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27   Eman   2022 Mar 24, 9:18am  

WookieMan says
I'd tap the brakes on saying she's smarter than anyone though.


She is smarter than most and especially the OP, who called her a scumbag. She started a company with $1k at the age of 23 and later sold it for $66M. Let the result speak for itself.
28   WookieMan   2022 Mar 24, 10:46am  

Eman says
WookieMan says
I'd tap the brakes on saying she's smarter than anyone though.


She is smarter than most and especially the OP, who called her a scumbag. She started a company with $1k at the age of 23 and later sold it for $66M. Let the result speak for itself.

Money is not a sign of intelligence though I guess was my point. I wouldn't call her a scumbag either. Dumb luck exists though.

I've experienced it with my own Uncle. Lucky situation. Got a contract with Caterpillar to plow their parking lots here in IL during the winter. Didn't graduate high school. Can barley read. And I'm not joking when I say that. Not book smart or your standard level of intelligence measurement, IQ. If you didn't know he had 8 figures of wealth, maybe 9 now you'd think he was an idiot. He liked construction toys (for him) and built a massive contracting company here in IL and now AZ and I think other areas. He's a little boy at heart that wanted to play with bulldozers. Only area he as smart in was hiring, but that's a personal decision from any business owner I know. I like you, you know how to do X, let's get it done.

He had blind luck his entire life. And once you get enough money it just works for itself so to speak. I've seen Barbara on Shark Tank. I'm underwhelmed. I was one, but the vast majority of Realtors have ZERO interest in your goals. The amount of shady shit I experienced is staggering. I could put a lot of people in jail to be honest. Big names too, at least in the Chicago metro area.

I let the license lapse last year so I can talk freely in public and online and not jeopardize my license at the time. So I speak more freely now here. For the lots I went around the Realtor and I'm not dealing with her. I won't. I know the game and the best investors in RE I know don't deal with Realtors to be honest. Maybe if my best friend was one I would use them, but I need to be close, super close to someone to trust them. End of the day it's price. No need for a 3rd party to skim off the deal.
29   Eman   2022 Mar 24, 11:38am  

Started a company with $1k and later sold it for $66MM requires brain more than luck IMO. We’ll have to agree to disagree.

I joined Patnet in 2009. I was like part of the 99%ers then. After a series of “luck” in the last decade, I’ve joined the 1%ers. Next goal is to join the 0.1%ers. Just like your uncle, we may not be “smart” but we know value when we see it. Smart people may not be as smart as they think. Don’t believe me, come to the Bay Area.
30   EBGuy   2022 Mar 24, 2:05pm  

Eman, are you hanging on to any apartment buildings or have you sold them off/divested?
31   Ceffer   2022 Mar 24, 2:34pm  

I had a friend who was a financial planner. If you don't think a lot of rich people have dumb luck, you need to talk with one of those guys. Some of it is just the wheel of fortune, and some manage to hang on to the dough even with lives full of boners and bad decisions, luck of the draw. He had some interesting stories about his clients and how hard it was to steer some away from the rocks, because they thought he should just be Bernie Madoff for them, giving them guaranteed 15 percent a year returns out of sight and out of mind. He worked as CFO for some family businesses who had no idea what they owned, they just took as much money from the company as they wanted for whatever Caligulan lifestyle they led. He struggled to audit to at least let them know to avoid the IRS and know the basis for their companies.

Unfortunately, some of these real life observations of the lucky fools can lead you to resent the unfairness in the scheme of things.

Every drug dealer I ever knew, even the ones who went to prison, always had big bucks that they somehow squirreled away from the authorities (likely through their lawyers and offshore banks). The money from dealing drugs, if you survive, is outlandish which is why the Globalists and intel agencies have come to dominate it. Of course, survival is the key because longevity isn't the strong suit of drug dealers. Retirement plans tend to be more along the lines of concrete boots in the bay because when you quit, you are then just another free range state's witness who needs to be snuffed out.

I had some extremely wealthy clients. Some of them were just around in California for generations and had enormous tracts of real estate that their families owned. You couldn't likely notice them in a crowd, they wore ordinary jeans and grungies and drove unremarkable cars. In Santa Cruz, you would be hard pressed to tell a lot of the trust fundies from the hippies scrounging to live in somebody's garage. The Nordstrom dressed up with Porsches tend to be corporate nouveau riche.
32   Eman   2022 Mar 24, 3:09pm  

EBGuy says
Eman, are you hanging on to any apartment buildings or have you sold them off/divested?


I still have all the apartment buildings. I sold my duplexes, condos and townhomes between 2015-2017 to scale up buying apartments.

I recently did my PFS (Personal Financial Statement) for my lenders and noticed my net worth went up $2M since pre-pandemic. Funny all the gains mainly came from SFHs. We’re talking about 35-40% increase in value. Condos and townhomes went up around 10-15%. Apartments didn’t gain any value. In fact, a few buildings went down in value due to lower rents, thus lower NOI (net operating income). Fortunately, no debt beat in our buildings. Vacancy was 1.2% in 2020 and 2% in 2021. 😅

Rents should come back to pre-pandemic soon I believe, if not already, for our San Jose market.
33   Eman   2022 Mar 24, 3:12pm  

Talking about divesting, I have about $600k in 3 flips, $600k in the stock market, and wife has about $400-$500k in her 401k/IRA. Thinking of ways to grow the stock portfolio to $7M by 2025. 😅
34   porkchopXpress   2022 Mar 24, 5:58pm  

I'm worth $2M and don't even own a home. Sad I know.
35   AmericanKulak   2022 Mar 24, 6:01pm  

Let's see what happens when the 30-year is 7%. 90% of homebuyers buy the payment. And the big investors buy the payment vs. rent, too, they aren't paying 100% cash.
36   HeadSet   2022 Mar 24, 6:40pm  

AmericanKulak says
Let's see what happens when the 30-year is 7%.

How likely do you think that 7% will actually arrive?
37   Eman   2022 Mar 24, 6:45pm  

porkchopexpress says
I'm worth $2M and don't even own a home. Sad I know.


There’s nothing wrong with this. Know your end goal and work towards it. Not everyone wants a home. I have a good friend who is a nomad. He has someone help him run the AirBnB biz while he travels the world. He doesn’t own a home, but worth over a million at the age of 37.
38   porkchopXpress   2022 Mar 24, 6:49pm  

Eman says
porkchopexpress says
I'm worth $2M and don't even own a home. Sad I know.


There’s nothing wrong with this. Know your end goal and work towards it. Not everyone wants a home. I have a good friend who is a nomad. He has someone help him run the AirBnB biz while he travels the world. He doesn’t own a home, but worth over a million at the age of 37.
Thanks. It just never worked out because of my job and we lived in crazy expensive places. Then throw in the Great Recession and that spooked the hell out of me. It was during that time I went down the rabbit hole of the Fed, Peter Schiff, sound money, etc. I also joined this site back in like 2005. I was just afraid of losing my shirt on a house because I saw friends and family go through it. I feel a little like old people who lived through the Great Depression...they become super frugal.
39   clambo   2022 Mar 24, 7:31pm  

Financial planning is not complicated but unfortunately requires patience, diligence, and discipline (avoidance of errors in judgement).

For $500/month you can have a million bucks but it takes 30 years more or less depending on when you start.

Guys who make a shitload of money may actually spend it and not have $500 left at the end of the month.
Or, guys buy dumb investments, or roll the dice on a stock instead of a mutual fund.

My grandmother and Porkchopexpress would get along; she rented but lived in great places and left all of her grandchildren $5000 apiece, more to her two daughters.

There’s a paradox in housing sometimes; people love owning them, and sometimes they have a need for cash flow so they rent them out at a fair price.
40   Eman   2022 Mar 24, 8:29pm  

porkchopexpress says
Then throw in the Great Recession and that spooked the hell out of me. It was during that time I went down the rabbit hole of the Fed, Peter Schiff, sound money, etc. I also joined this site back in like 2005. I was just afraid of losing my shirt on a house because I saw friends and family go through it.


I felt the same way. This was why I didn’t buy/add anything to the portfolio in 2020 to now. In hindsight, buying a couple SFH’s would have net $1M in a couple years. The housing market is madness at this point. I wouldn’t touch it.

I joined this site in 2009. My thinking aligned with Iwog, SFace and pkennedy as the old timers know. I decided to quit my W2 in 2009 and pursue real estate full time. It turned out to be a great decision.

I bought 6 properties with pkennedy from 2011-2013. Sold 3 and still have 3. We’re up over $2M on these condos and townhomes with our $300k investment. About 700% ROI not including cash flow all these years. Outperformed the S&P 500. 😅

As Wayne Gretzky said, we miss 100% of all shots we don’t take. Not taking risk is also a decision. The best time to leverage and go all in is during a recession. That’s when the risk is actually the lowest unlike what our mind and society tell us.
41   AmericanKulak   2022 Mar 24, 8:44pm  

HeadSet says
How likely do you think that 7% will actually arrive?



Well, the typical 30 year with 20% down is over 4% now with just a quarter increase in the highly stimulating funds rate of only 0.5%. Highly stimulating was anything under 2%, and 3% was considered stimulating. I checked both California (Walnut) and Florida (Orlando).


fredgraph.png?source="patrick.net target="_blank" rel="noopener">

target="_blank" rel="noopener" >https://fred.stlouisfed.org/graph/fredgraph" >


There's been a strange normalization (Entitlement?) to the lowest Mortgage rates since WW2. 5% is low historically.



About 7.5% is the average mortgage rate since 1971 when the Fed began collecting data:
https://www.valuepenguin.com/mortgages/historical-mortgage-rates#hist

The rates in the 90s averaged higher than 7% and averaged around 6% in the 2000s.
42   Eman   2022 Mar 24, 8:50pm  

Pkennedy retired with his young Brazilian wife in Brazil. After a decade of not doing much, he recently bought 3 acres and is developing 120 units. If this project is successful, he’s set for life.

He met @Patrick, @mell, iwog, justme and a few other Patnet members years ago. He told me mell is tall and slender. That’s all I could recall.

Pkennedy never owned a house here in California by the way. He hasn’t bought a house in Brazil all these years, but I believe he would soon. At some point, it makes sense. Hope your time will come soon @porkchopexpress.
43   AmericanKulak   2022 Mar 24, 9:07pm  

We're due for the real crisis, everything is overvalued AF. Real Estate, Stocks, etc.

The PE Ratio of the S&P500 is still over 25. I'd figure a ~30% correction is still necessary.
44   porkchopXpress   2022 Mar 24, 9:45pm  

Eman says
At some point, it makes sense. Hope your time will come soon @porkchopexpress.
Thanks brotha. Me too.
45   Al_Sharpton_for_President   2022 Mar 25, 5:39am  

AmericanKulak says
We're due for the real crisis, everything is overvalued AF. Real Estate, Stocks, etc.
Nominal prices can stay the same or even slightly rise. The game afoot is to reset real value. It's similar to Lucy and the football. The sheeples only grok nominal.
46   FortwayeAsFuckJoeBiden   2022 Mar 25, 8:45am  

guys keep in mind last time rates went up, prices didn’t go down. and inflation is just adding to construction costs.

im not saying buy now or be out forever. its always up and down. but nothing is getting cheaper.
47   EBGuy   2022 Mar 25, 12:38pm  

Fortwaynemobile says
guys keep in mind last time rates went up, prices didn’t go down.

I do remember someone talking about the late 70's/early 80's when they had to buy a home for their newly formed blended family (remarriage where both the husband and wife already had children). They bought the most they could at the time, which meant a very modest home, while work colleagues lived in the nicer part of town with larger homes. Sure, they could refinance in the late eighties, but were stuck living in that asset, where as their new mortgage would have afforded them a nicer place. Buy now and be priced IN forever...
48   Eman   2022 Mar 25, 2:15pm  

If anyone has to buy now, I recommend getting a 10/1 ARM, IO (interest only), or not. Your mortgage will be fixed for the next 10 years. If history is any indication, you should have a chance to refinance and lock in a 30-year mortgage in the 2%ish within the 10-year time frame.

Good luck
49   MMR   2022 Mar 25, 2:22pm  

Eman says
MAGA says
Scumbag Realtor!


Just read the article. You may disagree with her, but I wouldn’t call her a scumbag. She’s more than likely smarter than you, has seen more than you, and probably has more experience than you when it comes to real estate.

I disagree with her encouragement on buying real estate at this point. I could totally be right and she would be proven wrong, but I still wouldn’t call her a scumbag.


I had read that she was focusing on investing in Pittsburgh as it was not in an apparent bubble
50   stereotomy   2022 Mar 25, 2:33pm  

MMR says
I had read that she was focusing on investing in Pittsburgh as it was not in an apparent bubble


IIRC correctly, Pittsburgh is relatively unique in that it has a land value tax (LVT) which is taxed at a higher rate than the structures erected upon the land. I.E., the tax is geared to recapture the unearned increased value of property due to community improvements (roads, schools, etc.). Land value taxes are about 5X that on the assessed value of structures.

This tax structure goes a long way towards containing bubble pricing.

More info:

https://www.strongtowns.org/journal/2019/3/6/non-glamorous-gains-the-pennsylvania-land-tax-experiment?source=patrick.net
51   Eman   2022 Mar 25, 2:40pm  

MMR says
I had read that she was focusing on investing in Pittsburgh as it was not in an apparent bubble


Just like anything in life, know your business, or your trade well, and you should do well. She apparently knew her market and her niche. That was probably how she made it. More power to her.

I’m a small time real estate investor who got lucky. I started out real small in 2009. My goal was to get $2.5M in equity in 10 years and $10k/mo of cash flow. While immersing myself in the business, I learned much more and was able to scale up and made more than I thought was possible within this time frame. 🙏

People are so good at name calling and criticizing others. I suggest they look at themselves in the mirror first before criticizing others.
52   MMR   2022 Mar 25, 3:31pm  

stereotomy says
IIRC correctly, Pittsburgh is relatively unique in that it has a land value tax (LVT) which is taxed at a higher rate than the structures erected upon the land. I.E., the tax is geared to recapture the unearned increased value of property due to community improvements (roads, schools, etc.). Land value taxes are about 5X that on the assessed value of structures.

This tax structure goes a long way towards containing bubble pricing.

More info:


Wow! Apparently Pittsburgh was stable in the last crash also. This might be a significant reason why.

Thank you! Fascinating!
53   MMR   2022 Mar 25, 3:33pm  

Eman says
’m a small time real estate investor who got lucky. I started out real small in 2009. My goal was to get $2.5M in equity in 10 years and $10k/mo of cash flow. While immersing myself in the business, I learned much more and was able to scale up and made more than I thought was possible within this time frame. 🙏


Congratulations! I do recall you over the last 10-12 years.

That is something I hope to do in part because of the tax benefits and a FIRE mindset along with my wife

Nice!
54   Eman   2022 Mar 25, 3:51pm  

MMR says
Congratulations! I do recall you over the last 10-12 years.

That is something I hope to do in part because of the tax benefits and a FIRE mindset along with my wife


Thanks. I stopped posting on this site for awhile. I did a ton on posting on BiggerPockets. I got real popular there. Then the pandemic hit, I decided to close out my BP account and focus on my business.

The annual distribution has been decent. On a slow year, I would get $250-$300k. On a good year, $500-$600k. Tax liability most of the time on this is $0 due to off-setting the distribution with depreciation and capital expenditures. Also, we have a fantastic CPA.

We always have to pay taxes as flip profits are short-term gains so they’re being taxed as ordinary income. On average, wife and I pay $40-$50k/year in taxes. Not great, but not too bad.
55   Patrick   2022 Mar 25, 5:50pm  

stereotomy says
IIRC correctly, Pittsburgh is relatively unique in that it has a land value tax (LVT) which is taxed at a higher rate than the structures erected upon the land. I.E., the tax is geared to recapture the unearned increased value of property due to community improvements (roads, schools, etc.)


Pretty good definition of Georgism there.

https://infogalactic.com/info/Georgism?source=patrick.net
56   FarmersWon   2022 Mar 25, 6:17pm  

Eman says
MMR says
Congratulations! I do recall you over the last 10-12 years.

That is something I hope to do in part because of the tax benefits and a FIRE mindset along with my wife


Thanks. I stopped posting on this site for awhile. I did a ton on posting on BiggerPockets. I got real popular there. Then the pandemic hit, I decided to close out my BP account and focus on my business.

The annual distribution has been decent. On a slow year, I would get $250-$300k. On a good year, $500-$600k. Tax liability most of the time on this is $0 due to off-setting the distribution with depreciation and capital expenditures. Also, we have a fantastic CPA.

We always have to pay taxes as flip profits are short-term gains so they’re being taxed as ordinary income. On average, wife and I pay $40-$50k/year in taxes. Not great, but not too bad.


@eman
Looks like you have very smart ideas. Do You also do commercial property?
It is not easy to get loans.
W2 income is great, But paying quarter million+ every year in taxes for bay area typical dual high earners eat into take home pay.
57   FarmersWon   2022 Mar 25, 6:23pm  

Eman says
Just like anything in life, know your business, or your trade well, and you should do well. She apparently knew her market and her niche. That was probably how she made it. More power to her.

I’m a small time real estate investor who got lucky. I started out real small in 2009. My goal was to get $2.5M in equity in 10 years and $10k/mo of cash flow. While immersing myself in the business, I learned much more and was able to scale up and made more than I thought was possible within this time frame. 🙏

People are so good at name calling and criticizing others. I suggest they look at themselves in the mirror first before criticizing others.


I think hate towards realtors is not right. Only a handful make money , rest are just putting food on table.
Real culprits are bankers who generate money out of thin air and much of it disappear it into their cronies.
58   FarmersWon   2022 Mar 25, 6:24pm  

Eman says
If anyone has to buy now, I recommend getting a 10/1 ARM, IO (interest only), or not. Your mortgage will be fixed for the next 10 years. If history is any indication, you should have a chance to refinance and lock in a 30-year mortgage in the 2%ish within the 10-year time frame.

Good luck


Any suggestion on best HELOC rates?
59   Eman   2022 Mar 25, 10:22pm  

FarmersWon says
Any suggestion on best HELOC rates?


Meriwest Credit Union offers 2.99% for the first 18 months. After that, it will be prime rate, or 3.5%. Please note that HELOC rate is adjustable for the term of the loan.

Shop around. There were times where Bank of America or Chase offered 1.99%.
60   Eman   2022 Mar 25, 10:29pm  

FarmersWon says
Do You also do commercial property?
It is not easy to get loans.


This is a fallacy. People, who are clueless, keep repeating what they don’t know. Once you’ve dealt with commercial loans, you don’t want to go back to residential loans. Too much hassle. Don’t listen to people who say it takes 45-60 days to close commercial loans. I’ve closed a bunch of them in less than 30 days. In fact, I’ve closed a commercial loan in 18 days.

I only have small apartments, 5-12 units, and a handful SFHs and condos. 5-12 units are considered commercial properties. I don’t have any retail and office buildings kind of commercial property.
61   WookieMan   2022 Mar 26, 5:41am  

FarmersWon says
I think hate towards realtors is not right. Only a handful make money , rest are just putting food on table.

99% wrong on most levels. There are some good Realtors out there, but it's a 1% thing. Almost all of them will do anything to get a check and it's generally not in your best interest. 15 years managing a real estate office and watching the antics and many times illegal activities. And yes, I watched it and didn't do anything, but I personally never participated in shady shit. It's why I left once my wife's career boomed. Wasn't worth the risk to me or my family what I witnessed.

The average person will only do one transaction maybe two with the same agent. And you don't know what goes down. The biggest issue is lying about negotiation. Most of the time it's on the phone and you're not there. It's not like TV shows where you're sitting there with your agent on speaker phone hearing the negotiations. ALL of them will lie to you about communication with other agents, lawyers, lenders and inspectors. This is not a joke. 100% on this. And those people will lie back to you as well to keep a deal or make one.

Thing is this happenes in EVERY industry in some way shape or form. Realtors just get picked on more because it's a huge purchase. The disdain in valid, but not equally applied across all service industries where there is as much or more lying and cheating.
62   WookieMan   2022 Mar 26, 6:08am  

Eman says
I only have small apartments, 5-12 units, and a handful SFHs and condos. 5-12 units are considered commercial properties. I don’t have any retail and office buildings kind of commercial property.

Learning curve and huge potential for long term vacancies, but look into small industrial and warehouse type commercial property. Your tenants are companies and you can ask for basically anything when vetting them. Leases are long. With everyone working from home and e-commerce businesses needing space to store stuff, store fronts are a dying bread of property so I'd stay away from that.

Or just stick to what you know. I'm a believer in specializing and focusing on one niche. Yours seems to be residential. I did it and hated it. My uncle made a lot of money as a general contractor. But he needed space to store his equipment. He built a small industrial park. Maybe 100k SF between all the buildings and units. He nets $100k per month after tax now that it's paid off. He then bought a few other industrial/warehouse type properties. One is a bus lot and building for a school district. Another $20k/mo there. NEVER has to deal with tenant issues outside of them moving, which of course is a big risk if you have to float taxes and expenses for 1-2 years potentially.

It's nice when it's a business transaction and not a personal one like having a roof over your head with residential. Less emotion and stress in my opinion. Just my 2¢ on other avenues for wealth growth. I'd probably go out of CA though unless you really have an understanding for a local market. You obviously know what you're doing with residential, but just throwing out the idea.
63   FarmersWon   2022 Mar 26, 9:41am  

WookieMan says
but look into small industrial and warehouse type commercial property. Your tenants are companies and you can ask for basically anything when vetting them. Leases are long. With everyone working from home and e-commerce businesses needing space to store stuff, store fronts are a dying bread of property so I'd stay away from that.


I was helping someone and the banks refuse to loan to someone who is new to game in spite of 40% down.
The only easy way to get was commercial loan for something already rented to NNN type corporate.. Those properties had inflated prices.
64   FarmersWon   2022 Mar 26, 9:44am  

WookieMan says
99% wrong on most levels. There are some good Realtors out there, but it's a 1% thing. Almost all of them will do anything to get a check and it's generally not in your best interest. 15 years managing a real estate office and watching the antics and many times illegal activities. And yes, I watched it and didn't do anything, but I personally never participated in shady shit. It's why I left once my wife's career boomed. Wasn't worth the risk to me or my family what I witnessed.


It is not uncommon for any kind of sales people.
I guess exaggerating is part of jobs, You have seen nothing unless you have dealth with or worked with technology sales.. The marketing is few years ahead of actual product always.
65   Eman   2022 Mar 26, 12:20pm  

FarmersWon says
I was helping someone and the banks refuse to loan to someone who is new to game in spite of 40% down.
The only easy way to get was commercial loan for something already rented to NNN type corporate.. Those properties had inflated prices.


It’s a catch 22. Banks don’t want to lend to people without experience, but people can’t get experience without diving into it first. All in all, experience is the best teacher. I started small (single units/residential) and scaled up into small apartments. From here, I can do 20-40 unit deals and so on.

Value-add is in underperforming assets. Most NNN assets sell based on the market cap rate so all the meat has been stripped. It’s just a yield, hope-and-pray, play at this point. It’s equivalent to giving someone your money, and they’ll give it back to you at 5% increments over the next 20 years. Screw that 💩!

As you and your client found out first hand, banks only cared more about getting their capital back plus interest. They don’t care about the collateral/asset. For people to say banks like to foreclose and take people’s homes and assets is so clueless.

All in all, reputation goes a long time way in this biz. Protect your reputation at all costs. Then you can go a long way in this, or any, biz.
66   Eman   2022 Mar 26, 12:28pm  

WookieMan says
Yours seems to be residential. I did it and hated it.


Just like any biz, it’s not for everyone. When I had 18 units, I enjoyed being a landlord as all of my units have been completely rehabbed. Once I scaled up, I turned things over to a very reputable property management company. God bless for their existence. 😂 I learned that being an investor is a great way not to get burned out vs. being a landlord.

I don’t have experience with the industrial space. Everything is money out here when it comes to land, and an industrial building tends to sit on a big chunk of land so I stick with what I know until I have more resources to look at different asset class.

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