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All Forum Posts by: Steve Smith

Steve Smith has started 11 posts and replied 207 times.

Quote from @Ken M.:
Quote from @Steve Smith:
Quote from @Ken M.:
Quote from @Steve Smith:

Ken,

Very good posts and I could certainly argue your points. Document, document, disclose, etc, but only to the right people, not necessarily the lender. I don't wave a red flag in front of the lender daring them to call the note. But absolutely be very clear with the seller as to what you're doing. However, I've NEVER had a note called on any properties and the vast majority were "subject too" and/or owner financing. However, don't have any of those loans anymore (most paid off).

The only thing I do that you don't, is use trusts, and love them and they have saved my bacon a number of times.

.
just for clarity. I never disclose to the lender. They are not required to be notified. All disclosures are to the seller, escrow, IRS, that kind of thing.

In one lawsuit, the judge determined that the lender had constructive notice because I had recorded the warranty deed and was making payments from my business checking account. I had done nothing to hide the transfer of title. I won the case based on that.

How has using a trust benefitted you?

With a trust, no one know who owns the property. Thr trust could be in the name of the seller, and your entitty would be the trustee and beneficiary.
.
I'm not sure I get the idea.

If a lender sees that the person they have on record, the borrower, is not who is currently
listed at the county as the owner, they can then look into who owns the property. That is very easy to do in today's world. In fact, a lender could do a mass cross reference of all their loans. They probably will do so in the right circumstances.

They will send a letter to the borrower. If the borrower says it's their trust, the lender asks for proof. If the borrower legally and properly put it into a trust, it shouldn't be a problem. If the letter doesn't get responded to, they will call the note due and start a foreclosure.

Lenders aren't stupid and they don't play games with their money. The property secures the loan. It's called "risk management". They do this all day long, have been to court many, many times. You haven't been, hopefully.

If the borrower says that's not their trust or they sold the property or says they don't know who owns the trust, the lender can call the note due. Or, If it becomes a legal case, under the rules of discovery, the owner of the trust has to be revealed.

If the buyer is successful in hiding his ownership, he won't get legal notices of lawsuits and bankruptcy and foreclosure and change of servicer. I would think those are pretty important notices to get. It affects ownership.

Never trust a SubTo seller (subject to an existing mortgage) to "cover" for you in the future. There is no benefit for them to lie for you. They no longer own the property, are jealous of your benefitting from their pain and now have a debt hanging around that prevents them from buying another home.

And, no, most borrowers won't transfer the deed back to the borrower to protect you. And if they do transfer the deed back, the smart ones know that you now no longer own the property. They now own it again, and you can't make them deed to back to you once the lender isn't looking.

We're not even dealing with the issues of protected classes, emotional people, pre-foreclosures, elderly and minorities. Anyone that sees you've benefitted from "their property" believes they are owed that benefit. It does not matter that it is an irrational "feeling". Some attorney will take the case. 

Explain attempting to get the property deeded back to you, after hiding ownership from a lender who has the property as security for a loan, to the judge. That would be a fun one to witness.
.
At some point, if you do very many, you will wind in court on one of these. Just build the credibility, in advance, so the judge will side with you. Hiding ownership doesn't build credibility, and frankly, there isn't any plausible reason to hide ownership.

Learn more about "subject tos". Regardless of how you title it, YOU control the property, YOU (entity) also get a power of atty to manage, deal with the note, and do anything you want to with the property. You send notice to the bank of that, and get any notice or info from the bank re the mortgage.
You also disclose everything to the seller so they know what you're doing and they agree to it. That's been done hundreds of times without ever having the bank call the note.

Look up "subject to" on this site and I'd be surprised if there wasn't a few folks that teach it. 


It's hard to figure out what the income streams of millionaires are, most of us don't know who the millionaires are. Read the book "the Neighbor Next Door". They don't have lavish lifestyles, fancy cars or big homes. They drive average cars and nothing fancy about them, but there's some that are worth several million. Most did not make it with a W2 income, but you can.

If you're in your late 30s you should be half way there, late 50s you should be worth $1MM, and if not, you're below average. If you're in your 20s and 30s and just buy a house a year, (not slums) you should hit 1MM in 10 years, keep it up and you can imagine where you can be later in life. And that's only in real estate. And that's from only real estate and your W2 job, if you have one. Get rid of the job and you can do better, unless your W2 is at the high earner level.

So, no, you don't need multiple income streams to be a millionaire. The IRS and/census, or any part of the government does NOT know your net worth, only you do.

Quote from @Joe Homs:

@Heath D Wallace check with an attorney, but if you do that then you have two properties at risk under one LLC. Why not create a different LLC that is disregarded for tax purposes and is owned by your Texas LLC. If you are really paranoid and want privacy protection then to place the property in a land trust that is owned by your new LLC, that is owned by your Texas LLC.

Good Investing...


 Joe, That is excellent advise. A trust doesn't necessarily have a situs, so it could be anywhere, but you "may" want to have a situs in it like "formed under the laws/statues of the state of Texas.

And Heath, Why do you need to move it to Texas? Because the property is in TN, that state will still govern the laws regarding it, but a trust makes a lot of sense.

1MM in taxes is a LOT of money to pay in tax, and with depreciation recapture, it could be worse. Get some good advise, there are a LOT of ways to shave that way down. Is real estate involved... a 1031 is a good option, and perhaps you could value the RE on the high side to reduce the stock gain. Look at selling it on installment, make some interest and spread out the tax over years. Or create a loss for the year of sale. Also, I believe there are some reinvestment plans that may work. It's been a long time since I sold my business, so I can't advise on current strategies now. Get some expert help, and be sure you're getting good help. 

If you can't walk to it, it's too far. Stay local.

Post: Investing from Sydney Australia

Steve SmithPosted
  • Posts 210
  • Votes 163
Quote from @Jeremy Crooks:

Hi everyone,

I have been investing in US real estate for 2 years.  I have done 24 deals remotely from Australia.   I currently have a large buy and hold portfolio of rental homes in the US, yet I still live in Sydney.

It has not always been easy, but with perseverance, there is money to be made in the US real estate market.   That is the big picture, but for foreign investors there are details that the Americans just have no clue about.  (to put it mildly).   

To that end, I have gained knowledge on how foreign investors can set themselves up to invest in the US.  For example:  I am 1 of only 3 IRS Certified Agents located in Australia who can help Australians gain the ITIN (International Tax Identification Number).   It is no use buying a US property, if you can't open a US bank account or file a tax return.  An ITIN is a pre-requisite for both of those tasks).  

Hype around amazing deals is cheap.  But getting the details right is essential for success. 

Jeremy

That's Great, and success to you. I love 'Sydney, and have traveled there often for fun. You have a wonderful city. I have friends that live there that also invest there (and Hong Kong). Do you also invest in your home town?

Post: When can I quit my W2?

Steve SmithPosted
  • Posts 210
  • Votes 163
Quote from @Ken M.:
Quote from @Account Closed:

Hello, new here. Currently waiting on hearing back on my appraisal for my first house I'm getting out of.
I want to invest my profit into 1 or 2 multi family duplexes.

I am curious at what income level based on rental cash flow i would need to still qualify for a loan. I have potential job opportunities else where but will purchase a duplex before thinking of leaving the area. I know once I leave my job I will no longer have that work history and steady income the bank expects to see. So at what point can I use my rent as "steady income?" I ask this because once I have enough for another down payment I will want to scale to more properties. 

I am in the Indianapolis Metro area. I can currently find multiple duplexes under 300k. I plan to rent by the room. And possibly convert extra space(dinning room ect) in to bedrooms. 
With the high cost of rent in Indianapolis (1000-1500 for a 1 bed room studio) i believe I will have allot of cash flow even with the current interest rates. I personally know several people paying $800-1000 for a single bedroom. And in 2016 I myself paid 750 to stay in a bedroom in a 4 bed house that was full. Based on the area,my rent alone was covering the mortgage, let alone the other 3 tenants. Ever since i lived in that house iv been dreaming of doing the same but it wasn't in the cards yet.

Also if there is any one here who invest in Indianapolis please message me!

Your question: "When can I quit my W2?"  When you no longer have to ask that question.

 EXACTLY

1. Earned Income – Way to time consuming for the 'income made

2. Business Income – Also way to time consuming and a headache if you have employees. But you'll need a rental management company to handle your rentals, which might cost you an hour a week.

3. Dividend Income – Too risky, while you can average a reasonable return, you have to keep an eye on it and there will be downsides, perhaps big ones, like YESTERDAY.

4. Interest Income – Sure, you need a place to park your income before you spend it and lending it shore term, medium high interest works well. 

5. Rental Income – Profits from real estate investments. Yep!

6. Capital Gains – Don't sell it if you have to pay tax on it. Work to get it in a Roth IRA so there's no tax

7. Royalties or Licensing Income – Royalties with mineral rights are great, but you need to own the land, not in a stock or bond.

I could argue that Diversify is not necessary. Keep all your eggs in the real estate arena, diversity would be having many income streams from the property your own. TIME is your most valuable asset so I would argue to limit your diversity so your time is spent with little management or work. Travel, having fun and goofing off are WAY more important.

How many different income streams are you building? One

Quote from @Ken M.:
Quote from @Steve Smith:

Ken,

Very good posts and I could certainly argue your points. Document, document, disclose, etc, but only to the right people, not necessarily the lender. I don't wave a red flag in front of the lender daring them to call the note. But absolutely be very clear with the seller as to what you're doing. However, I've NEVER had a note called on any properties and the vast majority were "subject too" and/or owner financing. However, don't have any of those loans anymore (most paid off).

The only thing I do that you don't, is use trusts, and love them and they have saved my bacon a number of times.

.
just for clarity. I never disclose to the lender. They are not required to be notified. All disclosures are to the seller, escrow, IRS, that kind of thing.

In one lawsuit, the judge determined that the lender had constructive notice because I had recorded the warranty deed and was making payments from my business checking account. I had done nothing to hide the transfer of title. I won the case based on that.

How has using a trust benefitted you?

With a trust, no one know who owns the property. Thr trust could be in the name of the seller, and your entitty would be the trustee and beneficiary.

Post: 1031 Exchange question

Steve SmithPosted
  • Posts 210
  • Votes 163

If the IRA is not a Roth, I'd convert it to a Roth, but check with a CPA on how to treat the property in the Roth. As a rule, I could argue to have the IRA (Roth preferred) NOT hold property, but control is with options, leases, etc, so the profits come into the IRA. There could be liability owning property in an IRA, and you don't want any issues with that.