17
  • Votes 2

Thanks, Dale/Dave...

Great to hear that others have started out in eastern NC. I've already started to make some contacts via BP and I'm looking forward to continuing to learn and grow.