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All Forum Posts by: Sean Yang

Sean Yang has started 11 posts and replied 67 times.

Hi all, I think I am in some serious trouble now and really need your guys' input!! About a year ago I got connected to a loan broker here in BP who was posting ads looking for private money to fund local flippers- so called gap financing. After a few emails and a face-to-face meeting, I was sold on this idea and started to invest money with him. It was a flat rate loan with my name on the 2nd lien position. Loan was structured for 12mo as stated on the Note, meaning the full amount is due either upon the sales of that project or by the end of 12 months, whichever occurs first. I received a Promissory Note, a Deed of Trust, and a personal Guaranty from the borrower. In the first a few months, the broker sent me monthly updates. Although the project was a bit delayed, he promised me it's looking fantastic and nothing to worry about.

I got quite busy later of the year and stopped following up with him; however, things started to go downhill from here... Earlier this month, I pulled the Note and noticed the payment due date was only a few weeks away but the project was still not listed for sale. I started calling the broker but he's not responding to any of the emails/texts/calls. I felt something was wrong and immediately called the escrow company who gave me the borrower's phone number. I called the borrower directly and was told things were not looking good. His company was mismanaged and lost quite bit of money and also he's stuck with a few projects now. He borrowed most 1st loans from a hard money lender who is going to begin foreclosure process if not paid by Jan 2018. He said he's trying to refinance one of the projects but not sure if he's qualified. He's asking me if I have a lot more money to buy out the 1st loan and I told him no. He said he takes his reputation and integrity seriously and will try to pay me back the principle if we work together, but I just don't know how that would happen if things are falling apart like he described. 

So I guess my question is- what are my options now? I know being on a 2nd position is quite weak but is there something else I can do instead of just waiting? I have a Promissory Note, a Deed of Trust, and a personal Guaranty but not sure what I can do with these. I guess I can take them to the court and go after his personal assets? That might be the last straw but I really hope there is some other solution that could minimize both losses. Any advice is welcome! Thank you BP!

Post: How's Casa Grande???????????????

Sean YangPosted
  • Investor
  • San Diego, CA
  • Posts 69
  • Votes 18

@Cara Lonsdale

Hi Cara thank you for your advice. Yea I heard AZ city was started as a retirement community and it did feel like under-developed in most part when I visited it earlier this year. Did you have a chance to check out Casa Grande? 

Post: How's Casa Grande???????????????

Sean YangPosted
  • Investor
  • San Diego, CA
  • Posts 69
  • Votes 18

@Rich Rinaldi 

I am planning to do buy&hold, so renting out to families hopefully to earn enough cash flow. 

Post: Looking for a CPA in San Diego

Sean YangPosted
  • Investor
  • San Diego, CA
  • Posts 69
  • Votes 18

@Basit Siddiqi Thank you for the clarification

Post: Looking for a CPA in San Diego

Sean YangPosted
  • Investor
  • San Diego, CA
  • Posts 69
  • Votes 18

@Basit Siddiqi Thank you for your advice. By filing a state return in each state that I invest in, do you mean filing a full state return including W2, 1099 income, etc or just the rental portion? 

Post: Looking for a CPA in San Diego

Sean YangPosted
  • Investor
  • San Diego, CA
  • Posts 69
  • Votes 18

@Katie L. just sent you a PM. please check your inbox.

Post: Looking for a CPA in San Diego

Sean YangPosted
  • Investor
  • San Diego, CA
  • Posts 69
  • Votes 18

Hi I am looking for an investor friendly CPA in San Diego area who is experienced in rental properties, fix&flips and gap financing, etc. Also looking for an attorney who knows how to best setup LLC's to handle out-of-state rental homes. Any recommendation is welcome! Thank you in advance.

Post: Agent asking for $5000 upfront compensation. That normal??

Sean YangPosted
  • Investor
  • San Diego, CA
  • Posts 69
  • Votes 18

@Christine Kankowski Thank you for your input. Ya that's definitely a red flag that he wanted me to order more tests even after the inspection and I've already told him I would like to hold off... 

Post: Agent asking for $5000 upfront compensation. That normal??

Sean YangPosted
  • Investor
  • San Diego, CA
  • Posts 69
  • Votes 18

@Jennifer Slaughter  yeah I got referred to him by a local real estate agent in my town. He is an analytical type and very motivated which I really liked but he seemed to be desperate for commission and got angry when the deal didn't go the way he wanted. 

Post: Agent asking for $5000 upfront compensation. That normal??

Sean YangPosted
  • Investor
  • San Diego, CA
  • Posts 69
  • Votes 18

@Jody Schnurrenberger Yea I felt the same way. I offered my price based on the numbers not based on the listing price, which could be very irrelevant as some sellers/agents have no clue of the market and just threw out a random number. I analyzed rent, expense, vacancy rate, repair, etc and came up with a reasonable offer that would work, sometimes it's 80% of the asking price, sometimes it's close to the asking price. But too bad many agents dont seem to think that way.