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All Forum Posts by: Nathaniel Ortiz

Nathaniel Ortiz has started 5 posts and replied 10 times.

Hey BP! I need suggestions/insight on this opportunity. I came about this opportunity from networking through my current fulltime job. I met a lawyer who's entrepreneur minded personality clicked well with mine. Being passionate about REI it's hard to not talk about it, so after a couple meetups we discussed a property he has in San Antonio. A month later, he approached me with more details and proposed a partnership. He has a rundown property in East Central area, and would like me to wear the flippers hat for him. My plan is to analyze the market in that area, and determine what the best outcome is for that property in its given condition. Based on my perspective and walk through, I have determined a tear down is most likely the more favorable approach rather than repairing each defect one by one. Foundation (Peer & Beam) is bad, not a terrible cost alone, but flooring is destroyed by rat & mice problem. Roof is peeling off, there's holes in walls, and almost every single window is broken. Toilet is rusted and is in dire need of replacement. This is all coming from memory alone, but I'm sure you get the idea, tear down may be worth the cost, considering subject property is 2bd 1bth. All this being said, the owners main advantage is this property was Inherited. He owns the property free & clear, but still pays holding (taxes). From this rehab, he rather put it on the market and make a return on profit, splitting the deal 50/50.

With story and details out the way, I will admit I have only done one deal so far being a new investor (owner is aware), and that is still in progress. Current deal is probably going to be a whole-tale. The San Antonio property is in a C-D class neighborhood, so I am stuck whether it is in fact actually worth the tear down, or just throwing some lipstick on it for the market (with its current condition I imagine paint/landscaping won't budge our ROI anyway). If the tear down is a more favorable approach, should we keep it a 2/1 or be different from the neighborhood making a modern 3/2? I suppose with this side of the equation it is probably best to discuss with a realtor who knows the market better than I do, but would appreciate anybody's advice on any part of this opportunity. Also If anybody can recommend top investor friendly Realtors in San Antonio, please do! 

Thank you BP family, Nathaniel Ortiz.

Post: Getting Started in the World of Wholesaling

Nathaniel OrtizPosted
  • Investor
  • Austin, TX
  • Posts 10
  • Votes 4

Start with educating yourself on how to recognize a distress property/distress property owner. Start to understand the lingo of distress Real Estate situations such as foreclosure, probates, absentees. And start by either making a distress property list of your own by driving for dollars, or purchase distress property lists on the internet. Start marketing to them via cold call/door knock/direct mail. If you are in a situation with no capital; if I were you I’d start by driving around and note properties using an app called “parceled”, then skip-tracing to cold call. With consistency, you’ll eventually get your first deal! Good luck!

Post: Need help how to analyze this odd deal

Nathaniel OrtizPosted
  • Investor
  • Austin, TX
  • Posts 10
  • Votes 4

So to start off, my main focus is finding off-market deals and I stumbled upon a seller who is in a town 1.5 hours away from me. I'm based in Austin so I'm used to analyzing urban deals, but this seller has property in the rural areas of Texas. He has two properties of land (which I have no idea how to analyze land) And he has a property sitting on land with a roofing issue.

Focusing on the property with a house on it, I looked it up on appraisal district and it doesn't exist, But if I look it up on zillow and other public MLS portals it does. Main concern is I don't have accurate numbers on sqft, bed/bath or any of that, and the seller is old so he doesn't know. The other problem is, Texas is non-disclosure state, so therefor nothing shows when I look for sold properties within the last 6mo. I'm not sure where to start on this lead at all, can anybody provide some kind of feedback? I know I can probably find a realtor in the area to send me comps, but then how will they be compensated if this home doesn't even end up being a deal?

To sum everything, I want to help this guy out, he seems like a nice guy who's been going through alot, but because of his age and his communication, I can't really get too much info off of him. Not sure how to approach this situation, and can't perform my due diligence since I'm pretty much blind on the market in this small town.

Post: cold calling on weekends?

Nathaniel OrtizPosted
  • Investor
  • Austin, TX
  • Posts 10
  • Votes 4

Thank you for the perspective!

Post: cold calling on weekends?

Nathaniel OrtizPosted
  • Investor
  • Austin, TX
  • Posts 10
  • Votes 4

As I'm starting to get the ball rolling with finding off market deals, I've seen much success from cold calling during the week while I have time. I still have a full time W2 job, but do the best I can calling during the day, and end up only doing about 30 cold calls per week. The days I have off is Sunday and Monday. Monday Is obviously a great day for me to get to work, but I've always felt resistance calling on weekends. I'm curious what others think; Is it rude and bothersome to call on weekends? I understand for the people not willing to sell anyway its an annoyance to call regardless. But for the people in distress, am I more likely to catch them "at a bad time" during weekends, or am I just overthinking and resistance is getting the best of me?

Post: Mentor needed , I’ve been studying wholesaling

Nathaniel OrtizPosted
  • Investor
  • Austin, TX
  • Posts 10
  • Votes 4

@Zahsani Knowles what do you expect out of a “mentor”?

Post: What laws may I run into wholesaling?

Nathaniel OrtizPosted
  • Investor
  • Austin, TX
  • Posts 10
  • Votes 4

@Michael Plaks I’m curious, may you please elaborate?

Hello Bigger Pockets. My name is Nathaniel, a upcoming investor in the Austin Tx area. I want to start by saying I love Bigger Pockets and everything they do to provide value to people like me, and many others in the Real Estate world. I have tools in my investor tool box, I have powerful people to help me make things happen, and I have strategies in place. I just need a deal, and clarification on analyzing, and the best way to execute a Joint Venture in a BRRRR or Buy & hold.

A little bit of background about me to better understand my situation. I have known my partner for years, and he has seen me grow my small phone business to what it is now, (Still small, but systemized). We have gone through many small ventures together that have ultimately failed, (like Amazon FBA, small private money lending etc.). And so over the years I have known him to be a mentor to me. He is and has been a successful real estate investor for years, more than I have known him, and so ultimately I knew I wanted to be just like him and learn from him as well. 2 years later, after periodically checking in on each others whereabouts, I explain my whole journey so far and everything I've accomplished. I am pretty confident on the tools I've learned to use thanks to Brandon Turner's books, I'm confident on my strategy thanks to David Greene's book, and I'm confident on my mindset thanks to a countless amount of books I've explored throughout the years, as well as my own experience owning my own small business, and learning from other peer investors through networking. 

Today, I'm struggling and a bit discouraged. I have about 20+ wholesalers and agents sending me deals every week, but most deals sent are either asking above market value, or require so much work that a 30k estimated rehab budget does not make since with such little wiggle room for profit minus expenses, usually estimating 20k profit (not sure if that's worth the risk). I've tried prospecting myself to pre-forclosure properties, absantees, vacancies, and old MLS (zillow, redfin, realtor) real estate to lowball offers, but have had no luck finding a deal. I understand the Austin market is highly competitive, but my criteria includes towns south, east, and north of Austin, and still receive terrible inquiries. What am I doing wrong? I suppose maybe I'm analyzing these properties wrong? Maybe I'm not seeing something that many professional investors might? I don't like to bother my partner/mentor too much, so try to send him very few "potential" deals as possible. Does anybody have any examples to explain how they receive a lead from a wholesaler/realtor, and use free services to find out if it is a deal or no deal, as well as what margins are just too risky to go for?

My last question is, say I do find a deal for me and my partner to invest in. What would be the best way for both of us to benefit? My biggest goal is to learn as much as I can, and manage the BRRRR if everything goes to plan, using my partners capital. I have decided to drop out of college (for now) so I can focus on getting my first deal, so therefor don't have much capital myself to work with. So it's clear my partner would get the benefit of obtaining a deal through me, and I would manage the deal to execute a correct BRRRR. Now I understand we can't really "split" cash flow from rent, because there's other expenses needed to be payed. If profit from cash flow is split, it might be so little it isn't worth it for him. I also know the cashout refinance is all his money (obviously) so we couldn't split the benefit of a flip in a BRRRR, unless we just do a regular flip, but I want to build wealth, and so does he. Should we just do a flip instead? What would be the best way for me to benefit other than the ability to learn? If hands on experience is the only thing I get out of my first deal, hoping it's a BRRRR? I'm thankful for the opportunity, but I also don't want to sell myself short.

Thank you for taking the time to read this post, happy investing!

Post: Risks of investing in mobile homes?

Nathaniel OrtizPosted
  • Investor
  • Austin, TX
  • Posts 10
  • Votes 4

I found it was not worth the investment as for yes you are all correct on pointing out the land was not included, therefore not making sense to flip. Also discovered prices for brand new mobile homes with same specs at the same wholesale price I would've paid. Thank you all for the advice!

Post: Risks of investing in mobile homes?

Nathaniel OrtizPosted
  • Investor
  • Austin, TX
  • Posts 10
  • Votes 4

I have a mobile home owner very motivated to sell, asking 50k comps are at 110k no major cosmetic repairs needed. The numbers look like they can make sense as a quick flip, or even a potential buy and hold, but I'm aware mobile homes typically depreciate(?) and is a whole different "Industry" than single fam/multi fam property investing. What are the risks I should know about? Or is this a deal anybody would take as a quick flip?