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All Forum Posts by: Ryan Blake

Ryan Blake has started 34 posts and replied 889 times.

Post: Proof Of Funds-HELP!

Ryan Blake
Posted
  • Lender
  • Texas
  • Posts 936
  • Votes 708

@Barbara Gardner I think this is part of the reason why most wholesalers don't go through the MLS. There are requirements that you may not be able to meet. The agents/brokers are going to want this for cash offers to substantiate what they are sending to the listing agent/broker and to make sure they aren't wasting their time submitting all these offers without serious end buyers.

Are you working with a brokerage firm that handles real estate investors on a regular basis? Do they know that you are a wholesaler and that you will be double closing or assigning the contract for a fee?

Post: Looking to do my first deal this summer

Ryan Blake
Posted
  • Lender
  • Texas
  • Posts 936
  • Votes 708

@Dylan Barnard, multi-family can be a beast to find but they are out there. I would have an agent set up an MLS push for you. It takes minutes for the agent to set up and it will push properties that meet your criteria as soon as they hit the MLS or if there is a change in the listing (i.e. price drop, drops out of pending, etc.). You give the agent the zip codes you are wanting to look in, price range, and size. It sends them to your email and when you see a great deal, don't wait. Get your agent on the phone and schedule a showing ASAP.

Post: How to analyze deals.

Ryan Blake
Posted
  • Lender
  • Texas
  • Posts 936
  • Votes 708

@Henri Meli thanks for the link. Just read through it.

Post: Third Direct Mail Campaign

Ryan Blake
Posted
  • Lender
  • Texas
  • Posts 936
  • Votes 708

@Ken Nyczaj That is some great consistency. Are you revisiting any addresses on your mailing list? I hear that once they have something from you for the 3rd time, they are more likely to respond.

Also, where are you getting your DM list from? Are they high equity leads, driving for dollars, etc.?

Good luck and stick with it!

Post: New Seattle and King County Investor

Ryan Blake
Posted
  • Lender
  • Texas
  • Posts 936
  • Votes 708

@Kyle B. & @Ashley A. Good luck! I hope to see you post some great success stories in the next year.

Post: How to analyze deals.

Ryan Blake
Posted
  • Lender
  • Texas
  • Posts 936
  • Votes 708

@Henri Meli What is "House Hack?" I haven't heard of this before (I am relatively new). Thanks for the info!

Post: Flipping Diaries: Week 1

Ryan Blake
Posted
  • Lender
  • Texas
  • Posts 936
  • Votes 708

Purpose of This Post: To continually update my grand re-entrance into house flipping. I will be making a lot of mistakes. I mean a ton. And I want to be able to learn from my mistakes by publicly sharing them and learning from the community and from the research I will do. My hope is to have a place where other new investors will be able to look back and see my path and follow the good while avoiding the bad. It will also help to keep me focused by writing down my goals and having people hold me accountable to them. I will be posting at least once a week to update what I did well, where I miss stepped, what my goals for the upcoming week are, and some general questions I am having about facets that I hope some readers will help me research and get some answers on. So without further delay:

WEEK 1

Where I Came From

Hello, my name is Ryan. I am new to bigger pockets and relatively new to flipping (I won't even call it real estate investing because I don't want to open that can of worms here). I flipped 6 homes from 2010 through the end of 2011. I loved it! At the time, I was working with my brother and we were making $30k - $60k on each flip! I didn't know it at the time but this was bad. Very bad. It meant we were young, making lots of money, and making lots of mistakes. We got some stupid idea that we should invest our money in a restaurant franchise. So we chose a franchise that we loved growing up in Southern California and attempted to bring it to North Texas.

Yeah, I know, dumb. If it’s not broken, why fix it? I don’t have any clue why we thought we should put ALL our investing money in this franchise and give up on the thing that was working well and giving us tons of cash. We had a great system set up with a killer real estate agent, awesome GC that never did us wrong, and we knew how to pick, design, and finish out a house in distress.

Six years later we have closed our restaurant, lost most of the capital we had accumulated and went our separate ways. My brother went back to a corporate job and I am trying to recreate the good thing I had back at the beginning of the decade.

Where I am Going

I have accumulated $200k of personal funds to set up my base capital. I am having to start over new with many of my contractors and other contacts because I have moved from Dallas to Fort Worth (about a 50-mile separation). I am being much more proactive in my independent learning and that is how I stumbled upon Bigger Pockets.

My goal is to flip between four to six properties and acquire one multi-family (two to four units ideally) each year. I would like to do this for the next five years. To accomplish this, I am going to work to develop a pipeline of leads from various sources, assemble of team of real estate professionals I can contact and contract with, and by continuing my education wherever and whenever possible.

My First Deal

I am using the term "deal" loosely. I acquired it from a less than reputable wholesale company in the state. Didn't know that at the time but have since learned by receiving other leads from them that were horrible and from reading about them on BP. I got the property for about $15k too much. Quickly after getting the property, I learned that the foundation issue I thought was a quick fix was much more serious. This is the downside of the wholesale deals where you don't get an inspection time other than the hour during the showing before a bid collection. I was very unprepared for this and bid $6k over asking because I was too eager to get the property and there were five other bidders there. I also was too trusting that the wholesaler knew the market and would give an accurate ARV (after repair value). They overstated the ARV by about $15k.

Given all these mistakes, I feel lucky that it looks like I will still turn a profit on this house in addition to learning some very valuable lessons. Here are the numbers:

BYERS AVE

Purchase Price: $231,000

Purchase Closing Costs: $6,800

Renovation Budget: $39,000

Holding/Financing Budget: $13,000

Staging/Clean-up: $2,800

Commission/Closing: $15,000

Sale Price: $315,000

Total Profit: $7,400

I should end up holding this house for about 3 months (1 ½ months for rehab and 1 ½ months on the market before we close).

Moving on From Here

-On the Byers Ave house, I have the foundation and some trees that were causing the foundation issues taken care of. I have the GC starting work Monday in which we will be adding a utility room, a hallway to fix a pass-through bedroom and make it a true 3/2, gut the kitchen, and master bath, and basic cosmetics. They should be done by June 8th (4 weeks).

-I am actively seeking a second project. I have two wholesalers that I am using that are slightly more trustworthy. I have an agent that has set up an MLS push for homes in my zone that hit keywords I am looking for (this is amazing if you haven't set this up; just ask any agent to set this up and it will automatically update for you whenever something changes). I also went driving for dollars (drove neighborhoods I am interested in and collected addresses of houses in distress) and found 15 good possibilities. I am looking them up with our county appraisal district website and finding addresses to the owners. I want to drive and find 25 more before I send out letters.

-I need to finish setting up google voice so that I have a number to add into these letters that I can control.

Questions I am Working on

-How do you use google voice?

-What are you looking for when driving for dollars?

-Do you knock on doors when you see a house in distress but it looks like someone is home?

Post: New to Bigger Pockets

Ryan Blake
Posted
  • Lender
  • Texas
  • Posts 936
  • Votes 708

Hey y'all (yeah, I am from Texas),

I have been investing in Texas for a few years as a flipper (2010 - 2012, and 2018). I am just getting back into things after rolling my success in flipping earlier in the decade into a failed attempt at restaurant franchising. Now I am back and doing even more homework than ever because of the decrease in inventory and increase in competition since I was last in the business. I love using my creativity and analytical skills and find that real estate investing allows me to feel fulfilled in both these aspects.

I currently am working my first flip as I get back into the market and have been researching marketing techniques to help me find my next few projects. I hope to have 2-3 flip projects running at a time.

Finding reliable contractors and subs seems just as difficult as ever. I have loved reading everyone's posts about techniques they use for weeding out the bad from the get-go.

I am very interested in finding others in my vicinity that are in the wholesaling, flipping, or small multi-family game. To me, it is crucial to surround yourself with your competition and act civil and even friendly with each other. By surrounding yourself with other entrepreneurial minds you only increase your knowledge and your drive. I am in Fort Worth and if any of y'all want to grab lunch or drinks, let me know.

I have two wonderful children and an incredibly supportive wife that have helped keep me grounded. When I tear myself away from real estate, I enjoy relaxing with family and friends playing hobby board games and attending as many college football games as I can.

I am looking forward to contributing what I have learned and learning from all the other brilliant minds here.

Good luck investing to you all!

Post: Forming a series LLC in Texas

Ryan Blake
Posted
  • Lender
  • Texas
  • Posts 936
  • Votes 708
Originally posted by @Devin Squeri:

I read that there is no specific language to form a series LLC as opposed to a standard LLC, is that true?

Also and more importantly, when you are creating a sub series - do you need to register it with the state or is this purely internal bookkeeping?

Thanks,

Devin

There is specific language required in the state of Texas. I am not sure about other states. In Texas, you need to use Texas Form 205 which is the basic filing document for an LLC but use the "Supplemental Provisions / Information" area to add in verbiage that you will be operating the LLC as a master LLC with series under it. Link to Texas Series LLC provisions

From what I have read, there is not requirement (in Texas) to create a series as long as you are treating it as a separate entity, ergo having its own financial statements, bank account, and assets/liabilities. There can be separate ownership but like Kevin said above, I haven't done this so I am unaware of how to do this. If you are going to use a different name than the master LLC with a series designation behind it, you will need to file that name with the state for $25 using Texas Form 503.

In short, I agree with Kevin. Series LLCs are not necessary for about 70% of investing in real estate. If you have large assets that you are holding for extended periods of time (i.e. groups of notes, rental properties), you should probably use them but if you are wholesaling, flipping, or the like you could easily use a standard LLC.


MY ADVICE (I am not an attorney or tax professional): Set up your LLC with the series verbiage of your choice so you have the option to create series under your master LLC but only do so when you fall into the categories mentioned above.