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All Forum Posts by: Jason Mileshko

Jason Mileshko has started 0 posts and replied 122 times.

Post: Investing in southern california

Jason MileshkoPosted
  • United States
  • Posts 125
  • Votes 49
Originally posted by @Khristopher Kyle Garay:

Ive heard a lot of negative comments about investing in southern california. So is it true? Is so cal not the best place to invest in rental property?

Opinions....?

 You may have a hard time making sense of the numbers unless you buy some kind of foreclosure or property that is under market value. 

Post: Direct Mail Almost Killed My Business - SEO Saved It

Jason MileshkoPosted
  • United States
  • Posts 125
  • Votes 49

Direct mail is terrible, it may work for some industries and maybe even REI in some markets but I have never had a good experience with it.

Post: Anyone started investing in RE at age 35 or later?

Jason MileshkoPosted
  • United States
  • Posts 125
  • Votes 49

Many people start investing later in life when they have saved enough money to start buying property. 

Post: From $200 to 70 Units at 24 Years Old

Jason MileshkoPosted
  • United States
  • Posts 125
  • Votes 49
Originally posted by @Elijah Brown:

Hello,

My name is Elijah. I’d like to share my real estate story with you all:

At 17, I drove to Los Angeles from my small hometown in Vermont. I arrived with $200 in my bank account and all my belongings in an old Toyota. I had recently been accepted to the University of Southern California (USC) and I couldn’t wait.

School began, but my $30k tuition bill for the first semester never got paid. My parents had fallen on tough times and weren’t able to come up with the money. I needed a quick solution, so I joined the Reserve Officer Training Corps (ROTC) on my sister’s recommendation. This program allows students to train while in college, commission as a military officer upon graduation, and serve an eight year commitment in exchange for a full tuition scholarship and living stipends.

Late one night during my junior year, I stumbled upon the BiggerPockets YouTube channel. After spending the next two weeks watching every real estate video I could find, I was determined to purchase my first rental property.

By this time, I had been eating free meals at the school dining hall, saving my ROTC stipends, and working three part-time jobs (campus taxi driver at night, finance internship two days per week, and ice hockey referee on weekend mornings). I had saved up $20k.

I realized that $20k was not enough for a down payment and that I would not qualify for a loan. I called my best friend Larry from Vermont and my cousin Jake. I pitched them my crazy idea and sent them some of the YouTube videos that inspired me. Against all odds, they each agreed to invest $10k and co-sign the mortgage.

I was about to leave for Army camp when we found a perfect three bedroom house in Orlando for $140k. We had still not closed escrow the night before I was due to report, so I quickly signed over power of attorney to Larry. I had my phone turned off in my ruck sack while in training. If caught, I would be kicked out. Late one night, I snuck into the port-o-john and turned my phone on. Larry and Jake had successfully closed escrow on the house!

I knew I had to do it again. I was so hungry.

During my senior year of college, I won a small worker’s compensation lawsuit against USC from an accident I was victim of while a campus taxi driver. My $20k portion of the settlement, in addition to a USAA career-starter loan only available to ROTC cadets, meant I could buy another rental property.

After graduation, I had not secured a full time job, so I moved to Hawaii to live with my girlfriend’s parents while job hunting. I spent half of my time running a semi-legal Airbnb operation with a condo I rented month-to-month on Oahu. The other half I spent looking for a second rental property in Orlando. I spent very little time applying for jobs. After a few months of house searching, I tied up a property in Orlando under market value and immediately called Larry and Jake to gauge their interest. We closed on the second house in August 2018.

Shortly after, my employment recruiter, Ryan, finally called me about an asset management position at a commercial real estate firm in Irvine, California. I flew back to California from Hawaii and have been with the same company since then.

The great thing about working for a real estate investment company is that at least one of the other employees is a real estate investor. I networked like crazy and convinced a few of my co-workers to invest with me in two more Orlando houses. We closed on house number three in January 2019 and number four in June 2019.

I was having tremendous fun executing deals in every hour of my free time, but I quickly realized I needed to scale into multifamily. I sent out a Google survey to 25 of my co-workers and a few close friends. I asked if they would be interested in buying an apartment complex together and how much they would be willing to invest. I was able to raise $112.5k that week from ten incredibly trusting individuals.

I worked closely with my broker to find, negotiate, and close on a six-unit apartment complex in Orlando that I planned to renovate to increase rents. Finding a bridge lender and coordinating an SEC Regulation D offering was the most stressful experience of my life apart from Army training. I had to replace investors at the last second, and the lender who finally agreed to give me a chance was the 39th bank I applied to. There were also issues with the inspection, which required me to personally meet with the seller. We closed escrow in October 2019.

I spent the next 7 months evicting squatters and renovating each apartment one-by-one via my team of contractors and property managers in Florida. We refinanced the property in October 2020 with a 60% higher valuation than the purchase price.

After spending two years renting a Southern California apartment with my co-worker Kevin, I became obsessed with the house hacking strategy and began searching for a primary residence in Southern California that I could renovate and hack. I was convinced that COVID-19 would send home prices to the moon and also create enough buying opportunity with all the layoffs. My broker Thomas found the perfect four-bedroom fixer-upper in Orange County and I opened escrow with my 30% partner Patrick.

One week after opening escrow, I was called to active duty to complete a period of military training in Arizona. I quickly signed over power of attorney to Patrick and packed my bags. While in training, I closed escrow with only 5% down and convinced the lender to loan additional cash for a renovation. Patrick and I hired a contractor to execute while I was absent.

Arizona was a blast, and managing a full home renovation in additional to my other properties was certainly stressful; however, I couldn’t stop thinking about the next big deal.

Training was only Monday through Friday from 6AM to 5PM, so I spent nights and weekends hunting for deals in the Tucson market. After a few months, I found a decent five-unit apartment building on Loopnet and negotiated incredible seller-financing terms.

By this point, Larry and I had formed our own management LLC. Larry, who is now an accomplished CPA, has been an invaluable asset, especially when my other life commitments drag me in other directions. Larry helped us bring larger equity dollars to the table for the Tucson deal and we closed escrow in October 2020.

I returned from Arizona ready to get back to my girlfriend and begin renovating our Mercedes Sprinter van that we had purchased one weekend while I was in training. I had rented out all the bedrooms in my California house, so house hacking was no longer an option. The van would allow us to live rent and mortgage free, and also have the freedom to travel.

COVID-19 was getting bad in California, so my girlfriend insisted we move back in with her parents in Hawaii for a few months. I wanted to work on the van, but Hawaii didn’t seem like a bad proposition.

As soon as we arrived in Hawaii, I got the deal bug again. I decided to explore the Bigger Pockets forums, and stumbled upon Michael, who was syndicating a 54-unit value-add deal in Denver, CO. I asked Michael to send over the details and I reviewed them with Larry. No doubt, it was a killer deal. Larry and I agreed to join Michael in raising capital. That deal closed in February 2021.

I’m now at 70 units and looking to grow the portfolio exponentially. I’m also writing a book that I hope to release within the next few years. I’m more than happy to answer any questions and I’m always looking for a great conversation.

Elijah

 Way to go!

Post: DMV - DC - Homeless person - Set up shop - Right before Sale

Jason MileshkoPosted
  • United States
  • Posts 125
  • Votes 49
Originally posted by @Bruce Woodruff:

@Jason Mileshko Well you go ahead and do just that then. With your own property. The OP has a problem he needs to solve, and fast......

 I'm actually trying to help the OP, the best way to deal with this sort of issue is to have a conversation with the individual, figure out what is going on, it might be crazy for you to think but homeless people, are in fact also 'people', many are reasonable, intelligent and good. They OP may be able to help the individual get some help and thus solving his problem at the same time. I'm not sure how you don't see the logic in this Bruce, it's as though you want to jump to the most extreme option first. 

Post: DMV - DC - Homeless person - Set up shop - Right before Sale

Jason MileshkoPosted
  • United States
  • Posts 125
  • Votes 49
Originally posted by @Bruce Woodruff:
Originally posted by @Jason Mileshko:

You could try to help him out. 

 Headsmack.....

The OP is trying to conduct a business here, not start a charity. Although we all could help our less fortunate brethren, your advice does not offer any solution for the victim (the OP).

 Good point, however I think that business and charity can overlap and serve each other in most cases. Below is an idea of how I might handle this situation.

1. Have a conversation with the individual (human), don't look at them as vermin to be removed. This will provide information on what they're doing there, where their head is at, etc.

2. Use that information to come up with a solution, work out some kind of deal. Maybe this person wants to get somewhere better, maybe you know of a better spot for them to go, a shelter, more suitable environment, etc.

3. Spend some money to help facilitate that transaction and help the person solve a problem.

Post: Waiting for New York Salesperson License Exam Results

Jason MileshkoPosted
  • United States
  • Posts 125
  • Votes 49
Originally posted by @Harry Allman:

Hi everyone,

I took my NY Salesperson License Exam last Wednesday and I keep checking the website and it still says "Waiting for Score". Just wondering if anyone had this as well. I'm assuming things are different now because of COVID.

I was also wondering if anyone had an opinion regarding using the online option to apply for the license versus mailing it in. Someone told me they think mailing it in is better/faster because you can include the proof of completing the course (as opposed to the Department of State looking into it themselves). I would rather the online option because it seems simpler.

Thank you!

 You may have to wait through the weekend. 

Post: In search of a realtor in Abilene, TX

Jason MileshkoPosted
  • United States
  • Posts 125
  • Votes 49
Originally posted by @Kyle Swengel:

Hello BP!

I am looking for a realtor in Abilene, Texas that I can refer someone to. They are a first time homebuyer and are stationed at Dyess AFB. They are looking for either a value add single fam or multi that’ll rent well after they fulfill the primary residence obligation of their financing. Must be willing to explain the steps of the buying process, prioritize the numbers/math of the deal, and help get them into a good cash flowing property for when they later rent it out. Any help would be appreciated!

Kyle

 Smart, a referral is definitely the best way to accomplish this. 

Post: DMV - DC - Homeless person - Set up shop - Right before Sale

Jason MileshkoPosted
  • United States
  • Posts 125
  • Votes 49

You could try to help him out. 

Post: Agents, what's your #1 tip? (Plus, NEW BOOK!)

Jason MileshkoPosted
  • United States
  • Posts 125
  • Votes 49
Originally posted by @Kaylee Walterbach:

SOLD: Every Real Estate Agent’s Guide to Building a Profitable Business is available now!

SOLD provides a much-needed look at how successful real estate agents build their business, close deals, and generate commissions. In this book, best-selling author and expert real estate agent @David Greene shares everything he wishes someone had shared with him—including the exact processes he used to become rookie of the year and top agent in his office.

Whether you’re a newcomer to the real estate world or a seasoned agent that never got mentorship, this is the book you've been waiting for. Learn from the best, refine your business, and become a top-producing real estate agent in record time. You can get the book, along with some stellar bonus content, on the BiggerPockets Bookstore!

In the spirit of helping new agents be the best they can be, we want to know: Agents, if you could travel back in time, what’s the ONE tip you would give to yourself when you were first starting out?

 Become the local expert, and be of actual service to people.