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All Forum Posts by: Matt Huneycutt

Matt Huneycutt has started 2 posts and replied 36 times.

Post: 70% Increase in Foreclosures in 5 states...

Matt HuneycuttPosted
  • Involved In Real Estate
  • San Diego, CA
  • Posts 39
  • Votes 17

@KMP

Can you share a link to the article please?  

Thanks

Post: High Profit Return Potential!!! Fix and Flip Property in North Carolina!!!

Matt HuneycuttPosted
  • Involved In Real Estate
  • San Diego, CA
  • Posts 39
  • Votes 17

Are you searching for capital to execute, or a wholesale buyer?

Post: Build and Hold. Pros and Cons of building new SFR rentals

Matt HuneycuttPosted
  • Involved In Real Estate
  • San Diego, CA
  • Posts 39
  • Votes 17

Thanks Ken,

The initial concept was to extract the value of the land via liquidation, and maintain the existing house as a consolation prize.  We began thinking though, that perhaps the lots could be worth keeping. But after some reflection, I believe you are right...that our best move is to stick with the plan and sell the lots. We can pool the cash from the sale for a more logical buy and hold opportunity with existing homes in the Charlotte area. 

The financing piece for this type of deal is the real unknown. Could you tell me, what ballpark terms could I expect for construction loans, and what type of loans would/could I convert to after the build is complete?  

Post: House across from a dairy farm

Matt HuneycuttPosted
  • Involved In Real Estate
  • San Diego, CA
  • Posts 39
  • Votes 17

Amy,

Are there other houses besides this one? If so, maybe go get the opinion of those owners about the conditions there to help make a decision. I imagine winters don't smell so bad, but summers are rough. Do trucks come and go all day, or maybe just a few during business hours?  

If its the only house...maybe for a reason, and I would be extremely conservative. 

Something you could also do is check the last sales history, and compare that to other houses that sold that same year. I had to do that for a home in a historic district once. You take the percentage and apply to today's CMA.

Good Luck!

Matt

Post: Responding to all Leads

Matt HuneycuttPosted
  • Involved In Real Estate
  • San Diego, CA
  • Posts 39
  • Votes 17

Tim,

You could show the properties to your end buyers before you negotiate for them. If they tell you right away it's a bad buy, then you know how to proceed. Refer to Ben Grise, PODcast 90 or so. 

On a separate note, what is your RE experience?  

Good luck!

Matt

Post: development opportunity to partake in

Matt HuneycuttPosted
  • Involved In Real Estate
  • San Diego, CA
  • Posts 39
  • Votes 17

No worries. What is the scope of this subdivide?  

Post: development opportunity to partake in

Matt HuneycuttPosted
  • Involved In Real Estate
  • San Diego, CA
  • Posts 39
  • Votes 17

Dena,

Maybe Karen Margrave or Chris Adams can help you out. Chris just put together a 1MM$ no-money-down pro-forma and Karen has extensive building experience. 

Post: My 22 duplex lot deal - $1MM in debt - purchased with no money down.

Matt HuneycuttPosted
  • Involved In Real Estate
  • San Diego, CA
  • Posts 39
  • Votes 17

Bravo Chris 

Bringing in another banker was a killer move. Is the tactic of financing one or two builds at a time commonplace for double digit subdivisions or was that completely abstract thinking?

Just so I understand, you build one house and sell it, you now have the funds to own the lots out right?  Then you take further loans as you build the remaining 20 (your friend has you covered on loan #2. Is that right?

Post: Build and Hold. Pros and Cons of building new SFR rentals

Matt HuneycuttPosted
  • Involved In Real Estate
  • San Diego, CA
  • Posts 39
  • Votes 17

In areas where the rental market is strong and purchasing rate is low, it makes sense to investigate the buy and hold market, right?

Under contract right now, I have two 1-acre land parcels with a house on each...sale price $85,000. One house is a bulldoze, and the other requires $20,000 to be in tip top shape. ARV is anywhere from $100-$110k conservatively (for a 30+ yr old home). Zoning in the area is 20,000 sf minimum lot size, SFR, and is located in two succinct downtown overlay zones (like a vin diagram). As the city grows, these lots have the potential to become more valuable as they are authorized for mixed use (work and living) as well as light commercial. When this property came available, the idea was to split both lots in half creating four total lots. This will leave is with a fixer upper SFR, two raw land lots and one with sewer, water and power connections in the ground (which is a considerable advantage). My partner and I agreed that it would be a wise investment to subdivide the lots and sell the land parcels for $25k each. This would give us back $75k ( nearly our initial investment ) and for the cost of subdivision + rehab, we would have a rental property capable of bringing in $800 per month, conservatively. Pros to this scenario, are that I invest $40k, and within a year return with $37.5K (minus sales commissions, but $25k per lot is a low baseline) and half the interest in a more-or-less free and clear cashflow property. My partner will pay for and facilitate the subdivision, the rehab, and manage the property with cash and his own sweat. In exchange for his contributions, we will split the cashflow 60/40 or some agreed upon division proportionate to the expense, to be determined.

This, I believe, could be a solid plan.  Back up plan is, if need be, to sell the Fixer house at market value and divide the interest, yielding $50k each in positive returns, minus costs to sell the investment house.

The idea came to mind, however, when I learned about the concurrent zoning overlays that their may be some reasonable credibility in appreciation.  So now describing the original plan, I would like to pose the alternate plan and take your input. 

Fast forward, we now have one SFR, and three vacant lots in an area that could reasonably bring $1000 per month rent (given new or like new construction). We own the land, and we have utilities at one of the home sites. What if, instead of selling the lots, we hold them in order to build three additional rental units, given that we could build the homes for $100k or less each, hard and soft costs? Discussion points:

- What type of lending would be the appropriate choice for the construction?

- How do lenders valuate or view build and hold loans?

- Could you refinance after the build is complete to ensure cash flow?

- Could/should I take out a mortgage on the land prior to building?

- What are the expert pit falls to this strategy?

- What would lenders say to manufactured homes, versus spec built?

- If my partner is securing all the lending, how should the profit be divided?

- What is the exit strategy? The exit strategy, exit strategy?

- Has anyone been in a similar situation?  Was it successful, why or why not?

Post: Buying an unlisted lot

Matt HuneycuttPosted
  • Involved In Real Estate
  • San Diego, CA
  • Posts 39
  • Votes 17

Lynn,

I hunt off-market land deals all the time.  Here are a few good tips for gauging interest:

1)  Talk to the neighbors.  If the owners are 'land hoarders', it could save you a chilling rejection at the door to know ahead of time.  They can also tell you the current family or finance situation, which is crucial.

2)  Ask, don't tell.  When you have the owners' attention, introduce yourself and get them to expose what plans they have for the property.  Ask how they acquired it, how much land it is, what they use it for, what will they do with it, and when, etc.  The idea is to get them thinking, and get them talking.  If there is any interest there, it will show

If they look like they want to sell, but say no, you can throw a hail Mary.  Offer to give them an appraisal at no-cost.  24-48 hours, you can return with a dollar figure.  If they are on the fence, the next two days will give them plenty of time to think about what they will do with the money.  

Hope that helps.  Good Luck!

Matt H