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All Forum Posts by: Luke Ezzo

Luke Ezzo has started 1 posts and replied 2 times.

Post: Debating Proper Strategy for a Beginner

Luke EzzoPosted
  • Posts 2
  • Votes 4
Quote from @Stuart Udis:

@Luke Ezzo Focus on buying quality real estate rather than setting your sights on owning a specific number of doors. There's no correlation between the number of doors you own and success. Most in these forums are solely concerned with the number of doors they accumulate and end up with portfolios consisting of real estate in zero barrier of entry neighborhoods that fail to perform as expected.


Hi Stuart,

Thank you for your comment on my post. You’re 100% right. My original statement of “20+ doors” was a bit misleading. My true goal is to earn enough cash flow to 1) cover my necessities and general living expenses and 2) replace my W2 (I have the approximate numbers for these goals based on my own personal ambitions.)

Based on your comment, it sounds like I should strive to own high quality real estate in medium-high barrier to entry (read desirable, appreciating, etc.) neighborhoods. I would assume picking these neighborhoods is a factor of knowing your market like the back of your hand, but that then begs the question, which market? I gravitated towards markets where I can purchase for less than or equal to 100k per key, as that’s my approximate budget. But even as I type that, I’m realizing that I’m already falling prey to the “units” measuring stick of success. (I’d also assume that learning what qualifies as quality real estate comes with time and evaluating hundreds if not thousands of deals.)

Let me know if I interpreted your comment correctly. What other indicators do you look for when selecting markets/neighborhoods? What other specific characteristics contribute to, what in your mind would be, quality real estate?

Post: Debating Proper Strategy for a Beginner

Luke EzzoPosted
  • Posts 2
  • Votes 4

Hi all, this is my first post on any forum! I’m a new investor based in Chicago, but willing to relocate to nearly any city in the Midwest. My long-term goal (10-15 years) is to own cash-flowing 20 door+ multifamily properties as a form of (semi) passive income. I know that to get there I need 1) more experience and 2) more capital. I also understand that the real money will be made on the 3rd, 4th, 5th+ deals, so my primary concern is getting started, getting experience, and making a little cash on my first investment.

My initial strategy was to purchase a light value-add dup/tri/quad that is selling at a discount per key to FMV ideally with rents below market. Hold it for 1-3 years, fix it up, raise rents, and sell at a profit. For the last ~month, I've been building manual comps (both income and expense) for dup/tri/quads in a single market in the Midwest to underwrite my own deals. That said, through conversations with brokers in the area (and evidenced in the comps I've created) I've learned that this strategy may be slightly outdated as most properties are currently at market rents given the current rental environment, expenses aren't a realistic lever to rely on to add value, and there is a real risk I get priced out of the market by buyers with cash, 1031 exchanges, and with longer term hold strategies willing to pay an extra $10-20k per key.

When I explained my goals to this broker, he suggested I flip a SFH to start as it will accomplish my goal of magnifying capital using leverage (5% conventional down) while giving me experience. I've started to consider pivoting my strategy in the spirit of "failing fast," and figure that in 2-3 years I could conservatively do 1-2 flips and then 1031 that into a larger multifamily property and try to execute my original strategy.

What would you do if you were in my shoes? What advice do you have? What do you think of my initial and long-term strategy? Any input is greatly appreciated!