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All Forum Posts by: Clayton Silva

Clayton Silva has started 24 posts and replied 457 times.

Post: Best methods to acquire first investment property ?

Clayton SilvaPosted
  • Lender
  • California
  • Posts 464
  • Votes 288

@Ray Lin that's interesting, I've wanted to get into foreclosures in my target market as there are quite a few of them. Do you have more information regarding buying foreclosures?

Post: What to look for in property managers

Clayton SilvaPosted
  • Lender
  • California
  • Posts 464
  • Votes 288
Originally posted by @Nathan Gesner:

Remember: cheaper doesn't mean you'll make more money

This post is a wealth of information thank you for taking the time to write this!

Post: Best methods to acquire first investment property ?

Clayton SilvaPosted
  • Lender
  • California
  • Posts 464
  • Votes 288

I think most people generally recommend house hacking (have someone live in spare bedrooms that you know and trust that will pay you to do so). You could also look into ADU's (accessory dwelling units) depending on the property. Best of luck!

Post: NET WORTH/EQUITY or CASH FLOW?

Clayton SilvaPosted
  • Lender
  • California
  • Posts 464
  • Votes 288

@Sean Wilkinson easy answer is both but depends on what you're hoping to accomplish.

@Supada L. I was having a similar property and there are two ways of looking at it.

1) standard net income or cash flow. At face value your deal seems bad and the ways to fix are: raise rents, hire new property management/do it yourself, refinance and lower interest rate, or sell the property and be done. I chose to refinance mine personally (went from 4% to 2.25% which nets me an extra $120/month)

2) you could look at it as a savings account. Perhaps you have to put away a couple hundred in repairs every now and again, but what you get is a savings account that someone else is contributing to (principle in mortgage or equity). You also get the tax write off for interest expense and any potential appreciation. I know this isn't most people's way of looking at it, but it depends on what you are investing for and what you can afford to pay/lose per month. Best of luck.

Ok, I really like your analysis and I am very new to this so this might be the wrong way of looking at a deal but I feel like the cash on cash return view could be improved upon.  The two things not considered in the analysis of cash on cash are the tax write offs for expenses and interest paid as well as the additional "savings account" generated by having someone else paying off your house for you/building that equity.  When I factor those into the equation even an 8% return on a rental property looks far better than a stock market investment because stocks require capital gains tax upon selling and don't have nearly the same tax benefits.  (I have traded stocks for many years to moderate success and am just dabbling in real estate so any input would be very helpful).   

Post: First Rental Property

Clayton SilvaPosted
  • Lender
  • California
  • Posts 464
  • Votes 288

Investment Info:

Single-family residence buy & hold investment in Fayetteville.

Purchase price: $120,000
Cash invested: $1

3 bed 2 bath with about .5 acre lot. Beautiful backyard that backs into a government owned forest. Trails and forest behind the house, brand new gutters, 2 year old water heater, 3 year old A/C. 2 car garage with large, built in work bench. Recently remodeled floors and beautiful stainless steel appliances.

What made you interested in investing in this type of deal?

Bought a house for $0 VA loan, and moved to CA but wanted to keep the house and have modest cash flow.

How did you find this deal and how did you negotiate it?

I had no idea what I was doing at the time.

How did you finance this deal?

VA loan

How did you add value to the deal?

I redid the yard myself with the help of my, now, fiance and my roommate at the time. We also added brand new gutters and will be redoing the roof. When I purchased I was able to talk the seller down a bit and negotiate them covering part of the roof as I knew I would need it when I bought the house.

What was the outcome?

TBD, it is being rented by a fantastic tenant who makes 11:1 the monthly rent which is comforting.

Lessons learned? Challenges?

I am going to refinance it in March to get a lower rate and pull some equity out to help pay for the roof, but I did not adhere to the 1% rule and I should have. Regardless, I got fairly lucky for my first one and will be able to see some nice returns in the long run.

Did you work with any real estate professionals (agents, lenders, etc.) that you'd recommend to others?

I worked with Heather Maynor (agent) in Fayetteville. She is fantastic, honest, and crazy hard working. I think we toured 20 houses in under 2 weeks.

I also work with Andrea Watson (property manager) she is really great as well. Quickly found great tenant and keeps me updated on the everything.

Lastly, Leroy Conner of Conner Repair and Remodelling (contractor). He was my personal mentor at the church I attended when I was there and he is very reliable and does great work.