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All Forum Posts by: Alpesh Parmar

Alpesh Parmar has started 18 posts and replied 329 times.

Post: “ Blow Up the 401k ”

Alpesh ParmarPosted
  • Investor
  • Dublin, CA
  • Posts 344
  • Votes 228
@Shiloh Lundahl o agree with Benna because of couple of points: 1) investing in 401K assumes that one will have less income when they retire. Why would someone want to retire poor? Goal should be to have similar or more income when you retire. 2) I think ffhere are handful businesses which match 100% of 401K contribution. I have worked for 3 big IT corporations and at max hey matched first 6% of my contributions. Of course, I am have my own business now and I don’t invest in 401K or IRA anymore even though I can self direct.

Post: Help my wife and I solve this FIGHT. Should I get a W-2 job?

Alpesh ParmarPosted
  • Investor
  • Dublin, CA
  • Posts 344
  • Votes 228
Originally posted by @Joshua D.:

Hello all. 

   My wife and I are having a disagreement that we need you to weigh in on.  Here is what we are having a hard time with:

We started dating in 2012, and I've always held a W-2 job of some kind. I hated the last job I worked at. It was at an asphalt plant and I made good money, usually around $850-1000/week, depending on overtime, etc. I was extremely unhappy at the job and knew that I had more potential that I hadn't tapped into.

Fast forward to 2015 and I started to have a serious interest in persuing real estate. I bought my first duplex for $16,000 and now make $650 on one side and $675 on the other. After that one, I bought a house for $27,500, worth $130,000. Fixed it up a bit and rented it out for $975/month. Next house, bought it for $36,000 and fixed it up, rented it out for $1600/month for the past 3 years, and so on. It was just really blowing up and I was getting insane deals left and right. Seeing this, my wife supported me and when I brought up the idea of quitting my job to do real estate full time, she fully was on board. 

It is now 2018. We've built a very successful real estate portfolio over 18 units, and here are the figures for each:

- Have 60k into house, house worth 150k. Rents for $1280/month. (523)

- Have 25k into duplex, worth 40k. Rents for $1325/month. (8-10)

-Have 40k into house, worth 130k. Rents for $975/month. (122)

-Have 50k into house, worth 110k. Rents for $1025/month. (46)

-Have 50k into house, worth 125k. Rents for $1250/month. (40)

-Have 60k into house, worth 130k. Rents for $1200/month. (709)

-Have 50k into house, worth 85k. Rents for $985/month. (59)

-Have 60k into house, worth 125k. Rents for $1747/month. (290)

-Have 50k into house, worth 110k. Rents for $1245/month. (78)

- Have 75k into houses, worth 130k. Rents for $2115/month. (77)

-Have $10,000 into duplex, worth 30k. Rents for $1150/month. (171-173)

- Have $65k into house, worth 125k. Rents for $1200/month. (12) 

- Have 25k into house, worth 35k. Rents for $1150/month. (640)

We also have a flip house coming up. We bought it for $15,000 and will have around $100,000 into it when finished. It will sell for in the 130k neighborhood. 

As you can see, we've brought on a good amount of properties in the past 3 years, and the returns on them are around 20%. On the business side, we have $450,000 in debt for them all, and our net worth is around 1.3 million, minus our debt, our net worth is around $645,000.  We make around $7,000 cash flow per month in rental income, net. 

Here's the thing. So, on a business side, our business is running itself pretty much and doing great, making a monthly return. BUT on the personal side, my wife is now the only one who holds a W-2 job, and makes $700/week. Since I quit my job to focus on real estate full time, we've been paying our household bills and living on JUST her income, and putting 100% of the business income back into the rentals and acquisitions of new rentals.

She has recently come to me, upset, feeling like it's "not fair" that she is the only one of us who now goes to an office M-F and pays all of our monthly bills (My $477 monthly truck payment, $540 electric/heat bill, groceries, both of our credit cards, and anything else we buy) out of solely her paycheck, and feels that I do not contribute.

In my defense, I feel that me managing the rentals (meeting with contractors, looking at and aquiring new properties, and keeping the ball rolling in general) is my contribution, and going back to a W-2 job would be going backwards for me, with all that I've built while not having a W-2 job anymore.

She feels like a "sugarmama" and "used." 

Is she justified in feeling this way? In your opinion, should I go back to getting a W-2 job and doing the rentals, etc, as well, on top of it?

Or is she being unreasonable? 

Thank you! 

 I have a successful software consulting business which is slowing down so I started focusing on real estate starting last year and I have grown the real estate to around 20 doors. As my software business slowed down, my wife is after me to find a W-2 job.

Here is what I did: I showed her what I do whole day and how much real estate brings to the table. I am also able to spend tons of time with wife and kids.

@Michelle Eisenberg Great Job, Michelle. I am also based out of Bay Area and invest OOS. I would say move on ASAP. What do you think this PM would do whe they have an urgent maintenance request?

Post: Wanting to Invest Out of State by End of Year

Alpesh ParmarPosted
  • Investor
  • Dublin, CA
  • Posts 344
  • Votes 228
Originally posted by @Hailey Brown:
Originally posted by @Alpesh Parmar:
Originally posted by @Hailey Brown:

 Hi Alpesh, What east coast cities do you invest in? or which ones do you see that still have potential?

 Sorry for misunderstanding. I didn't mean that I invest in East Coast. I just noticed that the prices in CT, MA, NJ and some other markets are still far from 2006 peak. Where as, markets like WA, CA, OR, TX have already blown past 2006 peak. I used to invest in mid-west but since end of last year, I have moved to south and have invested in B'ham and Atlanta and may invest in FL markets.

 Oh ok, maybe I read that wrong. Thank you for clarifying. I have a property in Orlando and it does well. I have looked at Atlanta too, seems like its getting more and more expensive pretty quickly. 

 I love Atlanta and I am rooting for it to get Amazon HQ2. Let me know if you want to connect and share notes.

Post: Wanting to Invest Out of State by End of Year

Alpesh ParmarPosted
  • Investor
  • Dublin, CA
  • Posts 344
  • Votes 228
Originally posted by @Hailey Brown:

 Hi Alpesh, What east coast cities do you invest in? or which ones do you see that still have potential?

 Sorry for misunderstanding. I didn't mean that I invest in East Coast. I just noticed that the prices in CT, MA, NJ and some other markets are still far from 2006 peak. Where as, markets like WA, CA, OR, TX have already blown past 2006 peak. I used to invest in mid-west but since end of last year, I have moved to south and have invested in B'ham and Atlanta and may invest in FL markets.

Post: Wanting to Invest Out of State by End of Year

Alpesh ParmarPosted
  • Investor
  • Dublin, CA
  • Posts 344
  • Votes 228
@Lee Ripma totally agree. I refer friends to my realtors, PMs and they never take any action. They are considered tire kickers by these agents, PMs etc. if you want to get a good/great deal, you have to pull the trigger and build the rapport with the team especially when you can’t meet them on weekly/monthly basis.

Post: Wanting to Invest Out of State by End of Year

Alpesh ParmarPosted
  • Investor
  • Dublin, CA
  • Posts 344
  • Votes 228
@Peter Li I haven’t bought anything local since 2011. There is so much value for money OOS and you can diversify against different properties or different types of real estate.

Post: Wanting to Invest Out of State by End of Year

Alpesh ParmarPosted
  • Investor
  • Dublin, CA
  • Posts 344
  • Votes 228
@Sharon Tseung I live in East Bay and only invest OOS. Most of the markets except East Coast have gone up so it takes good amount of work to find good/great deals. Let me know if I can be of any help. Good Luck!
@Shawn Underwood new app still needs work but it’s a good start. The earlier app on my iPhone and iPad crash once a day. It was so bad that I stopped using it on my phone.

Post: Using a Property Manager - bad idea?

Alpesh ParmarPosted
  • Investor
  • Dublin, CA
  • Posts 344
  • Votes 228
@Kyle Marek welcome to BP. I live in San Ramon as well and only invest OOS. I used property managers in all three locations where I own rental properties. There are pros and cons and PM is he most important person who can make or break your investment.