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All Forum Posts by: Eric Neal

Eric Neal has started 12 posts and replied 40 times.

Post: Commercial Real Estate in San Antonio

Eric NealPosted
  • Lender
  • San Antonio, TX
  • Posts 41
  • Votes 6

Welcome to BP, @Alexandria Tatem! I'm a San Antonian and happy to have you here!

Post: Mix Use Complex in San Antonio - Under Contract!

Eric NealPosted
  • Lender
  • San Antonio, TX
  • Posts 41
  • Votes 6

Congratulations, @Mauricio Ramos!

Are any of the residential spots currently rented?

In terms of the commercial spots, you may want to go down the "gentry" checklist to see what's not in the area:

Coffee Shop

Craft Beer Place

"Artisanal" Bistro - Think grassfed meat sandwiches and avocado toast

Food Truck Park

Crossfit (or derivation thereof) Gym

Bakery or Cupcakery

Bicycle Repair Shop

Hipster Hair Salon

Boutique Clothing/Craft/Candle Shop

Shared office space with strong Wi-Fi, a keurig machine and some free weights (ala Mr. Money Mustaches' shared office - look it up)

Might be helpful, too, to have a connect in the finance world who could get your tenants some sba-backed tenant improvement dollars (I might know a guy ;))

Good luck!

Post: Multifamily Insurance Broker - San Antonio TX

Eric NealPosted
  • Lender
  • San Antonio, TX
  • Posts 41
  • Votes 6

Hi, @Account Closed. Reach out to Melanie Fey with Chicago Title.  She's been working in multifamily in San Antonio for many years and will know someone.  I'll follow up with a direct message. Good luck!

Post: Top Property Management Firms in San Antonio

Eric NealPosted
  • Lender
  • San Antonio, TX
  • Posts 41
  • Votes 6

Hi, @Ryan O'Donnell. Reach out to @Brian Phelt. He is a second-generation manager with good systems and great response times.  I'm a lender here in SA and Brian has been very helpful.  Good luck!

Post: Not a new member but moving to San Antonio, a new location.

Eric NealPosted
  • Lender
  • San Antonio, TX
  • Posts 41
  • Votes 6

Thanks, @Matt Motil!

@Seth Feel and @Rock Pozos, I'm not sure how much I can say without violating rules about solicitation. I'll be working for Security Bank, an under $1B bank focused mostly on CRE, IRE and commercial lending. I have an extensive background in all three types of lending and focus on deals in the $500,000 to $15 million range. I look foward to meeting you two and others in San Antonio!

Post: Not a new member but moving to San Antonio, a new location.

Eric NealPosted
  • Lender
  • San Antonio, TX
  • Posts 41
  • Votes 6

Hi, Everyone,

My family and I are moving to San Antonio in late April. I'll be working for a boutique commercial bank and look forward to meeting with investors in the area soon! I'd also like to ask a big favor of the San Antonio rehabbers,  contractors, investors, etc. We're under contract on a house that needs some minor foundation shimming and a complete replacement of cast iron pipes in said foundation. Thank you very much and have a great week!

Post: Thinking about moving to Detroit for a good job.

Eric NealPosted
  • Lender
  • San Antonio, TX
  • Posts 41
  • Votes 6
@Justen Ashcraft:

Thanks for the information! We'd like to avoid being in one of the far away suburbs, if possible.  The area wasn't even on our map but we might need to take a

Post: Thinking about moving to Detroit for a good job.

Eric NealPosted
  • Lender
  • San Antonio, TX
  • Posts 41
  • Votes 6
 @Christian Hutchinson:

Thank you VERY much for the detailed response.  I really appreciate the insight.  As for us, it will just be me working while my wife stays home with our 1-yr. old daughter (more kids in the future probably).  I will certainly take your input into consideration.  If this opportunity materializes further, I hope I can use you as a resource!

Post: Thinking about moving to Detroit for a good job.

Eric NealPosted
  • Lender
  • San Antonio, TX
  • Posts 41
  • Votes 6

Hello, Fellow BPers,

I am reaching because I am pursuing a pretty exciting oportunity with a major US Bank in Detroit.  I worked for this company before and have faith in their payscale, corporate leadership, etc.  My "investing" question comes to anyone who might be living in the area.  The following are neighborhood we're looking at buying in (primary resident) in the $180,000 - $240,000 range:

University District, Pembrooke, North Rosedale Park, Old Redford, Greenfield, Ferndale, Boston-Edison West, Grosse Pointe Park, East English Village, Morningside, Rosa Parks, Jefferson Chalmers

Does anyone have any thoughts or insights on those areas?  Also, in our research, it looks like car insurance, city/state tax, and heating an older home in the winter are costs that we really have to consider when making the move.  I anticipate the job to pay in the $85,000 to $100,000 range plus semi-annual bonuses in the $5k - $10k range each.  It looks like city/state tax will run us about $7k/year on that income.  We drive paid for 2007 vehicles but I've heard horror stories about car insurance being $10k/year! 

While there we'd also like to look at putting an old $73k IRA into action investing in the city via sf and mf rentals. To me, when you invest in the real estate of a market, you are investing in the infrastructure of the city to keep gaining value and growing for the long haul. I've read enough conflicting evidence about Detroit that investing there feels like speculating. For people investing AND/OR living there, what are your thoughts on this topic?

Thank for reading through this long post.  I look forward to reading responses!

Post: Looking at a property in Cortez, CO

Eric NealPosted
  • Lender
  • San Antonio, TX
  • Posts 41
  • Votes 6

Thanks, @jerry_w.

I feel that it is a pretty crappy deal as well. The problem is that I keep hearing on the podcasts that getting started in real estate is about DOING. I don't think I will lose money on the deal either. Still, I will probably pass. Thanks!