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All Forum Posts by: Todd Dexheimer

Todd Dexheimer has started 32 posts and replied 2971 times.

Post: Commercial loans interest rates and down payment %

Todd Dexheimer#2 Multi-Family and Apartment Investing ContributorPosted
  • Rental Property Investor
  • St. Paul, MN
  • Posts 3,031
  • Votes 3,687
Originally posted by @Priscilla Okyere:

@Todd Dexheimer how does one go about getting agency financing for over 1MM please ?

 Contact commercial mortgage brokers. There are a bunch of companies out there that focus on these types of loans. Companies like Meridian Capital, Old Capital, Berkadia, CBRE, Capstone, Greystone, Northmarq, Walker and Dunlap, Eastern Union, etc. 

Post: What did you think of today's BP podcast episode (Episode 500)?

Todd Dexheimer#2 Multi-Family and Apartment Investing ContributorPosted
  • Rental Property Investor
  • St. Paul, MN
  • Posts 3,031
  • Votes 3,687
Originally posted by @Eric Bilderback:

@Todd Dexheimer

Do you agree that he is a Cynic of our system?  I don’t think he is negitive as much as he believes (much like me) that the Fed etc. helps the wealthy and harms the working or middle class.  The easiest way to get rich in America is to borrow money to purchase cash flowing assets.  The risk is not much but the returns are huge.  I don’t believe people who own apartments/real estate such as myself add that much value.  But it is important people understand the system so they don’t spend their time working their asses off getting further and further behind.  

At the end of the day not much I can do about it and as Abraham Lincoln said, “the first thing you need to do to help the poor is not be one of them.”

Still pisses me off and Mr. Rich dad too I say good on him.

Feeling me?  Or do you disagree?  I know your a reasonable guy genuinely interested in your opinion.


thx



 Sure, maybe he is mad at the system, but he is always very negative. The world and our country has a lot of problems, but there is a ton of good out there. I choose to look at the positive and focus on what I can control vs focus on the negative and what I have no control over. 

Maybe he is doing his part by complaining, but I feel there is a better way to go about it. 

As for the value of what you do, I see what I do differently. I buy apartments as well. We buy apartments that are old and outdated and renovate them in order to provide a great place for our residents to live. Our staff and team is very resident focused, which provides a great experience and a place for out residents to feel safe and cared for. Through our resident first approach we are positively effecting our residents, on-site staff, contractors, investors and the community. With our profits, we are able to give money to charities and further improve our community. 

Post: What did you think of today's BP podcast episode (Episode 500)?

Todd Dexheimer#2 Multi-Family and Apartment Investing ContributorPosted
  • Rental Property Investor
  • St. Paul, MN
  • Posts 3,031
  • Votes 3,687

I did not listen to the episode, so maybe it was great, but Robert Kiyosaki is a very negative person. He thrives off of selling fear, so of course he will predict a crash, just as he has for the past 25 years. 

Post: Where can I find out more about syndication?

Todd Dexheimer#2 Multi-Family and Apartment Investing ContributorPosted
  • Rental Property Investor
  • St. Paul, MN
  • Posts 3,031
  • Votes 3,687

Here are 3 articles that I wrote about syndication that may help you out. 

https://www.biggerpockets.com/...

https://www.biggerpockets.com/...

https://www.biggerpockets.com/...

Post: How to Invest my Capital

Todd Dexheimer#2 Multi-Family and Apartment Investing ContributorPosted
  • Rental Property Investor
  • St. Paul, MN
  • Posts 3,031
  • Votes 3,687
Originally posted by @Sterling Clifton:

I have a little over 200k that I would like to invest in a multi-family unit/apartment. I have been pondering on whats the best way to go about this. I own a piece of land that I could have maybe a 12 unit apartment built on, but with the price of wood so high, I'm not sure if that's a great idea. When looking at some multi-family homes that are on the market already, they all just seem so run down that it would just be a huge hassle to deal with, let alone attract any decent tenants. 

Not sure what the best option is and I'm open to other options.

Lumber prices are way down now, so maybe building is an option, but if a run down property seems like a lot of work to fix up, then developing a property will certainly be too much work. 

If you are looking for a deal to own on your own, then buy one of the run down buildings, fix it up and rent it to good tenants. 

If you are looking for a more passive investment, then find an investment company and invest passively with them. This will require work up front to vet the company, but will be completely passive after that, while you collect the money, as they do the work.  

Post: How long did it take you to become financially independent?

Todd Dexheimer#2 Multi-Family and Apartment Investing ContributorPosted
  • Rental Property Investor
  • St. Paul, MN
  • Posts 3,031
  • Votes 3,687

3-5 years is very realistic, but it will take education, determination and a lot of grit. My freedom number was much less, but it took me 2 years to achieve while working a full time job. You need to be consistently taking massive action everyday. 

Post: Apt Syndication (MGT Fees)

Todd Dexheimer#2 Multi-Family and Apartment Investing ContributorPosted
  • Rental Property Investor
  • St. Paul, MN
  • Posts 3,031
  • Votes 3,687
Originally posted by @Donald DiBuono:

And that fee would be for managing the property? Is there typically any added fee for creating the syndication and putting together the financing?

If you're going to manage the property, you would be a typical market fee. This is anywhere between 3-8% depending on the property size and location. 

The 2% asset management fee if for managing the property manager, contractors, etc

Post: Should I Invest Passively in Real Estate Syndications?

Todd Dexheimer#2 Multi-Family and Apartment Investing ContributorPosted
  • Rental Property Investor
  • St. Paul, MN
  • Posts 3,031
  • Votes 3,687
Originally posted by @Ian Ippolito:
Originally posted by @Rebekah Hitt:

@E. C. "Stony" Stonebraker what is the range of ROI?

What methods have you used to vet syndicated investment companies?

 For vetting a syndication, different investors do it differently because every investor comes from a different financial situation and has different goals and risk tolerance. For me, I'm a very conservative investor and may look through a hundred deals a month, and at the end of the year only invest in 4-5. So things that are a red flag for me may be fine for someone more aggressive. Here's how I do my due diligence:

1) Portfolio matching: (takes 30 seconds per deal)

a) Have an educated opinion on where I think we are in the real estate cycles (financial and physical market cycles)

b) Then and only then do I pick the strategies, capital stack, and specialized asset subclasses that make sense for that opinion. For example, I am a little concerned about some aspects of the business cycle recovery and a potential for a double-dip so I lean toward the safest part of capital stack which is debt (or low-debt equity). I won't go with the riskiest opportunistic strategies, and will stick to core and core plus mostly with some value-added. I won't be investing in the riskiest/most supportable asset subclasses such as hotels, and tilt my portfolio the ones that have historically been more stable such as multifamily and single-family housing. I also don't want refinancing risk, so any deals with only 3 to 5 year debt are out for me. For someone that's not as conservative, or a different view on the cycle, they might have a different opinion than me on all of this.

2) Sponsor quality check: (takes about 45 minutes per deal)

I believe that a great sponsor can take an average looking deal and make it great, and that in mediocre sponsor can take a fantastic looking deal and make it bad (especially if there is a severe recession). So I start with the sponsor first. Again, others might disagree.

a) Track Record: Get the entire track record for the strategy. As easy as this sounds, it's not simple and usually like pulling teeth. Many times they will claim it's wonderful and then try to hide their worst deals by only showing completed deals. Make sure to get unexited deals. Or if they are doing value-added multifamily, they will show you their hotel experience. That doesn't cut it for me. I want a specialist that's an expert, and not a jack of all trades and master of none. Also, in a mainstream asset class like value-added multifamily, I see no reason to take a risk on a sponsor that doesn't have full real estate cycle experience and didn't lose money. Again, other might feel differently here.

b) Skin in the game: as a conservative investor, I understand that the dirty secret of industries that the waterfall compensation is in the line with me and incentivizes sponsors to take more risk. So I require skin in the game (average is 5% to 15%) to offset this. Contrary to popular belief, this is not set because I believe it will give me a higher return. I believe it tends to give me a slightly lower return, because the sponsor is going to be more careful, and if there is a severe downturn will prevent me from taking catastrophic losses. Someone that is more aggressive, may want lesser even though skin in the game. Also, if the sponsor is new, I am fine with less skin in the game as long as it is significant to their net worth. On the other hand if they are a sponsor that is experienced in stopping a skin in the game, that's a huge red flag for me.

c) how open to scrutiny are they? I always discuss investments with others in an investor club because other people might think of things that I might miss. And even though virtually every sponsor agreement allows me to share investment information with others who might be advising me on it (especially when club members are bound by an NDA), I still ask the sponsor if I can share it, because it's a test. Most are fine with that, but a few will have problems with it and claim there are legal issues, etc.. That's a red flag for me.

d) death by Google: I Google everything I can about the sponsor. I check the SEC, FINRA, ratings websites for inside information on the principals in the company. I also look for lawsuits and see what happened in them. Many times it's an easy red flag. Sometimes it's ambiguous, but even then, why should I bother with the company that has numerous unresolved lawsuits, versus another company that is virtually the same but has none. Again, others might feel differently here.

3) property level due diligence: (takes seconds to weeks per deal): here is where I drill in with the low-level details.

a) pro forma popping: I examine all the assumptions, and see if they are overoptimistic or not. I look at every single item in the pro forma and imagine that it is complete BS, and see if I can challenge it. If there's a hole, it may be a red flag.

b) sensitivity analysis: I examine all the assumptions, and make sure I can live with the worst case scenarios.

c) "Stall and see": if they are getting money over multiple years, and there is no penalty for investing later, I would usually wait so I get some real performance data, versus having to look at theoretical pro forma information.

d) Recession stress test: I will not invest in anything, until I subject it to recession level stress and see if I can live with the result. And I take the worst recession I can find in the recent past. Sometimes there is only great recession data, and that recession was pretty mild on some asset classes, versus previous recessions. So I will usually 1.5x or 2.0x the stress. If the deal collapses and I would lose everything, I'm out. Others might be fine with taking risk, but least by doing this a person can get an idea of what might go wrong.

e) Legal document analysis: it will usually take a few days to go through the legal document properly, as almost inevitably there are tons of gotchas that either have to be explained, or mitigated with a side letter.

That is the very short summary of what I do. If you want more information, p.m. me and I can give you a lot more details.

 Great list Ian! One thing I found curious though was this: "I see no reason to take a risk on a sponsor that doesn't have full real estate cycle experience and didn't lose money."

Why do you want to invest with sponsors that lose money? I get wanting to work with sponsors that have had experience and gone through trials, but if they did that and still made money or at least broke even, wouldn't that be better? What comes to my mind is - "well if they lost money once and bounced back from it, then will they be ok with losing money again, knowing that they can bounce right back once more?"

Post: Multi family equity?

Todd Dexheimer#2 Multi-Family and Apartment Investing ContributorPosted
  • Rental Property Investor
  • St. Paul, MN
  • Posts 3,031
  • Votes 3,687

Not in this market environment. First, 95%+ of tenants are still paying rent, so not much has changed, just the fact that you can't get the bad apple out. 

Even if you did have a much larger percentage of tenants not paying rent, a seller would sell on pro-forma and because the market is white hot, they would get most of the value. 

Post: Commercial loans interest rates and down payment %

Todd Dexheimer#2 Multi-Family and Apartment Investing ContributorPosted
  • Rental Property Investor
  • St. Paul, MN
  • Posts 3,031
  • Votes 3,687

Those terms are pretty good for that size of a loan. If you are able to go a bit bigger, once you get into the loan size of $1mm+, you can qualify for agency debt. This is 30 year am, fixed for up to 15 years, 2.75-3.5%