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Roths, 401k, HSA, IRA, etc. If you max those out then fine have $40k or $40M in a savings account that could be seized if you default. At that point there's no reason to default, just pay. I'm strictly talking in strategic senses. Middle class person with $100k family income loses a job and can't pay the mortgage. Leverage the default as much as you can. One by not paying. Two protect yourself/finances. Third is short sell and get all liability waived. I/we did this with pro (some text omitted to shorten quote...) se funds. Not one client had a dime taken from their checking or savings. The loans are sold off, but even then I would never bank with who lends me the money unless it's a commercial/business account.
I'm in by no ways promoting dumping debt. If you get yourself in a fucked up situation there is a way out is all I'm saying. Too many think it's doom and gloom and do something stupid including taking their life... over money and credit. You can always make more and repair it.
Renters are the worst to deal with. I've been a landlord. "A fucking ant is in my house come throw chemicals at it." "My dad died I need two weeks to pay rent." Fine, you're a good tenant. That's not the norm. It's not a judgement on you personally. Renters suck. It's not easy money like some portray. It's a pain in the ass and anyone saying otherwise is lying.
Even with the best of screening tenants are shit 50% of the time. This is 100% fact having rented over 1k apartment units. My evidence is beyond anecdotal. I was a good tenant when I leased. Most aren't.
96 units are managed by a property management (PM) company.
The key I would tell anyone is be patient, location (not regulations above) and don't overpay ever.
WookieMan says
The key I would tell anyone is be patient, location (not regulations above) and don't overpay ever.
What's PM?
Charlie Munger would agree with this.
I’ll stick with long term SFH’s in good locations. Might add a vacation rental down the road.
When you compared the rent to the mortgage. How did this look like? On your PITI, the P is your forced savings account. Did you deduct that to compare? Would you have put at least 20% down?
Bird-dogging and finding owners that might sell off market it critical.
It's like restaurants. Most fail at it thinking it would be easy. You need a plan and structure.
On the bad renters, again this is a bullshit false paradigm. Some people are more responsible than other, more honest, harder working. Doesn't matter if they're the landlord or the tenant, those are personality traits. I've known plenty of tenants who get taken advantage of because they don't know the law. And the reason landlords get bad tenants, they don't know how to screen. A credit score is not a good way to screen people. Job history and personal references are more important, as well as past rental history.
Especially when the landlord takes the first person to get their app in. If someone can move in on a moment's notice, that should tell you something...
WookieMan says
I'd love to buy a 2/2 on St. John USVI and have renters pay for the thing
Like that idea! Never been to St John. Have you been to other islands like Turks and Caicos?
Kind of goes for home ownership as well. Have a water heater blow and not know how to replace it. $2k later for a $500 fix. The list goes on. Not trying to stop people from getting into rentals properties, but it's not a cakewalk. It's like restaurants. Most fail at it thinking it would be easy. You need a plan and structure.
Have you been to other islands like Turks and Caicos?
Given our rents are high, our PM charges 5% flat rate for apartments and 6% for SFH/unit. Our market has two of the best PM companies, Zell and Atlantis Properties.
You’ve been out of the biz for too long. There’s no $500 water heaters. Changing a water heater is $1.5k each with our handyman. $925 for water heater and parts. $550 for him and his helper. If we use the plumber from our PM company, it runs $2,250 each.
For 100-gallon water heaters, we have our GC do it for $3.3k. Our PM’s plumber (some text omitted to shorten quote...) t 8-9am and leaves around 2-3pm, but still gets paid for the whole 8 hours. Electrician and plumber bill rates are $145 to $155/hour. Our handyman normally completes 4-5 tasks each day. If there’s not much for him to do, we have him help out with vacuuming and cleaning the common areas, or repairing around the buildings. Always things to do all year around.
Bahamas, Cayman, Puerto Rico, Jamaica, Dominican, St Marten, Aruba, Curaçao, USVI (St. Thomas and St. John), BVI (Virgin Gorda, Salt Island, Normans Cay, Tortola), Mexico (Isla Mujeres & Cozumel). Been to Cancun region and Costa Rica. I may have been drunk, but I think I've been to Belize.
Covid fucked up 8 other islands for first time visits as the trip was cancelled. Basically all the Lessor Antilles. St. Lucia, Barbados, Antigua, etc. I hate Fauci, but it's one of my biggest beefs with Trump. He fucked up a trip of a lifetime that was cheap based on a little shit New Yorker shit bag. Again shit. Not a death threat, but he's the closet person I'd make a death threat towards.
I totally missed what I wanted to talk about. Turk and Caicos is massively expensive. Massively. I want to go, but a week trip even in a condo, you'll get nailed for $10k even in off season. TC is massively expensive. I haven't been, and likely won't because it's just stupid money to be honest. There's value elsewhere that only one step down from TC from what I've heard at least. I'll go at some point, just not with kids. Get a studio or 1 bed place.
On a tangent, but former Californian homeowners who sell and move to Texas do complain about property taxes and learn to protest them. Texas puts the "taxes" in Texas. You can't spell taxes without Texas :)
Texans buy a $500k house and complain that 5% taxes on it costs them $25k/year.
Californians buy the same quality house, but it costs $2.5MM. Then they complain that the 1% tax costs them $25k/year for a mediocre house.
Mexicans like to listen to terrible music in their BY’s / patios until early morning. And once they are drunk on cheap beer they start adding singing which is obviously worse than the music.
Tell us your story with gay whites. Lol
If I have to guess, they’re all beautiful. Been thinking of buying a vacation rental/property where it can “almost” pay for itself when not in use. Haven’t figured out the location and asset….yet
So the gay neighbors. Dude got a dog, but had no idea how to take care of him. This was Arizona, and our backyard was rocks, so always let my dogs out in the front yard. My chihuahua's are old, and mostly toothless, all bark, but they do like to act aggressive if someone comes by the yard. Thing is this guy never needed to cross in front of our house. He could have easily walked the other direction. But dude insisted on walking across our property, then would freak out whenever our dogs would be let out to use the bathroom, and would bark at his dog. He wanted me to leash my dogs in my own front yard. Of course fuck him, I never changed anything I did.
WTF??? Try Ocean Casio in Atlantic City. Way cheaper and better. You'll thank me later.
Besides St. John, which ones are your favorite islands where you could see yourself buying a vacation home?
That doesn't sound like it was about his gayness.
Given our rents are high, our PM charges 5% flat rate for apartments and 6% for SFH/unit.
Texans buy a $500k house and complain that 5% taxes on it costs them $25k/year.
That's a good rate for sure. It wasn't worth waking up for $200/month on Chicago rents. So rates are higher here. One call could cost you $200 in time and gas so you're negative managing it. Lot of evictions in Chicago and they take a long time.
When I was talking about the water heater I was talking about DYI landlords. I can get 50 gallon units for $600 and put it in myself. Pricing is different everywhere. I'd expect CA to be higher and then factor in labor. I can (some text omitted to shorten quote...) not apartments. If you got good management awesome. But everyone starts small generally. You either have it or you don't. I don't like stress even with management.
Have you looked into warehouse and non-retail commercial space? My uncle pumps out $30-40k/mo on hassle free space that the tenants are required to take care of. Like a bus barn for a school district. One building. I'm avoiding personal interactions in real estate beside maybe a couple houses if I can find a deal.
Have you looked into warehouse and non-retail commercial space? My uncle pumps out $30-40k/mo on hassle free space that the tenants are required to take care of.
Eman says
Have you looked into warehouse and non-retail commercial space? My uncle pumps out $30-40k/mo on hassle free space that the tenants are required to take care of.
How does one go about finding a warehouse and non-retail commercial space to purchase? What does your uncle have?
It’s your job to rise to the top of their preferred client list so whenever they have a good deal, you’re one of the first clients they call.
How does one rise to the top of their preferred client list?
After such a steep incline it’s expected that rents plateau for a while or even slightly go down year over year.
Eman says
It’s your job to rise to the top of their preferred client list so whenever they have a good deal, you’re one of the first clients they call.
How does one rise to the top of their preferred client list?
Reputation is paramount in any biz. Agents/brokers don’t get paid until the deal is closed. They’re essentially working for you, as a buyer, for free. That’s how I view it regardless of what others on this website think.
When we first started out, we called all the listing agents in our farm and asked them out for lunch. Do your homework so you can talk intelligently. Ask them why certain deals went down at such great prices while others are at high prices. Then tell them you’re looking for gre (some text omitted to shorten quote...) nt of them often so they remember you. Whoever brings you a deal, they own that listing for life. Unwritten rules in commercial real estate.
Do what you say you’re going to do. Keep your promise. Be reasonable. Don’t be a pain in the rear to work with so whenever they have a deal, they will remember who to call first, and who will close the deal without being a pain in the rear. They don’t get paid unless the deal is closed. A bird in hand is worth more than 2 in the bush. Be that bird in hand.
Nuttboxer, looking at - let’s say 50 - properties doesn’t give you any meaningful insight / indications of where the market is headed.
Look at indicators for San Diego such as Active listings, expected market time, purchase application data etc. If you actually want to know where the market is headed you would want to follow people who do market tracking for a living. Altos research, Steven Thomas, Logan motashami etc. make it easier on yourself and follow the pros. I know you probably won’t but I thought I try ;)
San diego’s spring market is sizzling hot. Expected market time is 40 ish days. I am living north of San Diego and yes, the +1M homes sit a little longer but they sell eventually. Often all cash offers. By now, inventory should have increased because seasonality is slowly kicking in. It hasn’t. People are dis-incentivized to sell since they are locked in to much lower rates.
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https://finance.yahoo.com/news/pimco-kiesel-called-housing-top-160339396.html?source=patrick.net
Bond manager Mark Kiesel sold his California home in 2006, when he presciently predicted the housing bubble would pop. He bought again in 2012, after U.S. prices fell more than 30% and found a floor.
Now, after a record surge in prices, Kiesel says the time to sell is once again at hand.