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All Forum Posts by: Lane Kawaoka

Lane Kawaoka has started 286 posts and replied 4078 times.

Post: Calling All OOS Investors! Help Me Learn From Your Mistakes!

Lane Kawaoka
Posted
  • Rental Property Investor
  • Honolulu, HAWAII (HI)
  • Posts 4,248
  • Votes 2,626

Go in with a 50% expense ratio... the difficult part of being OOS is that PM firms (worse if you are going with TK company PM firm) is that they know you are helpless and captive to their high repairs. It happens so get used to it.

Post: Private ownership or syndication? (Noob question)

Lane Kawaoka
Posted
  • Rental Property Investor
  • Honolulu, HAWAII (HI)
  • Posts 4,248
  • Votes 2,626

The big thing I see folks missing out is most passive investors when buying little rentals are doing the buy hope pray model where they are relying on market appreciation... cashflowing or not.

A syndication typically has a business plan to bump the NOI and evokes forced appreciation/value add.

Post: Any suggestions on good Apartment Syndication organizations?

Lane Kawaoka
Posted
  • Rental Property Investor
  • Honolulu, HAWAII (HI)
  • Posts 4,248
  • Votes 2,626

Take a look at assets under ownership. Anything under 500M is still pretty new.

Post: Accredited Investor?? WHY!!

Lane Kawaoka
Posted
  • Rental Property Investor
  • Honolulu, HAWAII (HI)
  • Posts 4,248
  • Votes 2,626

Here is my best attempt at explaining this… An accredited investor is a defined by the United States Securities & Exchange Commission as someone who makes a minimum of $200,000 ($300,000 if filing jointly) or has a net worth of 1 million dollars excluding personal residence. The significance of being an accredited investor is that you can invest in things that those with less money, cannot. You can also be something called "a sophisticated investor" which has a much more nebulous definition but essentially says you know what you are doing even if you don't have that much money. These laws were put in place long ago to "protect" the average person from predatory activity. The irony of this all is that there is no protection for the average Joe, or pension funds for that matter, against investing in a wildly bloated stock market at record valuations. Every major trader out there knows we are in a bubble but there is no protection for individuals dumping money into their retirement accounts to buy mutual funds. It's an archaic system which makes little sense. Certainly, there has been some recognition of this fact. The 2012 JOBS act made it easier for Main Street America to participate in "alternative" investments via crowdfunding and made it easier for sponsors to advertise previously unknown opportunities. However, we have a long way to go. I would advise you that you need to know the lead syndicator personally. None of this "we met at a local REIA and he pitched me his deal". If a guy does not have a list of solid investors they must lack the track record.

Post: Tertiary market voted the best place to move in 2022

Lane Kawaoka
Posted
  • Rental Property Investor
  • Honolulu, HAWAII (HI)
  • Posts 4,248
  • Votes 2,626

I've been buying apartments in Huntsville. Its been climbing on tertiary market list for a few years now. 

It boasts the highest level of upper level degrees per capital.

Post: Huntsville, Alabama, is the No. 1 Best Place to Live

Lane Kawaoka
Posted
  • Rental Property Investor
  • Honolulu, HAWAII (HI)
  • Posts 4,248
  • Votes 2,626

We used to buy class c for 30-40k a door back in 2018 in HSV. Not the same stuff is double... its crazy. We are pivoting business plan a bit. Some Class B assets are 120-160 a door.

Post: Thoughts - Best And Worst Passive Income Ideas?

Lane Kawaoka
Posted
  • Rental Property Investor
  • Honolulu, HAWAII (HI)
  • Posts 4,248
  • Votes 2,626

Private lending is passive but in terms of taxes "ordinary income" and you cannot cancel out with passive losses that you get when you are an equity holder of real estate. 

Post: What to do with a whole life insurance policy

Lane Kawaoka
Posted
  • Rental Property Investor
  • Honolulu, HAWAII (HI)
  • Posts 4,248
  • Votes 2,626

Taking policy loans and investing is essentially what infinite banking is.

I load up quite a bit and take the loan right after to invest. 

Post: Turnkey Properties Good Idea?

Lane Kawaoka
Posted
  • Rental Property Investor
  • Honolulu, HAWAII (HI)
  • Posts 4,248
  • Votes 2,626

There are cons of course but when I was a non accredited investor and not as experienced it was a great way to get into the game. Especially as a busy engineer at the time.

Post: Tax questions on Syndication exit

Lane Kawaoka
Posted
  • Rental Property Investor
  • Honolulu, HAWAII (HI)
  • Posts 4,248
  • Votes 2,626

All investors will have to pay back the depreciation recapture (losses taken throughout the hold) and capital gain (the big payout on the end which is sale minus cost basis). But don't despair because although this is the case when you look at it myopically, in reality most investors go into multiple deals accumulating 100s of thousands of passive activity losses in their first few years investing. Those losses do not go away, but they become suspended to be used to offset future passive income and sales/capital events like this in the future. When you exit a deal, what normally ends up happening (like Tom Brady keep winning more Super Bowls) is that you go into two more deals (with now double the amount of capital) and you will likely find that with those new K1s you could result in you having way more passive losses you began with If you can see where this is going... yes, experienced investors with a lot of capital deployed might have 500k-1M+ suspended passive losses and have not paid taxes in years and do not appear to pay taxes for years! (you can find how much suspended passive losses you currently have on your IRS Form 8582 - which your CPA is likely not giving to you and in that case you should get a new one)

Another example: Assume you invest $100,000 in a syndication and the cost segregation yields $20,000 of depreciation. You hold the asset for five years and it is sold for $150,000. You have $50,000 of capital gain and $20,000 of depreciation recapture. Assuming your capital gains tax rate is 20% and you made no further investment, you would owe tax of $10,000 on the gain and $5,000 on the recapture.
Now assume you took the $150,000 and invested it in a new syndication and got the same 20% cost seg, so $30,000 of depreciation. The new depreciation would first offset the $20,000 of recapture then the remaining $10,000 would offset some of the capital gain from the previous sale leaving you with $40,000 of gain. You would pay 20% tax on the $40,000 and the tax owed would be $8,000 rather than the original $15,000. If you have other passive loss that you have been carrying from other investments, that could be used to further defer and reduce the tax.