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All Forum Posts by: Pathik P.

Pathik P. has started 1 posts and replied 27 times.

Post: Lehigh Valley PA contractors

Pathik P.Posted
  • Investor
  • New Jersey
  • Posts 28
  • Votes 2

@Daniel A richiez I actually just had a call with them today. Everything you mentioned matches up to what they claimed to do. Awesome!

Post: Real Estate attorney or Title Company in NJ

Pathik P.Posted
  • Investor
  • New Jersey
  • Posts 28
  • Votes 2

Hi @Jake Recz would you still be open to me sending a DM your way for attorney referrals in NJ?

Hi @Joe White mind if I reach out as well? I'm in a similar situation of finding contractors in South East PA. 

Post: Lehigh Valley PA contractors

Pathik P.Posted
  • Investor
  • New Jersey
  • Posts 28
  • Votes 2

Hi @Daniel A richiez I wanted to ask you if they've started work so far, and how it's been going with MitriBrothers.

Post: New to 5+ unit MFH, would love advice and tips!

Pathik P.Posted
  • Investor
  • New Jersey
  • Posts 28
  • Votes 2

Thanks @David M. We're definitely being sure to take this nice and slow, step by step so that we set a solid foundation of our team/ strategy/ plan, vs just jumping into a deal and scrambling to piece together lenders/ attorney/ title/ insurance. We've built out our own calculator to let us just plug in numbers to give us a yes/no decision on properties and avoid hesitation beyond that. It also helps us figure out our price points for purchase+rehab. 

Post: New to 5+ unit MFH, would love advice and tips!

Pathik P.Posted
  • Investor
  • New Jersey
  • Posts 28
  • Votes 2

Thanks @Greg Dickerson! Solid advice. I've been working on establishing a team in markets that I'm looking in. This includes Agents and PM who invest themselves. As I've been having conversations with different lenders, they all pretty much point us towards commercial loans due to us being an LLC, with the LLC entity as the borrower versus any of our personal names. Some tried telling me to get creative with quit claiming after taking a loan in my name, but to me that makes no sense because I'd still be the one carrying the debt. I'm still staying somewhat fluid on my strategy as far as jumping straight into 5+ units or may getting a few triplex or quadplexes and then 1031 up to 5+ unit properties. It fully depends on the type of loan we are able to get and required down payment.

We pretty much are starting with $120k in capital, and don't plan to invest more into the LLC beyond that as I know we can grow this amount.

Post: New to 5+ unit MFH, would love advice and tips!

Pathik P.Posted
  • Investor
  • New Jersey
  • Posts 28
  • Votes 2

Hello BP community!

My name is Pathik Parikh. I'm brand new to the Real Estate Investing world, along with 2 other members (my younger brother and brother in law), through an LLC based out of NJ. Like many of you, our strategy is to purchase value-add buy and hold properties, with the eventual milestone goal of leaving our W-2 jobs.

About me: I'm an operations guy through and through. I've spent my career as an Ops Manager with Amazon, Senior Ops with a start up, a Senior Ops with Iron Mountain, and Site Manager for XPO. I'm all about standardization, streamlining, and building repeatable processes with a team. I'm big on the mentality of "Take action after doing your due diligence, or lose to analysis paralysis" (typical operations I know). The two partners are both Finance professionals with large banks, so they're heavy on excel crunching every number and creating models to run. So it balances out my eagerness to jump right in and forces me to thoroughly make a case for any investment I propose to them.

Most recently, I proposed that instead of aiming at SFH, we should look into 5+ unit MFHs or small apartments. Since we are an LLC, we keep getting commerical rates/loans. I know I can take a residential loan for 1-4 units in my own name, but I'm going to purchase my own primary residence soon and don't want to hinder my borrowing power there. My argument was that it's ok going slower this way (meaning less properties bought in a given timeframe) because the pure cashflow would be higher than if we went slower with residential properties. The MFH properties are a unique niche in and of themselves because you're not in competition with home buyers or big shot commercial buyers. Financing can get creative as well if the owner of a distressed property owns it flat out for seller financing.

Now I know there are differences in commercial vs residential properties. Valuation is based on profitability vs intrinsic property value like a beautiful house, vacancy can be seen as value add things to improve, rehab is a different timeline given more units, etc.

What I'd love to hear from the community here is any advice you may have in regards to getting into MFH properties, what to watch out for, how to find a solid deal, financing you may have done, value add tips, doing this in higher prices market (like NJ) and lower priced markets, etc. I've read about people saying don't go commercial as your first deal but it just comes down to learning and understanding it the same way you would have with residential properties, and having a strong team.

Looking forward to seeing the replies! Thank you all in advance.

Post: Property ownership 100% remote. Doable?

Pathik P.Posted
  • Investor
  • New Jersey
  • Posts 28
  • Votes 2

I'll definitely have to take you up on that chat @Kelly Myers to learn more about CO

Post: Property ownership 100% remote. Doable?

Pathik P.Posted
  • Investor
  • New Jersey
  • Posts 28
  • Votes 2

Hi @Kelly Myers I'm actually figuring out remote rehabbing for my LLC. I'm seeing that a project manager is needed for most of the remote rehab. You mentioned that your property manager actually helped oversee one rehab. Did they charge for an extra service to do this? I have someone who is helping me as an agent and property manager, but was telling me that they don't oversee the rehab. Just that someone from the property management company could possibly swing by for status updates for an additional fee.

I'm also looking into getting into CO markets but don't really have "boots on the ground" there yet. 

Post: Deed transfer - will it hurt my credit?

Pathik P.Posted
  • Investor
  • New Jersey
  • Posts 28
  • Votes 2

@Corbin Jones similar to what Shawn said above, not a crime. It's more so that the bank have the option to call the full amount on the note if they want to. It's AMAZING that you got the bank saying they wont, but I would recommend getting a letter of approval or something in writing from them that's legal saying they won't turn around and call it on you. There are quick ways to fix it though: 1) Just put it back on your name 2) Refi to the LLC under nonconforming loan (albeit it's a higher rate of course).

The debt itself though is still on your name. Only ownership is transferred when you quit claim -- meaning whatever amount of interest ownership you had in that property (0% or 20%) goes to whomever is listed on the transfer. Warranty Deed, which are more "legit" specifically says how much claim you had in the property before transferring it over. I don't think there's a way to get the debt to be transferred over without the bank rewriting it.