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All Forum Posts by: Mark Allen

Mark Allen has started 38 posts and replied 474 times.

Post: Dallas High End MF Slowing down?

Mark AllenPosted
  • Real Estate Investor/Broker
  • Irving, TX
  • Posts 520
  • Votes 263
Class A across the country is softening, not just DFW. Dallas-Ft. Worth still has the strongest multifamily fundamentals across the nation (#1 by far in job growth) and remains very strong in the B/C space.

Post: Sub2 -- stumped: what to do if you can't find someone to close it

Mark AllenPosted
  • Real Estate Investor/Broker
  • Irving, TX
  • Posts 520
  • Votes 263
Why not forgo a sub2 closing, make their payments, fix it up, sell it, and work out a profit split? Then you dodge taxes and all the extra closing costs from the first closing. I skimmed your story so I may be missing an important piece.

Post: Help! Deal is to BIG!

Mark AllenPosted
  • Real Estate Investor/Broker
  • Irving, TX
  • Posts 520
  • Votes 263
Sounds like Toby Brown's portfolio.

Post: Commercial / Portfolio Lender for SFRs in Dallas, Texas

Mark AllenPosted
  • Real Estate Investor/Broker
  • Irving, TX
  • Posts 520
  • Votes 263
Vista Bank - Jeff Lisle. Tell him I sent you.

Post: Evaluating a portfolio deal. Out of state deal on 34 properties

Mark AllenPosted
  • Real Estate Investor/Broker
  • Irving, TX
  • Posts 520
  • Votes 263
Are you working with a P&L? If so, this should help guide your income/expenses. Your projected expenses seem light. What's age/quality of homes? What market? I'm finishing up a book on buying and selling portfolios and will offer my analysis tool on the website. Other income - You can add other income from background checks, pet rent, pet deposits, etc etc. Vacancy - What's average vacancy in state and local area? I'd add 2% to that number for bad debt. Leasing fees and Management fee - Has your management company committed to 5%? Do they charge leasing fees? Deferred maintenance - Is there deferred maintenance? Roofs, plumbing, electrical, paint, etc? CapEx - I'd add $250/home. Utilities - When properties go vacant, you're covering utilities. I'd assume $25/unit but this will vary on location. HOA - Any HOA fees? What's the spread between your net yield and cost of debt? Your desired returns should help drive your offer price. Cap rates are more subjective, returns are more tangible. Best of luck!

Post: Appropriate Prep for Selling A Portfolio

Mark AllenPosted
  • Real Estate Investor/Broker
  • Irving, TX
  • Posts 520
  • Votes 263
Deanne Bourne we broker portfolios all over the country. I'm happy to refer you to our residential portfolio expert in NY. I just closed 42 units in a small Wisconsin town and 96 homes in Chicago. Obviously a very complex sale to knock out in one transaction and you should rely on an expert to value and market this portfolio nationwide.

Post: Who will lend on 2000+ unit portfolio

Mark AllenPosted
  • Real Estate Investor/Broker
  • Irving, TX
  • Posts 520
  • Votes 263
Michael Biggs You're incorrect about just having the "down payment". We have a $51mm property under contract in Houston and every buyer that I brought to that deal knew their capital stack because they had experience taking down properties of that size. Commercial debt is far from just having a down payment.

Post: Who will lend on 2000+ unit portfolio

Mark AllenPosted
  • Real Estate Investor/Broker
  • Irving, TX
  • Posts 520
  • Votes 263
I don't believe someone trying to take down a 2000 unit portfolio should be asking that question...

Post: Breaking up a SFR portfolio

Mark AllenPosted
  • Real Estate Investor/Broker
  • Irving, TX
  • Posts 520
  • Votes 263
Adam Steele you may have heard my podcast about SFR portfolios with Joe Fairless. Each lender is different, so confirm with your lender prior if you can sell homes individually on the retail market. 3 homes is much easier than larger portfolios.

Post: How I Bought My First Apartment Complex(es)

Mark AllenPosted
  • Real Estate Investor/Broker
  • Irving, TX
  • Posts 520
  • Votes 263
I started investing in residential real estate in 2009 while in college at West Point (USMA). I entered the Army and was able to leverage the equity to grow a small portfolio which I eventually sold off to flip homes in the Dallas area. A few years ago I exited the military and knew I wanted to be involved in some shape or form in the commercial real estate industry. I spent two years working for a software company in sales, while saving money to eventually quit and broker multifamily. During this time I was active networking and learning as much as I could about multifamily so I could hit the ground running (valuation, management, renovation, lingo, etc.). I debated joining a local mentorship group and remember seeing a post by Joe Fairless e about how to do your first multifamily deal by adding value to an investor with experience - Either underwriting, finding a deal for them, etc. (sorry I don't have the link, but that post changed my mindset, thanks Joe). I knew with my network, hustle and me being a multifamily broker, I could get my first multifamily deal done without spending $20,000 on a mentor program. In my first seven months as a multifamily broker, I've had two deals close, and 4 more set to close before year end; two of which I will be partner. I connected with a New Jersey investor at the end of last year who has been involved in Dallas multifamily since the early 2000s (longtime relationship with my brokerage office). He has owned and managed thousands of units and his biggest challenge today is finding good deals, so I proposed a potential partnership pending I could solve his challenge. I found two off-market, Class C properties; one in Irving and the other in Greenville, 231 total units between both properties. Both owners were over the age of 75 and ready to sell. Each property was well under market rents, 99% occupied, outdated interiors, deferred maintenance, and huge operational upside as they were both self-managed. We're conservatively projecting 15%+ return on equity in Yr 1 with 2 years of IO. Ideally, we'd like to add-value and refinance within 3 years, but all market dependent. Up-front I get a 5% equity share, plus another ~1.5% for investing $50,000 of my own money. So not majority owner (two other partners who are putting up $3mm in equity), but I'm able to get my feet wet and continue to learn. I know they say it's not over until the lady sings, but if all goes as planned, we're set to close this Thursday. I'm super pumped to repeat this model while the majority of my focus goes into brokering multifamily. Ideally, I'll focus more on investments during a down cycle.