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All Forum Posts by: Kenneth Vasquez

Kenneth Vasquez has started 3 posts and replied 21 times.

Post: Out of state investing in Indiana

Kenneth Vasquez
Posted
  • New to Real Estate
  • Long Island, NY
  • Posts 22
  • Votes 10
Originally posted by @Gloria N Gear:

Hi Ignacio, I would be glad to have a chat with you.  I am a local investor here in Indy and a real estate agent for OOS investors.  A couple of other resources for you are CIREIA, on FB - Indianapolis Out of State Investors Group, Indy Investor Pod, AND -- great exciting news!!  BP is featuring a series of "Meet the Investor" and the next 12 episodes are all investors from Indianapolis.  https://www.facebook.com/42478...

Thanks for the info, Gloria! I'm looking to BRRRR in the Indy market myself.

Post: Hard money lender questions

Kenneth Vasquez
Posted
  • New to Real Estate
  • Long Island, NY
  • Posts 22
  • Votes 10
Originally posted by @Kevin Romines:

To add to the great list that @Michael Kinsella gave you. You will also need to know if the lender will allow you to roll closing costs into your loan, or paid at closing? Also a very important point is to ask how they handle draws? Can they pre-fund the draws, or will you be paying the labor and materials costs out of pocket, to then get reimbursed at your draw request time?

How and who inspects the draw request? Do they do 1 loan for the full amount of their portion of the acquisition and rehab or are the rehab funds separate? This last point gets back to if they charge you interest on the full loan amount or just the amount that has been disbursed? 

What is their fee for an extension and how long of an extension will you get for that fee? Will they allow the seller to pay your closing costs, if so, negotiate that the seller pays them from their proceeds. This should be easily done considering the level of rehab a house may need?

I hope this helps?

 This is also very helpful, Kevin. Some of these are questions I would have never thought to ask.

Post: Hard money lender questions

Kenneth Vasquez
Posted
  • New to Real Estate
  • Long Island, NY
  • Posts 22
  • Votes 10
Originally posted by @Michael Kinsella:

Joseph,

Some of the items that you will want to evaluate when speaking with different lenders to see which one’s terms fit you best are,

  • Loan amount: What will the loan amount be? Is it at a desirable level?
  • LTC/LTV restrictions: "Loan-to-cost" and "Loan-to-value" restrictions will vary by lender, but lenders are generally within 5-10% of each other for a given product type. For example, a lender might offer you 85% LTC (loan-to-cost)/65% LTV (loan-to-value).
  • Interest rate: What will you be paying to borrow the money? Interest rates from hard money lenders for rehab loans generally range from the high single digits to the low/mid double digits.
  • Points: What will the lender charge to originate the loan? If using a hard money lender, you can expect to pay at least a couple of origination points (% of the loan amount) at closing.
  • Other fees: The cost of the appraisal, any underwriting fees, etc. These figures all contribute to your total cost of capital, and represent important points to consider as you go about obtaining a loan.
  • Term length: How long is the loan? Do you have enough time built in for your investment strategy?
  • Is interest charged on the full loan amount or just funded amounts?: This is a seemingly smaller point, but still one that's important to consider, particularly if you end up with a significant rehab budget. If interest is charged on the full loan amount as opposed to just funded amounts, and you have a significant rehab budget, you could end up paying a significant amount for funds you aren't using immediately.
  • Lender reputation: Is this lender trusted amongst investors? Have you spoken to other investors who have successfully employed your strategy and gotten positive feedback from them?
  • Time to fund: How quickly does the lender move? What is their median time to fund?

The above list is not exhaustive, but serves as a reasonable starting point from which you can evaluate lenders. Asking these questions lets a lender know that you are serious and informed about the process, even if you are a new (or newer) investor.

Hope this helps!

Thsnks for this list! Really helpful. 

Post: Understanding hard money and brrrr

Kenneth Vasquez
Posted
  • New to Real Estate
  • Long Island, NY
  • Posts 22
  • Votes 10

Hey guys,

I'm having a hard time understanding something. Let's say you do a brrrr deal and the ARV of the property comes back less than expected. You've gone to a bank that tells you they'll let you cash out at 75% LTV, but when running your numbers, you realize that this is less than you borrowed from your hard money lender to do the deal in the first place. Here's a simple example (because I'm a visual learner lol):

Assumed ARV = $115,000

Purchase Price + Cost = $45,000

Rehab Costs = $35,000

All In Costs (total above) = $80,000 financed fully by a HML

But then the appraisal comes back at $100,000 and you're only able to obtain an 75% LTV, meaning you'll only cash out $75,000. How do you pay your HML when you weren't able to pull all of the money out of the deal? Are you basically SOL?

Post: Long Island Buy and hold LTR

Kenneth Vasquez
Posted
  • New to Real Estate
  • Long Island, NY
  • Posts 22
  • Votes 10
Originally posted by @Francois G.:
Originally posted by @Kenneth Vasquez:

Hey @Francois G.. Where do you recommend investing out of state?

Hey Kenneth,

I see you're from NY. It's hard to recommend somewhere without knowing what your goals are but Pittsburgh has been good to me regarding cash-flow in the northeast. PA in general has landlord-friendly laws that makes it better to invest in rather than NY. 

I was actually looking into Pittsburgh along with a few other places in Southwest Indiana, Central Florida, and Scranton, PA. I’m looking to buy and hold, preferably buying distressed properties, rehabbing them, then applying for a cash out refi.

Post: Long Island Buy and hold LTR

Kenneth Vasquez
Posted
  • New to Real Estate
  • Long Island, NY
  • Posts 22
  • Votes 10

Hey @Francois G.. Where do you recommend investing out of state?

Post: Out of State Investing

Kenneth Vasquez
Posted
  • New to Real Estate
  • Long Island, NY
  • Posts 22
  • Votes 10

That’s exciting @Sal Lombardo. I am from NYC and looking into the Pittsburg area as well. I’d be interested to see how your deal works our. Good luck!

Post: How much passive income would be enough to make you happy?

Kenneth Vasquez
Posted
  • New to Real Estate
  • Long Island, NY
  • Posts 22
  • Votes 10

Hey @Richard Prillerman. I agree with @Matt Hassler. I’m looking for $10K month passive income. This would supplement my W2 income and provide financial freedom for myself, my wife, and our unborn children. But those are my goals. Everyone has a different definition for what their goal for financial freedom is. Good luck!

Post: Hi from an investor and Landlord St Petersburg Fl

Kenneth Vasquez
Posted
  • New to Real Estate
  • Long Island, NY
  • Posts 22
  • Votes 10
Originally posted by @Leif Olander:

Hi Kenneth

St Petersburg/Tampa is great. We love it here. NYC is pretty cool too.

There is a golf community in Haines City that we invest in. For $15K i would call my private money lender and get an efficiency unit in there. They are about $40K and rents for $675/month. It doesn't sound like much but as they are so cheep the ROI is very good. Even better than a 1 or 2 bedroom condo. We have owned a few of those and we own one now.

Funny thing, I have family in Haines City! I'll definitely look into the efficiency units. What has your experience been with turnover in these types of units?

Post: Hi from an investor and Landlord St Petersburg Fl

Kenneth Vasquez
Posted
  • New to Real Estate
  • Long Island, NY
  • Posts 22
  • Votes 10

Hey @Leif Olander! My fiancé and I toyed with moving to the Tampa area in late 2018/early 2019 but we both found better career opportunities here in NYC. I still have a soft spot for the area though. If I had $15K on hand, how would you suggest I invest it in your market?