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All Forum Posts by: J. Martin

J. Martin has started 176 posts and replied 3654 times.

Post: REI club in San Francisco or Bay area

J. Martin
#1 Real Estate Events & Meetups Contributor
Posted
  • Rental Property Investor
  • Oakland, CA
  • Posts 3,832
  • Votes 2,925

Hi @Andy Kaufman ,

Have you started the club in Berkeley?

I live in Richmond and invest in the East Bay, and am interested in meeting up with some more investors in the East Bay. Any info/date/times appreciated.

Thanks!

Post: San Francisco meet up!

J. Martin
#1 Real Estate Events & Meetups Contributor
Posted
  • Rental Property Investor
  • Oakland, CA
  • Posts 3,832
  • Votes 2,925

Hi Sarah,

I haven't been especially active on bigger pockets, but I am an active real estate investor in the Bay Area and thought I'd get in touch before doing a surprise drop-in on the meet-up on 11/18! I own 5 units in the East Bay and am interested in talking and networking with some other Bay Area RE investors to share some thoughts, experiences, and maybe get some more deals going.. I've worked with @Johnson H. before in our 9-5 jobs and happened to see him in this thread, so hopefully he'll vouch for me, even though we've only had limited discussions about our respective real estate ventures so far..

So just wanted to check to make sure your meet-up welcomes those who are just getting into the BP game, and already in the rental game.. Hello to everyone else, and hope to meet many of you soon!

Best,

J Martin

Post: Owner Occupied Offer

J. Martin
#1 Real Estate Events & Meetups Contributor
Posted
  • Rental Property Investor
  • Oakland, CA
  • Posts 3,832
  • Votes 2,925

0% down is great!

if you can't do it with VA, know that you can put 3.5% down FHA on a 2-4 unit and most likely get more cash flow. They'll count 75% of in-place or market rents for underwriting too, which gives you a much higher purchase price than you would qualify with yourself. Then do a 0% down VA for a principal residence/future rental SFR later.

Low-down payment financing backed by the govt is one of the greatest gifts to real estate and ROI, IMHO.

And yes, have them sign a lease if you do this deal and they stay. Better yet, have punitive monetary penalties written into the lease if they don't move out in time. Something like $500 for going past the date, and $100 or 150/day would give them a large incentive to move out, even if they're in a bind. If you're really concerned, you can have an escrow company hold something like $2-5K of the seller's proceeds, to be released upon move-out at agreed-upon date, and delivered in XX condition. Everything's negotiable. You can always tell them, "If you plan on holding up your end of the deal, none of these terms even matter."

It depends how competitive the market is out there - to know what they can get away with. There are people in San Francisco & NYC who purchase condos and let the elderly owner live in it for free until they die just to be able to buy it off-market (sellers market). In other areas/situations, buyers just extend escrow until the owners move out, because they refuse to take the risk (buyer's market). But a lease is not unreasonable under any circumstance.

Post: THinking of getting into low income rentals

J. Martin
#1 Real Estate Events & Meetups Contributor
Posted
  • Rental Property Investor
  • Oakland, CA
  • Posts 3,832
  • Votes 2,925

IF YOU ARE A HANDS-ON MANAGER.

I buy and rent in the lower-income city of Richmond, CA in the Bay Area, 35min train commute to San Francisco. I think there are opportunities to make good money on these types of properties IF you're willing to be a very hands-on manager. I bought my first 4plex and moved in to one unit, spending lots of time screening and hand-selecting good tenants. I have the nicest place on the block after I installed new motion lights, fence, garden, etc. I pick up any trash outside. Tell the neighbors not to park their cars on the lot. Call police if people are slumming around in the neighborhood. And fix anything that breaks in the units. Vacancy is 2% in Richmond and rents are increasing dramatically all over the Bay. Wroking class folks come here when they get priced out of more desirable areas or want more space for their dollar. The cash flow is good, got large security deposits, and haven't had any issues (although just for a year now).

Time will tell, but I think this approach can work well. If you want to live out of town and leave an average property manager in charge of the building, you may have a higher probability of the situation spiraling downwards.. But if you can manage it or have someone you can trust manage it, I think it's a good way to get cash flow from day 1 (at least on my properties), and enough extra to cover the risks you might face in these neighborhoods. ...if you keep your eye on them and don't let the tenants or the scene slide out of control..