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All Forum Posts by: Shiv Jey

Shiv Jey has started 36 posts and replied 84 times.

Post: What would you do?

Shiv JeyPosted
  • Seattle, WA
  • Posts 110
  • Votes 17

I wanted to ask everyone what you all think my best strategy should be.  

Current status:

Wife and I are employed and rather high-income earners (total household income >1M), but because we are employed, we are getting destroyed on taxes.  We are doing traditional investments, including 401k, 457, great pension plans if we stay long enough, etc.  We are investing with the help of a financial manager/consultant to ensure we can maintain a nice lifestyle upon retirement (which is realistically 25-30 years away).

I got excited about real estate investing after reading a couple books and seeing the potential.  Positive cashflow from rental income will not affect our lifestyles and this isn't meant to take place of our jobs.  We live fairly meagerly and splurge more on convenience rather than big ticket items (no fancy car, big house, etc.  just exorbitant seattle delivery fees :) ).

Both our jobs are time consuming.  Wife is on board and fully supportive, but I cannot count on her to "get it done" when issues arise.  I work erratic hours 6-7 days a week.  I would most certainly require a property manager even with my very first property.

My thoughts:

If through rental properties I can break even in terms of rental income versus expenses, and given that I would be in a financial position to pay down mortgages fairly aggressively and benefit from rental income long-term, it seems to me collecting real estate properties would be a great way to build a vast portfolio, perhaps more effectively than traditional investments.  Meanwhile, I would not be significantly affected by waves of market rises and crashes since my job is fairly safe and well-paying and should be able to handle such slow-downs.  After putting money into traditional investments, I imagine I could save an additional 100k annually to invest into real estate.

My current actions:

I'm lurking on this site to try to meet as many Seattle-area investors as I can, reading aggressively about rental property investing, and saving money.  Wife and I are newlyweds and I have lots of student loans so we're in the saving money phase in the meantime.

So, if you were in my position, how would you play the real estate game?  I thought that since additional monthly income is not required, I can look at properties that even net zero positive cash flow, as long as all expenses and costs are covered, have tenants essentially pay down the mortgages while I reap the rewards, and hopefully, appreciation as well.  At age 60 I can sell out or bequeath the properties and retire.  What would you do?

Post: New Member from Greater Seattle WA Area

Shiv JeyPosted
  • Seattle, WA
  • Posts 110
  • Votes 17
Originally posted by @Ryland Taniguchi:

You can make money in any market. You just have to adapt. Flipping sucks now in King county. BRRRR in pierce and thurston is still good. Development in seattle is very very good. Hard money lending is where it is at now.

I am also going to explore Florida next.

 I too am new, and live in Seattle, and am looking into gathering knowledge and diving in next year.  What do you mean by hard money lending and development in seattle?

Post: Just joined

Shiv JeyPosted
  • Seattle, WA
  • Posts 110
  • Votes 17

Hi John, I'm interested in residential first.  New to the game and still building my knowledge base.  How long have you been in Seattle?

Post: Seattle Area - Advice Appreciated!

Shiv JeyPosted
  • Seattle, WA
  • Posts 110
  • Votes 17

Dear all,

I have lived in Seattle for a year now and am looking into real estate investing.  My father built houses and sold them, sometimes up to three at a time, while working a job as a civil engineer when I was growing up.  Although a lot of fun, my job is too erratic with long hours to do that, so I came across Brandon Turner's book on Rental Property Investing and felt it gave me options to be more "hands off" in terms of being an investor with good property managers, etc.

I'm saving money and hope in the next year to buy my first property as I learn more, read more, and hopefully see the seattle market slow down a bit.

I would love to meet like-minded people in the area.  Specifically, Shoreline/Edmonds/Mill Creek has caught my eye as I feel Seattle proper is far too expensive and overpriced.  The areas up north I mentioned are also on the expensive side, but with the new rail station opening in Shoreline that I heard about on NPR I believe positions it well to grow quickly.  Please feel free to reach out with stories, advice, or any tips in general, and I'm definitely open to meeting people as I begin to get into the world of rental properties.  

Thanks!

Shiv