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All Forum Posts by: Taylor Chiu

Taylor Chiu has started 25 posts and replied 465 times.

Post: VA loan cap removal questions

Taylor ChiuPosted
  • Real Estate Agent
  • Salt Lake City, UT
  • Posts 473
  • Votes 230

@Chris Mason

Thanks for your input! Was hoping you would chime in on this one. Sounds like we’ll just have to sit back and wait to see how this all develops.

Btw, I was confused at first cause your profile pic changed haha

Post: VA loan cap removal questions

Taylor ChiuPosted
  • Real Estate Agent
  • Salt Lake City, UT
  • Posts 473
  • Votes 230

Hey everyone, the VA loan cap was removed last week. Great news! That brings to mind a couple of questions:

- Are va loans still capped at no more than 4 units? Or is my dream of getting a 50 unit apt complex with a va loan now possible?

- Does this affect the overall va total loan eligibility (across potentially multiple loans)?

Post: Bitcoin is 10k again what are you going to do now?

Taylor ChiuPosted
  • Real Estate Agent
  • Salt Lake City, UT
  • Posts 473
  • Votes 230

I think it's going to be a while more before it's mainstream enough for rent collection

Post: Difference between 203k loan and new CHOICERenovation product?

Taylor ChiuPosted
  • Real Estate Agent
  • Salt Lake City, UT
  • Posts 473
  • Votes 230

Hey everyone, Freddie Mac just came out with a CHOICERenovation loan. Any ideas how this differs from the 203k loan? Seems like both cater to those who need to finance rehab costs, but I imagine there is more to it than that.

Post: Newbie way to find out what out-of-state market to invest in

Taylor ChiuPosted
  • Real Estate Agent
  • Salt Lake City, UT
  • Posts 473
  • Votes 230
Originally posted by @Kin Meng Sio:

Hi all, just joined Bigger Pockets and I'm excited to connect with all of you! I'm working in the tech industry in Seattle and I'm trying to start doing out-of-state BRRRR, as Seattle is too expensive to start with.

Then I'm facing my first challenge: which market should invest in? I've heard couple good options from podcasts and other investors but I decided to do some homework. From my perspective, I want to invest in places where I can imagine myself living in and having a good life, so I started googling best places to live in the USA, and found https://realestate.usnews.com/places/rankings/best-places-to-live.

US news has done some extensive research for 125 metro areas across the country. Then they came up with multiple indices for ranking (you can find out how they come up with their indices here) Some of the ranking criteria includes home prices, rent, job market, cost of living, net migration, etc. PERFECT! Sounds like some criteria I would look at as an investor. Then I did some web scrapping to pull the valuable data and stick them in a spreadsheet. For those who are interested in the data and play it around yourself, click here to download it from my Google drive. 

For those who don't wanna deal with spreadsheet, this is what it roughly looks like:

After playing around the data a bit,  we picked 4 markets for further investigation and analysis. I also stick some of my emotional thoughts on these markets:

1. Fayetteville, AR

Pros: pretty well-rounded in terms of cost of living, quality of life, job market, net migration. Housing price fits my price range of < $200k.

Cons: fairly small metro area (500K population). Small metro size means less opportunities (generally compared to bigger metro areas).

2. Des Moines, IA

Pros: pretty well-rounded in terms of cost of living, quality of life, job market, net migration. Housing price fits my price range of < $200k. I have family in Minnesota so I may be able to get some support there too. 

Cons: fairly small metro area (600K population). Small metro size means less opportunities (generally compared to bigger metro areas).

3. Boise, ID

Pros: High appreciation, and I've personally been there so I have a rough idea of what it feels like. Closer to Seattle area so it's easier to fly there for anything. 

Cons: To start off my investment career I'd rather start in market with more steady growth. Rapid appreciation sounds attractive but also scared me a bit for market downturn. 

4. Houston, TX 

Pros: I have friends down there so I can get more local knowledge. Big metro area seems to have more opportunities in general.

Cons: Bigger metro area also means more competition (especially larger players).  

By no means I'm trusting this dataset 100% but it helps me narrow down for further actions. My next steps:

1. Further research on these 4 markets and get down to a winner I will focus on.

2. Using a similar approach to lock down what neighborhoods to invest.

3. Start connecting with local investors, agents, property managers, contractors to build a team. 

4. Fly down there to connect with people. Live in local Airbnb to get a feeling. 

5. Find deals 

Love to hear all your feedback on my approach! Please share what you will look for when considering an out-of-state market. Will also appreciate tips & tricks on neighborhood research. 

 Awesome spreadsheet, thanks for putting that together!

Post: 1st [Possible] Rental Property, A Mini Trailer Park Lot

Taylor ChiuPosted
  • Real Estate Agent
  • Salt Lake City, UT
  • Posts 473
  • Votes 230
Originally posted by @Maksim Easley:

@Geordy Rostad What are your thoughts on this method of evaluating mobile home parks? I came across it earlier but don’t necessarily know how it works out the way it does and if it’s actually a decent rule of thumb to consider when searching. “A good rule of thumb that I use to start with is that I take the number of occupied spaces and multiply this by the average monthly space rent and multiply this by 70 (The "70" number is an arbitrary number based on my experience in evaluating deals).” Using this method, it makes the deal I found seem fairly nice but I wasn’t sure if it’s something you’d use on a small lot or not.

https://www.mobilehomeuniversity.com/articles/evaluating-mobile-home-park-investments.php

 Yep that's a good way to do it. Also you should run some test ads to confirm that $450/mo is what you could get for lot rent.

Post: So I just bought a mobile home park with a car loan..

Taylor ChiuPosted
  • Real Estate Agent
  • Salt Lake City, UT
  • Posts 473
  • Votes 230

@Brandon Brown

Congrats man! Very creative indeed. What’s the size of your park’s MSA?

Post: Does the BP app send notifications on iPhone?

Taylor ChiuPosted
  • Real Estate Agent
  • Salt Lake City, UT
  • Posts 473
  • Votes 230

@Jason Lam

Sadly I don’t think it does

Post: How Universal Basic Income Could Change Real Estate Investing

Taylor ChiuPosted
  • Real Estate Agent
  • Salt Lake City, UT
  • Posts 473
  • Votes 230

@Wes Blackwell

To get to your actual points, I don’t think this would make anything more affordable. That 1k/mo is coming from taxpayers, probably the ones who own all of the rentals. So they’ll raise their rent to cover their new expenses, and these tenants will have to fork over that 1k in new increased living expenses. Which ends up with everyone paying more for the same experience.

Post: Investing a million dollar inheritance for passive income

Taylor ChiuPosted
  • Real Estate Agent
  • Salt Lake City, UT
  • Posts 473
  • Votes 230

@Truman Ellis

Congrats on the inheritance! If you want to go very passive, syndicating as a limited partner could be a great path. You could achieve 15% returns possibly with almost no work after you bet the syndicator and the deal in the first place. Not that you would invest it all, but if you were to put 1 million into syndications, with a 15% return you could Get 150K a year, which is enough for a comfortable lifestyle.