Kevin Smith
No Money Down In Practice
13 March 2018 | 2 replies
There's a lot of discussion around partnerships, private lending, and hard money, but I don't see much discussion on the actual mechanics - what these arrangements look like in practice.My hope is this post can serve as a reference for those starting out, so we may get a better understanding of how these strategies are actually implemented as well as an ability to more accurately predict the profits and returns you and your lenders and partners can expect.If those with more experience would like to revise these numbers and statements, it would be most appreciated.These scenarios assume you, the flipper, are bringing none of your own capital to the deal.Typically, this would mean 1 of 2 scenarios...Private Lending - Someone you know brings 100% of project costs (purchase, rehab, acquisition costs, holding costs) to complete the deal and in return, they get a certain percentage return which comes out of your profit.Hard Money + Partnership - You get a hard money lender to cover 80-90% of purchase+rehab and a partner to cover the remaining 10-20% as well as acquisition costs (including hard money origination and points) and holding costs (including hard money interest payments).An aside about the structuring...Private Lending - A promissory note is created, and your private lender lends to you or your business.
Dejan Popovic
Install/Hang Drywall in Waterloo/CF
22 August 2019 | 1 reply
I've got a large project and both of the guys that I work with our tied up with other jobs atm.
Marlon Thomas
Should I learn about construction?
13 March 2018 | 2 replies
In order to save money and have more control over my projects I was thinking about taking a carpentry course so I can learn how to do some of the work on my own renovations when the time comes.
Chris P.
To pull the trigger or not
28 March 2018 | 8 replies
.$2,135.00MONTHLY INCOME$1,694.08MONTHLY EXPENSES$440.92MONTHLY CASHFLOW14.08%PRO FORMA CAP$9,853.40NOI$22,125.00TOTAL CASH NEEDED23.91%CASH ON CASH ROI13.59%PURCHASE CAP RATEExpensesIncome50% RuleTotal operating expenses:Mortgage expenses:Vacancy:$170.80Repairs:$213.50CapEx:$106.75Electricity:$50.00Water & Sewer:$162.00Insurance:$120.00Management:$213.50P&I:$380.20Property Taxes:$277.33$72,500PURCHASE PRICEPurchase Closing Costs$2,000.00Estimated Repairs$2,000.00Total Project Cost$76,500.00After Repair Value$70,000.00 Down Payment$18,125.00Loan Amount$54,375.00Loan Points$0.00Amortized Over30 yearsLoan Interest Rate7.500%Monthly P&I$380.20Total Cash Needed$22,125.00 Financial Info2.79%2% RULE $15,625.00TOTAL INITIAL EQUITY2.83GROSS RENT MULTIPLIER 2.16DEBT COVERAGE RATIOAnalysis Over Time3% /yearEXPENSE INCREASE 3% /yearINCOME INCREASE 2% /yearPROPERTY VALUE INCREASEYear 1Year 2Year 5Year 10Year 15Year 20Year 30Total Annual Income$25,620.00$26,388.60$28,835.54$33,428.29$38,752.55$44,924.83$60,375.21Total Annual ExpensesOperating ExpensesMortgage Payment$20,328.97$15,766.60$4,562.37$20,801.97$16,239.60$4,562.37$22,307.82$17,745.45$4,562.37$25,134.21$20,571.84$4,562.37$28,410.77$23,848.40$4,562.37$32,209.20$27,646.83$4,562.37$41,717.40$37,155.03$4,562.37Total Annual Cashflow$5,291.03$5,586.63$6,527.71$8,294.08$10,341.78$12,715.62$18,657.81Cash on Cash ROI23.91%25.25%29.50%37.49%46.74%57.47%84.33%Property Value$71,400.00$72,828.00$77,285.66$85,329.61$94,210.78$104,016.32$126,795.31Equity$17,526.25$19,494.41$25,837.43$38,134.84$53,197.53$71,986.64$126,795.31Loan Balance$53,873.75$53,333.59$51,448.23$47,194.77$41,013.25$32,029.67$0.00Total Profit if Sold *-$1,449.73$6,062.22$30,895.02$80,784.39$143,073.13$220,258.21$432,774.81Annualized Total Return-6.55%12.87%19.10%16.62%14.34%12.71%10.60%
Etan Frankel
Opportunity Zones and Funds
24 September 2019 | 15 replies
@William GlassIt depends on a number of things but primarily whether the land value in comparison to the cost of construction for your new project.
Kar-Ming Lo
Appliances discount: big box or small family location
13 March 2018 | 0 replies
Our hope is to flip approximately 4-5 projects for our inaugural year.
Elvis Vasquez
Building a simple single family home in Miami (advice)
14 March 2018 | 9 replies
@Elvis Vasquez Yes City of North Miami is a smaller municipality and the building department can be complicated from my experience working with them and past clients also trying to get projects completed.
Erik Sherburne
How leveraged are you?
19 March 2018 | 87 replies
The leverage that I have was taken when there were outstanding buy opportunities and all of my cash was tied up on projects.
Brian Truman
Off Market Properties in Kitsap County, WA
19 March 2018 | 3 replies
I used to use $30/foot as a decent ballpark figure for renovations, but it seems like renovation costs have gone up quite a bit, $40-50/ft has been the new reality lately, but of course it's tough to put a 'per-foot' number on any particular project because everything is unique.Mobiles on their own land can be flipped, just pay attention to the age, anything before 1976 will pretty much have to be sold on a contract or to a cash buyer.
Ginger Marcos
Real Estate Team in Cleveland, OH
13 March 2018 | 1 reply
Would love to connect and see if we can do some business together.Are you looking to grow a rental property portfolio or do value add projects in Cleveland?