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3 December 2024 | 6 replies
Quote from @Michael Izbotsky: @Ashish Acharya My SMLLC was created after we married, so couldn't that argument carry over that the LLC is "owned equally by both spouses"?
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5 December 2024 | 6 replies
The length of time you're carrying debt is a factor to consider.
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5 December 2024 | 4 replies
I run sum numbers for you please see comments below before refinancing and post refinancing .If I were in your position, I would approach it as follows:Initial Investment Assumptions: Market Value: $360,000 Purchase Price: $360,000 Equity: $0,000Financial Breakdown: Hard Money Loan (LTV 100%): $360,000 Interest Rate: 10% (30-Year Amortization) Monthly Payment: $1,995Upfront Costs: Origination fee (1%): $3,600 Closing Costs (3%): $10,800 Renovation Costs: $10,000 2 Month of Carrying Costs During Renovation: $5,390Total Upfront Required: $29,790Total Capital InvestmentPurchased price $360,000 Upfront Costs $29,790Total: $389,790To make this investment work, you need to rent the whole property for at least $3,165/month, refinance it let say after one year with 5% interest with a traditional mortgage.Year One Rent: Monthly Rent Income: $3,165 Monthly Rent Losses during renovations (2 Months): -$6,330 (-$527/month distributed over 12 months) Total Rent Income: $31,650 per year => $ 2,638 per monthMonthly Expenses: Hard Money Loan Payment (10% Interest): $1,995 / per month interest only Property Tax (Assuming $3,000/year): $250 per month Property Insurance (Assumption): $100 per month Utilities (Hydro, Gas, Water): $292 per month Assuming 0% Vacancy first year Assuming 0 % Repairs & Maintenance first year because unit has been recently renovated Total Monthly Expenses: $2,637Monthly Net Cash Flow: $1Post-Renovation Refinancing Strategy:So far, we’ve purchased the property, completed renovations, and rented it out.Next, you can approach the bank for a refinance to consolidate your initial investment of $29,790 plus your 360k debt into a mortgage.
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17 December 2024 | 36 replies
@Mike Dymski, in my experience raising institutional capital early in my career, I would disagree about "following a sponsor" for years, and actually many of the deal level analytics (a majority of institutional investors invest in funds not deals), but your point is generally correct.Ultimately, what I see a lot on these forums is that a lot of people are relying on the investment manager to also educate them on macro economic conditions, which will always carry a natural bias towards their types of offerings.
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9 December 2024 | 20 replies
And investing in cheap homes is absolutely fool's gold.
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5 December 2024 | 19 replies
You've got gold with that kid.
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3 December 2024 | 6 replies
Plus you still have to actually underwrite the entire deal (purchase, construction, carry, etc to develop accurate CF/profit).
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11 December 2024 | 101 replies
Yet, you should never say never and any investment carries a certain degree of risk.
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2 December 2024 | 11 replies
If this were my deal the sale price on a triplex would likely be around $900k, so if I bought the land for $150k, and my build costs were about $500k, I would expect my interest and carrying costs to be about 10-12% of the total of that, so lets say $75k, for all in expenses of about $725k.