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All Forum Posts by: Paul V.

Paul V. has started 8 posts and replied 41 times.

Post: 1031 Into Passive Investment Through TIC?

Paul V.Posted
  • Investor
  • Denver, CO
  • Posts 42
  • Votes 29

Thanks @Jackson Hanssen. Great point. I would be coming in through an LLC, so feel comfortable with liability protection as it relates to other assets, but still, will be on title, so there is exposure.

As a real estate guy I'm still in growth mode and am having a hard time swallowing the dst pill.  Maybe in 20 yrs when im investing for cash flow!

Post: 1031 Into Passive Investment Through TIC?

Paul V.Posted
  • Investor
  • Denver, CO
  • Posts 42
  • Votes 29

1031 exchanges have been interesting to me, although, outside of a DST, they still require active management.

I received an invitation from a well regarded real estate developer to 1031 exchange into an acquisition they are doing. This is made possible by them setting up a Tenants In Common (TIC) structure.

Has anyone done this before? Looking forward to hearing your experience.

Post: Protection on Investments

Paul V.Posted
  • Investor
  • Denver, CO
  • Posts 42
  • Votes 29

@Jane Park. It sounds like you are being presented with a passive investment opportunity.....Would you be a limited partner and the developer would be the general partner?  Are you an accredited investor?

There are a lot of books out there covering the topic of passive investment. It can be very lucrative, but requires a different type of evaluation than active investment.  

I'm currently evaluating multifamily passive deals here in Denver and would be happy to connect.

First off, I would examine why the return would be higher for a longer period..... What about the project would allow that to actually happen?

Post: 125k to invest, where to start?

Paul V.Posted
  • Investor
  • Denver, CO
  • Posts 42
  • Votes 29


@Paul V. Could this plan theoretically be executed without moving residences every year or is it contingent on moving into the newly purchased house a factor with obtaining convectional financing? 

 

@Meir Preis In order to obtain 5% down convention funding in this specific situation and strategy, it would have to be a primary residence and require moving in.  

Post: First time buying a rental property for investment dilemma

Paul V.Posted
  • Investor
  • Denver, CO
  • Posts 42
  • Votes 29
Quote from @Jenny Kao:

Hi all, I'm a newbie to real estate! Currently, I'm looking to buy my first rental property. I'm looking at single family home (3B2B) or condo in either AZ or CO. However, most single family home price seems to be out of my range (low 300) and condos all have high HOA fee, which I'm not sure down the road if it's worth it. Should I be looking at other states instead? Seems like there are a lot of experts in this community, therefore just wanted to get some thoughts. Thanks!

My first couple of investments were in condos.  I currently have a couple here in Denver.  I would recommend them as a way to get in the game and start accumulating equity.  

https://www.denverpost.com/202...

Metro Denver apartment rent inflation has outstripped income gains by a higher margin than in any other major city in the U.S. since 2009, according to a study from Clever Real Estate subsidiary Real Estate Witch.

From 2009 to 2021, rent growth outpaced income growth in 46 of the 50 largest U.S. metros, with only Providence, R.I.; Buffalo, N.Y.; Cleveland and Pittsburgh able to keep housing costs in line with wage gains.

Nationally, median monthly rents went from $817 in 2009 to $1,163 in 2021, a gain of 42%. Denver’s gain was 82%, going from $856 a month to $1,554. That jump, almost double the pace experienced nationally, was second to only San Jose, the hub of California’s Silicon Valley, where monthly rents went up 85%, from $1,360 to $2,511.

Seattle; Portland, Ore.; San Francisco; Nashville; and Austin, Texas, were other heated rental housing markets. Rounding out the top 10 were Salt Lake City, San Diego, and Los Angeles.

A big difference between Denver and San Jose, however, was that median incomes didn’t keep pace with rent inflation, rising 48%, well short of the 82% gain in apartment rents. Denver rent gains outpaced income gains by a 71% margin, putting it among a camp of seven major metros where rent gains outstripped income gains by 50% or more.

After Denver, Las Vegas had the next biggest gap at 57%, followed by Charlotte, N.C., at 56%, Seattle at 55% and Atlanta at 53%.

But the study wasn’t entirely bleak. Denver rent gains are moderating, growing 4.9% between 2022 and 2023, which ranks 36 out of 50 metros.

    Rents have skyrocketed, but the rent-to-income burden of 21.1%, up from 17% back in 2009, isn’t too much higher than the 20% burden measured nationally. That 21.1% ratio remains below the 30% rate recommended to avoid being “rent burdened.

    That said, people with higher incomes are more likely to own their homes, which skews the numbers. Renters are likely more burdened than what Clever captured in its study, and Denver renters are more burdened than they were back in 2009.

    “The rent-to-income ratio surged the most in Denver, followed by Seattle — two cities where recreational cannabis consumption was first legalized, increasing demand for housing among marijuana migrants from other parts of the U.S.,” said Jaime Dunaway-Seale, in comments accompanying the report.

    The change in Denver’s rent-to-income ratio was the largest in the country at 23%, followed by Seattle at 19%.

    One of the challenges with real estate is that there are so many different options.

    I would suggest coming up with a plan for what your end goal is and then reverse engineering it.

    If you are looking to grow wealth, a key metric that I would recommend using to analyze different scenarios is Return on Equity.  Have you run that for your properties/portfolio?

    Post: Chicago Condo Conversion Pre-construction Flip

    Paul V.Posted
    • Investor
    • Denver, CO
    • Posts 42
    • Votes 29
    Quote from @Jonathan Klemm:

    @Paul V. I think the biggest thing that drove appreciation here in Chicago was low inventory (which is still the case) and high demand due to low-interest rates.

    Now, with the rise of interest rates things seem to be leveling off more.

     Thanks for the insight @Jonathan Klemm - Very interested to see where things go from here for my home town.

    Post: First Time Investor looking for advice starting real estate portfolio

    Paul V.Posted
    • Investor
    • Denver, CO
    • Posts 42
    • Votes 29

    @Jarred Marrow

    Congrats on taking this step and asking for advice.  Two initial thoughts:

    1) Living paycheck to paycheck - Real estate has it's ups and downs, so you want to have some cushion.  What opportunities exist for you to increase your value in your skill sets and increase your income and/or decrease your expenses? What sacrifices can you make today to invest in yourself?

    2) What is your current primary residence situation? Renting? You could potentially leverage $20k into a downpayment for an initial primary residence to get your journey started.  

    Post: Chicago Condo - Lincoln Park

    Paul V.Posted
    • Investor
    • Denver, CO
    • Posts 42
    • Votes 29

    You all got me curious about the details on this so I did some research.. I was able to pull up the Association's amendment to the bylaws that were recorded with the county!  Here you go:

    Amendment To Bylaws

    @Jonathan Klemm @Victor So @Mark Ainley @Tom Casey