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All Forum Posts by: Jack Seiden

Jack Seiden has started 31 posts and replied 801 times.

Post: Bold Prediction: The Fed WILL Do a 25+ BPS Cut... But RE Borrowing Rates Will Rise

Jack Seiden
Posted
  • Real Estate Agent
  • Washington DC
  • Posts 838
  • Votes 646
Quote from @Scott Trench:

Nope - My strategy assumes that rates rise long-term, and calls for spending less than I make. I'm just gradually deleveraging, this next time by likely buying all in cash, and continuing to not lever my properties until cap rates are lower than interest rates... unless I can get cheap and low leverage debt through assumption.

 Does buying all cash not make your return lower than just sticking it in a S&P index fund?  

Post: House is a money pit

Jack Seiden
Posted
  • Real Estate Agent
  • Washington DC
  • Posts 838
  • Votes 646
Quote from @Kyle Weinapple:

Hey BP, I am stuck in a situation where i have rental property in Baltimore city and it is a money pit. The good thing is that its at at 2.875% interest rate. I have owned it for 4 years now and have put a good amount of money into it already but with the condition that it is in now, it probably needs another $30,000-$35,000 put into it. I have enough in savings to pay for it but I keep asking myself should i just sell it and get it off my plate and lose the low interest rate or bite the bullet and do a big rehab and continue renting it out. I know the solution can really depend on the individuals situation but any opinions or ideas are appreciated! thank you BP!


 What area of Baltimore is it in?

Post: Bold Prediction: The Fed WILL Do a 25+ BPS Cut... But RE Borrowing Rates Will Rise

Jack Seiden
Posted
  • Real Estate Agent
  • Washington DC
  • Posts 838
  • Votes 646
Quote from @Scott Trench:

Ready for some nerdery? 

I believe that the Federal Reserve is going to cut rates by 25-50 bps at it's September meeting (no emergency cut), but that 30-year fixed rate mortgage rates will rise to upper 6s low 7s around the same time, and Commercial borrowing rates, including for multifamily, will increase as well. 

Here's the bet: 

- "Unemployment" is not about to shoot up. This is important, because the only way the Fed gets aggressive about rate cuts is in the face of skyrocketing unemployment. Immediately after the weak jobs report, we saw unemployment applications come in way below projections.

The economic pain people and businesses are facing in 2024 is real. But, unemployment, as measured by the US Census is unlikely to explode. Why? Two Reasons: First, because 50M people in this country either work gig jobs or are illegal immigrants, when they lose their jobs or have their hours scaled back, it doesn't show up on official unemployment stats. Second, when Boomers lose their jobs, they often simply retire, and they are an enormous generation. 

 Core Inflationary pressures remain high. A rate cut in September is more symbolic and a signal to markets that the Fed is cautiously optimistic that they've tamed inflation than actual dovish Fed Policy. We have 10,000 boomers leaving the workforce each day, and this will continue for years. There are not enough Gen Z-ers to replace them, and that puts pressure on (legal citizens) wages, partially offset by immigration. Oil prices remain a huge X factor, and housing prices (at least with respect to rents) are being held back by the most supply EVER being built and coming online here in 2024. Supply won't abate until at least middle of 2025, but when it does, inflationary pressure on rents will be very high indeed, especially if I'm right and rates stay high.

- The Yield Curve will begin to normalize (uninverting): Even as the Federal Funds Rate begins to drop, the yield curve will finally begin it's march towards normalization. Even if the Fed lowers rates by a full 100 bps over the next 12 months, to 4.25%, the 10-year, in a normalized environment, should be at 5.5% (+125bps over the FFR). While it won't get all the way to 5.5%, it will creep towards 5%, and occasionally tick past it, with high volatility. Yield curve has been inverted for nearly 2 years now. It won't stay that way forever, so enjoy it while it lasts...  

- US Treasuries, with each passing year, are "less safe", putting upward pressure on yields: Regardless of the election outcome, neither party is about to solve the budget deficit. US Treasuries will not see their credit rating improve, and will, within the next 12-24 months get another (small) downgrade, inching up treasury yields. We aren't in "US is going to default and is an inherent credit risk" at 6X national debt to tax revenue ratio, but we are getting close to "let's be wary" territory for creditors. Imagine a $185K income earner ($100K after tax) having a $600K mortgage. Not crazy, but if that mortgage becomes $650K, $700K, $800K, you begin to feel a little apprehensive and need more interest in return for incrementally higher risk. 

So, even as the Fed lowers the Federal Funds rate, and as we see the spread between the 10-year treasury yield and the 30 year mortgage rate shrink, upward pressure on the 10-year from longer-term foundational pressures will see mortgage rates tick up or or at least hold steady.

While this is neutral/slightly negative news for home buyers, it is very bad news indeed for our friends in the commercial real estate world, who are really seeing the best case scenario for the 10-year right now. I think this is your moment, friends in the multifamily space, and that if you let it pass, you might not get better terms.

It can, and, I believe, will, get WAY worse for borrowers in the multifamily and CRE spaces.

I can’t say I disagree with the analysis, just think (I’m sure this will sound incredibly stupid in the future) ultimately bonds and mortgages are likely to trade in a very narrow band the next few months, without a really nasty recession I find it hard to see them getting much below the 3.75% they hit Monday, I also think the Fed wants to keep the number below 4.25% because while I don’t think the economy is in a recession or anything it’s clear to me and I think the Fed as well l, that the economy probably can’t handle another year of rates above that, they will lower rates & possibly even taper qt to achieve that outcome. For the 1st time really since 2022 when I look towards next year, my biggest question is what housing demand will look like within that band of rates more so than what rates actually are. 

Post: Just moved to Pittsburgh from Rockville, MD

Jack Seiden
Posted
  • Real Estate Agent
  • Washington DC
  • Posts 838
  • Votes 646
Quote from @Kevin Turcios:

Hi everyone. I'm a relatively new investor who just relocated to Pittsburgh from Maryland. I would love to connect with other investors + build my team so I can get more familiar with the area. I'm interested in doing long term rentals using the BRRRR strategy, but curious to learn what others are doing.


It’s gonna be hard if not impossible to get the margin to brrrr pretty much anywhere in the region, would recommend more turn key & house hack. 

Post: New to REI in the DMV

Jack Seiden
Posted
  • Real Estate Agent
  • Washington DC
  • Posts 838
  • Votes 646
Quote from @Sarah Anthony:

Hi,

My name is Sarah and I am a 30 year old dental assistant, new to Real Estate Investing, and eager to build a network. I'm not sure what the path to begin looks like, but I've been researching about different approaches, specifically multi family properties and House hacking. With the housing market being high in Washington, DC, I'm interested to know how others got started in the area. I am hoping to find an opportunity to help an established Investor with any administrative tasks, social media, or marketing in exchange for a chance to learn. Look forward to connecting with like minded investors! 


Sarah

I’m gonna give a slightly different answer than others, figure out where/how you want to live within reason & than figure out a way to use strategies to make that somewhat affordable but using a strategy 1st approach is really risky in this market, because it might take 4-5 years to even break even vs renting, so you want to find a place you’d be happy to live for 4-5 years & than find strategies like house hacking that make that more affordable.

Post: Creating Basement Apartment in Howard County

Jack Seiden
Posted
  • Real Estate Agent
  • Washington DC
  • Posts 838
  • Votes 646
Quote from @Tim Miller:

Josh, first thing is, you are owner occupied and that gives you more freedom to do things. A few things you'll need to look at:

1. Are the windows big enough for a bedroom in the basement? If not, you have to put bigger ones in.

2. There is no law saying you can't have 2 kitchens in your home.

We have this in our home in PG county, we don't call it and ADU or a 1 bedroom apt. We just say we rent out a bedroom in the basement with a private bath and they have use of the kitchen & Rec area (livingroom). By doing this, you don't have to worry about the rental laws as they do not apply to you now.

Feel free to reach out if you have any questions.

This is incorrect with you an adu license, no 2nd stove, wet bar, microwave sure, but 2nd stove requires an adu license 

Post: Any investors looking at Washington DC for Multifamily

Jack Seiden
Posted
  • Real Estate Agent
  • Washington DC
  • Posts 838
  • Votes 646
Quote from @Gus Delgado:

Thank you all for the feedback! Seems like there are some deals to have in DC. TOPA still a concern but how much of a concern is it for the buyer? It seems like this would be more on seller side.

It’s not a deal breaker for the buyer, just a pain and occasionally a time suck, it absolutely can be an issue when you sell, not something that can’t be overcome but something that can cost time, money, effort, which again is why I’d just much rather be in condos than multi family all things equal, the per unit savings aren’t even that big in large swaths of D.C.

Post: Any investors looking at Washington DC for Multifamily

Jack Seiden
Posted
  • Real Estate Agent
  • Washington DC
  • Posts 838
  • Votes 646
Quote from @Gus Delgado:

Currently looking into the DC market for multifamily, but seeing a lot of negative information related to fraud, TOPA, pandemic relief for tenants, etc. I would love to talk to someone that has experience on this market and could tell me a bit more about it. 

I would love to meet up if in the area!

Not a fan of D.C. multi family right now prices are high with rates very hard to cash flow and unless you are playing in the 1.5mil+ you are in at best borderline neighborhood’s & also competing against a ton of newer apartments in most cases. I’d honestly rather just look at buying one off condos at this point, probably not gonna cash flow either but at least you take some risk off the table and can get into more stable areas with less construction (mainly NW) 

Post: Getting into real estate investing in the Silver Spring, MD area

Jack Seiden
Posted
  • Real Estate Agent
  • Washington DC
  • Posts 838
  • Votes 646
Quote from @Ray Guevara:

Hi all, 

I am looking to get into real estate investing with low funds and the ability to spend around 2k a month on the business. I have been listening to the bigger pockets podcast for about to years but have not been able to successful. I am licensed real estate agent, with the main objective to try and use my license for real estate investing, but I could not figure out how to effectively use my license for investing. 

I want to learn how to build a sustainable business and reaching out to see if there are any mentors in the area willing to give someone an opportunity to  learn how they build their business and how they would start if they had to do it all again. I believe am coachable and will take immediate action on advice given. If you are in the area and willing to share your knowledge it will be greatly appreciated. 

The thing to understand about being an agent, that took me a little while to figure out, it’s a marketing gig, your actual skills as an agent are mostly irrelevant, most buyers won’t understand or care if they got a good deal or a bad one within reason. Given that there are two ways to grow your business, organically, posting here and on social media, I for instance have a blog, now both in my experience and talking with people who have or had tried to build that way, it’s wayyyyy harder now than before, interest in real estate is way down, I know a few people with pretty large YouTube following’s views are way down. The next would be direct marketing, mailers, paid advertising, Zillow leads. Basically you are spending a large sum of upfront money and hoping you get an roi on that, my understanding though I really don’t do that type of marketing is it was a good payoff if less than you would think based on total sales volume in the before times, but again as conversion rates fall it’s become harder to justify. Sorry for the lack of good advice but we are in one of the biggest home sales droughts in U.S. history so it’s just a tough market.

Post: Is anyone else buying residential in Nova for investment?

Jack Seiden
Posted
  • Real Estate Agent
  • Washington DC
  • Posts 838
  • Votes 646
Quote from @Harvey Batra:

Hi All,

Trying to understand if anyone else is finding any residential  deals in Nova area and at what cap rates? Trying to explore if there are still pockets in Nova where the returns make sense, given the high prices.

Nova is extremely low risk, which is why cap rates are so low, the issue I honestly see with nova right now is the cap rates are often times below what you could get in a bond, and leverage is hurting you right now, I wouldn’t say I Would recommend not investing in nova or investing in high risk market, but personally I’d rather get something in the 5-7 cap rate range and take on slightly more risk to do so.