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All Forum Posts by: Account Closed

Account Closed has started 17 posts and replied 474 times.

Post: Good time to get in the stock market?

Account ClosedPosted
  • Investor
  • United States
  • Posts 565
  • Votes 356
Originally posted by @Victor S.:
Originally posted by @Account Closed:


Brother, the stock market is going to go down to its true value... zero. I'd hold off on that. Stick to real investments, not paper money and fiat equity. If you can't touch it and feel it in your hands don't buy it. 

I thought I've seen it all, but the internet Nostradami (or is it Nostradamuses?) keep me on my toes. 

Fed just lowered the rate to 0% and offered $700B in QE. What's next?

 Are you aware of the negative ramifications of 0% and additional QE?

The value of your dollar is being lowered by the day because of this. 0% rates mean additional propping up of the economy allowing people to continue to over pay for acquisitions. This can't last, it's all going to come tumbling down. Luckily I won't have a single dollar in the scam market. Not a single penny in an IRA, 401K, etc.

Are you aware that the day your dollar went off the gold standard it became useless except for the fiat value that we attribute to it. Are you aware of the fact that the more money that is printed and circulated into the market the less your dollar is worth?

No need to tell the future when this has happened in the past. Just look at EVERY CURRENCY ever created.

We truly do live in an upside down world. 

Post: Good time to get in the stock market?

Account ClosedPosted
  • Investor
  • United States
  • Posts 565
  • Votes 356
Originally posted by @Jacob Lapp:

For us real estate investors this is a good time to have rental properties while we watch others portfolios crash with the stock market.

Other than a moderately safe mutual fund I contribute to monthly and my 401k, I am not involved in trading stocks.

Do you guys think this is a good time to buy stocks while they are so low?

I made an account on Robinhood and found some stocks that seemed like good investments. BAC, V, FB, MPC and ET. If I invest 1k and they return to where they were before the virus, in a year it will give me a whopping $500 return. :/

I don't have the knowledge of the market to be comfortable investing 20k (hoping to make 10k in a year).

Are there any stock pros here that have any tips for someone trying to capitalize on the low stock prices?

Thanks in advance!

Brother, the stock market is going to go down to its true value... zero. I'd hold off on that. Stick to real investments, not paper money and fiat equity. If you can't touch it and feel it in your hands don't buy it. 

Post: Ready to buy, but should I wait?

Account ClosedPosted
  • Investor
  • United States
  • Posts 565
  • Votes 356
Originally posted by @Maurice E. Stokes Jr:

Im in position to buy my first investment property. With the virus issues just starting to heat up Im now wondering am I starting out at the beginning of a bad time to enter the market? This will be my first Investment so this subject is only adding to my already beginner anxieties. Any professional advice on should I wait a bit to see if this gets worse and maybe run into better deals down the line or jump on the opportunities at my door step now? Im in the Baltimore Maryland region.

 Hey man, if this continues for 2-3 months people are going to start losing properties. If you have access to off market deals you'll be able to get some for way below market once they foreclose. 

Post: Should My Realtor be doing MORE?

Account ClosedPosted
  • Investor
  • United States
  • Posts 565
  • Votes 356
Originally posted by @Greg Hoffman:

Is this normal? 

Met with RE agent yesterday and described what we're looking for... 

"Important that its a DEAL not RETAIL" I said

"Ugly needs Cosmetic work, can add equity with upgrades" I followed up 

We gave out Price range and Target Area we want to live....

HE says "

he will send houses that fit our budget in our area"

but

"can't separate out out houses by condition"

so I basically will be getting any house that comes on the market that fits price and location. 

QUESTIONS

Should I expecting more than that? 

Can't I just do that myself? 

Am I expecting too much for him to handpicking good deals to send me so I don't waste my time with "drip emails" 

 I wouldn't expect more than that unfortunately.

Just "DON'T" sign a exclusive purchase agreement where you have to buy from them for a certain period of time. This is how they rope you in and then sit back and do nothing because if you get a deal elsewhere you still have to pay them a commission. I was an agent so I know what their tricks are.

If you want a good realtor find one who also is an investor.

Post: Strategy: AirBnB with Duplex

Account ClosedPosted
  • Investor
  • United States
  • Posts 565
  • Votes 356
Originally posted by @Devin Duval:

Hello BiggerPockets Family!

I am looking into buying a duplex in the Columbia, SC area. It is a 3bd/2b on both sides with a single car garage on either side. The purchase price is $240,000 and I have had an appraisal done on the property that has come out to $323,000. It needs $35,000 in repairs.

So, my strategy with this property is to use an investor friend for the down payment of 20% ($47,000) and the rehab cost of $35,000. And the goal would be to pay him a 10% return on his money annually until he can be payed out. Then AirBnB the duplex for maximum profits. I am trying to figure low around 16 nights @ $225 a night. The area is nice. It is 5 miles to the football stadium, and around 2 miles to Ft. Jackson which is a military base that has graduations so many times a year. So I think the price, location, and days booked are reasonable. 

With this post I would like to see if anyone else has used this strategy? Do you think my numbers are favorable? Do you think my booked days and pricing is reasonable? Or just any input that you may have would be greatly appreciated.

Buying a property specifically for Airbnb or STR is "highly risky" my friend. If for whatever reason it doesn't go right, and there are many you're on the hook for tens of thousands of dollars in your capital and debt. This is why I prefer rental arbitrage but God forbid I say that here on the forum.

Be careful and good luck...

Post: Credit Rating Drop from Purchasing Rental Properties

Account ClosedPosted
  • Investor
  • United States
  • Posts 565
  • Votes 356
Originally posted by @Andrew Pettitt:

I'm a Canadian real estate investor and recently purchased a few rental properties which net positive cashflows.  

  • Duplex Side A -  $2,500/month or $30K/year - 2-YR lease set up
  • Duplex Side B - $2,500/month or $30K/year - 2-YR lease set up 
  • Airbnb - $4K/month or $50K/year (2-YR average) - Nightly Rates

I purchased the duple in November 2019 and just noticed my credit rating dropped the day I made this purchase. Has anyone experienced this before? 

Is there a way to show banks' property revenues to keep credit ratings up? Is this even possible?

Welcome to the world of real estate investing. A credit score is a scam sold to the masses. Don't worry about it. Learn to use private debt and private capital and you will never have a problem.

Post: Smokey Mountains current situation on the ground

Account ClosedPosted
  • Investor
  • United States
  • Posts 565
  • Votes 356
Originally posted by @Ryan Proffit:

Hello, I have been following and searching threads on the Smokey Mountains. I am going to have some funds available soon, and am very interested in this area. I am just looking to get an update on expected gross income vs purchase price/bedroom. I fully plan to self manage, and have been taking a lot of notes from the forum. I am hoping to be able to buy 2 within the next 1.5 years hopefully. Hopefully the big fish from this area will chime in with some excellent intel as usual. I always vote for sage advice. Thanks in advance.

Ryan

 I was just there. Someone I met had two properties. The first made 150K last year and the other made like $60K, that's net.

Post: What buy first rental or first home

Account ClosedPosted
  • Investor
  • United States
  • Posts 565
  • Votes 356
Originally posted by @Tyler Henry:

I make a fair salary, but recently came into a windfall that will allow me to get into some real investing. I’m interested in starting real estate. I’m going back and forth on the idea of meeting a financial advisor but in the meantime I’m seeing this as my first step:

I currently rent an apartment that is $1500/mo. My lease just renewed, cancelling it is basically $3k. Not the end of the world but again, I also have furniture that is expensive to move, but really I like where I live and don’t want to move yet. In short: I don’t have a strong desire to buy a place to live in for myself yet.

But I do like the idea of buying something to rent out, basic idea would be to get a condo that total out of pocket is like 30% of what I have in the bank, including down payment/rehab/vacancy etc. Then if that gets rented and feels stable would look at getting another. Maybe the 2nd one I would live in or rent it out as well.

I just want to kind of know or get an opinion of it is an exceptionally bad idea to forgo my chance of getting the benefits of living in something first, like a lower APR/down payment requirement or would the difference end up being marginal? Maybe I am being impatient?

A financial advisor is just going to tell you to "put your money in a well balanced portfolio of stocks, bonds and mutual funds, invest for the long term, and max out your IRA." This is stupid if you would like to see results before 2085 and have control over your investments instead of basing them on hoping the market keeps going up.

why don't you rent the place you're in month to month or a 3 month lease while you decide.

You will get benefits of an "owner occupied" property but in all honesty the market is inflated so you're overpaying anyways. Unless you buy a REO, pre forclosure or something which is the only way I'll buy a property.

Good luck!

Post: Charlottesville, VA. Airbnb regulations

Account ClosedPosted
  • Investor
  • United States
  • Posts 565
  • Votes 356
Originally posted by @Sam Rogers:

I'm thinking about starting an AirBnB business in Charlottesville, VA, but it seems rather hostile to AirBnB hosts. Does anyone have experience working in Charlottesville specifically or other areas with strict regulations, and if so, how do you deal with them. I've reached out through AirBnB to a few hosts for their input, but I'm curious to hear what the BP community has to say. Thanks, Sam.

Some markets are just hostile to STR's and for good reason because if it becomes over saturated there can be too many of them and that kills the appeal of the area. My advice is that if you can find a way over this barrier to entry you're going to be one of the only people to have an Airbnb in that area. You could control the market or a submarket at least.

Good luck!

Post: Just closed on my 23rd Door and I haven't seen 1 property!

Account ClosedPosted
  • Investor
  • United States
  • Posts 565
  • Votes 356
Originally posted by @Tom Donnelly:

Last week I closed on my 23rd door and I got started investing in real estate less than two years ago.  I want to share this success story to give others some encouragement, especially if you're investing long distance.

I started listening to the BP podcast about 2.5 years ago, when I realized I was terrible at trading stocks and started looking for other outlets of semi passive income.  I had some money in the bank and needed something to do with it.  I listened to about 30 episodes, read multiple books and decided that small multifamily would be niche.  I encountered one problem from the get go, I lived in California and needed cheaper properties to even consider investing.  So begins the journey...

After market research I focused on Omaha, NE as my first market.  I reached out to between 15-20 agents that I found through the BP forum and let them know I was interested in investing in their city.  I got a reply from 2 of them.  That was good enough.  The one I ended up working with has thrown some good deals my way.  I quickly jumped on a plane in January of 2018 and checked out the market, confirming it was the right decision.  From there I went back home and started analyzing deals that came my way.  I purchased my first two properties in April of 2018.  Details below:

April 2018 Purchases:

Duplex (vacant) for $40k - needed $13k in siding and about $5k in internal cosmetics.  I built in the $18k construction loan and purchased the property for $58k with 20% down (less than $12k).  Rents are $695 for the top unit and $715 for the bottom unit = $1410/month.  I stabilized it with tenants and cash out refi'd almost a year later which allowed me to pull out $50k in equity.  I'm now cashflowing a few hundred dollars a month on this property

4plex for $120k - I purchased this with a friend and rehabbed 3 of the units.  We had a tenant destroying the bottom unit  and gave them a 60 day notice to vacate.  They left and our PM had to clean up the trash and debris they left behind, not to mention the cockroaches we had to get rid of.  Rents total $2410/month.  We haven't made much money on this unit because there's been issue after issue, but we've built equity and we're breaking even right now.

March 2019-September 2019

Another friend that I've met through a mastermind group turned me onto Bay City, Michigan because of the cheap property prices and gentrification of the town.  We saw opportunity for passive income.  Last year we purchased 4 buildings together, 2- 5 plex's and 2-3 plex's for a total of 16 units.  Each building cost $85k or less, and we should be cash-flowing about $4k/month net total by the end of this year. We inherited some bad tenants that we've been swapping out and getting the current ones up to speed with paying on time.


February 2020

In between the timeframes above I started a vacation rental management company with a business partner, we currently manage 17 properties.  This industry has turned me on to purchasing vacation rentals, which until I started managing them, seemed too risky.  Last week I closed on a 2bd/2ba cabin in Sevier County, TN.  Purchase price was $269k, I put down 10% and locked in a 4% rate at 30 years.  All said and done I put down $35k and the place is fully furnished, ready to be listed on Airbnb.  It's been consistently grossing about $39k/year which should give me about $1k/month in cashflow after the mortgage and expenses are paid for. 


I haven't physically seen ONE of these properties and can truly say that once you get the first property done, you're on your way to more! I've dealt with my fair share of bad tenants but I have a property manager in both states to deal with those.  My company will be managing the Tennessee property, so I leave that properties destiny in my own hands.  I also purchased my first property for dirt cheap which allowed me to get my feet wet, without taking on a huge risk.  If you find reliable people in each market, you can purchase properties anywhere without physically seeing them.  David Greene's Long Distance Real Estate Investing book is a great place to start if you're in a similar situation.  Please feel free to reach out if you need some motivation or want to connect!  I'm by no means an expert, but I took action, which is what got me here and will continue to drive my portfolio forward.

I hope this encourages someone to get started on their journey.


Tom

Good work man!