All Forum Posts by: Kyle Luman
Kyle Luman has started 2 posts and replied 15 times.
Post: Cash flow vs equity discussion in recent Podcast

- Investor
- Modesto, CA
- Posts 15
- Votes 8
Thank you both, I appreciate the insights.
Post: Finding 1031 Exchange Investors

- Investor
- Modesto, CA
- Posts 15
- Votes 8
Have you reached out to some 1031 qualified intermediaries? I haven't done a 1031 exchange, but may in the near future and the small amount of research I have done on it seems to indicate that some qualified intermediaries only do the intermediary task (hold your money while you close on the new deal) and some try to do other tasks as well, like facilitate you finding the next deal, etc. Thus, I might contact some 1031 QIs if you are looking for someone targeting you as a 1031 exchange partner.
Post: How do you fund property repairs/expenses if you are “investing for equity”?

- Investor
- Modesto, CA
- Posts 15
- Votes 8
Quote from @Kyle Kline:
On a recent Bigger Pockets Podcast episode (link above) the guest discussed the idea of investing for equity and not cash flow. Unless I missed it throughout the episode, I do not recall them ever discussing how you cover the cost of property repairs and capital expenditures.
It was the podcast with Dr Ben Aaker, he said he would fund the other real estate needs/expenses from his physician pay. He was trying to avoid increasing his annual income which was already high from his W2 job.
Post: Is AN 800+ FICO CREDIT SCORE EVEN POSSIBLE?

- Investor
- Modesto, CA
- Posts 15
- Votes 8
Quote from @James Hamling:
I struggled with debt management until I incorporated this pay bi-weekly "law". It started as a goal, turned into a rule, now it's a law I very happily live. I save untold thousands annually thanks to it.
I haven't heard of the bi-weekly credit card payment idea. I see how that would keep your utilization percentage down (and thus help your credit score a small amount), but I don't see how it saves you actual money. Can you educate me? Thank you.
Post: Cash flow vs equity discussion in recent Podcast

- Investor
- Modesto, CA
- Posts 15
- Votes 8
I just listened to the recent BP podcast with Dr Benjamin Aaker and Dave Meyer from a couple of weeks ago.
https://www.biggerpockets.com/blog/real-estate-1045
There was a section where Dr Aaker talks about focusing on equity and trying to avoid cash flow since he didn't want more income presently while earning money as a physician. They didn't dig into specifics on how to do that. I've been analyzing deals looking more at cash flow, but like Dr Aaker, I don't need cash now and I can't become a real estate professional for a while since I'm working more than 40 hours weekly in my W2 job.
I had hoped Dave Meyer might have asked more specifics on how you design for equity instead of cash flow.
I can think of these ways, but I feel that I am probably missing some of the best ideas:
1. Buy in appreciating areas. Obvious, but maybe the least reliable as it is somewhat by chance. Past performance doesn't guarantee the same future performance. For instance, a starter home on the wrong side of town in central California is ~$400k now. Is it really going to be $500k in 10 years?
2. If it looks like it will cash flow too much, take a larger loan (put less down) and use the remaining capital for other properties. Not sure I want to end up paying higher interest rates due to smaller down payments.
3. Get a 15 or 20 year loan (higher monthly). The cash that would flow in a 30 yr loan underwriting scenario is sent back to the bank so that builds equity faster.
Forced appreciation, while excellent overall, I am not sure it helps in this situation to avoid income from cash flow as that will probably both provide equity, but also increase cash flow right away. Are there other ways to focus on equity and minimize cash flow?