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All Forum Posts by: Jason G.

Jason G. has started 1 posts and replied 428 times.

Post: Buying properties on roofstock

Jason G.
#5 Ask About A Real Estate Company Contributor
Posted
  • Rental Property Investor
  • Long Island, NY
  • Posts 434
  • Votes 495
Originally posted by @Venkatraman Rajagopalan:

Hi,

How is roofstock to buy rental properties? The website looks cool but they do not show pictures of the interior of the house. Thanks in advance.

For the exclusive roofstock listings the photos of the interior normally are found in the inspection report in the diligence vault.  Do a search here on BP, there are threads that share both positive and negative experiences while using them.

Post: Anyone in AZ buy on Roofstock.com?

Jason G.
#5 Ask About A Real Estate Company Contributor
Posted
  • Rental Property Investor
  • Long Island, NY
  • Posts 434
  • Votes 495
Originally posted by @Matthew Terry:

Jason, my main question is if the asking price is negotiable. The "Turn Key" marketing is false when the inspection report shows there is $20k worth of repairs needed.

The sales prices are negotiable.  In the past there was a time period where it wasn't and if it wasnt purchased for list price then lower amounts could be offered.  I'm not sure if that is still the case or recall what the time period was.  They are not turnkey properties, but at least the ones I purchased really did not need any work or if they did very minor work.  Be an informed purchaser and check out all available options for purchasing a property.  Roofstock isnt the only place to go, though they do make things very easy.

Post: Frustrating lender experience

Jason G.
#5 Ask About A Real Estate Company Contributor
Posted
  • Rental Property Investor
  • Long Island, NY
  • Posts 434
  • Votes 495

Try Better Mortgage.

Post: newbie first rental property

Jason G.
#5 Ask About A Real Estate Company Contributor
Posted
  • Rental Property Investor
  • Long Island, NY
  • Posts 434
  • Votes 495
Originally posted by @Hnin Thiri:

@Jason Gines

My PM ask me to fill out W9.I have no LLC yet.

so I am not sure How PM will handle my SSN on W9.I will ask W9 from them too.

1) How did you do with W9?

I choose realprotect for my rental insurance.

2) How you choose lower or higher deductible for your first property?

Thanks inadvance

Thiri

I thought I responded to this, but maybe on a different thread?  If not, let me know, maybe my response didn't post.

Post: Roofstock Case Study

Jason G.
#5 Ask About A Real Estate Company Contributor
Posted
  • Rental Property Investor
  • Long Island, NY
  • Posts 434
  • Votes 495
Originally posted by @Hnin Thiri:

@Jason Gines

My PM ask me to fill out W9.I have no LLC yet.

so I am not sure How PM will handle my SSN on W9.I will ask W9 from them too.

1) How did you do with W9?

I choose realprotect for my rental insurance.

2) How you choose lower or higher deductible for your first property?

Thanks inadvance

Thiri

I did not form an LLC. I have insurance and then an umbrella policy. So properties are in personal name and property management tax documents are in my personal name and social. I chose the lower deductible for insurance for all five properties. It is based on your comfort with varying levels of exposure.

Post: Roofstock

Jason G.
#5 Ask About A Real Estate Company Contributor
Posted
  • Rental Property Investor
  • Long Island, NY
  • Posts 434
  • Votes 495
Originally posted by @Joseph McCrillis:

@Keith Anderson -How is your rootstock acquired home performing 3 years later?

@Linda Dalton I'm about to buy out of state.

@Jason G. -What's your opinion 5 months in?

5 months? The first Roofstock property I purchased was July 2017.  I've been very happy with all four properties from them to date.

Post: newbie first rental property

Jason G.
#5 Ask About A Real Estate Company Contributor
Posted
  • Rental Property Investor
  • Long Island, NY
  • Posts 434
  • Votes 495
Originally posted by @Hnin Thiri:

1) preapproval letter (25 to 35%down ,~ 70k finance)

2) Can you approve or disapprove the tenants that PM find for you?

3)Will you make counter offer if it will go below 1%rule for property with 4+ neighbours , 5+ schools and 3% appreciation?

4)Can request PM for pest control and garge ?

5) roofstock is for rental property market place but What does owner occupied property mean on roofstock?

(1) For conventional financing you should be able to put 20% down for a SFH. If it is multifamily or you already have multiple conventional mortgages you may have to put 25% down. (2) If you purchase a vacant property then the property manager should be sending you breakdowns of applicants with recommendations on whether to approve or deny. You own the property, not the PM, you decide which tenants are approved. (3) Is the property cash flow positive and is there room to raise the rents in the neighborhood? If so I personally would. (4) PM should be able to setup pest control, etc. (5) Owner Occupied means that the owner lives in the house. They should be vacating upon closing and that should be clearly spelling out in the PSA.

Post: Roofstock review. NEWBIES BEWARE!!

Jason G.
#5 Ask About A Real Estate Company Contributor
Posted
  • Rental Property Investor
  • Long Island, NY
  • Posts 434
  • Votes 495
Originally posted by @Tushar P.:

@Jason G. Do you not believe in this statement from Roofstock: “Rigorous certification means you can focus on your investment strategy rather than due diligence.” 

@Jay Hinrichs thanks for pointing out that TKs are selling their properties via Roofstock. What do you think - is it a better platform for the sellers or the buyers? By the way, have you bought or sold properties via Roofstock?

I do not know if that is a statement made by Roofstock, but regardless of who made it, it isnt something I agree with.  Investors are responsible for their own due diligence 

Post: Roofstock review. NEWBIES BEWARE!!

Jason G.
#5 Ask About A Real Estate Company Contributor
Posted
  • Rental Property Investor
  • Long Island, NY
  • Posts 434
  • Votes 495
Originally posted by @Tony Kim:
Originally posted by @Jason G.:
Originally posted by @Tony Kim:
Originally posted by @Jason G.:
Originally posted by @JC Wu:

It’s been months since I started this thread. Since then, many people have shared their opinions and insights, both privately and publicly. Piecing together what they/you told me, what I read, what I experienced, and some interesting new developments, you might find this post very intriguing, perhaps a little disturbing.

@Baris Keser concluded that most of the listings on roofstock are overpriced compared to all the homes that are sold/for sale in the area and also current rental income and market rental income is about 10-15% over the comps as well. He has done his study for Georgia 31097 zip code and found for sale homes about 30% discount of the house that is listed on roofstock.

@Tony Kim mentioned that Roofstock listings aren’t exactly what he would call good deals.

@Brian Ploszay wrote that Roofstock properties in his market are overpriced.

Here’s what I find very interesting:

In another BP thread that @Jason G. started (the same Jason who wrote Roofstock a long ravishing review and posed those good questions I used as template on this thread), he wrote that he was told most of Roofstock properties are sold for 97% of list price. I don’t know who told him that. I presume it was somebody from Roofstock given the seemingly good relationship he has with Roofstock. Here’s the link https://www.biggerpockets.com/forums/92/topics/468304-roofstock-case-study

In an article, Roofstock CEO said that roughly 93 percent of investors on the platform are buying out of state and 75 percent are first-time buyers. Here’s the link https://www.curbed.com/2019/9/10/20852849/millennial-buy-a-home-homeownership-remote

If what they say is true, it seems that there are too many naive and inexperienced newbies like myself overpaying for the properties listed on Roofstock, while being unaware of the depth of the water.

However, I’d like to point out that buyers are free to offer less than the list price and it’s up to sellers to accept or decline the offers.

A very interesting new development:

The Roofstock certified property management company in Florida that ripped me off and screwed me over appears to have had hundreds of fake positive reviews written on multiple review sites. Yelp issued consumer alert on them. It seems that even their CFO impostures as investor to write themselves five-star reviews and the employees compliment themselves and each other.

I complained about this company and pointed out their shady conduct to Roofstock. To my disappointment, Roofstock kept it on their certified provider list. This PM company has also been an active seller on Roofstock.

I filed a complaint with the Florida Attorney General along with the evidence I had analyzed and compiled, reminding them of the legal precedent of the NY attorney general imposing fines as high as 350K on a number of companies that wrote fake reviews and how a scammer behind hundreds of fake reviews on TripAdvisor received prison sentence last year. The attorney general office scanned all the hard copy pages I mailed, attached the PDF file to an email they sent me, saying that they are sharing my correspondence with their Consumer Protection Division. I don’t know whether they’ll eventually bring enforcement actions upon this PM company or not, but I doubt they’d bother to take the time to scan all 21 pages if they don’t plan to do anything about it.

I also brought it to Better Business Bureau’s attention that this PM company might be writing fake reviews on BBB. BBB took down their page a couple of weeks later. My guess is their BBB accreditation will be revoked.

Another interesting new development:

I sold this Florida property through a local wholesaler to an investor located in Israel, so the end buyer is not just an out-of-state investor, but an out-of-country investor.

The end buyer did some light rehab on the property and listed it for sale on the MLS. It has been sitting on the market for 186 days and the list price has been reduced multiple times. Zillow shows 1256 views but only 41 saves since listing. This investor will lose money for sure.

The biggest winner in this whole thing is the local wholesaler who made a quick 10K assignment fee. Myself and the investor after me (both unfamiliar with the local market) are the losers.

Last but not least, I’d like to point out that you don’t know if an investment is good or bad until you fully exit. It’s especially true for RE investments. You could be making 10K/yr of rent from one property for 10 years straight.

But if, say, there’s an undisclosed material fact or omission on the inspection report, polybutylene piping for instance (I’m just giving out a random example off the top of my head, not implying anything), those pipes suddenly burst 10 years after you buy the property and floods the house, the water damages could easily exceed the sum of the profits you’d made for the past ten years. Most investors who buy rentals from online platforms (not just Roofstock) out of state keep them as buy-and-hold. Many of those platforms are too new for certain types of “ticking time bombs” to explode. It’d be interesting to see how that plays out in the next few years. In the meantime, ignorance is bliss.

It looks like most ppl on BP only read the first page of any thread. The more interesting stuff is on the later pages really. I assume people who’ve contributed to this discussion are interested to know more and many people only check posts they’ve been @ed in. Sorry to disturb you if you don’t want to be @ed. Please don’t feel pressured to reply.

@Heshel Mangel@Account Closed

The 97% figure came form @Zach Evanish in an e-mail to me back in July of 2017 when we were having an e-mail exchange regarding the pricing of one of the properties on Roofstock.  I do not know the accuracy of that figure or if it is what the average is presently.  I do agree that many properties on the site simply cannot work for an investor seeking cashflow.  I have purchased four properties through Roofstock, but I do not think anyone at Roofstock has treated me any differently than they would any other customer.  There was a property priced very well in the Atlanta Market just a couple of months ago which was located a few houses down from one I currently own which I wish I was able to get, but someone outbid me by a few grand.  Good deals do come up, but it requires setting alerts and checking the site.  It is just another resource investors can use to get started and grow their portfolio.  I don't think I would have investment properties now if I didn't come across Roofstock.  

There was a good deal a few months ago?  OK, that's nice. 

There aren't any good deals on Roofstock. An investor who goes through the process of listing her property on Roofstock is not going to advertise a property that would entice me at all. I just don't understand why anyone would go through Rootstock when you can purchase from a very reputable turnkey provider like Smartland, Spartan, Ace Properties, Ohio Cash Flow, Memphis Turnkey. As far as I can see, the numbers for properties on Roofstock are similar, but you will forego the opportunity to deal with someone who has built up a very good reputation here on BP. I bought from Ohio Cash Flow... it was about as close to "set it and forget it" as you could imagine....and their PM is best in class. They turned around a vacancy and found a new tenant for me in two weeks. I'd be willing to bet that the other providers here are very competent as well.

I understand that Roofstock is somewhat involved in the sale process, but you are still dealing with an unknown seller who can easily make life difficult for you if they choose to. You'd also be putting your trust in a PM that you have no idea about. TK providers that post here on BP on the other hand have a vested interest in making you happy and providing very good PM services.

I am not aware of Roofstock having such a horrible reputation that your post implies they have. First you say there are no good deals on it but then contradict yourself and say you can get similar numbers through the turnkey providers you listed. There is nothing stopping a potential purchaser from looking up the seller/owner of the property. I am not sure what you mean by the seller making life difficult. While Roofstock provides options for property management they do not require you to use them and there is nothing stopping anyone from seeing if they have a presence or reviews on BP or online in general. The PM I went with had a very strong online presence with plenty of reviews on multiple platforms. I am very happy with them and they've assisted me in purchasing a SFH. Not everyone wants to go through the process of purchasing a turnkey, but if that is your strategy then all the more power to you.

"looking up the seller/owner of the property"?  LOL, yeah that'll do a lot.

It's obvious you have completely misunderstood my point so I'll make it very simple for you. The figures you get from deals on Rootstock vs. the TK providers here are very comparable. So instead of having to deal with the unknown of Roofstock (as evidenced by the spotty reviews here), why not just buy from a Turnkey company that has built up a good reputation here on BP.  I would much rather get a nicely rehabbed property from someone trusted here on BP than a place like Roofstock where you're dealing with the unknown. I'm pretty sure the OP of this thread wouldn't have gone through the crap she did had she avoided Roofstock and instead gone with a reputable TK company. Again, not blaming Roofstock because it's not necessarily their fault... it's just the nature of their marketplace and so many unknown element that can lead to things like this. If you can't see this, then I don't know what else to tell you. Hope you have continued success buying properties on Roofstock.

I understand what you are saying.  I think this fear of utilizing Roofstock is misplaced, but in the end if the strategy you are using to acquire properties works for you, then that is what matters most.  Whenever I am ready to purchase a new property I have my property management company start searching for suitable investments and I begin to actively look at the Roofstock listings.  I am in no way wed to Roofstock but if what I think is a good deal for me comes up on Roofstock I am going to take it and I couldn't imagine why you wouldnt do the same but what can I tell you.  I just dont have any desire to deal with the turn key process. It's a personal preference. Just want to pick up a property that may just need a fresh coat of paint and place a tenant in there.

Post: Roofstock review. NEWBIES BEWARE!!

Jason G.
#5 Ask About A Real Estate Company Contributor
Posted
  • Rental Property Investor
  • Long Island, NY
  • Posts 434
  • Votes 495
Originally posted by @Tony Kim:
Originally posted by @Jason G.:
Originally posted by @JC Wu:

It’s been months since I started this thread. Since then, many people have shared their opinions and insights, both privately and publicly. Piecing together what they/you told me, what I read, what I experienced, and some interesting new developments, you might find this post very intriguing, perhaps a little disturbing.

@Baris Keser concluded that most of the listings on roofstock are overpriced compared to all the homes that are sold/for sale in the area and also current rental income and market rental income is about 10-15% over the comps as well. He has done his study for Georgia 31097 zip code and found for sale homes about 30% discount of the house that is listed on roofstock.

@Tony Kim mentioned that Roofstock listings aren’t exactly what he would call good deals.

@Brian Ploszay wrote that Roofstock properties in his market are overpriced.

Here’s what I find very interesting:

In another BP thread that @Jason G. started (the same Jason who wrote Roofstock a long ravishing review and posed those good questions I used as template on this thread), he wrote that he was told most of Roofstock properties are sold for 97% of list price. I don’t know who told him that. I presume it was somebody from Roofstock given the seemingly good relationship he has with Roofstock. Here’s the link https://www.biggerpockets.com/forums/92/topics/468304-roofstock-case-study

In an article, Roofstock CEO said that roughly 93 percent of investors on the platform are buying out of state and 75 percent are first-time buyers. Here’s the link https://www.curbed.com/2019/9/10/20852849/millennial-buy-a-home-homeownership-remote

If what they say is true, it seems that there are too many naive and inexperienced newbies like myself overpaying for the properties listed on Roofstock, while being unaware of the depth of the water.

However, I’d like to point out that buyers are free to offer less than the list price and it’s up to sellers to accept or decline the offers.

A very interesting new development:

The Roofstock certified property management company in Florida that ripped me off and screwed me over appears to have had hundreds of fake positive reviews written on multiple review sites. Yelp issued consumer alert on them. It seems that even their CFO impostures as investor to write themselves five-star reviews and the employees compliment themselves and each other.

I complained about this company and pointed out their shady conduct to Roofstock. To my disappointment, Roofstock kept it on their certified provider list. This PM company has also been an active seller on Roofstock.

I filed a complaint with the Florida Attorney General along with the evidence I had analyzed and compiled, reminding them of the legal precedent of the NY attorney general imposing fines as high as 350K on a number of companies that wrote fake reviews and how a scammer behind hundreds of fake reviews on TripAdvisor received prison sentence last year. The attorney general office scanned all the hard copy pages I mailed, attached the PDF file to an email they sent me, saying that they are sharing my correspondence with their Consumer Protection Division. I don’t know whether they’ll eventually bring enforcement actions upon this PM company or not, but I doubt they’d bother to take the time to scan all 21 pages if they don’t plan to do anything about it.

I also brought it to Better Business Bureau’s attention that this PM company might be writing fake reviews on BBB. BBB took down their page a couple of weeks later. My guess is their BBB accreditation will be revoked.

Another interesting new development:

I sold this Florida property through a local wholesaler to an investor located in Israel, so the end buyer is not just an out-of-state investor, but an out-of-country investor.

The end buyer did some light rehab on the property and listed it for sale on the MLS. It has been sitting on the market for 186 days and the list price has been reduced multiple times. Zillow shows 1256 views but only 41 saves since listing. This investor will lose money for sure.

The biggest winner in this whole thing is the local wholesaler who made a quick 10K assignment fee. Myself and the investor after me (both unfamiliar with the local market) are the losers.

Last but not least, I’d like to point out that you don’t know if an investment is good or bad until you fully exit. It’s especially true for RE investments. You could be making 10K/yr of rent from one property for 10 years straight.

But if, say, there’s an undisclosed material fact or omission on the inspection report, polybutylene piping for instance (I’m just giving out a random example off the top of my head, not implying anything), those pipes suddenly burst 10 years after you buy the property and floods the house, the water damages could easily exceed the sum of the profits you’d made for the past ten years. Most investors who buy rentals from online platforms (not just Roofstock) out of state keep them as buy-and-hold. Many of those platforms are too new for certain types of “ticking time bombs” to explode. It’d be interesting to see how that plays out in the next few years. In the meantime, ignorance is bliss.

It looks like most ppl on BP only read the first page of any thread. The more interesting stuff is on the later pages really. I assume people who’ve contributed to this discussion are interested to know more and many people only check posts they’ve been @ed in. Sorry to disturb you if you don’t want to be @ed. Please don’t feel pressured to reply.

@Heshel Mangel@Account Closed

The 97% figure came form @Zach Evanish in an e-mail to me back in July of 2017 when we were having an e-mail exchange regarding the pricing of one of the properties on Roofstock.  I do not know the accuracy of that figure or if it is what the average is presently.  I do agree that many properties on the site simply cannot work for an investor seeking cashflow.  I have purchased four properties through Roofstock, but I do not think anyone at Roofstock has treated me any differently than they would any other customer.  There was a property priced very well in the Atlanta Market just a couple of months ago which was located a few houses down from one I currently own which I wish I was able to get, but someone outbid me by a few grand.  Good deals do come up, but it requires setting alerts and checking the site.  It is just another resource investors can use to get started and grow their portfolio.  I don't think I would have investment properties now if I didn't come across Roofstock.  

There was a good deal a few months ago?  OK, that's nice. 

There aren't any good deals on Roofstock. An investor who goes through the process of listing her property on Roofstock is not going to advertise a property that would entice me at all. I just don't understand why anyone would go through Rootstock when you can purchase from a very reputable turnkey provider like Smartland, Spartan, Ace Properties, Ohio Cash Flow, Memphis Turnkey. As far as I can see, the numbers for properties on Roofstock are similar, but you will forego the opportunity to deal with someone who has built up a very good reputation here on BP. I bought from Ohio Cash Flow... it was about as close to "set it and forget it" as you could imagine....and their PM is best in class. They turned around a vacancy and found a new tenant for me in two weeks. I'd be willing to bet that the other providers here are very competent as well.

I understand that Roofstock is somewhat involved in the sale process, but you are still dealing with an unknown seller who can easily make life difficult for you if they choose to. You'd also be putting your trust in a PM that you have no idea about. TK providers that post here on BP on the other hand have a vested interest in making you happy and providing very good PM services.

I am not aware of Roofstock having such a horrible reputation that your post implies they have. First you say there are no good deals on it but then contradict yourself and say you can get similar numbers through the turnkey providers you listed. There is nothing stopping a potential purchaser from looking up the seller/owner of the property. I am not sure what you mean by the seller making life difficult. While Roofstock provides options for property management they do not require you to use them and there is nothing stopping anyone from seeing if they have a presence or reviews on BP or online in general. The PM I went with had a very strong online presence with plenty of reviews on multiple platforms. I am very happy with them and they've assisted me in purchasing a SFH. Not everyone wants to go through the process of purchasing a turnkey, but if that is your strategy then all the more power to you.