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All Forum Posts by: Emmett McNulty

Emmett McNulty has started 7 posts and replied 28 times.

Post: The 2 Year Road to Redemption

Emmett McNultyPosted
  • Investor
  • Northshore MA
  • Posts 29
  • Votes 16

That is a great podcast!  I believe they invest in Oregon State and Kansas City. Our houses are not currently in east campus, I have a concentration right by Columbia college and another handful+ in the western urban area.  I am generally interested in anything in the urban areas north of downtown going west of Mizzou/Colubmia College/Stephens College.

Post: Gas or Electric Water Heaters

Emmett McNultyPosted
  • Investor
  • Northshore MA
  • Posts 29
  • Votes 16

What usually defines the selection for us is the flue.  If there is room for a flue, I prefer gas.  If the flue just wount work out, go with electric.

Post: The 2 Year Road to Redemption

Emmett McNultyPosted
  • Investor
  • Northshore MA
  • Posts 29
  • Votes 16

Excellent question @Nathan Kaminski,  I focus (almost) completely in downtown Columbia. There are some really nice old houses that once fixed up, both students and professionals love to rent because of their close proximity to the city and campuses.  Our mission is to have the nicest rentals in this area.  I have approximately 37% student rentals due to my time frames of procurement and plan to focus more on that niche market through the next couple of years.  I have worked with some investor who exclusively focus on that market and made it a central focus for our systems.

Post: The 2 Year Road to Redemption

Emmett McNultyPosted
  • Investor
  • Northshore MA
  • Posts 29
  • Votes 16

After looking back on the past couple of years and reading similar stories, I wanted to share some of my story.

In mid-2014 I was turning 30, had recently changed positions and was beginning to realize that my financial future was limited by my employment. I was spending 10-14 hours per day working and seemed to only accumulate more debt. This led me to start taking the limited funds we had to start pursuing various business opportunities. These businesses provided educational return, they got me reading books, but ultimately I failed in terms of finding personal and financial reward through them.

Approximately 6 months after my realization, my wife and I were sitting in bed and I was reading the book “Rich Dad Poor Dad”.I remember distinctly, putting the book down and asking my wife “how would you feel about us selling our house and buying 2?”.To my surprise she said “That sounds fine”.

That next morning I called a realtor, listed our house and started looking for properties in Denver, Colorado.Our current residence sold very quickly, and we moved into a single bedroom apartment in an “OK” part of town. A funny story about that.Our son was 1 at the time and I couldn’t muster up the money from our house sale to purchase 2 properties. So, we moved into the 1 bedroom apartment and our sons crib was put in the closet! Believe me when I tell you that, Ill never live that one down!

After approximately 8 months with both of us working full time and with the funds from our house, we had enough saved up to finally close on 2 properties in downtown Denver (we actually built these on foreclosed land, probably more suitable for another post). Meaning our son lived in a closet for the better part of a year!

We had our second home rented out before the closing.

At this point and after reading numerous books on real estate, I realized that although we had reached our goal of owning a rental, our finances were completely vertical and I need to spread out to increase cash flow and reduce the impact of a vacant property.

In January 2016, I started data basing different markets across the USA. Plugging numbers form local property managers into maps and spreadsheets, analyzing home costs vs. rental income vs. population growth and a few other factors. This lead me to look at a handful of cities, in which I started calling RE agents in and booking flights to see houses.

After visiting several towns, I put two houses under contract tin Columbia, Missouri (February 2016). Keep in mind, I just tapped out our finances on the two houses in Denver.That said, I knew my numbers and thought that these were good cashflow properties. The challenge was simple, I just needed to figure out how to pay for them.

Although I can’t explain it, after reading a book called “think and grow rich”, I applied these principals and well, I started finding money.

At the same time, I met a future partner, other local resources and decided to really start pressing for more deals.

Over the next several months, I went on what my wife describes as an all-out war path. Working 18-20 hours per day, putting out direct mail (biweekly), calling anyone who would talk to me and scraping the market for any leads to be had while building relationships with local resources and lenders. Our portfolio grew from 2 to 12.

At this point, I started to see the light (for me) and decided to sell our properties in Denver. With these sold, we were able to exchange some funds, grow the portfolio and stabilize the existing portfolio into a nice loan with a local bank.

This brings us to September 2016. As it stands, we have collected a portfolio of 16 properties that cashlfow well and have the ability to expand further.

Over the next month, we are expecting a second child, I will be leaving my job and moving to our place of investment to expand our efforts. In other words I am leaving the work force and going at this full time.

Please keep in mind that this is an abbreviated story and in no way could ever represent the amount of adversity that I experienced through this process or the effort that was required.

Looking back, I am amazed with power of real estate and have found a true passion, like nothing I ever experienced in my job and I wish anyone on a similar trajectory to push as hard as you can.

Post: New Member from Missouri

Emmett McNultyPosted
  • Investor
  • Northshore MA
  • Posts 29
  • Votes 16

Hi Denise and welcome!

My family and I do quite a bit of investing in the Columbia Missouri market and absolutely love it. While flipping generally holds the most appeal to new investors I would strongly recommend you look at your first project as both a flip and a rental.  Keeping the rental potential in your back pocket will give you another exit strategy.  Keeping your options open is something that will benefit you no matter what direction you decide to take as a RE investor.

What part of MO are you looking?

Best of Luck!

- Emmett McNulty

Post: New to Denver BP Forums!

Emmett McNultyPosted
  • Investor
  • Northshore MA
  • Posts 29
  • Votes 16

PS. Regarding sharing, I am more than happy to share how this unfolds with anyone who is interested.

Post: New to Denver BP Forums!

Emmett McNultyPosted
  • Investor
  • Northshore MA
  • Posts 29
  • Votes 16

Regarding the meetup tonight, I am in! Is it at 1308 E 17th Ave, Denver, Colorado 80218?

Regarding research via Zillow, I have stayed away from sites with "projected" valuations of properties. What I have been doing is calling property managers in a given area/city, speaking with local RE brokers and agents about the areas and seeking feedback from the MLS and current rental inventory and asking for local and/or regional websites that provide timely sales and rental information. I then use this information for actual sales and rentals to generate a database to with parameters regarding sales and rental information. This gives a high level overview of potential areas.

If based on this high level overview I believe this area may meet my criteria, I again reach out to the resources, used for the basis, and start evaluating neighborhoods and different criteria that influence how this high level data may be accurately or inaccurately appropriated.This information then goes into a separate database very similar to the first, but broken out by neighborhood and sometimes even by block.

This is essentially gets you to where I am currently. The next step is flying out to visit some of these areas with local RE agents and to visit with the local property managers.

Overall, this is a very similar process to what I have used in my local market(s), with a combination of direct marketing, to find properties in the areas included in the original post.

Post: New to Denver BP Forums!

Emmett McNultyPosted
  • Investor
  • Northshore MA
  • Posts 29
  • Votes 16

Greetings, my name is Emmett McNulty and I have been a member of bigger pockets for several months now and have found it to be an exceptional research tool!

A little bit of background is that I currently have investments in Denver and have ventured as south as Douglas County. My current focus is in north eastern Arapahoe County. My RE experience is as a SFR "buy and hold" investor and landlord. Professionally, my background is in engineering and contracting (project management and contracts). Both (professional and RE) of which lend themselves well to one another, from fixing up properties to managing the properties after acquisition.

Some of my recent experience is (and anyone feel free to chime in on this) is that the Denver County, Arapahoe county and even Douglas County markets are not conducive to traditional investment "rules" (NOI/CAP or 2%) for SFR's.Cash flow is generally much tighter and local investors I have worked with use a minimum cash flow (say $400/mo) analysis or a 1% rule in place of these traditional rules. And/Or, some investors are freezing their buy and hold investments form 3-4 years ago and only increasing inventory for flipping or to hold briefly, essentially speculating on market conditions

I would be very interested to hear form some local investors on their strategies for this highly competitive market. More specifically and in short, I have begun data-basing and analyzing metrics for areas around the US with what I believe to be stable rental markets for buy and hold investments.As such, I would also be very interested to discuss this strategy from others in highly competitive markets.

I look forward to being a more active member in the BP community and have found the resources here to be second to none!

R Emmett McNulty