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All Forum Posts by: Carlos Quiros

Carlos Quiros has started 33 posts and replied 82 times.

Post: Checking Rental History

Carlos Quiros
Posted
  • New to Real Estate
  • Los Angeles, Ca
  • Posts 82
  • Votes 58

New investor question here....

When looking at a property with tenants in there already is it common place to contact the property management company and ask if they pay on time or is there another method to finding out if you're about to invest in a headache or not.

Post: Investing in sketchy areas....

Carlos Quiros
Posted
  • New to Real Estate
  • Los Angeles, Ca
  • Posts 82
  • Votes 58

That is great advice. Thank you for your feedback and commentary. I will take all of this into account when looking at properties before I make any decisions.

Carlos

Post: Investing in sketchy areas....

Carlos Quiros
Posted
  • New to Real Estate
  • Los Angeles, Ca
  • Posts 82
  • Votes 58
Quote from @Ricardo R.:

@Carlos Quiros without knowing the area... if you are a buy and hold investor (rentals) you typically want to avoid areas like that. Can you get into the area and can you then ride an 'upwave' on appreciation? ... sure BUT... the entry $ for these areas is usually low and although for example appreciation of 50% might occur (unknow when and unsustainable), in actual dollars... it really means very little... 50% appreciation on little equals little appreciation in dollars. 

Additionally, typically buy and hold investors that enter these areas do quite the opposite... they have properties that are NOT remodeled because the area's tenant base is of low-quality and high-risk, so when they have an issue at the very least there is not too much on the line since the property is of a lower grade to start with. 

The worst thing is buying a fully remodeled buy and hold property in a war zone or D grade area and then be stuck either with 1) problem tenants that either won't pay and/or destroy your property and/or conduct illegal activities or 2) be stuck and unable to raise rents because after all the area is still dilapidated. War zone and D grade properties have a tendency to look great on paper but in actuality they are management intensive and pay out poor - most amateur investors that invest in these areas either tout their ROI ex. "My ROI is 80%"... and then you come to find out that it's true but... that is really only $100/mo. or less in actual cash-flow OR they tout high cash-flow but fail to tell you all the economic vacancy they experience, the difficulty with local government and the difficulty in dealing with the lower grade of tenant. 

Gentrification areas are best for flippers where you won't have to be around to deal with management. In these areas you are WAY better off waiting until the area turns around and paying a bit more for a more stable area. But in general, you want to buy the area first and the property second; meaning I would take a C class property in a B+ or A neighborhood any day of the week over an A++++ class property in a war zone or D neighborhood and you would also make way more $ with way less hassle doing it. Don't believe me? check the listings in these areas, and you will soon find an 'investor' that has acquired 5,10, 20 properties in these areas that is selling them in batches --- now think 1) if it's such a great investment area, why sell in batches? and why exit the area? and 2) you will likely see that a single C class property in a B+ neighborhood would likely equate to 4-6 of these war zone properties in these batches and the better area is 1) more stable; 2) able to be held onto 'forever'; 3) the sky is the limit as far as future of rents and appreciation; and 4) much less moving parts to achiever a much higher CF and wealth position. Just my two cents, hope this helps.  


 Thank you for your thoughtful, through and informative response Ricardo. Where are you investing in now? I should mention that the area is in a C neighborhood but I will take all of this into consideration when looking at properties and areas.

Carlos

Post: Foundation Report For Investment

Carlos Quiros
Posted
  • New to Real Estate
  • Los Angeles, Ca
  • Posts 82
  • Votes 58
Quote from @Robert Ellis:
Quote from @Carlos Quiros:

When looking at an inspection report do you all generally avoid anything that has a foundation concern? Are all foundation concerns a "no go" or are there levels to this?

The inspection report says "foundation wall leaning"

Still learning and asking a lot of questions. 

Thank you to anybody that replies. I know everyone is busy :)


 no concern at all. as long as the repair estimates are accurate. in columbus there are like 3-4 companies that specialize in working with real estate transactions and write letters on how to address the issues 


 Could you provide those company names?

Post: Investing in sketchy areas....

Carlos Quiros
Posted
  • New to Real Estate
  • Los Angeles, Ca
  • Posts 82
  • Votes 58
Quote from @Journey Toole:

@Carlos Quiros

Hello! No one will be able to tell you which direction to go in. It’s your decision and you have to decide if you’re comfortable with it. Worse areas can have lower graded Tenant base, as you mentioned, more crime, more turnover, more repairs. But typically your cashflow is better. If that area is also turning, but might worth the bad few years until it’s good.

Are you an early adapter or a laggard?

Better areas will cost more to enter, less cashflow, but typically better quality tenants, lower crime, less turnover.


 brand new investor so as you can imagine I am second guessing everything

Post: Investing in sketchy areas....

Carlos Quiros
Posted
  • New to Real Estate
  • Los Angeles, Ca
  • Posts 82
  • Votes 58
Quote from @Journey Toole:

@Carlos Quiros

Hello! No one will be able to tell you which direction to go in. It’s your decision and you have to decide if you’re comfortable with it. Worse areas can have lower graded Tenant base, as you mentioned, more crime, more turnover, more repairs. But typically your cashflow is better. If that area is also turning, but might worth the bad few years until it’s good.

Are you an early adapter or a laggard?

I am a brand new investor. So second guessing every move here

Better areas will cost more to enter, less cashflow, but typically better quality tenants, lower crime, less turnover.


Post: investing in sketchy areas...

Carlos Quiros
Posted
  • New to Real Estate
  • Los Angeles, Ca
  • Posts 82
  • Votes 58

Hello all-

I am looking at a few properties, one in particular is fully remodeled, has tenants but after asking questions about the area on a facebook group I am told that gunshots are heard in the area and police are present often.


Is this an area where as an investor one sees opportunity with a unit thats fully renovated and a start to beginning to gentrify an area or an area where you'd rather avoid until more people jump into that ship


Any advice would be helpful & appreciated

Carlos

Post: Investing in sketchy areas....

Carlos Quiros
Posted
  • New to Real Estate
  • Los Angeles, Ca
  • Posts 82
  • Votes 58

Hello all-

I am looking at a few properties, one in particular is fully remodeled, has tenants but after asking questions about the area on a facebook group I am told that gunshots are heard in the area and police are present often.


Is this an area where as an investor one sees opportunity with a unit thats fully renovated and a start to beginning to gentrify an area or an area where you'd rather avoid until more people jump into that ship


Any advice would be helpful & appreciated

Carlos

Post: Investing in sketchy areas....

Carlos Quiros
Posted
  • New to Real Estate
  • Los Angeles, Ca
  • Posts 82
  • Votes 58

Hello all-

I am looking at a few properties, one in particular is fully remodeled, has tenants but after asking questions about the area on a facebook group I am told that gunshots are heard in the area and police are present often.


Is this an area where as an investor one sees opportunity with a unit thats fully renovated and a start to beginning to gentrify an area or an area where you'd rather avoid until more people jump into that ship


Any advice would be helpful & appreciated

Carlos

Post: Investing in sketchy areas....

Carlos Quiros
Posted
  • New to Real Estate
  • Los Angeles, Ca
  • Posts 82
  • Votes 58

Hello all-

I am looking at a few properties, one in particular is fully remodeled, has tenants but after asking questions about the area on a facebook group I am told that gunshots are heard in the area and police are present often.


Is this an area where as an investor one sees opportunity with a unit thats fully renovated and a start to beginning to gentrify an area or an area where you'd rather avoid until more people jump into that ship


Any advice would be helpful & appreciated

Carlos