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All Forum Posts by: Sarah Moore

Sarah Moore has started 6 posts and replied 22 times.

Post: Dissolved LLC owner property purchase confusion

Sarah MoorePosted
  • New to Real Estate
  • Central Maine
  • Posts 22
  • Votes 7

Hello all. We're trying to close on a seller financed mixed use building. However, it came out kind of late in the game that the property is not actually owned by the seller. It's owned by a dissolved LLC in care of him. His ex-wife was the former registered agent and is now out of the picture and no longer involved in the property except on old documents.

We’re not sure of this deal is going to be able to close without our seller as the official owner, but there seems to be no other option. Any ideas on how we can save this deal? 

Post: Not sure how to assess commercial unit need

Sarah MoorePosted
  • New to Real Estate
  • Central Maine
  • Posts 22
  • Votes 7

Evan Polaski I know a good office broker that I could probably talk to a little more in depth and get their input. Thank you. 

Post: Not sure how to assess commercial unit need

Sarah MoorePosted
  • New to Real Estate
  • Central Maine
  • Posts 22
  • Votes 7

@Chris Mason that made me laugh for real. Thanks for that. Surprisingly, I didn't even think of that. This area has a pretty significant housing shortage, so I bet an approach like that would be well received. 

Post: Not sure how to assess commercial unit need

Sarah MoorePosted
  • New to Real Estate
  • Central Maine
  • Posts 22
  • Votes 7
Quote from @Michael K Gallagher:

@Sarah Moore Some great advice here from @Chris Mason I'd also add that like any other asset the underlying demographics of the market these buildings are in can tell you a lot about the office demand as well.  You might also see if any of the vacancy's are currently listed and how good their marketing is.  Not saying this is the case all the time, but often times they just have poor or little marketing, and no follow up with prospective tenants.

I'd also consider any "alternate" uses, for instance its currently an office building, but is there a different use or is it in a location that lends itself to say medical office more than trad office, or is there a way to retrofit for a coworking kinda set up.  if the fundamentals on the market and location are sound there is always a way to creatively work through and imrpove the operations.  

 Thank you @Michael K Gallagher. I really like the idea of creative and alternate uses of the space. I'll look into that in this market and see what sorts of potential need there may be. 

Post: Not sure how to assess commercial unit need

Sarah MoorePosted
  • New to Real Estate
  • Central Maine
  • Posts 22
  • Votes 7
Quote from @Chris Mason:

Commercial leases are in the 3-5 year range. So most of the pre-covid ones have already rolled.

I'd focus on the ones that are about to roll. The business who signed a 5 year lease in August of 2019, that's up in August of 2024.

I'd go walk my happy butt into that office space. I know a commercial tenant (colleague) who is paying to rent an office space big enough for 40 employees, but only 5 people are willing to go to the office, so it's a ghost town, obviously they will not be renewing. If a potential buyer were to walk in there, it would be obvious that this tenant isn't renewing, and they'd be a fool to include that rent in their own underwriting numbers. 

Be cynical and conservative, subtract out the rent from any ghost office. Consider making judgement calls beyond just the obvious ghost offices, too.

At this point, since we're at about the 5 year mark, I think things are mostly stabilized. And if that means it's "stable" at 35% vacancy, then don't pay a dollar over what makes sense with perpetual 35% vacancy. The listing broker is going to have a proforma assuming 10% vacancy, throw it in the trash, which is EXACTLY what we are doing on the lending side. 

If that 35% vacancy ever shrinks to 15%, hey, that's your upside, that's why buying an office in 2024/2025 is going to be like buying homes was in 2009/2010 at the bottom of the market. More millionaires were made by those bottom of market home purchases than most other times, I suspect that's what we're looking at for offices this year and next.

Let me know if you want to run financing numbers. 


 Thank you Chris! That is marvelous advise. As I move forward I may take you up on the offer to run financing numbers. We're currently considering 4 different properties, I'm just a lost figuring the prospective rents. This feels a lot different to me than residential.  

Post: Local meet up yea or nay

Sarah MoorePosted
  • New to Real Estate
  • Central Maine
  • Posts 22
  • Votes 7
Quote from @Ko Kashiwagi:

Hi Sarah,

Meetups are great for building long term connections. If you go to/host the same one every week, even better. I would also check to see if there are meetups already on websites like BiggerPockets, Meetup.com and Facebook.


 Hi Ko, 

Thanks for the recommendation. I'll check out a few more online resources.

Post: Local meet up yea or nay

Sarah MoorePosted
  • New to Real Estate
  • Central Maine
  • Posts 22
  • Votes 7
Quote from @Chris Ayars:

Have you checked into whether or not there is a meetup already established in your area? If so, you might be better off going to one of them unless organizing events is in your skillset.


 That's a great question Chris. Yes, I have looked into it and the nearest one is over an hour away. So I would be the one who would need to organize meet ups locally. There is interest and I know we could build a community. I'm just not sure I want to take on that chore every month, even though I'm capable of it. Just trying to decide how much to take on right now. 

Post: Local meet up yea or nay

Sarah MoorePosted
  • New to Real Estate
  • Central Maine
  • Posts 22
  • Votes 7

I'm a new investor in my area and looking forward to this year. Part of my strategy, as everyone's, is to expand my network. As such I've hosted one small real estate meet up for local folks. What's your opinion for the small gatherings? Do you think they're worth the time and effort of setting up a regular thing or no? 

Post: Not sure how to assess commercial unit need

Sarah MoorePosted
  • New to Real Estate
  • Central Maine
  • Posts 22
  • Votes 7

We're considering 4 commercial properties in our area. These include multiple office and retail spaces. I'm good with the underwriting, and know that the numbers would work. The only hesitation I have is that I am not 100% certain about the office space rental market. I'm still new to this arena and don't want to make a costly mistake if I can avoid it. 

What advice do you have for determining if the demand is there for prospective commercial (office space) tenants? 

Post: Unsure about getting into class C and D neighborhoods

Sarah MoorePosted
  • New to Real Estate
  • Central Maine
  • Posts 22
  • Votes 7
Quote from @Greg Ruff:

Hi Sarah, I haven't had experience with this myself, but I do work with an investor that's actually focusing on those types of investments right now considering them to be more stable because of the guaranteed rent deposited through section 8 housing. There's typically less turnover with tenants, and it's easy to fill when they do turnover. I would definitely start by checking what % of units are receiving some sort of housing stipend or what programs may be available to them. The downside to this approach being less upside potential on raising rents over time if rents continue to climb. Hope this helps! 


 That's great information. I hadn't even considered the Section 8 aspect. Thank you!