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All Forum Posts by: Henry Clark

Henry Clark has started 209 posts and replied 4092 times.

Post: Is Farm Land Rental Business Better than Home Rental?

Henry Clark
#1 Commercial Real Estate Investing Contributor
Posted
  • Developer
  • Posts 4,168
  • Votes 4,140

@Harshit Agrawal

If your dying to own farm ground, check out what we did with our ground.  Journey's End Subdivision, Glenwood, Iowa.

Here is the point.  By ground that has inherent value other than farm ground. 

1.  Pick a piece of property that has road access on as many sides as possible.  More than one.  

2.  Check out doing subdivisions in the country side.  We can only reduce down to 2 acre lots.

3.  Pick a piece of ground that is more of a rectangle along the road, versus a rectangle deep away from the road.  

4.  Don't plan to do a traditional subdivision where you do a hard surface road access.  This costs to much and you have to be able to split the land into less than 2 acre lots to make it work.

5.  With the long rectangle piece of ground, split into lots and do shared driveways for two lots next to each other.

6.  The land you pick, look for waste ground on the back side or a ditch with trees, or as many trees as possible.

7.  Water, sewer and electric they will need to pick up.

8.  Covenants.  Recommend you do covenants.  If I buy a lot and put a trailer or junk on it, I just devalued your lots to the side of me.

Post: Recently inherited land

Henry Clark
#1 Commercial Real Estate Investing Contributor
Posted
  • Developer
  • Posts 4,168
  • Votes 4,140

Need to know more about the land:

a.  Zoning

b.  Flood plain

c.  Road access

d.  County/City subdivision rules

e.  Build versus sell; what is your risk aversion?  Do you want to finance $15,000,000 of housing for x years and sell; do you want to sell subdivided land lots with little input, etc.

f.  Number of acres and configuration of land.  Long rectangle along the road or a triangle.

g.  Just a wording thing, is it inherited or gifted (gave you)?  Tax basis implications.

Post: Is Farm Land Rental Business Better than Home Rental?

Henry Clark
#1 Commercial Real Estate Investing Contributor
Posted
  • Developer
  • Posts 4,168
  • Votes 4,140

From Iowa.

Rental per acre $180;  $7,000 per acre= 2.8% before property and income taxes.  Assuming you paid cash for the land.

Update for Central Ohio; then compare to returns you might make on MFH.

Post: Is this is good deal?

Henry Clark
#1 Commercial Real Estate Investing Contributor
Posted
  • Developer
  • Posts 4,168
  • Votes 4,140

Use one of the forum calculators.

Off hand, never assume 100% rental.  Example 9 units at $520/month.  You should build in at least a 10% vacancy, roughly $500 monthly.  That takes away your extra cashflow of $540.

Factor in some capital costs, carpet/roof/floor/kitchen/bathrooms/sidewalk/etc.  Realize you said he just went through and remodeled a lot.  You need to go through and make a list and then do a repair/maintenance schedule with estimates.

Example:  Take this and add to your expense stream.

unit 8 bathroom year 3  $2,000

Unit 1 sidewalk step repairs year 1  $500

Unit 6 Kitchen sink and cabinets year 5 $3,000

All units roof- year ?? $100,000

So forth.  It starts getting skinny.  Just sharpen the numbers, then move forward.

Post: Rental property with land - RV storage?

Henry Clark
#1 Commercial Real Estate Investing Contributor
Posted
  • Developer
  • Posts 4,168
  • Votes 4,140

Look up my posts on RV/Boat storage.  Check your zoning first.

Post: First Deal - All Help appreciated!

Henry Clark
#1 Commercial Real Estate Investing Contributor
Posted
  • Developer
  • Posts 4,168
  • Votes 4,140

Break your thought process/review down into segments:

1. HOA- responsibilities.

     - evaluate each responsibility.  Example: do you have to pay $10,000 next year for a new road or sidewalk?

- How stable are the HOA fees at $xx? Are the units full or going into default, so you have to pick up more.

2.  Need to do your financial analysis in more detail.  Use one of the forum calculators.

      - What are your revenue projections- assuming 12 months every year for ever, or using 90% rented?

      - What are your expenses.  Assume this is not a standalone unit.   Basic expenses, NNN, capital expenses- replace carpet/shower/kitchen/roof/etc.  Even if your not repairing immediately, you need to factor in annual set aside.

3.  Built in 1960.  Lead based paint, asbestos insulation or floor tiles, other issues.    

4. Do a market analysis in the HOA and similar areas. Any new projects being built near by that will compete? Over the next 5 to 10 years, is this neighborhood improving or declining?

5.  Start developing a checklist for future deal assessment.  Incorporate the above and other concepts into it.

Straight up numbers look good, until you start replacing carpet, hot water heaters, bathrooms, etc.

Post: Finding Owners of Commercial Properties

Henry Clark
#1 Commercial Real Estate Investing Contributor
Posted
  • Developer
  • Posts 4,168
  • Votes 4,140

@Craig Choksey

I might be off base.  Would recommend you sort these by state and city.  Then look up on GIS maps for those communities/properties.  Start with the municipalities you have the most so you knock out a lot at once.  You will get the contact name and address, plus a thorough property description.  Enough to help you narrow this list down again, before you reach out to the people.

You should be able to knock out 200 of these in a weekend, as long as you have the address.

Post: Tell us how to improve BiggerPockets content!

Henry Clark
#1 Commercial Real Estate Investing Contributor
Posted
  • Developer
  • Posts 4,168
  • Votes 4,140

Another sub category.  Get rid of the World is coming to an end posts or is it a good time to buy.  Its always a good time to buy and who cares if the world is coming to an end.  I/We won't know it happened.  Most of these stock market crash posts are being put up as irritants.

If you want to stop the world from coming to an end, go plant a tree and stop eating grapes and bananas in the middle of the winter.  Carbon footprint to get them here and the Carbon retention loss to plant them.

We own 80 acres of trees and grass.  We just bought 50 acres of pasture and are planting 10,000 Teak trees.  Go do something, stop using my oxygen up and telling people what to do with their lives.  And no, I'm not a greenie, I love steak and to deer hunt.

My point is to come up with subcategories to get these negative energy posts off to the side.  If someone is truly worried about the stock or housing market crashing, I will be glad to give them positive actions they can take based on their risk analysis.

If someone truly thinks its a bad time to buy, then I will be glad to help them to learn to do more business deal analysis, they haven't learned their risk/reward level yet is all.  Put that into a different subcategory under Big Sister/Big Brother or mentor section.  Any experienced investor won't ask that question unless there is a nuance to the situation or they are just being an irritant.

Post: Tell us how to improve BiggerPockets content!

Henry Clark
#1 Commercial Real Estate Investing Contributor
Posted
  • Developer
  • Posts 4,168
  • Votes 4,140

@Allison Leung

a. Time to collate and prioritize.  Take all of the above comments and categorize into about 8 categories.  Grab a bunch of yellow stickys or do it on an electronic platform.  Show the results to this group.  Then categorize into 8 categories.  Then Sub categories as A/B/C.  Note the number of comments.  Communicate out to this group, since they took the time to answer you.  Just because one comment was noted a 1,000 times doesn't mean it gets prioritized at the top.  There will be A/B/C projects.  A's- big impact but also big resource drain.  C's- quick impact, takes little resources.  Example:  Newby help center-  this is easy.   Put in a Big Sister/Big Brother tab; with sub tabs for the major investment types. Example: Sub type- Self Storage- I will be glad to walk people through from start to finish. Though I will cut them off quickly when I realize they are just day dreaming and not committed. Sub types- SFH/MFH/Trailer parks/Retail/Commercial/Financing/Tax/etc. This will clean up the forum quite a bit. B's- usually don't get done.  Others get done, then these move up to A's or down to C's.  Local section- State/city/type- example best plumber in Potosi, Missouri.  I don't want to see that personally.  I actually love Potosi.

By doing this A/B/C approach you are explaining without explaining why something  (B's) didn't get done.  They will understand, their subject was beat out by other subjects.  They might disagree, but will know why.

Circle back to this group who responded to you.  Let them have a first pass at your collation and prioritization.  Then take forward to your internal group.  Then come back to the BP population.

b. Assign resources and responsibilities.

c.  Tell us Bigger Pockets direction.

If your team has done before great.  Otherwise I can do for you, but is better to be done by the person who asked the question and is tied into the resources.

Have seen this same request several times.  Stop asking unless there is a path forward.  No need for Four more pages of comments.

Don't close this subject.  Move it forward.

Post: Self Storage Day to day Constructing a new facility

Henry Clark
#1 Commercial Real Estate Investing Contributor
Posted
  • Developer
  • Posts 4,168
  • Votes 4,140

10 September 2020, 05:40 Started planting right before the temperature dropped from 100 degrees one day, then down to 55 for a high the next day. Will be cool and wet for the next two weeks. Dirt was bone dry, but now, due to two slow days of rain, we're good.

Dug the holes with the mini excavator above.
Put steel posts in for tree support.
Cut tree guards out of 4 inch corrugated drainage pipe. Used the Chainsaw to cut down the middle. Then with someone holding the end, I cut them into 3 to 4 foot sections.
Put the guard on the tree first. Then plant the tree. Tie plastic string around to hold the tree. This will keep the tree upright and protect against deer rubbing the tree.
Might not be able to tell from the tree picture. Built a little dam up front and left a little low in back. This will help in both catching rain water and as we needed to water the tree. It will get and keep more water.
These guards will come off in about 2 to 3 years. If the tree grows faster than that or if I forget, the plastic will expand and open up as the tree grows. No bugs or diseases inside, plenty of air flow.

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