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19 September 2016 | 8 replies
All blue collar neighborhoods with lower crime (C class in my mind).
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26 December 2016 | 19 replies
This may be a long post, but I thought it would be good to walk through everything step-by-step, and explain my thinking along the way.If you want to stick with me through it all, here we go:I was not going to be getting a conventional mortgage for my first property for a number of reasons.First, I am still annoyed at the hoops I had to jump through to get a mortgage for my primary residence.Second, my liquid cash was on the lower end.Third, the properties that I would need to start out with would not be financeable anyway.Fourth, my DTI is on the high side, due to the decision that we made to take out a HELOC to complete interior improvements on my primary house.So, I decided that my path was going to be to form a single member LLC, and take a loan from my 401(k) at work to finance the down payment.Since I do not view the 401(k) loan as a long-term solution, I am treating like hard money, and pay it off ASAP.So, my first deal would be a flip, or a rental that was such a good deal, that I could re-fi out and pull all my cash out.I decided to reach out to the commercial lending department of the local credit union, which I am a member.The person I talked to (who became my lender) is fantastic.I told him what types of properties I was looking for, and that I’d look to turn them into rentals, or to flip them.I will never forget his response, which reminded me why I love this credit union.He said:“Typically, the deals you are talking about are much smaller than the deals we like to do.However, we also realize that you can not get to that level unless someone helps you get there.So, if the numbers make sense, we will see if any of our products fit.”Awesome!
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16 September 2016 | 6 replies
Perhaps there is an agreement there that the tenant will fix the property in exchange for a lower rent, but it is not happening... per the owner.
23 September 2016 | 40 replies
If you negotiate a good enough deal that pays you then complete the transaction with the investor to buy the house you have under contract.
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16 September 2016 | 8 replies
Some potential drawbacks to keep in mind are:Additional closing and loan origination costs (two transactions/mortgages instead of one) - speak to your lender and title company about costsTwo insurance policies instead of one - probably close to double the insurance cost as compared to a duplex - get a quote from a good insurance agent and compareTwo sets of property taxes instead of oneThese certainly aren't deal killers, and the benefits noted above may outweigh the disadvantages.
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27 September 2016 | 13 replies
I am finishing up getting my RE license, and want to start working some transactions.
19 September 2016 | 14 replies
Be very careful as a remote transaction raises a lot of red flags.ThxChris
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15 September 2016 | 3 replies
There are two conflicting thoughts here, to me:-One says that you are limiting the number of people interested in the condo because they won't be able to rent it out, thus lowering the prospect pool and price.
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19 September 2016 | 9 replies
The tenant has been paying significantly lower rent for quite some time, approximately $200-300 below market price for a similar unit.
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18 September 2016 | 14 replies
At higher properties you need to use a lower %, and this is driven by your market.