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All Forum Posts by: Peter VanWesep

Peter VanWesep has started 4 posts and replied 14 times.

Post: self manage vs property management company

Peter VanWesepPosted
  • Real Estate Broker
  • Seattle, WA
  • Posts 16
  • Votes 2
I think the primary concern with this course, Mark, aside from the fact that you would need to be more hands-on with this employee than you would likely be with a prop mgmt company, is that many states require property managers to have a real estate broker's license in order to perform many of the functions that are central to managing your property (interviewing/placing tenants, collecting rent, etc). From a quick glance, it looks like New Jersey is one such state. If this is where your properties are located, then I think it will be a tricky endeavor to navigate this process with a solid legal footing.

Post: Grand Rapids REI Happy Hour

Peter VanWesepPosted
  • Real Estate Broker
  • Seattle, WA
  • Posts 16
  • Votes 2

Hey there Grand Rapids investors!

I'm a real estate investor living in Oakland, CA who grew up in Grand Rapids and am so excited to have recently closed on a duplex in northeast GR (just south of Leonard).

I am going to be out visiting the property in the next couple weeks and would love to meet up with some fellow BPers!

If any of you would like to join me and my business partner for a happy hour on Friday, September 8th, I would love to buy you all a drink.

Come on by the Reservoir Lounge at 1418 Plainfield Ave NE between 5 - 7pm so we can meet and chat about Grand Rapids/West Michigan real estate.

I'm excited to be back in the community and can't wait to introduce myself and see what kind of investment work you've been doing.

See you soon!

Peter

Post: Best ways to leverage

Peter VanWesepPosted
  • Real Estate Broker
  • Seattle, WA
  • Posts 16
  • Votes 2

Post should be titled "Best ways to use leverage" rather than "Best ways to leverage".

Applying for a loan is easy.

Post: Best ways to leverage

Peter VanWesepPosted
  • Real Estate Broker
  • Seattle, WA
  • Posts 16
  • Votes 2

Hi there BP community!

I am a public educator turned software engineer/real estate investor currently living in Oakland, CA.

I am an owner-occupant of a duplex in north Oakland where I've accumulated a good amount of equity (~400k) and I'm curious of people's opinions on good ways to leverage it.

I apologize in advance if this question has been answered many times previously. I couldn't find posts that fit my situation precisely, which is why I'm posting here.

My goal with REI

I hope to build a portfolio over the next ~5 years that will allow me to return to public sector employment without facing a significant hit on my salary. This would translate to making an extra ~$70-80k/yr in (mostly) passive income. Quite a lofty goal, but I think that's why we're all here.

Legwork so far

For the past year, I've been looking for properties to BRRRR in the bay or Sacramento but have had a predictably hard time finding deals. The best options I've found are occupied properties in C/D neighborhoods in Sacramento that would generate around 12% COC, but where I likely wouldn't be able to recoup significant capex and where tenants *might not* consider rent their top budgeting priority.

Thoughts I've had

It has been mentioned repeatedly in these forums that the midwest/south are probably the best places for ROI. With that being the case, I am considering permanently moving as far away as Denver so that I can be within a couple hours of most of these midwest cities. I have been looking at properties listed for <$75k in many of these places, and the numbers look promising (15-20% caps). Of course this is with *zero* insight as to how things actually look on the ground. I don't have many connections in these cities, and don't expect they will be easy to make (though BP certainly helps!), but I would fortunately be able to work my full-time job remotely for a period of a 2-3 months in order to build a network and start a project.

My questions

  • I plan to estimate median rent to selling price for a number of cities within 2hrs of Denver (through copious internet browsing and scripting). I'll then reach out to BP agents/investors in those areas to talk about the market (cap rates, crime, neighborhoods, schools, population growth, etc). What are peoples' other recommendations on selecting a location?
  • Is the sub-75k market where I want to be, or should I be looking at more expensive properties? In the long-term, I expect I would hit my 10 loan limit before reaching my income goal if I buy cheap, but the percentages obviously look much better for those properties in the short term. The options I see are: (1) buying cheap and eventually finding portfolio lending once I hit 10 loans, (2) buy more expensive properties but make sure to always hit my desired COC percent, 1031 when necessary, and hope to find 10 high performing properties that cash flow at ~$6,500/month, (3) sell the bulk of my assets and find an apartment building once I've gotten enough equity/experience to qualify for a commercial loan. Other options for avoiding the 10 loan limit? This is obviously a "best case" long term question, but given my timeline, I'm hoping to get as much figured out in advance as I can.

Thanks in advance! I've already gained so much knowledge and insight from this community and look forward to hearing what you might have to say.

Best regards,

Peter