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All Forum Posts by: Al D.

Al D. has started 17 posts and replied 280 times.

Post: Question regarding Paid Mentorships

Al D.Posted
  • Investor
  • San Francisco, CA
  • Posts 292
  • Votes 325

My opinion on this subject is admittedly biased, as I started investing without anyone’s help (not counting the buyer’s agent,) and am professionally suspicious of real estate gurus selling “education,” to begin with. But I started at a different time in the market cycle, and attribute my success to date to luck and caution, mostly to luck. I do not envy anyone starting out at this time. (I now know that I was too cautious, especially in the beginning. But that’s only through the benefit of hindsight.)

I wasn’t aware of Zillow or BP, or even whether YouTube may have already had some good content. If useful podcasts were around, I also wasn’t aware of them. I hadn’t even read “Rich Dad.” I advertised my first vacancy on Craigslist, which is also where I may have (memory on this is rusty) found my second property, ~two months after buying my first.

It took me a few years after starting to invest locally (as a landlord) to meet someone who had been doing that for longer and in multiple markets. We had dinner, where I got all the info to feel comfortable to start investing in other markets. The cost of this ~two-hour mentorship was the price of a nice sushi meal (which the unexpected mentor offered to split.) Within the next week, I had a plan to expand out of state. Again, market conditions were (still) different - good deals were oh so easy to get.

In the following year, I finally learned about BP, and decided to become a real “real estate investor,” which (I thought) “required” me to expand beyond just doing buy-and-hold. I got so cocky that I decided to do a flip - I was only a landlord up to that point, but now in multiple states, and still self-managing some of those far away units. But at least I brought in a partner for the flip who had done those locally, in CA, and was also a financial/accounting professional - experience and skills I lacked. We invested in Indianapolis, using a (recommended) licensed broker for the whole project, who ended up being full of hot air - which we only learned too late…. We lost money. But I got better educated for that money, not to mention humbled.

I never partnered with anyone again, and realized that my lane was LTR landlording, whether personally or through PMs (mostly PMs now.) I did not need to try other things in real estate, including STRs. I even tried syndications (as a LP,) and learned that I can do better on my own - at least without breaking promises/making myself a victim of fraud, the latter I warned others about on a deal I was being pitched (and time proved me right.) (I may also be stuck for many more years in a syndication that was supposed to exit in 2017. I may never see most of that money again. But that one wasn’t exactly fraud.)

Along the way, I attended a number of free seminars that hit my area (and more recently webinars,) to see what information I may be missing out on. Unfortunately, I have not come across any seminar that wouldn’t attempt to get me to sign up for hundreds/thousands of dollars’ “worth” of a workshop, where I’d subsequently likely be pitched tens of thousands of dollars “worth” of additional “education” and alleged mentorship. So, while I haven’t paid a dime for those, I have met some people who have - who still have nothing to show for the investment, not one I know personally. The (few) gurus I have come across at these seminars, all kind of remind me of that syndicator I had a suspicion was lying (which he was.) But I have not met all the gurus out there.

That’s my bias on the subject, in a nutshell. Where does that leave your question?

You are already on the right track: You have purchased an investment property - what a great way to learn by being hands-on! And you are certainly aware of BP. And I presume that you can find good podcasts, YouTube channels, etc. - for as narrow or as wide of a net you may want to throw out for your own “real estate investing.”

But if you should still have an inclination to trust some guru with a paid mentorship, I’d suggest to go above and beyond their standard contract, which will likely stipulate what you owe them in far better terms for themselves than what they owe you in return for your money: I’d ask them to stipulate - in writing - what “mentorship” your money (at each level of a “workshop”/“education” they expect you to pay for) will actually get you, and for how long. And incorporate that written promise into the contact as an addendum/exhibit. (And look out for any language in the original contract that may say something along the lines of “no promises made outside of this document may be enforceable.”)

I have nothing to sell you. Perhaps someone else here will share their success story from a paid mentorship. You’d have to verify their claims, as you are - wisely - saying you would.

Good luck.

Post: A Second Cause in Housing Court

Al D.Posted
  • Investor
  • San Francisco, CA
  • Posts 292
  • Votes 325

If he is still there, you may want to try a little game about returning his security deposit/following the law. Depending on his “abilities,” you can get his forwarding address by following the law that actually applies to both parties here:

ORC Section 5321.16 (B) “… The tenant shall provide the landlord in writing with a forwarding address or new address to which the written notice and amount due from the landlord may be sent. If the tenant fails to provide the landlord with the forwarding or new address as required, the tenant shall not be entitled to damages or attorneys fees under division (C) of this section.”

https://codes.ohio.gov/ohio-revised-code/section-5321.16

Post: Home Buyer's Inc Spam Calls

Al D.Posted
  • Investor
  • San Francisco, CA
  • Posts 292
  • Votes 325

I’ve been getting their calls for years. My numbers are also in the federal DNC and those of some other states’. They come in waves from this “company,” often multiple times per day, often from sequential numbers, a wave lasting for weeks at a time. On the rare occasion I answer, I typically waste their time. Politely telling them to stop calling me has only resulted in hang ups and statements like “We’ll see.” Once I’ve confirmed who they (allegedly) are (of the latest wave,) I often call back multiple times, and when I get a live answer, I play music - only then do they get the point. So it stops… for some time.

If I were to speculate here so publicly (where I suspect the perpetrators will also read this,) I'd say that some wholesaler/investor may unwittingly use a "reputable" VA company for his/her own needs, putting my info on that VA company's radar (again.) Then, once they are done "representing" the unwitting investor, they start calling for their own needs - perhaps because the owner of the VA company also happens to be an "investor." If that is actually the case - given certain forensic evidence I gather from each call they make, which I keep records of - the unwitting investor using that VA service is potentially on the hook for a larger lawsuit than just for their only intended call. But it's not my fault that that (smaller) investor does not make sure that no DNC-registered number is ever called by his out-of-the-country VAs in the first place… In any case, like I said, pure speculation on my part.

I own properties in various states, but it seems that my half a dozen in TN get the most attention from them. I do believe that their alleged name is pure bs.

I, too, do not have the luxury of only accepting known callers. I will also PM you, Allen, regarding the legal recourse question.

Post: section 8 non paying tenant

Al D.Posted
  • Investor
  • San Francisco, CA
  • Posts 292
  • Votes 325

I am with Vlad on this: Call the local HA directly. The sooner, the better. If this is your first property/new PM, don't take the PM's word for a fact, especially if there is some info you feel they are not providing… I had a PM who claimed they got no HUD payment for a given month. When I contacted the agency directly, it even sent me an email with the evidence I needed to show that the PM had been paid. (In TN, a PM firm may be owned/run by an unlicensed person - as long as there is a licensed broker registered for it with TREC. Under normal circumstances, there is nothing wrong with that…. This link should open to where you can see if the firm/person you are using is even licensed: https://search.cloud.commerce.tn.gov)

Post: Let`s get the ball rolling

Al D.Posted
  • Investor
  • San Francisco, CA
  • Posts 292
  • Votes 325

@Petronella Kerssens I do not use any calculator tools here, so no idea whether what you are using pulls up some market data automatically, or whether you input it yourself. Since (positive) cash flow appears to be important for you (and, in my opinion, it should be,) some potential considerations:

1. What was renting for ~$2,400/mo a little over a year ago in a certain part of Wesley Chapel I own in, appears to be going for ~$2,000 now. And that is back to 2021 levels. Depending on where you get your data, make sure it’s current.

2. Property insurance situation in Florida is currently unstable. I have experienced a company that no longer underwrites in a particular zip code, and my premiums have increased considerably over the years. Besides flood zone considerations, consider the age of the roof. Most importantly for this point, speak with an insurance broker once you are in the purchase contingencies stage.

3. If your purchase should be in an HOA, calculate for some future increases in the dues. (For some reference: where I own, the dues have gone up by ~45% in the last 7 years. Still manageable in dollar terms, tho.)

4. You likely know this already, but Florida has a history of real estate booms and busts. (I don’t have a suggestion on this point.)

Post: Eviction - Tenant Forged Documents

Al D.Posted
  • Investor
  • San Francisco, CA
  • Posts 292
  • Votes 325

I understand the fraud/forgery part, which is material. But I am also curious: Are you evicting based only on the apparent lies in the application process, or has the tenant begun to default on any of the lease terms, like not paying rent?

Post: Warner Robins Rent Price Trend

Al D.Posted
  • Investor
  • San Francisco, CA
  • Posts 292
  • Votes 325

I am curious about the LTR price trend in Warner Robins in the last year or so and for the foreseeable future:

Have new builds, like The Cottages on Bass Rd, for example, affected rents, in your experience?

Do you know whether many more new builds for likely rental inventory may still be coming?

Is the market likely to get oversupplied with rentals, at least in the short term?

Any thoughts on the desirability of the area S of Watson, N of Russell and E of Corder to the base?

Thank you.

Post: California 60 day notice to tenant

Al D.Posted
  • Investor
  • San Francisco, CA
  • Posts 292
  • Votes 325

@Ravi S. I exited my last California rental in 2021, so my knowledge on the subject of the laws effective in 2020 is limited. That said, there are exemption to rules, and it may help anyone who may be able to answer your question to know some additional facts:

-Is there a local set of tenant protections where the property is located?

-What type of property is this? (I believe SFRs/condos and such should still be exempt. But does your 2021 rental agreement contain this info? I am not sure myself if it should.)

-Do you own in your name or SMLLC, or something else?

-Did you document each of the “late rent” events as a breach of contract/default in written notices to the tenant?

I can’t wait to hear someone familiar with the Tenant Protection Act of 2019 weigh in. (New state legislature, ballot measures to overturn existing exemptions, and expanding local rent control with new fees all played a part in my decision to exit California.)

Post: Investing Deposit money in Ohio

Al D.Posted
  • Investor
  • San Francisco, CA
  • Posts 292
  • Votes 325

@Jeremy Mullin As to the interest that you would owe the tenant, you are correct: only on the amount over the monthly-rent-equivalent at the time of signing the lease. (I had a tenant who was recommended by a person I trusted, but her credit history was not up to my standards. I had her give me 1.5 months worth of rent as security deposit: $800/mo rent; $1,200 SD = annual 5% interest on $400 at the end of the lease. She was a great tenant, and was also refunded the $400 at her first renewal, along with $20.)

I am not aware of a need for a special account (in case of an audit, for example,) like in Florida, for example. But if you should find yourself in a situation where you may have to terminate the tenancy before the lease is up (think events outside of the tenant’s control that would make the property uninhabitable,) and can’t come up with *the tenant’s* money within 30 days, good luck.

Post: 7.62 Interest rate and SO MANY POINTS

Al D.Posted
  • Investor
  • San Francisco, CA
  • Posts 292
  • Votes 325

@Justin Sullivan Shoot! My decimal was off (even though I did it in my head.) I knew something was off. You are correct.