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All Forum Posts by: Stephen Polizzi

Stephen Polizzi has started 16 posts and replied 86 times.

Post: Selling 1 Rental to buy ??

Stephen PolizziPosted
  • Danbury, NH
  • Posts 89
  • Votes 21

 I recommend using Google to search BP. The BP search is lacking... you can type this format:

site:biggerpockets.com <topic>

In the example, <topic> is whatever you are after (i.e. 1031). That restricts google to just look at BP and 1031, so should get you lots of relevant information.

 Off-topic but I'm glad I'm not the only one who has found this to be true. BP search is almost unusable for anything beyond an exact-match single-term search query. @Brandon Turner @Joshua Dorkin

Post: Tax Protection for Flipping Income

Stephen PolizziPosted
  • Danbury, NH
  • Posts 89
  • Votes 21

@Ryland Taniguchi Did you ever get an answer to your question about flipping properties with the same entity you do GC work for the general public with?

Post: Using an LLC/entity to purchase an REO

Stephen PolizziPosted
  • Danbury, NH
  • Posts 89
  • Votes 21

I've been told that REOs don't want offers and closing docs to be done through an entity such as an LLC because it clouds whether or not its an arms-length transaction. Is this true?

Recently I closed on a deal with a real estate agent partner and she used her personal name to close rather than our LLC. She's a close friend of the family, so I'm not concerned about malfeasance. She is quitclaiming the deed over to our LLC now. When I asked the reasoning, she gave the above explanation and the lawyer who closed the deal also gave me the same explanation when asked. The alternative was to have all 5 of our LLC members close and then quitclaim but she claims that this too would be an impediment. This particular deal was through HUD, but all explanations were generalized to REOs not just HUD.

What's the actual deal with this, does anyone have experience?

Post: Business Profits Tax New Hampshire

Stephen PolizziPosted
  • Danbury, NH
  • Posts 89
  • Votes 21

I too would love to hear from an expert on BPT.

@Tanya R. Hi Tanya, what is the name of the NH version of that program? Thanks!

I know you said "other than...via mailers", but honestly I think you'll find that's where you're going to end up. There are other strategies (cold calling, social media, landing pages, ad retargeting, etc) but most folks utilize those in addition to a solid and persistent direct mail marketing campaign.  Rather than try to avoid the inevitable, I'd suggest figuring out how you can afford to do the mailers and where you'll generate the leads to mail from.  Just my opinion, but may save you some aggravation and lost time.

@Andrew Johnson  We are contractors. I've viewed the units I'm intending to purchase and there are various amounts of deferred maintenance, nothing insurmountable.  The common areas require cleaning, touchup, and paint.  Landscaping required as well, but all stuff we handle daily.

These guys are motivated by the bulk purchase, distance, no end in sight for them, and frankly have a level of sophistication that allowed the situation to degrade to this point. Realistically the only chance at making something of this failed investment for them is to sell to an investor like me who can take on the building as a whole.  There isn't a viable future here for individual owners in its current state.

The guy selling me the 6 units was the treasurer and admin for the association. He was bad at filing liens and chasing fees. Again, that's how the building got here.  As far as I can tell (prior to title search) there are no outstanding liens.  I spoke with an attorney briefly and he indicated that part of the process for restarting the association would be to blanket forgive all outstanding fees (no records anyway) and start fresh. Since I would own a majority of the units, I think this is preferable to me as well.

@Thomas S. I tend to agree with you, and that would be my primary topic of conversation with legal.  How much can I raise fees and what can I do to enforce them?  I don't want to be an ******* and I'm certainly not trying to force people from their homes, but either this needs to be a viable condo association or people will need to sell, there can't and shouldn't be an in-between. At present, the value and assessment of the units is driven down by condition. That will start to climb as I improve the building/association.  However, I'll be setting comps low by buying these on the cheap and making the rest of the units non-warrantable, so I don't think they can ever achieve full value as condos without perhaps dissolving and recreating it or whatever takes place in an initial condo-conversion that allows them to be warrantable.  I'm hoping to hear from someone who has successfully executed a similar plan or a better plan in a similar situation.

@Thomas S. @Andrew Johnson

The mitigating circumstance here would be that those types of buildings aren't readily available for purchase anywhere near me.  Since I will be self-managing, this is significant.  

Also, I'm able to purchase these units at a very significant discount with good owner-financed terms. The most recent arms-length sales in this building were 55-60k in 05-06, I'm considering buying at ~15k.  I think a more realistic value for them is 35-40k.

This is a very good quality building (relative to other MF in my area) that is plagued by admin problems. 

I'm in for the very long time-line, as I'm hoping to turn this building into part of the foundation of my family's business; I'm curious about the never-ending battles with other owners...can you elaborate?

My direct marketing campaign yielded a motivated seller of some condos local to me that I'm interested in acquiring for buy-and-hold rentals.  

The complex is a single 15 unit building in pretty good shape physically, but the association is dead in the water. Nobody has been paying condo fees for several years. There are only 4 owners living there (3 with running water), the rest of the units are vacant.

The seller and his brother represent 6 units, and they have agreed to sell them to me owner-financed. There are 2 other owners that want to sell, but I don't know if we can come to an agreement on a price, considering the discount I need to make this work.

My plan is to get 8 of the units under contract at once or with contracts contingent on getting 8 units. With 8, I'll own the majority of the units and control the HOA. I'll then restart the condo association, begin collecting fees, and as units become available, I'll purchase more of them. Currently none of the other owners want to sell, I assume because they're happy not paying condo fees, lowered tax assessments due to the condition of the association, and ignorance of the risk of not having an association.

I've run the numbers and I'm comfortable this will be a profitable deal even assuming high startup costs and high vacancies while we revamp and also assuming non-compliant owners not paying their portion of the fees.

My biggest questions are:

1. Assuming I stabilize this building and association, will I be able to refi out of my 8-10 units 3-5 years from now?  

2. What is my recourse with owners who don't pay HOA fees or follow HOA rules? I intend to get legal consultation on this as well.

3. I'd like to eventually own all 15 units.  Assuming I don't want to sell them, would it be more advantageous to dissolve the association? 

Any experience with this type of situation would be much appreciated.  I don't know what I don't know and what I'm not asking.

Post: Flip deal DOA due to AE Flood Zoning

Stephen PolizziPosted
  • Danbury, NH
  • Posts 89
  • Votes 21

Thanks for the input everyone.