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All Forum Posts by: Michinori Kaneko

Michinori Kaneko has started 39 posts and replied 542 times.

Post: Looking for commercial financing solution on an unique residential property

Michinori KanekoPosted
  • Rental Property Investor
  • New York
  • Posts 568
  • Votes 331
Quote from @Brandon Croucier:

I've got one I just closed like this, only 1 or 2 lenders in the space will do this kind of stuff.


 who is your lender? can you please provide me info? 

Post: Looking for commercial financing solution on an unique residential property

Michinori KanekoPosted
  • Rental Property Investor
  • New York
  • Posts 568
  • Votes 331

I'd assume if its rented out by room then it has locks on every room sure, but how is that any different than student housing or other multi family houses?

Post: Looking for commercial financing solution on an unique residential property

Michinori KanekoPosted
  • Rental Property Investor
  • New York
  • Posts 568
  • Votes 331

Hi, 


I am in contract to purchase a SFH which was converted into a boarding house. Basically it was a 4B2B house which was converted into 5 bedroom apartment, where the rooms are rented out individually. I had DSCR lender (to whom I disclosed the situation upfront) who just told me (after I paid for appraisal and wasted several weeks) that no DSCR lender would lend for this type of property, which I don't understand why since student housing can be funded via DSCR and this is a very similar concept.

In any case, if DSCR is not an option (or maybe i just need a better DSCR lender), I need a different option for financing but I need a commercial loan because I do not want the loans to show up on my personal credit. The property will be purchased by a single member LLC (which I am the sole owner). Please let me know if there are any leads in someone who could work out a lending option for scenario like this. Thank you for your help in advance!

Post: Over 20 Side by Side Duplex's

Michinori KanekoPosted
  • Rental Property Investor
  • New York
  • Posts 568
  • Votes 331

how did you financing the 1.94M? did you need to invest any additional cash for renovation? how much are you renting for? 

Post: Fort Wayne, IN - Submarkets advice and Building a team

Michinori KanekoPosted
  • Rental Property Investor
  • New York
  • Posts 568
  • Votes 331

nice, are you looking to sell this property? what is it renting for?

Post: BRRRR Deal Fort Wayne

Michinori KanekoPosted
  • Rental Property Investor
  • New York
  • Posts 568
  • Votes 331

That's great. what rent are you collecting, and how much are your cashflowing? what is your ROI?

Post: Capital taxes on sales of house hack homes

Michinori KanekoPosted
  • Rental Property Investor
  • New York
  • Posts 568
  • Votes 331

Hi I wasn't planning on a house hack but I have a house that I'm considering renting out portion of it. It's not a multi family, it's a SFH. The question is on capital gains tax treatment when I sell the house down the line. I understand that when you sell your primary resident that you lived 2/5 past years you can get $500k deduction on your capital gains. I plan to rent it for few years then use the entire house as my resident when my kids get older and I need the additional space. My tax accountant told me that once I rent out a portion of the house that part becomes forever business property and while I can continue to take depreciation post rental period I will not be entitled to the capital gains treatment for that portion. Is this accurate? Is everyone that's house hacking paying capital gains taxes on portion they are not living in? Thank you for your help in advance

Post: 1231 Loss and 1031 Gains

Michinori KanekoPosted
  • Rental Property Investor
  • New York
  • Posts 568
  • Votes 331
Quote from @Ashish Acharya:

No income from operation does not trigger 1231 loss recapture. 

1031 on the same asset can be tricky, you might want to ask this to your tax professional. 

Many taxpayers assume that gain or loss attributable to the sale of real property held for more than one year and used in a rental activity is Section 1231 gain or loss. That is not always the case; Section 1231 applies only to property used in a trade or business. The term trade or business is not clearly defined for purposes of Section 1231. The preamble to the Section 199A final regulations indicates that taxpayers should be consistent in treating an activity as a business or nonbusiness activity for all Code provisions that use a trade or business standard that is the same or “substantially similar” to the Section 162 trade or business standard. If a taxpayer takes the position that a rental is not subject to the business interest limitation, the IRS may expect the taxpayer to take the position that gain from the sale of property used in the rental is not Section 1231 gain.

While the sale of property used in a nonbusiness rental activity does not give rise to a Section 1231 gain or loss, it generally results in a capital gain or loss.15 Depreciation recapture rules (including the 25% rate applicable to unrecaptured Section 1250 gains) apply to both Section 1231 property and capital assets.16 As long as the property is sold at a gain, the taxpayer is no worse off as a result of capital asset status (and may be better off if the taxpayer has unrecaptured Section 1231 losses that would cause a Section 1231 gain to be taxed at ordinary rates). If the property is sold at a loss, however, Section 1231 treatment is generally preferable to capital gain treatment because a net Section 1231 loss reduces ordinary income.

Thanks Ashish,

so to clarify, the loss resulted from a rental apartment complex that was held in an LLC. The LLC held no other assets and owned by my wife and I. We sold the apartment for a loss and while the LLC is not dissolved we submit the tax return as final and it no longer has no revenue or expenses.

we however own several other single family properties held in our personal names and consider 1031 these into other rental properties. In this case, per your statement above doesn't seem to trigger the recapture.  Thanks for your help on this!

Post: Self-directed IRA geared towards money lending

Michinori KanekoPosted
  • Rental Property Investor
  • New York
  • Posts 568
  • Votes 331
Quote from @Jay Hinrichs:
Quote from @Doug Smith:

We're a licensed Mortgage Company in Florida and I have 32 years of experience in lending/banking and I have a great deal of experience in IRA lending. I would love to chat about it. 1) There are more than one self-directed custodian that we have clients with. 2) We normally create a segregated LLC owned by the IRA and the money flows in and out of that to keep from triggering gate fees with the custodian. 3) Most of the loans we do have pretty quick turns...usually 7-10 days. 4) If we use "checkbook control" and create an LLC that holds the loans that is, in turn, owned by the IRA, that speeds things up and keeps the fees low from the custodian. If the amount we're lending is high enough, we usually eat the LLC creation and any filing costs. I hope that helps.


thats a great service if you setting up solo Ks for your clients..  I have been lending out of my IRA since the mid to late 80s back then I think there was  only one company if i recall right it was called lincoln.. then Entrust stepped in  since I was in Oakland at the time and they started there I was one of the first 500 or so clients.. but as you state running through the custodian runs up a lot of fees so check book control is the way to go.
Jay it's good to see you are still active here :) I was here few years ago when I was just getting started in RE investing and your inputs have helped me greatly back then. Hope you are doing well!

on a separate note are you still investing in loans via your IRA and what service provider do you use for it if you do? Thank you!

Post: LLc’s and irrevocable trusts

Michinori KanekoPosted
  • Rental Property Investor
  • New York
  • Posts 568
  • Votes 331

if you are getting just started, i would just use your personal name and get the freddie/fannie 30 yr fixed loans. gives you way better cashflows up front which allows you to grow faster in the beginning.