Flaming Moderate said:
J.R. said:
Flaming Moderate said:
J.R. said:
Canada2017 said:
Easy rules
A. Only buy newer or new properties
B. Upper end properties with higher rents bring better tenants .
C. Only buy properties that make sense.....positive cash flow .
D. Always put them on a 15 year mortgage note .
E. At least here in Colorado...everyone has a dog . 400 dollar non refundable pet deposit.
F. Never rent to college students .
G. Never rent by the room .
H. Never be a slum lord .
This is from a multifamily perspective.
A) I never buy new or newer. There has to be value add to make $
B)Not really. The best performing properties we own are very middle income and primarily Hispanic
C)No, you buy properties with upside (hair on them)
D)I'm talking multifamily. We finance, generally interest only, rehab them, lease them up, raise rents and the refinance to take most of our equity out
E)Unfortunately, pet are lie people these days. They are part of the deal. Factor accordingly
F)Agree with this. Student housing is a serious hassle
G)Agree
H)Don't know what you mean by this. Somebody's slum is another person's palace.
Can I ask you a stupid question. How many units? Are you talking about a duplex or a 500-unit complex? Assuming something in-between, but are there many of those out there? Thanks.
And thanks to all of you - JR, Canada, Mike, etc., for sharing your expertise.
sure. We do 200-700 doors per deal. I have some quads that I own personally, but most are bigger properties . Deals are usually $20M-$40M.
Thanks. Guessing one doesn't just walk into the local Chase and get that loan.
Not right now. This ridiculous mortgage forebearance program (just about zero requirements) has hit 5.9%. I think a lot of homeowners may not understand the difference between forebearance and forgiveness.
Five percent of mortgage income sidelined for six months with an easy renew to a year. That's a lot of capital that cannot be re-loaned. A lot.
“Life, liberty, and property do not exist because men have made laws. On the contrary, it was the fact that life, liberty, and property existed beforehand that caused men to make laws in the first place.” (The Law, p.6) Frederic Bastiat