Melissa Odom
DCSR, LLC, and Trusts
3 December 2024 | 15 replies
If the concern is max cash out, you can cross collateralize the properties to cut down on costly processing fees.
Marc Shin
STR Furniture - cheap vs expensive
2 December 2024 | 10 replies
So it will add time, and then you have to cut up and throw out big boxes.
Hemal Adani
Anyone has invested with Open door capital? How was your experience?
22 December 2024 | 105 replies
what really needs to be reviewed is why is it not going well and what is the plan - its very different plan when you cut distributions and do a capital call to hold $4M to lower your debt obligation to allow for a refinnance compared to needing a capital call because you are only at 80% occupancy and anticpated 95%, rents are 50 cents a square foot less than you wanted and expenses are 25% higher....
Jonah Gunalda
ER doctor hoping to diversify in passive real estate!
10 December 2024 | 25 replies
That doesn't cut it for me.
Jasmine G.
Financing first rental
3 December 2024 | 10 replies
Cash flowing at 5% down was possible about 3 years ago—but that ship may have since sailed.Now, you’re left with two options: you can either pony up more cash per deal, or you can potentially look out of state for markets with more favorable rent-to-price ratios.Or…you can wait for rates to decline, but I don’t know how much a 100 or 150 basis point rate cut in the next year will really move the needle.That said, some firms (usually new construction companies, turnkey providers, etc.) will enter into forward commitments with lenders at institutional rates and then pass cost interest rate savings onto end buyers to entice them to purchase a property.
Sam Lewis
Why would hard money lenders trust someone they don't know?
2 December 2024 | 10 replies
Borrower Types: The Professional - HM Lender will cut sweet-heart deals to keep these borrowers around Experienced real estate investors Regularly engage in property transactions Typically have a track record of successful projects The Newbie - Charge Higher everything as the risk is higher as no experience Novice investors or first-time borrowers Limited experience in real estate Seeking to build their investment portfolio The Deadbeat - Only lend if the deal is so SWEET, they can't lose if they take the property from the Borrower Borrowers with poor credit history or financial difficulties High-risk borrowers May struggle to secure traditional financingThe lender will do an application on the deal/borrower and some standard docs they require are:Hard Money Application / ExperiencePurchase contractARV report – COMPS – See * Redfin*Pictures of Property – most people use Dropbox to shareProof of Funds – Down / Reserves (Bank Statements)Personal identification (ID or passport)But usually if the deal is sweet enough, they will do it anyway because if the deal goes south, there is so much equity/value in the property that the HM lender can't lose.
Nik Farooqui
New Member- Let's Connect
29 November 2024 | 24 replies
Your experience in construction will definitely give you an edge, especially in flips and rentals.
Tyler Rayman
Out of State “Mid Term” Month to Month, Furnished Rentals
5 December 2024 | 18 replies
I'm not sure if typical property managers would take on the role, if they did they would want a larger cut.
Thomas Azoury
Convert garage w tenants
2 December 2024 | 17 replies
The most likely scenario is that his renters will eventually do something that costs him a significant loss, despite cutting them a major break for so long.
Hector Espinosa
If You Were to Start Investing from Scratch in 2025, What Would You Do Differently?
14 December 2024 | 42 replies
Inevitably, there are some that are not cut out for the turbulence and want to sell after less than a year of ownership.