All Forum Posts by: Shiva Bhaskar
Shiva Bhaskar has started 53 posts and replied 506 times.
Post: Financing a 6 unit apartment complex

- Investor
- Los Angeles, CA
- Posts 523
- Votes 476
Hi Matthew. This would be a commercial loan, so no FHA programs. if the property were larger / more expensive, you might qualify for agency debt from Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac loan programs. This deal is likely too small, so you'll need to go with more traditional bank financing. A local credit union might be one of your best bets. I'd call a few of them, and also connect with a commercial mortgage broker in your area. Don't bother with most residential folks (people who do loans on 1 to 4 unit stuff) - you want someone who specializes in commercial.
Post: Anyone seen Blackrock impact on housing and which areas?

- Investor
- Los Angeles, CA
- Posts 523
- Votes 476
We're based in Los Angeles County, and invest locally (multifamily mostly. I was not active during the last crash, but I know Invitation Homes and Colony Capital bought huge amounts of SFR back then, and even more in Riverside and San Bernardino. At this point, I would not say that we're seeing as much big institutional activity in LA County for SFR rentals, probably because of prices. There are some larger local players who are buying aggressively in C and D areas, but the numbers on most higher quality stuff does not pencil out for a buy and hold rental.
I think in Florida, Texas, Georgia, Arizona, the institutional activity in the SFR space is bonkers. I hear the same in North Carolina. That is tough for first time local buyers.
Post: What are my rights as a tenant?

- Investor
- Los Angeles, CA
- Posts 523
- Votes 476
Originally posted by @Peggy Liu:
Hi everyone. I live in Los Angeles and as many people know, the crime rates in LA have skyrocketed since the pandemic. I currently live in a three-story 17-unit apartment building for the past twelve years. The ground floor is where the garage is. Over three weeks ago, the landlord informed us that the garage gate is inoperable. She says it would take about three days to repair the circuit board. This was May 22nd. A week goes by, the gate is still not repaired. The gate remains wide open for anyone to come into and out of the garage. All the tenants as well as myself have urged the landlord to get this fixed asap as we've encountered strangers roaming around in the garage peering into the cars. Two weeks passes, several of the cars were broken into in the middle of the night. Personal and some valuables were stolen from some trunks. Videos have shown that it appears to be an organized crime. Two men in masks scoped every car in the garage at 2 in the morning. This was alarming and again, all of the tenants urged the landlord to fix the gate. We told her that if she does not, it is a matter of time before something else happens. And it did. June 12th, my scooter which I have already agreed to sell to my coworker was stolen from the garage at 4:38AM. I had locked my scooter but, apparently, the thief was able to unlock it. Not only is it UNSAFE to be in the garage after midnight, now my motorized vehicle is stolen. One of the tenants has gone ahead and hired a night security guard to watch the building from 11PM-7AM for $200 per night until the landlord fixes this gate. Again, we told the landlord that if she does not fix this gate ASAP we are going to file a suit for the lost of our possessions and the lack of security in the building. It is VERY unsettling to know that there are thieves going in our garage every week. About half of the neighbors in the building have all had items stolen from their vehicles. It's now Sunday night and the gate is still NOT fixed. Is my claim reasonable? What can I do in this case of a very negligible landlord?
Hi Peggy. I am a local multifamily investor, as well as an attorney. Your landlord is being very negligent, though I am not certain as to whether this rises to the level of a habitability issue. Our group owns complexes like yours, and would never consider this ok.
You could contact Eviction Defense Network or BASTA and see if they can help. I know few very aggressive tenant law firms which may be able to help. Please feel free to DM me and can share their information.
Post: Question about Rent Control/RSO Guidelines for Los Angeles

- Investor
- Los Angeles, CA
- Posts 523
- Votes 476
Originally posted by @Kenan Heppe:
Hey everyone!
I'm looking into purchasing a duplex in L.A.(Hollywood), with the intent of occupying it myself. I've read on some sites that an owner-occupied duplex would be exempt from rent control restrictions. Does anyone have the actual legal literature on this? I can't find the actual written legal rent control ordinances anywhere. All I find are blog posts or unofficial lists/pdfs/summaries. If anyone has the actual law that would be specific to the Hollywood area, that would be wonderful!
Hi Kenan. I'm a local multifamily investor and also an attorney (nor specializing in real estate per se though). You will want to review the Los Angeles Rent Stabilization Ordinance (LARSO). Please note that depending on how long tenant has been there, you may owe relocation fees if you're taking possession of their unit for your own occupancy. If you want to have an attorney review your plans with you in detail and advise as to legal compliance, happy to suggest someone whom we work with and is very good.
Post: Los Angeles Landlord here - eviction moratorium

- Investor
- Los Angeles, CA
- Posts 523
- Votes 476
Originally posted by @Carlos Martinez:
I can't seem to find when they'll be making an announcement on the eviction moratorium. Will it be extended? currently scheduled to end June 30th. I have a tenant who owes over a year of rent.
Fellow landlord here. We should know shortly, like the next 5 to 7 days. AAGLA and the big landlords sued to end moratorium - lets see what courts say.
Post: When is it legal to ask your tenants to move out?

- Investor
- Los Angeles, CA
- Posts 523
- Votes 476
Originally posted by @Kat Hughes:
Hi!
We own a multi unit property in Los Angeles Ca. Front house and a duplex in the back. The duplex in the back has been rented since 2012 by amazing tenants who have been paying their rent on time every month. However, we want to ask them to leave so that my brother can move into one of the units and my parents can move into the 2nd unit. Is this ok to do? What legal and valid concerns will the tenants have against us should they wish to sue us for asking them to leave? And what if this is our true intent but my parents decide after asking the tenants to leave that they no longer want to live in the unit and we end up renting it out to new tenants? Can the old tenants come back to us and say we tricked them into thinking it was for family reasons but actually not?
My dad recently had a health scare and we wish for him to live closer to us. We live in the front house. But the unit behind us is a two-story duplex and my dad is contemplating if that is right for him or not. And that's why we're not sure. We would like for him to move in but we're not entirely sure yet.
Would appreciate some advice, especially since CA laws are more tenant friendly than landlord friendly!
Hi Kat, moving in family is permitted, but depending on age of tenants, how long they have been there, you may owe them relocation fees. I am a local multifamily investor, and a lawyer also. Happy to share info of a colleague who represents landlords, and can offer advise on this. just DM me / connect and will send over.
Post: Woman's husband fights boyfriend during a showing!

- Investor
- Los Angeles, CA
- Posts 523
- Votes 476
Originally posted by @Nathan Gesner:
A woman wants to look at one of my rentals. She shows up with her husband and starts checking the place out. A few minutes later, her boyfriend shows up and gets into a fist fight with the husband. Long story short, there's damage to a few walls and the cops are on the hunt for him.
The boyfriend contacts me via facebook (I've known him for six years) and asks me to call him so he can apologize and offer payment for the damages.
Life as a property manager in a small town is never boring!
I always think of Wyoming as being beautiful and peaceful and only nice folks there, and my city (LA) and my former city (New York) as being the main places all the crazy folks are. Not the case!
Post: What they don't tell you about cheap rental properties

- Investor
- Los Angeles, CA
- Posts 523
- Votes 476
Originally posted by @Marcus Auerbach:
It all sounds so perfect: you can buy a house for cheap, have someone else fix it up for you and then rent it out for great cash flow. You run the numbers (on a BP calculator, they are really good BTW), you read the forums on BP and after moneth of research you are convinced this will work!You can make it work!
So you narrow it down to a city (maybe Milwaukee) and you call an "investor friendly agent" to help you find a great inexpensive property. There are some on Zillow for 5k, so spending 50k or 100k will surely get you a good deal. And you won't have to deal with the tenants, because you will have a PM to do that for you, so problem solved (in theory at least). Some agents tell you that's a bad idea, they probably were not the investor friendly kind, plus most agents don't understand investing (which is true), so you just keep looking until you find one who is happy to write a few low ball offers on cheap properties - and you buy your first one!
Surprise number one is finding contractors is a lotharder than they made it sound in the book! Let alone getting three bids! Contractors are either booked out for the year, or they are expensive, or the worst, not trust worthy. Finally you found one, but when you tell him where the property is, he does not want the job anymore. He is worried about his truck and his tools, not worth it he says.
I have seen a lot of houses over the years that have been "remodeled" remotely and I have seen the "quality" of work that can come without the owner checking in person. Like upper cabinets "secured" by finish nailes, makshift plumbing and electrical, trim and woodwork that looks like a kindergardener has installed it, drywall that shows every single seam, roofs that leak from day one. The best part, it is almost impossible to sell a house like this, even a low income buyer will get scared by the home inspector.
The remodel went over budget, but after 7 months of remodel agony now its time for cash flow and to hire a PM to get the place rented. Turns out not every PM wants to take on your property when you tell them the address. But you finally find one who will do it and has a low enough fee. So you hire them and they place a tenant. Rent starts comming in - finally success!!
So you go ahead and buy a few more of these properties. It is hard work, but you have mastered the first one, you have learned a few things, the next one will go better.
A few years into this and with a hand full of cashflowing properties you start to notice that repairs request start increasing. A new furnace, a ton of plumbing repairs on the 60 year old galvanzed pipes, the PM says they need to fix the ceiling, because the roof (that had a few years left when you bought it) is leaking. You realize that capex is exceeding cash flow.
Meanwhile there are some problems with the tenants. You receive fines from the city (DNS) for littering and trash, the police gets called to deal with issues, one tenant moves out, and the PM can't seem to get a grip on this. No rent for 3 months. You had enough and fire your PM, find a new one. The new guys come with a hole list of expensive repair requests, 15k in total, but they also recommend a few extra things on top of that like a new garage. You decide to make a trip and find the place is trashed. You have never seen anyone living in such a flith. The weeds grow tall, fast food wrappers everywhere. The aluminum siding has dents everyhwere!? Walls are damaged and dirty, someone punched a hole in a beedroom door. There are drawers missing from the kitchen cabinets....!?
Now you have to deal with an eviction, you try to get money from the tenant for damages. Attorney, small claims court, daily emails and phone calls. Tenant has no money, just fieled for bankrupsy. Meanwhile you are trying to find a contractor, who can get the place ready and an agent to sell it. An investor offers you half of what you paid. You finally get it listed, an offer accepted, home inspection comes back and reviels a whole list of expensive repairs. The elctric panel is not safe and needs to be replaced, a basement wall has a crack and needs to be beamed, probably cause by water from the missing downspout extensions. Reluctantly you agree to get all these repairs done, more working with contractors, more expenses. But it will soon be over!
A week before closing you get a phone call from your agent. Financing fell apart, because the buyer has lost their job. So back on the market, you just paid the foundation contractor and the electrician an amount that equals about 20% of the list price.
You can see where this is going. I am currently working with a friend of a friend helping him liquidate his small portfolio. I have done this before, it's often more work and frustration to sell a cheap house than one for 200k or 300k (or 600k). He basically went through the experience above, he said he never should have, it was a bad idea. I am not excided about the listings, I can barly cover team expenses, I do it just to help him out.
Last night someone called me, saw me on BP, is looking to buy investment properties, no experience and never been to Milwaukee, but he heard it's great. Wants to buy two houses every year until he has enough cash flow to retire, hates his job. Tells me the hole plan. Budget is 80k per house. I explain that I have been a buy and hold investor for over a decade, done a lot of BRRRs, worked with a lot of investors. Median home price in Milwaukee is now over 200k, he'll be in a rough neighborhood. That I am personally buying only properties that are at least twice that amount, that's before rehab. It's 2021, prices are up, market is hyper competitive. I am telling him why this is a bad idea.
He thanks me for my time and asks me if I knew of any more investor friendly agents....
True story, food for though.
Great post Marcus! I am in Los Angeles and invest locally. We looked at properties in a Midwest city very similar to yours, went out there for 4 days and met lots of folks etc. It was a wonderful experience traveling there, but I know multiple folks who invested there and had very serious issues. Some did succeed, for sure, but the things you mentioned end up eating the investment.
The funny thing is, while I was there, I met a local investor who owned properties in the rougher areas. Very hands on guy. He did incredibly well because he knew how to manage tenants and situations. We have a few properties in LA that are in challenging areas, but being local, buying right, does help. I really like your model though. I think it's the closest you can find to a sure thing in real estate.
Post: Los Angeles in person meetup?

- Investor
- Los Angeles, CA
- Posts 523
- Votes 476
Originally posted by @Jason Hsiao:
Not sure what the rules are for in person meetups but it's been working out ok as long as respectful to the businesses. This month I'm going to be at Glendora Public Market on Wed June 16 at 6pm. Rotating geographical location a bit.
Come grab a drink if you're in the san gabriel valley area or inland empire. Meet and learn with other investors, no agendas no pitching.
Who's interested? Tag a friend who's been missing in person meetups.
Good stuff Jason! Will have to stop by one of these soon. Our meetup will return to some in person soon as well.
Post: Should I be waiting for a crash?

- Investor
- Los Angeles, CA
- Posts 523
- Votes 476
here is another thing to consider: If you're not traditionally active in the market, how would you even get your hands on the deals that materialize in a crash? Sellers / banks work with those they know.
In some markets, you're starting to see real price cuts on retail / office properties. I guarantee that the folks who are getting their hands on those are the ones who are already active in that asset class and market. In 2008 and 2009, the banks were handing off distressed loans to big private equity funds at a crazy pace, and they picked up insane amounts of single family homes that became rentals. It might seem like only a big player can do this, but if you bought several properties in a few zip codes in your target market, and get to know realtors, you'll get access to those deals too.
The point is, we should always only buy good deals. Don't buy if the deal doesn't make sense. However, I am always wary of assuming that I will be able to access the best distressed deals, if I don't have a prior track record of closing deals. The players (agents and/or banks if we're talking foreclosures) know who is active, and that is who they go with. Local real estate is really a game where you can build an inside advantage that pays off in every sort of market cycle. Start building YOUR advantage as soon as you can!