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All Forum Posts by: Josh Jacobson

Josh Jacobson has started 7 posts and replied 19 times.

Post: Milwaukee 5 unit Financing

Josh JacobsonPosted
  • Accountant
  • Chicago, IL
  • Posts 20
  • Votes 5

Hi,

Does anyone have a lender they use in Milwaukee, WI they could refer me too? Working through a deal there and need some financing.

Thanks!

Josh

Post: upfront capital issues

Josh JacobsonPosted
  • Accountant
  • Chicago, IL
  • Posts 20
  • Votes 5

thanks Brandon and Brie!! I'll take your advice. Brie I'll message you in a bit.

Post: upfront capital issues

Josh JacobsonPosted
  • Accountant
  • Chicago, IL
  • Posts 20
  • Votes 5

Thanks for all the thoughtful responses!! 

To answer the question on going back to the seller, I've gone back on all the previous deals and it killed them. I'm going back this week on this one as the costs are really mounting up.

Most of the issues are either roof or foundation that have been killing the deals. One of them the seller told us the roof was 5 years old and the inspector got up there and it was ancient and he recommended immediate replacement or at least being able to replace immediately, where because the roof was 5 years old I was going to reserve over 3 years of cash flow for a new one. This current one I'm working through is both roof and foundation. The inspector commented that the foundation work would be "very expensive and a big project". So I'm getting that bid out this week to go back to seller

I'm definitely considering (and probably will with Bries advice) switching real estate agents because I'm getting almost no help from them identifying this type of stuff. My background is more finance so if I know the numbers I can work it out, just need help identifying them.

Thanks again everyone.

Post: upfront capital issues

Josh JacobsonPosted
  • Accountant
  • Chicago, IL
  • Posts 20
  • Votes 5

Hi Everyone,

I am curious if I can seek some advice from the community. I've been under contract 4-5 times on multi-family buildings ranging from 6-8 units in Chicago and 1 18 unit building in St. Louis and every time the inspector finds a large scale project that doesn't fit in my numbers. I think I underwrite pretty conservatively, I do $500 per unit or 5% of revenue (whichever is more) for general repairs and do 5% of revenue or 5,000 per year in capital repairs held (whichever is more) for capital repair items. I also try to underwrite to the best of my ability the things that I can notice, like a water heater or a/c being 20 years old I'll make sure I have that in my upfront capital number. Typically I'll identify around $25k maybe I need to do 3 new water heaters and then update a kitchen and bathroom, and then I'll always tack on something to be safe so I have a reserve account so I usually double that $25k to be $50k in available cash for upfront capital. For the 5th deal in a row, the contractor found projects that need to be done well in excess of my $50k reserves and way past my cash flow reserve for capital where I'm uncomfortable buying. 

How do people handle this? Am I being too conservative or getting unlucky? Appreciate the help everyone!

Josh

Post: Retail Leasing St. Louis

Josh JacobsonPosted
  • Accountant
  • Chicago, IL
  • Posts 20
  • Votes 5

Thanks Yonah! I reached out to Tom.

Donald, do you have a direct contact there at Cushman and Wakefield? I'm having a hard time finding a person to reach out to on their website.

Post: Retail Leasing St. Louis

Josh JacobsonPosted
  • Accountant
  • Chicago, IL
  • Posts 20
  • Votes 5

Hello All!

Thinking about buying some apartment units that have vacant retail commercial space on the first floor. Is it typical for me to pay for the build out or is it more typical in St. Louis for the new tenant to pay for that?

Also, does anyone have any insight on finding market rent for retail space?

Thanks!

Josh

Post: st. louis loan broker

Josh JacobsonPosted
  • Accountant
  • Chicago, IL
  • Posts 20
  • Votes 5

Hello,

Does anyone have a suggestion or contact for a St. Louis loan broker?

thanks,

Josh

Post: Working on first closing. Now what....

Josh JacobsonPosted
  • Accountant
  • Chicago, IL
  • Posts 20
  • Votes 5

I think every dime of cash flow the property produces should be saved in order to scale up. Doing that and continuing to pay down the loan should allow you to reset the equity at some point through refi or heloc and roll that into a new property. I think you have to get to property number 3 or 4 until the snow ball impact of the cash flow and equity is really felt, but even with one single family home it is there. 

If you paid cash, then with a 10% return it'll only take you 2 years to get to number 2 and way shorter to get to 3, just by saving the cash. 

Brie is someone to aspire too around here, so I would definitely listen to her advice. 

Post: How do you analyze your flips?

Josh JacobsonPosted
  • Accountant
  • Chicago, IL
  • Posts 20
  • Votes 5

@Max Keller would you mind sharing your google sheets calculator? thanks!

Post: Structuring Deal with Passive Partner/Investor

Josh JacobsonPosted
  • Accountant
  • Chicago, IL
  • Posts 20
  • Votes 5

@Steve Burgess thanks for the advice! This is what I am seeing in the market as well. I think I'm going to lower my target purchase price so I can pull the deal down myself, rather than having to rely on his income to pass the lenders tests. Then I will have a side agreement with him and just use his funds to scale.