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All Forum Posts by: Quiana Berry

Quiana Berry has started 8 posts and replied 30 times.

Quote from @Serena Kim:

Hi - are you currently worried about short-term rentals in Orlando/Kissimmee? 

Recently, that has been one of the top question I've been getting from investors, especially given how well the real estate market has done. My short answer is no and below I'll do my best to answer some of the reasons fellow investors cite for their concerns. At the end, I'll include my own concerns. I would love to get your thoughts as well. I've been wrong many times in the past and thanks to this community I'm becoming better investor. 

Other People's Concerns

Concern #1 "House prices are going through the roof and properties are going for $10k to $100k above asking!" 
Answer: The value of a house is whatever someone is willing to pay for. In theory, the value of an asset is the present value of it's discounted cash flows. It simply means, you estimate the cashflows it will generate and discounted by an interest rate (more on this next). House prices near Disney have skyrocketed in price, but so have the cashflows. I'm currently charging significantly more in 2022 than I used to in 2018+ ($50-100 more a day on average). Similarly, the cost of building a house (materials and labor) increased by quite a bit over the past year alone. If you can charge $10 more a day ($300 a month), that would justify an additional mortgage of ~$50k. Finally, in a normal market you have around 5 offers per property. Every week one of my clients is bidding for a house that has 20-30 offers! Supply is not even close to the demand! Prices are not going down any time soon. I personally think houses will continue to appreciate at least for the next 3-5yrs.

Concern #2: "The Airbnb market feels saturated. So much competition"
Answer: A simple check on Airdna proves this wrong. Type Kissimmee on Airdna and scroll down to Rental Growth. Back in 2019 there were over 45k listings. Now there are around 37k. Similarly, Tourism is increasing in Florida

Concern #3: The Fed is hiking interest rates and that will cause interest rates to go higher and the housing bubble to burst
Bubbles are driven by irresponsible use of leverage, we are not close to that (corporate leverage is significantly healthier, when was the last time you heard about NINJA loans, etc). US government debt is another story, but that's the great benefit of having the world's reserve currency. Historically, when the Fed hikes interest rates, as soon as the process begins you tend to see interest rates move lower. What does happen is that the yield curve flattens as the market start pricing in the probability of a recession. Mortgage rates are driven by the back-end of the yield curve (30yr rates), and those tend to stay low (as they are now). While the market is pricing in 6 interest rate hikes by February of next year, I personally think they will hike only 1-2 times. Same with their balance sheet. The US economy is moving into a deflationary bust (lower growth and lower inflation). By the time the Fed looks to hike a 2nd time (May or June), they may have to stop. I could write a whole blog about this, but simply to say rates are not going to move higher, and if anything it should all support housing prices. 

My Personal Concerns

Concern #1: Struggling competitors squeezing margins to make ends meet. Operators in the area are doing a much better job than back in 2019 when I used to see hosts rent their beautiful homes for $80 a night. But still, when I see a 6+br resort house charging $150 during holidays I can't help but get frustrated. When everyone is making money, competition comes. We are seeing a lot of townhomes come online (and more will probably come soon). Some of those are highly overpriced and don't have big private pools. On the other hand, they are luxurious. I could see a lot of those operators struggle to rent and start lowering prices.

Concern #2: The cashflow is pretty good, especially for those that manage their properties well. The market is ripe for an institutional player to take over, and I don't know what will be the net effect of that. Uncertainty makes me a better investor, but also scares me. So far our market (Kissimmee) is managed mostly by mom-and-pop shops and by the owners. At some point a big institutional player looking for cashflow will join the market at scale and provide the institutional quality management that the market needs. Every day when I look at properties and see their Airbnb reviews I notice that a bulk of the people selling are because they are not making money. If you see a listing, try finding that owner's Airbnb profile, you'll probably see a bunch of guest horror stories and extremely low daily rates. 

Hopefully this wasn't too long (or boring) to read. Please feel free to share your thoughts!! Would love to hear what others are thinking. 

Serena

Great reflection any updates on this? 

Post: Out of State Investing in Midterm Rental Multifam in FL 2023

Quiana BerryPosted
  • New to Real Estate
  • Posts 34
  • Votes 12
Quote from @KL Dolphy:

Are you looking to purchase a home and live in it as well with a budget of 700K? 


 From nyc, would probably start off as a house hack before living outside of it and managing full time out of state.

Post: Out of State Investing in Midterm Rental Multifam in FL 2023

Quiana BerryPosted
  • New to Real Estate
  • Posts 34
  • Votes 12

Hi! Im a first time buyer, interested in closing on a multifamily in FL market particularly 1. Orlando 2. Tampa 3. Jacksonville. Strategy: buy and hold.

Florida for lower taxes, sunshine and close proximity to hospitals (travel nurses), universities, parks/attractions and bonus the Caribbean and South America is right in it's backyard. Orlando is a top choice for proximity to Disney /amusement parks, hospitals, growing tech market, inland protection from hurricanes.

I am looking for a house hack investment deal around 700k with short-midterm potential. Willing to do light fixer upper work that doesn't require structural work. Home preference is No less than 4 bdr 2 bath and preferably some land and 40 mins- 1 hr tops from a city, close to hospital and/or university - potential target market.

Questions 

Any investors have stories of what it's like in recent days out there? 

Any recommended contacts or tips to build a team out there? 

Is the insurance situation that bad with the reforms proposed? 

Besides swamp land any other gotchas to be careful of? 

Any guidance appreciated, total newbie here. Thanks so much!

Post: Should I house hack in or out of state for my first deal

Quiana BerryPosted
  • New to Real Estate
  • Posts 34
  • Votes 12
Quote from @Frank Avallone II:

Hey @Quiana Berry, I was in the same boat when I started out. I would advise starting to look in the areas around you that you are comfortable with. Sounds like friends and family is definitely a strong factor for you which totally makes sense. Have you began talking to anyone in the field in your area? Any realtors you are talking to or other investors? This would be a great way to get more of a understanding about the area you are in from an investment standpoint. 

Thanks for your reply and for checking out my message. Yes I have been speaking to realtors and I'm in the NACA program as well. Going to local evemts and talking to people is my next goal. I don't know how much research I need to do to know "enough" before pulling the trigger but that's where others experience comes into play.

Post: Should I house hack in or out of state for my first deal

Quiana BerryPosted
  • New to Real Estate
  • Posts 34
  • Votes 12
Quote from @Ecaterina Katerina Morosan:

Given that you're not ready to pick up a job of a landlord, have you ever thought of lending your money to experienced investors for %?

Thanks for sharing this with me. I have heard of being a hard money lender but with the upside potential, I don't understand fully How to protect yourself from the risks of peer lending is a house flip flops. 

Post: Should I house hack in or out of state for my first deal

Quiana BerryPosted
  • New to Real Estate
  • Posts 34
  • Votes 12
Quote from @William Sing:

Hey @Quiana Berry, For a lot of first-time investors I highly recommend doing something in a place you feel comfortable with and also doing owner-occupied. You can utilize better loan programs (owner occ) and is a lot more forgiving. Areas that appreciate a lot more will also lower your overall risk as long as you can hold on to it in a 5-10 year time frame. It is a good way to use "training wheels" and will give you a better idea of what is needed when you invest out of state. Just my two cents!


 Thank you for the advice I never thought of this strategy and I will look into it!

Post: Should I house hack in or out of state for my first deal

Quiana BerryPosted
  • New to Real Estate
  • Posts 34
  • Votes 12

Can I be honest and say: I am stuck not knowing where to begin/ feeling overwhelmed/analysis paralysis, and not feeling "ready" enough to invest or if I am prepared for the headache of landlording 

Defined my goal though: I aim to start by investing in a multifamily house hack in NJ (West NY area) for the close proximity to NY, within the year. I will have that as a home base, trying to aim for young professionals like myself who want to be close to NY for work.

Here's my dilemma: I am torn bc I work remotely and technically can invest anywhere but I would have to stay there over a year to set it up as per the loan reqs. I know if I go out of state and leave friends and fam behind I can do STR, build up equity quicker and pull out to reinvest in my next home, and then buy in NY/NJ region. Not sure what order to do it and if I should make the sacrifice.

My logic is : At least if I start in the more expensive market I can get higher rents, even though STR is illegal in my desired purchase area, even if hosted. Am I right? I feel like Im going crazy lol

Either way I'm looking for preferably off-market, multi-family slight fixer-uppers in West NY and will pull the trigger soon. All leads welcome!!! Let me know how I can support you too! Cheers

Post: Want to become a real estate investor but not sure how?

Quiana BerryPosted
  • New to Real Estate
  • Posts 34
  • Votes 12

Not knowing where to begin/ feeling overwhelmed/analysis paralysis, and not feeling "ready" enough. Defined my goal though. I  aim to start by investing in a multifamily house hack in NJ (West NY area) for the close proximity to NY, within the year. I will have that as a home base, trying to aim for young professionals like myself who want to be close to NY for work.

I am torn bc I work remote and technically can invest anywhere but I would have to stay there over a year to set it up and per the loan reqs. I know if I go out of state and leave friends and fam behind I can do STR, build up equity quicker and pull out to reinvest in my next home, and then buy in NY. Not sure what order to do it and if I should make the sacrifice.

At least if I start in the more expensive market I can get higher rents, even though STR is illegal in my desired purchase area, even if hosted. Do you see my dilemma? lol Either way Im looking for off market slight fixer uppers to get more equity and need to pull the trigger soon

Post: What is stopping you from buying your first investment property?

Quiana BerryPosted
  • New to Real Estate
  • Posts 34
  • Votes 12

@Kelly Claiborne how does one overcome financing barriers? I have talked to a mortgage lender but was told I don't have the prior consistent work experience and salary requirements they need to see (as a student). Also banks are less likely to loan in this period of lay offs because of potential defaulting on a loan, therefore it's harder to get a loan in these times if you not only have the 2 years of work history lined up, but current employment as well too, irregardless of the savings I have and first time homeowner grants I plan to use (in my experience) .

Would owner financing and hard money lending be the only way around this (hypothetically - not saying I would want to start out like this though ) ?

In the mean time I will wholesale, mortgage notes and anything else that requires time/connections or leverage over work history. (until I can commit to something aside from internships etc. )

Post: Where are all the female investors and real estate agents?

Quiana BerryPosted
  • New to Real Estate
  • Posts 34
  • Votes 12

Perhaps Let's start a group chat, share resources, personal experiences, do meet ups and encourage each other etc.

Aspiring Wholesaler/investor student from NYC here btw😊👋