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rental property question - Eman?


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2023 Dec 21, 4:27pm   1,848 views  43 comments

by FortwayeAsFuckJoeBiden   ➕follow (3)   💰tip   ignore  

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4   FortwayeAsFuckJoeBiden   2023 Dec 21, 7:22pm  

ad says

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Looks like a nice place and neighborhood.

Renting at $2,000 as a landlord with no mortgage would likely yield a cap rate of at least 4.4% (i.e., ~~ $15,000 / $340,000) in addition to a 3% annual appreciation in home value
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to get 2k would be more like a 2,000 sq ft house. these rent closer to 1400.
5   Eman   2023 Dec 21, 8:20pm  

Numbers are not even close to take a look at them. Pass.
6   FortwayeAsFuckJoeBiden   2023 Dec 21, 8:33pm  

Eman says


Numbers are not even close to take a look at them. Pass.


thank you, what do they need to be to be worth it?
7   GNL   2023 Dec 21, 8:47pm  

FortwayeAsFuckJoeBiden says

Eman says



Numbers are not even close to take a look at them. Pass.


thank you, what do they need to be to be worth it?

Ask @Eman to share his formula.
8   WookieMan   2023 Dec 21, 9:33pm  

GNL says

FortwayeAsFuckJoeBiden says


Eman says




Numbers are not even close to take a look at them. Pass.


thank you, what do they need to be to be worth it?


Ask Eman to share his formula.

Ask him as he has good RE advice. But it's basic math. Not trying to deter you, but if I was at an advisor level, I'd tread lightly. If you don't know the answer then I'd hold off. There are so many metrics for RE, and they're out there. So if this is your first question I'd personally advise more research. The info is out there online or in person.
9   AD   2023 Dec 21, 9:37pm  

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You want to make at least an annual inflation-adjusted ROI of 5% for an investment like this

Yes, you can get a CD at 5.5% for 12 months versus annual inflation now around 3.1% , and not have as many headaches as being a real estate investor or landlord

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10   Eman   2023 Dec 22, 5:18am  

FortwayeAsFuckJoeBiden says

Eman says



Numbers are not even close to take a look at them. Pass.


thank you, what do they need to be to be worth it?

This is a basic question. If those numbers don’t chase you away from buying those houses, I suggest you have more learning to do. As ad said, no your ROI. However, there are more to it.

Real estate investing is very different from market to market. You have to understand the dynamics of the market you’re investing. Just look at the Bay Area and the SoCal markets. People kept saying they’re so expensive so decades, but I’ve been able to crack the code and can buy at any real estate any year I want to. It’s just a matter of “is it an okay or a great deal.”

I can buy in the Bay Area NOW for better numbers than what you’re sharing above so why pay those numbers to buy in ID?
11   Maga_Chaos_Monkey   2023 Dec 22, 8:32am  

ad says

Renting at $2,000 as a landlord with no mortgage would likely yield a cap rate of at least 4.4%


I've read 9% is a good deal. Mine were lower than that but not by much and they appreciated from ~200K to ~300K over the past few years. I started buying in 2013 and quit in 2017.
12   FortwayeAsFuckJoeBiden   2023 Dec 23, 9:31am  

thanks guys for all the advice. i’m not trying to be professional investor. just don’t want to leave cash where inflation will eat it up. i have one rental now. just looking to pick up one or two more and be done. i live in ID, i can’t manage properties outside. i’m self managing it now.
13   AD   2023 Dec 23, 10:53am  

Eman says

You have to understand the dynamics of the market you’re investing


You go in and get a great price for the property, not necessarily cheap price. Perhaps you can convince them by over exaggerating with the property inspection discrepancies.

You get bank loans to maximize financing of your real estate assets.

Then you spend very little to get the place ready for rental and maximize/optimize annual rental increases as well as minimize vacancy.

You may be flexible with your tenants such as with number of occupants per unit in order to maximize profits such as stack two overworked/underpaid Indian/H1-B software engineers per bedroom.

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14   Booger   2023 Dec 23, 11:27am  

Fuck being a landlord and just pick up dividend paying stocks before they lower rates.
15   Eman   2023 Dec 23, 11:54am  

FortwayeAsFuckJoeBiden says

thanks guys for all the advice. i’m not trying to be professional investor. just don’t want to leave cash where inflation will eat it up. i have one rental now. just looking to pick up one or two more and be done. i live in ID, i can’t manage properties outside. i’m self managing it now.

Self management is where landlords get burned out and hate rentals. Many banks and credit unions offer 5% interest on your cash. Why settle for this deal where you don’t even get 5% return while appreciation is not certain, and there’s no built-in equity?
16   Maga_Chaos_Monkey   2023 Dec 23, 11:56am  

Eman says

Self management is where landlords get burned out and hate rentals. Many banks and credit unions offer 5% interest on your cash. Why settle for this deal where you don’t even get 5% return while appreciation is not certain, and there’s no built-in equity?


Right, and hire a property manager when the time does come to buy.
17   AD   2023 Dec 23, 12:06pm  

Booger says


Fuck being a landlord and just pick up dividend paying stocks before they lower rates.


yeah I like Vanguard's high yield dividend fund

can earn about 8% a year long term and no headaches of being a landlord

it takes a lot of fortune and nearly ideal conditions to earn +9% a year on real estate

with the Eman types, they get to use OPM (other peoples money) as in bank loans to appreciate their residential real estate assets ...

its just about leverage , give a 20% downpayment and finance the rest as far as residential long term or vacation property ...

then gain equity with that property to repeat the same process for another residential property...

,
18   FortwayeAsFuckJoeBiden   2023 Dec 23, 12:06pm  

Eman says

FortwayeAsFuckJoeBiden says


thanks guys for all the advice. i’m not trying to be professional investor. just don’t want to leave cash where inflation will eat it up. i have one rental now. just looking to pick up one or two more and be done. i live in ID, i can’t manage properties outside. i’m self managing it now.

Self management is where landlords get burned out and hate rentals. Many banks and credit unions offer 5% interest on your cash. Why settle for this deal where you don’t even get 5% return while appreciation is not certain, and there’s no built-in equity?


i can offer less than asking, that’s common out here. worst case is they’ll say “no” right? not sure what is built in equity.
19   Eman   2023 Dec 23, 12:08pm  

I shared this before. I’ll buy a property with thousands of negative cash flow each month as long as I know I can turn it around within 12 months with supside potential in equity. There must be a reason why we buy.

$5k/month of negative cash flow = $60k/year set aside to service the alligator. If we can get it to cash flow neutral in 6 months, that’s down $30k. If we can turn it $60k/year positive cash flow in 2 years, that’s $1M increase in equity. It’s simple math. The risk is so worth it, but it requires work and the foresight. I love how the outsiders call people like myself “stupid” for buying negative cash flow properties.
20   Eman   2023 Dec 23, 12:09pm  

Built-in equity = you buy a property that’s worth $300k for $200k. That’s $100k built-in equity. How many years or decades would it take for you to get $100k in cash flow. I love built-in equity assets.
21   Booger   2023 Dec 23, 12:16pm  

Eman says

Built-in equity = you buy a property that’s worth $300k for $200k. That’s $100k built-in equity.


OK, so it only works when you can buy property at a $100K discount... As if that happens in this market..
22   GNL   2023 Dec 23, 12:22pm  

Eman says


I love how the outsiders call people like myself “stupid” for buying negative cash flow properties.

You left out the getting it to cash flow $60k positive part. You left us to wonder if all we need is to sprinkle some pixie dust.
23   FortwayeAsFuckJoeBiden   2023 Dec 23, 12:24pm  

GNL says

Eman says


I love how the outsiders call people like myself “stupid” for buying negative cash flow properties.

You left out the getting it to cash flow $60k positive part.


fixing and renting for higher amount likely, lots of properties out here borderline condemnation.
24   AD   2023 Dec 23, 12:26pm  

Eman says

Built-in equity = you buy a property that’s worth $300k for $200k.


that is why you have to exploit and engage in other practices as a buyer ... you have to find desperate and unsophisticated sellers ...
,
25   GNL   2023 Dec 23, 12:26pm  

FortwayeAsFuckJoeBiden says


GNL says


Eman says


I love how the outsiders call people like myself “stupid” for buying negative cash flow properties.

You left out the getting it to cash flow $60k positive part.



fixing and renting for higher amount likely, lots of properties out here borderline condemnation.


I assume so but, why leave it out? It's not the easy part. Especially when viewing the last rehab he posted.

Why not give a complete finance/math picture of one of his residential deals? I'm not doubting Eman, I'm just saying, why stop at the surface of a deal? It's not like he literally didn't just say "add 1 million in equity" as if it was some kind of magic.
26   GNL   2023 Dec 23, 1:32pm  

Eman says


Built-in equity = you buy a property that’s worth $300k for $200k. That’s $100k built-in equity. How many years or decades would it take for you to get $100k in cash flow. I love built-in equity assets.

What is the one common thread of all those late night RE investor books/conferences? Find deals below market. Below market deals are definitely out there. I am in the DMV and I would say there are a ton of them...mostly the tear downs. Purchase a 1970 rambler on a good lot for $600K on up to ones I've seen even over $1 million. Then tear it down and put up a house large enough to cover the maximum allowed by local regulations for $1.6 - $2/$3 million. Those are the big boys (in residential anyway). We had a $14,000,000 2 miles from me go up about 5 years ago.
27   AD   2023 Dec 24, 4:16pm  

This real estate investor offers a free calculator for deciding whether to invest in real estate. He has a quantitative system which I assume Eman has one also.
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28   Eman   2023 Dec 24, 5:02pm  

ad says

This real estate investor offers a free calculator for deciding whether to invest in real estate. He has a quantitative system which I assume Eman has one also.
.



.

The one we use is called “Deal Analyzer”. It’s similar to the screen shot you shared above. We use a different spreadsheet to analyze for multifamily/apartment buy-and-pray.

As I previously shared, the maximum price we’re willing to pay for flips is 60% ARV, preferably closer to 50% ARV. I know the majority of flippers are willing to pay/buy at 70-80% ARV. Not our cup of tea at those prices.

Plenty of skeptics say “it’s impossible”. Just borrow a line from Henry Ford “If you think you can, or can’t, you’re both right.”

I’m a dreamer so I believe I can. I have big dreams. There were days I felt I was on the verge of achieving the next milestone of my dream. At the same token, there were days I felt completely defeated. The stress is real. Rather than whine and quit, I just put my head down, think things through, and keep pushing ahead. At the end of the day, it’s my destiny and I control it. Don’t have to blame anyone for anything.
29   Eman   2023 Dec 24, 5:19pm  

ad says

Eman says


Built-in equity = you buy a property that’s worth $300k for $200k.


that is why you have to exploit and engage in other practices as a buyer ... you have to find desperate and unsophisticated sellers ...
,

You don’t have to exploit anyone, or anything. You buy trouble assets that no one wants. They’re called “don’t wanter.” I used to buy assets at discount prices on a regular basis through short sales, REOs and at the courthouse steps. Iwog and ptiemann were the other two on Patnet.

The most recent “don’t wanter” was the flip we closed earlier this month. It was an REO languishing on the market for months at $750k. They kept dropping the price. We finally bought it for $515k and sold it for $1.05M.
30   Eman   2023 Dec 24, 5:20pm  

GNL says


Eman says


Built-in equity = you buy a property that’s worth $300k for $200k. That’s $100k built-in equity. How many years or decades would it take for you to get $100k in cash flow. I love built-in equity assets.

What is the one common thread of all those late night RE investor books/conferences? Find deals below market. Below market deals are definitely out there. I am in the DMV and I would say there are a ton of them...mostly the tear downs. Purchase a 1970 rambler on a good lot for $600K on up to ones I've seen even over $1 million. Then tear it down and put up a house large enough to cover the maximum allowed by local regulations for $1.6 - $2/$3 million. Those are the big boys (in residential anyway). We had a $14,000,000 2 miles from me go up about 5 years ago.


If you’re truly interested, you could have looked at my previous posts. It’s a lot to type everything again on an iPhone. Here’s the link to one of them. I didn’t bother to look through them all.

https://patrick.net/comment?comment_id=1955329
31   Eman   2023 Dec 24, 5:31pm  

ad says

Eman says


Built-in equity = you buy a property that’s worth $300k for $200k.


that is why you have to exploit and engage in other practices as a buyer ... you have to find desperate and unsophisticated sellers ...
,

A couple properties I could think of, that were on the market for everyone to buy, were:

https://redf.in/tYUeuC - Bought for $640k. Sold for $1.325M

https://redf.in/QCgM2H - Bought $355k. Sold $700k

You don’t have to exploit anyone or find any unsophisticated sellers. They’re all there for the taking.
32   Eman   2023 Dec 24, 5:37pm  

This was the most crazy one. Bought $771k. Sold $1.92M.

https://redf.in/OgyrYB
33   FortwayeAsFuckJoeBiden   2023 Dec 24, 6:33pm  

Eman says

This was the most crazy one. Bought $771k. Sold $1.92M.

https://redf.in/OgyrYB


you know how to find deals, that’s really good. i’m looking at redfin which is clearly not the right place. now i’m not looking for some insanely profitable investment, just better than cash. but man i’m clearly looking at wrong places.
34   GNL   2023 Dec 24, 6:46pm  

Eman says

I’m a dreamer so I believe I can. I have big dreams. There were days I felt I was on the verge of achieving the next milestone of my dream. At the same token, there were days I felt completely defeated. The stress is real. Rather than whine and quit, I just put my head down, think things through, and keep pushing ahead.

Anything worth achieving requires this mindset. IMO

People can achieve amazing things. I love the story of Colonel Sanders. If I remember correctly, he was a serial entrepreneur and failure but never gave up. He eventually found success in his, I believe, 60s.
35   Eman   2023 Dec 24, 6:52pm  

FortwayeAsFuckJoeBiden says

Eman says


This was the most crazy one. Bought $771k. Sold $1.92M.

https://redf.in/OgyrYB


you know how to find deals, that’s really good. i’m looking at redfin which is clearly not the right place. now i’m not looking for some insanely profitable investment, just better than cash. but man i’m clearly looking at wrong places.

Fort Wayne,

Learn the market. See the potential where others may not see. If you look at certain assets, they’re more valuable as a single family home (SFH) than a duplex, or triplex. Convert it from multi-units to a SFH. Re-layout the whole thing and make it an open floor concept, etc… People love open floor plans.

See if it’s easy to add/gain additional square footage on a hillside property. Everything is there already. Just have to build a retaining and perimeter foundation, if needed, etc….

Given the current interest rate and housing prices, having an ADU is a big plus. A 1/1 can be rented for $2-$2.2k/month. That can help to service $250-$300k of debt.

When you scale up to multifamily aka commercial property, look for underperforming properties. Say $1k/month/unit is worth $100k/unit. If its fair market rent is $2k/month, this means it’s worth $200k/unit when you get the rent to fair market. That’s $100k equity/unit. If the unit is nicely done up, people are likely going to pay $2.2k/month, which makes the unit worth $220k. The increase in value of the unit basically pays for itself and more. I’m keeping it real simple here. Not going to get into the convoluted math.

Just some pointers. Good luck.
36   AD   2023 Dec 24, 8:44pm  

Eman says


2.2k/month, which makes the unit worth $220k.


I look at renting my townhome for $2100 and make at least $900/month profit, deduct $400/month for HOA, $125 for property tax, $150 for insurance, $225 for rental management company and repairs . So multiply that $900/months by 12 months and divide by 4%.

That is $270,000 and is a very conservative estimate on the townhome's value.

.
37   AmericanKulak   2023 Dec 24, 8:44pm  

Eman, you're a smart fellah. Not sarcastic.
38   Eman   2023 Dec 25, 12:22pm  

Fort Wayne,

$500k is plenty of money to buy an apartment building in your area IMO. Here are some more numbers, and I’m sharing this based on real life experience.

Say $1k/mo rent = $100k value/unit. When rents are low, expenses tend to be high. The owner likely spends 60-70% of that money on expenses. At 70%, this leaves $300/month/unit or $3.6k/year, or 3.6% cap rate aka 3.6% ROI.

One turnover, spend $25k to rehab the unit to get $2k/mo rent. Say on a 10-unit building, your cap rate just went from 3.6% to 4.8%. $11k/mo in gross rent vs $10k.

Two turnovers = 3.6 cap to 6 cap
Three turnovers = 3.6 cap to 7.2 cap
Four, five, six turnovers, etc… See how fast it scales on such small increase in revenue?

Next, instead of spend $25k on rehab, say you spend $35k to deck out the unit with higher end materials and amenities like dishwasher, A/C, inside laundry, etc. Additional $200/month in rent increases the value of the unit by $40k. Spend $10k to get $40k in equity. That’s 300% ROI.

Merry Christmas.
39   Eman   2023 Dec 25, 12:31pm  

Say your market is trading/selling at 5 cap rate aka 5% ROI. People will call you names for buying a 3.6 cap. With 3 turnovers, you have increased the value of the building by 44%. What’s the ROI on your $500k + $75k rehab?

Say you get 5 turnovers in 5 years, you decide to refinance, pull out the equity and buy a second building. In a decade, you’ll have both cash flow and so much equity. Your spouse can then tell her boss “if you like your job, you can keep your job.” 2 to 3 decades out when you and your spouse kick the can, your kids will have a nice chunk of tax free money (up to $11M or so)?

Real estate is about control (the asset) and leverage (OPM). Time will do most of the heavy lifting.
40   AD   2023 Dec 25, 12:48pm  

Eman says

Real estate is about control (the asset) and leverage (OPM). Time will do most of the heavy lifting.


Yeah so you raise the annual rent at least at the housing aggregate of PCE or CPI which annually is about 6.5% ?

Your real property will appreciate at least about 4% a year over 20 years.

.
41   Eman   2023 Dec 25, 2:49pm  

ad says

Eman says


Real estate is about control (the asset) and leverage (OPM). Time will do most of the heavy lifting.


Yeah so you raise the annual rent at least at the housing aggregate of PCE or CPI which annually is about 6.5% ?

Your real property will appreciate at least about 4% a year over 20 years.

.

We raise rent 5% annually since they’re way below market. After 5 years of ownership, the average rent on the existing units is $1,205. Didn’t raise rent one year due to the pandemic.

In general, we keep the rent the same, or raise 2.5%, if the tenant renews the lease for another year. We raise 5% if they opt for MTM.

3 natural turnovers so far out of 12 units. The rehabbed units are rented for $1,850. Zillow has FMR of $2.2k/month.

If nothing changes, we should be able to get all our money out of the deal in a couple years through a cash-out refinance. The ROI should be infinity then. If we’re lucky, we’ll get a couple more turnovers between now and then. Then the cash out refinance will be even more lucrative.
42   AD   2023 Dec 25, 6:17pm  

Eman says

The ROI should be infinity then


yep, i wish i could borrow money at 5% rate and make at least 15% off of it

residential real estate seems the safest to borrow money as far as leverage

.
43   WookieMan   2023 Dec 26, 4:09am  

Eman says


I shared this before. I’ll buy a property with thousands of negative cash flow each month as long as I know I can turn it around within 12 months with supside potential in equity. There must be a reason why we buy.

$5k/month of negative cash flow = $60k/year set aside to service the alligator. If we can get it to cash flow neutral in 6 months, that’s down $30k. If we can turn it $60k/year positive cash flow in 2 years, that’s $1M increase in equity. It’s simple math. The risk is so worth it, but it requires work and the foresight. I love how the outsiders call people like myself “stupid” for buying negative cash flow properties.

I didn’t read everything after this comment so maybe you mentioned it. Tax consequences to your benefit as well. You’re writing off the loss against other gains while getting the equity built up on another property and if you sell in 2 years that’s long term cap gains.

That’s why I’ve never understood short term flips. Unless you get an amazing deal that 30%, if I recall correctly is awful.

Cashflow and all the numbers are key. Don’t forget about the tax man as a reminder. A wrong decision could be a 30% hit on the deal. Depending the value it could be 10’s or 100’s of thousands once you sell. All the other numbers matter in the now, but once a year in April and when you sell is an important factor in the other numbers. I’ve seen people get burned on the back end of deals not thinking of taxes and what looked good turned into a break even situation or sometimes a loss.

Note: typing on the phone if this reads like I’m retarded.

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