May 2022

Inventory Shortage Could Continue As Interest Rates Rise and Homeowners Feel “Locked-In”


As the Federal Reserve aggressively raises interest rates and bond yields climb, we are leaving behind the era of ultra-low mortgage rates that prevailed from 2020 through the end of 2021. 

Over the past several years, we’ve become accustomed to mortgage rates below 4%, with the average rate on a 30-year fixed-rate mortgage (for an owner occupant) dipping as low as 2.65% in January of 2021. Those are extremely low in a historical context. As of this writing, the average rate on the same loan is about 5.3%.

fredgraph 3
30-Year Fixed-Rate Mortgage Average in the United States – St. Louis Federal Reserve

For at least the next several months and perhaps for years to come, we will experience a higher interest rate environment. However, the lingering impact of these years of ultra-low interest rates could be felt for the next several years or even decades to come due to what has recently been coined the “Lock-In Effect.” 

In the short-term, rising interest rates will do what it always does to demand—curtail it. Over the last several months, we’ve seen this happening as mortgage purchase applications are down about 15% through May 13 from the same period in 2021. Rising rates reduce affordability, pricing would-be homebuyers out of the market. As long as interest rates continue to increase, they will continue to put downward pressure on demand—nothing new here. 

However, what is potentially new is how rising interest rates could negatively impact inventory. 

Recent data from Redfin shows that 51% of homeowners with a mortgage have an interest rate below 4%. With so many homeowners locked into super low rates, there could be a disincentive for homeowners to sell. 

Think, if you have a home with a mortgage rate under 4%, why would you choose to sell that home and enter a super competitive housing market with high prices, only to pay more interest on your next loan? It’s not a very attractive proposition. 

To put it in perspective, consider a $425k house. If you had a 3.5% mortgage rate, your monthly payment would be around $1,910. If you rebought a home at a similar price with an interest rate of 5.3%, your monthly payment would be about $2,360. That comes out to roughly $450 more per month or $5,400 per year. 

Or consider someone looking to downsize. Perhaps an aging couple wants to sell the home they raised a family in, get some cash to invest with, and reduce their monthly expenses. 

If this couple downsized from a home worth $425,000 to a home worth $350,000—they would be saving approximately $0 per month. That’s right, they could buy a cheaper, smaller home, and still be paying the same amount. Sure, they’d get some equity on the trade, but their monthly costs would be the same, which is super important for people in retirement. Again, not a super attractive proposition. 

It’s for this reason the term “Lock-In Effect” has been coined. Many economists and analysts believe the number of new listings could remain low for a few years while homeowners feel “locked in” to their unusually low mortgage rates. 

It is worth mentioning that the number of homeowners who may be “locked in” varies considerably. According to the same Redfin report, Utah, Colorado, and Washington, D.C. have the highest proportion of homeowners with low rates. Oklahoma and Mississippi have the fewest. 

While we don’t know if this Lock-In Effect will happen, the logic checks out. If it does materialize, it could have profound impacts on the housing market for years, if not decades to come.

It all comes down to inventory. If fewer homeowners put their homes up for sale, it could prevent inventory from recovering to more normal, pre-covid levels when the housing market was more balanced. 

As I wrote recently, inventory needs to increase for prices to moderate or go down (or whatever you think will happen). 

There are a lot of different metrics related to inventory, so let me explain. 

Inventory is defined as the total number of homes on the market at the end of a given month. It is a very useful metric because it combines both supply and demand. It factors in how many people put their house on the market (known as New Listings) as well as how many and how quickly those homes are being sold (demand). 

This is where inventory is as of March 2022. 

all homes for sale
All Homes for Sale (Mar. 2022) – Redfin

There’s a pretty dramatic story depicted in this chart. Pre-pandemic, we expected about 1.8M units of inventory over the busy summer months. Now, we’re at 600k. 

As other housing market analysts and I believe, this number needs to increase for the housing market to return to a healthier and more normal level (or to crash). Prices were still appreciating when inventory was at 1.8M, so you can bet they’ll go up with dramatically lower supply. 

As demand moderates, inventory could start to pick up, but we’ll likely need to see more new listings. As of now, that’s not happening, as New Listings are down on a seasonally-adjusted basis. 

new listings
New Listings (Mar. 2022) – Redfin

But, New Listings could increase from three places: homeowners selling, new construction, or foreclosures. 

New construction could add to new inventory, but supply chain issues have suppressed completions, and new permits started to drop as of April 2022. 

new construction
New Residential Construction (Apr. 2022) – U.S. Census Bureau, Department of Housing and Urban Development

Many people believe a wave of foreclosures is coming and will add inventory, but that’s not going to happen. You can watch my other interviews and videos about that, but to put it shortly, mortgage delinquencies have dropped for seven straight quarters. Homeowners are not defaulting. Could a recession change this? Sure, but the inventory from a potential increase in foreclosures would be gradual and take years to play out. 

The last and the most important source of New Listings are homeowners. Normally, as COVID-19 becomes a receding part of our lives, I would think that New Listings from existing homeowners would increase. But this is where the Lock-In Effect could come into play. If over 50% of homeowners with a mortgage have ultra-low mortgage rates, we may not see many homeowners list their homes for sale. 

If fewer homeowners put their homes up for sale, that will put upward pressure on housing prices. Of course, some, or maybe all of that upward pressure, could be offset by the downward force of rising interest rates, but the impact of years of ultra-low rates will be a super important factor in the housing market, likely for many years. 

I can even see a scenario where this Lock-In Effect impacts the market for decades. Again, interest rates during the pandemic were the lowest they’ve ever been, and it’s not clear if rates will ever get as low as they just were. Ever. And even if it does happen, it could be a long time before it does. 

Personally, I think rates will rise for another year or so, but then we’ll see a gradual easing of interest rates. After all, the Fed has pursued easy money policies for about 15 years under four different administrations. While the Fed is temporarily raising rates, I don’t currently think we’re going back to an era of double-digit mortgage rates. At the same time, I also don’t know if we’ll see a 2.7% fixed-rate mortgage again in our lifetimes. It’s only happened once and took a very unique set of circumstances to get there. 

Of course, no one knows what happens next. But if you’re like me and want to get a sense of where the housing market is heading, keep an eye on the Lock-In Effect. It will be very interesting to see if the predictions of lower inventory come true. To keep track, just look at new listing and inventory numbers each month. 

If you want more data-driven information about the housing market, investing, and the economy, check out On The Market, BiggerPockets’ newest podcast, where I’m the host. Every Monday, you can find new episodes on AppleSpotify, or YouTube

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What to Do Before You Quit the High-Pay & Benefits of Corporate World


Before you quit your job, you will need to prepare yourself not just financially, but mentally. If you’re thinking of leaving your W2, and you’re not at retirement age just yet, odds are you have a side hustle or even an entire small business. As the side hustle begins to grow, you may be torn between spending time at your job and putting in the hours to scale your business.

This is doubly true if you’re like Daniella Flores from I Like to Dabble, who is at a high-paying, fully-remote job with a solid share of benefits. Before she decided to scale down her full-time work, she had to come up with an action plan that would allow her to slowly slip away from corporate life, so she can avoid the instant shock of being an overnight entrepreneur.

Daniella has some helpful tips for anyone who thinks their time at a job is close to the end. She has spent the last year or so planning for the departure, so when she leaves her job, she doesn’t need to search for a new one! Now, she can spend more of her time writing, designing, and building something that will truly set her up for long-term financial (and time) freedom.

Mindy:
Welcome to the BiggerPockets Money Podcast, show number 305, where we interview Daniella Flores from iliketodabble.com, and talk about the things you need to consider before quitting your job to go full-time self-employed.

Daniella Flores:
I got into therapy last year. And that was the one thing that helped me a lot. We were talking about this, because I was like, “I’m not sure if this was the right move,” because my job has all these amazing benefits. But I really want to do this. I really want to do this full-time because I feel like I’m wasting all this time, not wasting, but you use your energy throughout your workday doing these tasks and the energy to build up for the stuff you want to work on. So then after that, I’m like, “There’s all these things I want to do. And I feel like I’m losing this time to something else that my heart isn’t into.” I don’t see a future. And we talked about it, and she’s like, “I see the way you talk about your blog.” And she’s like, “I don’t see your face light up like that when you talk about your work.” That’s all you need to know. She’s like, “It sounds like you know what to do.” That’s right. I do, I guess.

Mindy:
Hello, hello. Hello. My name is Mindy Jensen. And joining me today is David Pere, from the Military Millionaire group. David, what’s going on?

David Pere:
I’m not finding the unmute button. That’s what’s going on.

Mindy:
Hey, that’s my job.

David Pere:
Apparently, you can use the spacebar to unmute, which means that I leave myself muted. So, there’s less noise. But apparently, if you drag the Google Doc over to type and then hit the spacebar, you just make a big gap in a sentence, which is what I just did instead of talking. So, that’s what’s going on in my life. And we had an appraisal come back really high today. So, that was cool.

Mindy:
Well, nice for you, we had the exact opposite. So, I wish your appraiser lived over here. David and I are here to make financial independence less scary. That’s just for somebody else to introduce you to every Money Story. Because we truly believe financial freedom is attainable for everyone, no matter when or where you’re starting.

David Pere:
Whether you want to retire early, and travel the world, go on to make big-time investments and assets like real estate, or start your own business, we’ll help you reach your financial goals and get money out of the way, so that you can launch yourself towards your dreams.

Mindy:
A few months ago, Daniella posted on Twitter that they were thinking about quitting their job, but there was a lot more to it than they originally thought. And if you’re struggling with it, you’re not alone. I know this firsthand, because my own husband… Hi, Carl, struggled with this too before he finally took the plunge. So, I feel qualified to talk about this both with Daniella and to give advice to people who are listening as well. David, you’re also successfully unemployed, right?

David Pere:
Yes, ma’am. Have been since October.

Mindy:
Now, is that official? Do you have a job? Do you do any sort of work at all, or you just sit around on the beach all day and eat bonbons?

David Pere:
Technically, still in the reserves for the Marine Corps, though I have not actually gone and done anything for the reserves in the last five months. So, we’ll see how long that lasts. I have not received a paycheck from anything outside of my LLCs since October 10th.

Mindy:
So then, I would call you unemployed. Because if nobody’s paying you, then you shouldn’t be doing any work for them. So, Daniella is here today to talk about both the circumstances leading up to their potential retirement or separation from employment, and what they’re going to do once they get there. One of the things I like most about Daniella is that they don’t like to hustle. They like to dabble. Their blog is called iliketodabble.com. And they do not promote the grind it all costs mentality that really makes life kind of suck.

Mindy:
To quote Daniella, “Stop this. You have to hate your life to become successful rhetoric. Hustle culture doesn’t work. You can do meaningful work in moderation, and be happy.” Daniella has taken these dabblings, combined them with their full-time job in IT and their low expenses, to get them to the precipice of retirement, which is where we join them today. Daniella Flores from iliketodabble.com, Welcome to the BiggerPockets Money Podcast.

Daniella Flores:
Thank you so much for having me. I’m so excited. I love this podcast, and I can’t wait to get into it.

Mindy:
I can’t wait to jump into your story. So, let’s get a little bit of a background from your money journey. Where did you start? And right up to about now where you are considering leaving full-time employment.

Daniella Flores:
Yes, so I guess I’ll start my story back when I started side hustling. So, when I started my first like go it side hustling was when I was in high school. I didn’t really think of it as side hustling at the time. I had a problem with spending money because I wasn’t familiar with how I was kind of triggered by money. So, I would basically spend my… at that time, I worked to the movie theater. So, it’s been like the whole paycheck on things that didn’t matter like food, clothes. These were things that I didn’t necessarily need at that time.

Daniella Flores:
I wanted them, but they really didn’t matter. And through all of that, by the time I had my bills come, I would need money for those because I was paying for my car. I was paying for my cell phone. I was still in high school, so I didn’t have rent stuff. But I would go and sell my clothes as well, as go to thrift stores and buy stuff and resell those at online. So, at the time, I was using Craigslist for this stuff because this is back in the day. And I was trying to basically remake the money back that I blew.

Daniella Flores:
I had the education of how to have a good financial. Hear me resay this. So, I had the education to have a good financial foundation for my parents, but I was somebody that would never listen to any of that. I thought that, “I have it covered. I’ll do it. This works for me.” And it did not work for me for a very long time. And I went on that way for about a couple of years until I got into college. I had to be a little bit more serious. I stopped side hustling per se. I had basically… they were jobs. They weren’t like these little one-off things I was doing. I was working three jobs through college, trying to graduate.

Daniella Flores:
At the time, working at my mom’s surgery center. I was doing health insurance verification, and I hated the tediousness of it. I was like, “I can’t wait to go to college or work in tech. My life is going to be so easy. I can’t wait to do all these things, have control my life. It’s going to be great.” And I got into school. I took an unpaid internship. I was making $0 for those first couple of weeks. I got hired on eventually at $30,000 salary. I thought that was a lot. I was not making much after taxes or anything. It was maybe $1500 a month after taxes, health insurance, stuff for life insurance, 401(k), the benefits that cost money at the place I was working at.

Daniella Flores:
From there, I actually had my first real experience in IT. I was a web engineer. But at this startup, the environment that the way it was was everybody was around my age, right out of college. We were all working 80-hour weeks. They would have alcohol in the office, all this food for you. They’d have parties and go to concerts for free, all these things so they could keep you in this environment. So, you’re always working. And I burned out hard. And I burned out very quickly. It took me 10 months, and I’ve burned out so bad. I just stopped going to work. And I was actually fired for my first job out of college.

Daniella Flores:
And that was when I started my first legit freelance kind of side hustle. I got a job waitressing. And then I got a freelance gig with one of the former clients that worked with me at that startup. I didn’t sign an NDA or anything. So, I was totally fine, just by the way. So, working with that freelance relationship, doing like a freelance… basically what I was doing at that startup as a freelancer, and they asked me like, “What would you like to get paid? We can pay you $100 an hour.” That blew my mind. It was crazy because they really valued my work. At the time, I was completely clueless about what I should ask. They’re like, “How about $100 an hour? It was only for 10 hours a week.” So, I was like, “That’s perfect. I can do that.” And so, I did that for a while. And I worked as a waitress.

Daniella Flores:
And then, I still had this pressure, though, for my family to get a real job. “You need to get back into a real job. What are you doing? You’re not going anywhere.” So, with this mindset my whole life, is like, you go to you go to college. You get a job. That’s what you do. And then, eventually, you retire. There’s no really stuff in between these, think about too much. Because you’re thinking about all the time. It’s like, I got to work. I got to make this money. I got to live, I guess.

Daniella Flores:
And at that time, I was trying so hard to get another job. So, I eventually got another job. And then from there, I kind of moved up these different positions. I did a lot of lateral moves throughout my career in tech. I did a lot of job hopping because I felt I was just stuck a lot at the other salary ranges I was in, who these jobs I was taking. So, I had to kind of job hop to get my salary to kind of bump up as I went. And I never really got any my money stuff, though, together during any of that. I was still spending like I’ve always been spending. And it wasn’t until about 2017 where we finally had to start getting our stuff together. I was having student loan. The student loan office’s calling me all the time about student loan payments that needed to be made. We had credit card debt that we had to pay. And we had car debt that we had to pay.

Daniella Flores:
At the time, my wife was also paying for her house. When we met, it was her house. That was in her name. So, I was like, “We need to get our stuff together.” And that’s what actually propelled us to basically get our money stuff together. So, it’s a long-winded answer. I went through a lot of all of these weird events in my life that were kind of telling me like, “Hey, you need to get your stuff together.” And just got it together eventually.

Mindy:
Yay! Better late than never.

Daniella Flores:
Yes.

Mindy:
So, I have a few things I want to unpack from this. First, you said, “I can’t wait to get out of college. So, my real life can begin.” And that is going to be the callback for later when you talk about your retirement because I hear you see, “Everything’s going to be great once I can quit my mom’s job or quit this job with my mom where I’m verifying insurance benefits,” which has to be just a horrible job. And then, I can get this great job.

Mindy:
And I hear that mentality from people who want to retire, “Once I retire, everything’s going to be great.” And then you went on to talk about the life that you had. And it was not great because it wasn’t the life that you wanted. And the retirement… and I know this firsthand from my husband’s experience. I’m going to call David to get his firsthand experience, is that, if you don’t plan your retirement, it’s not great. It’s kind of sucky. Your life gets pulled, and your attention gets pulled. And your time gets pulled in all these different directions because you have no plan.

Mindy:
And I’m really excited to talk about the next phase of your life because I want to see what you’re planning. Because I can see so many good things. You have learned from the time that you were in college that, “I can’t wait to get my real life planned.” And I know. I follow you on Twitter. I read your blog. I know you’ve got plans. And your retirement is going to be great. Because you’re not just jumping into it with both feet, and “Hey, whatever happens, happens.” You have to plan things in life, or life will happen to you. So, I just wanted to get that out there.

Mindy:
You also had this pressure from your family to get a real job. Everybody listening, stop pressuring people to get a real job. Whatever they want to do, if it’s covering their bills, if they’re not asking you for money, don’t bother them. And then, in one of your blog posts, you say, “I am an advocate for job hopping to increase your salary within reason.” I want to dive into that a little bit because I’m old. And I come from an era where you don’t job hop because you look flaky. And I can remember how many times my parents told me, “Well, you don’t like this job, but you can’t leave because you’ll just look like a job hopper, and nobody will ever want to hire you.” I have applied for so many jobs that I have gotten or been offered because I’m a good interviewer. They’re not going to care. But apparently, they do. And now, they don’t within reason. So, what does within reason mean to you?

Daniella Flores:
So, within reason, for me, I think that’s more of an open thing. Hey, if you’re job hopping every couple of months, like two months, three months, so that’s all your resume looks like. I’m not going to say that that’s a good idea. That’s what I mean by it, within reason. So, job hopping for me, if the job isn’t working out for you, whatever it is, however long you’re there, though, leave. Find whatever way you can to leave that job, and find a better job. But if you’re doing job hopping to just raise your salary, don’t do that. Like “Here, I’m going to job hop 10 different jobs and get a 500k salary.” What are your goals, though, with that?

Mindy:
So, let’s get to where we are today. You are considering leaving your job, but there’s a lot of things to consider. Not just, “I quit. Bye. I’m done.” And I liked your most recent article on acorns.com. Is it acorns.com or grow.acorns.com?

Daniella Flores:
I think it’s grow, grow.acorns.com. It’s the CNBC acorns, I guess, publication partnership that they have.

Mindy:
It was hack your job to earn more money. And step number one, you negotiated for full-time remote work. I love this tip from you. During the pandemic, I made sure to negotiate for this because I knew we would be asked to come back to the office eventually. And we wanted to move to another state. So, you negotiated before anybody else was asking to stay home full-time. You’re there right at the beginning of the pandemic. Talk about that. Let’s talk about how you negotiated this because this is not just “Hey, I want to work for remote forever.”

Daniella Flores:
Right, absolutely. So, I first want to say like a preface here. So, as somebody who works in tech, it is a lot easier for me to negotiate remote work than it is for somebody who is like a teacher, per se. I just want to say that for anybody listening. So, negotiating remote work for me was something that I had a lot of actual experience with. So, with the kind of positions I’ve had throughout my career, I’ve always worked remote in some capacity. It’s either been a hybrid remote relationship where it’s at least like one day remote to as much as being full-time remote.

Daniella Flores:
The last three jobs that I’ve had, I’ve been a full-time remote worker. So, I kind of knew already what they were looking for in a full-time remote worker when it came up to… we were all sent home during the pandemic. I was like, “Yes! Back into full-time remote role again.” I want to stay here. So, where I work currently, when I was originally hired, they had told me that I would eventually have the chance to become full-time remote. But at the time, their policy was hybrid. So, I was actually going into the office before the pandemic about two days a week.

Daniella Flores:
So, once we were home full-time, we wanted to make our move happen. Because with the way everything was at that time, we thought it’s like, “It’s either now or never. We got to move now. We just got to make it happen.” So, my wife was looking for jobs in the area we wanted to move to. And I was doing kind of the data analysis on my side with my job, looking around at the different programs. Because there were already people that worked full-time remote in other locations that have always been doing it that way. Because they had like little jobs, not little jobs, but they had positions that were open as remote only. Because it was a global company, this company has offices all over the world. So, they already had groups that were working remote. They had people that were working remote.

Daniella Flores:
And so, I looked around first to look at that… the climate of the company is like, “How are they going to receive it, if I ask it?” So, I did that. And then I use our ticketing system. So, the way that we do our work, everything’s tracked in tickets. And there’s all these different types of tickets. So, I can actually pull my own metrics of how I work and how much I get done, which is the same stuff that I use every year in our reviews. And I going to go through all the stuff that I do. And then, I showed them all the extra stuff I was able to do by working full-time remote since the pandemic.

Daniella Flores:
And I also showed that it was like this push of… they kind of made it that way though, anyway. They send everybody home. The expectations increased like crazy. If anyone’s listening, and they work in tech, they probably understand what I’m talking about. Because now, there are things in tech that weren’t there before. There are like measurements, that they measure how you’re working. They measure the tickets that you’re doing. They measure the data that’s in your tickets. They have these KPIs now that are set up to actually have people lose their jobs, which is kind of a whole other conversation.

Daniella Flores:
But I presented all this to them. And I was like, “Look, the job is already basically demanding me to be remote.” My wife and I are preparing to move to Washington State. And then I kind of presented all the information. I talked to my manager, and he was like, “I’m okay with it. We just have to go to legal and maybe, sign some stuff.” That also personal relationship I have with my manager. And he said I was always present. I wasn’t somebody he had to try to chase down. He said I always did my work. He never had a doubt of me being full-time remote if anything would change. He’s like, “You’ve kind of been hybrid remote, anyway. I know how you work remote. I don’t think anything’s going to change. We just have to see how the company can legally do that.”

Mindy:
I think there’s a lot of people out there who hate their job, and “If I could just work from home, it’d be great.” But if you go to work, and you hate your job, it oozes out of you that you hate your job. It oozes out of you that you’re a miserable person. And then you’re like, “Hey, I want to work remote.” And your boss is like, “Why would I let you work remote? You don’t get anything done at the office. Why would I let you go home and do even less at home?” You presented yourself as “I’m very good at working remote because here’s my past work experience. I’m already getting more stuff done because I’m already working remote. Look at how great I am already.” It should be very easy for you to allow me to work remote.

Mindy:
And being a good employee is going to get you the most benefits from your job. And if it’s not, then that’s a different conversation. You do need to quit your job if your company isn’t appreciating you. But you have to be somebody that the company wants to keep. They’re not going to bend over backwards to keep a crappy employee. So, I love this tip that you… like, “I went through the tickets.” I don’t want to offend you and call you a big data nerd.

Daniella Flores:
Well, I am a data nerd.

Mindy:
Good. That’s a term of endearment on this show. I bet you have spreadsheets too.

Daniella Flores:
Yes, I love spreadsheets.

David Pere:
Tim Ferriss kind of talks about this in The 4-Hour Workweek, right? The idea of being able to show that you are more… like test out a day at home and then show you are more productive that day and whatever. Where was the company physically located at before you went remote?

Daniella Flores:
So, the IT headquarters in our specific region was in St. Louis, Missouri.

David Pere:
Well, I can’t even talk smack about you leaving because I’m in Springfield.

Daniella Flores:
Springfield. I went to college in Springfield actually.

David Pere:
MSU?

Daniella Flores:
Yes, Missouri State University for my first year.

David Pere:
Cool. Cool. Cool. Good area. That’s where I do most of my investing. So, what I was going to say though, is that one’s kind of odd actually, because I was going to ask if they gave you a slight pay cut. So, I have a friend Daniel who lived in Carlsbad, California. And he moved to a much more affordable market to work remote full-time during the pandemic. And they gave him like a little bit of a pay reduction for the move. However, if you look at cost of living to pay, it was like a pay raise, essentially, to move. But I guess if you’re moving from St. Louis to Washington, you probably went to a higher cost of living area. So, probably didn’t give you a pay cut for that.

Daniella Flores:
For my employer, they have offices all over the world. So, in every big financial market country, they have an IT headquarters. So, with that said, there are tons of employees that work remote. So, they have actual location markers that they could put my name to. And I had the same salary that I was getting before that. So, they didn’t change my salary at all. And it’s actually shortly after that, that I job hopped within the company to a higher salary. But I still was able to stay remote.

Mindy:
Let’s talk about that.

Daniella Flores:
Yes. So, this was actually a little less than one year ago. It was about May. So, my former team… if anyone’s listening, I hope they’re not. Everybody on the team is great. There’s just a couple of people that made it a very toxic environment even though I was working virtually. And I know a lot of people say that, like, the toxic environments, there’s an extra boundary there with remote. And yes, that is true. But at the time, think about like this time last year during the pandemic, people’s attitudes, there was like that tension everywhere with work and everywhere you went. And it came out in team meetings. And I was getting on these 5:00 A.M. calls. I’m trying to run these calls efficiently to make sure that we’re on target for certain efforts that we’re doing in our iterations.

Daniella Flores:
And so, I got on these calls, and I would just get screamed at for over the smallest things, like a link that they don’t want to click to view a thing on a screen. The things that these people get upset about, I was like, “This seems not working out for me. I can’t deal with this every single day where I’m on the verge of tears after just a couple of morning calls.”

Daniella Flores:
So, I started looking around internally at the company. They have an internal career portal. Everything gets listed there first before it gets listed to their external portal. But I also looked into their mentorship program. So, I reached out to a mentor. And we started meeting on a monthly basis. And then, she gave me some tricks to look at the internal portal to kind of be like, “Hey, this hiring manager, I know that that position is for this specific thing.” Because it wouldn’t be really in the job description. Everything’s so vague in all the descriptions. She was able to kind of give me more of a lowdown of the certain jobs. So, I was actually starting to apply to a couple things internally. It didn’t get anything and not really much traction was happening.

Daniella Flores:
And then luckily enough, somebody else who was in my network at the job, they were just somebody else on like another team. They weren’t on my team. But we had talked because we worked on various projects together. And she said, “Hey, I have word that there’s a new organization being spun up. And they’re looking for a leader liability and an engineer for this team. They reached out to me, but I’m taking a manager position. So, I gave them your name.” And I was like, “Oh my God. Thank you.” And they reached out to me the next week for an interview. We interviewed. They said, “It’s fine. You can stay remote.” And they said the words, “I don’t see us ever returning back to the office.” But now they’re all there. And I feel horrible about it, but anyway.

Daniella Flores:
Anyway, I found this new team. I did a move. I was a senior software engineer then. And I’m now a lead reliability engineer. So, I got a pay bump with that, and I got a bonus bump with that. And that was a huge save for me. And I kind of got lucky on it because I was applying to other things. And I even got an email back from one of the offices. It was one that was listed San Francisco/ remote. And I was like, “Cool. It’s remote.” That would probably stay remote. So, I applied to that one. And they actually were trying to set up an interview with me, but they said, “We are remote now. But once we go back, we need you to move to San Francisco.” And I was like, “San Francisco is one of the most expensive places to live. No, absolutely not.” Like, no. I work remote now for the same company. I don’t know why you would require me to be there. So, that one actually… they passed on me because they said that, “If you’re not going to move here to eventually work in the office, then it won’t work.” and I was like, “Okay.” And then, that next week, that came through with my friend on the other team. So, that was pretty cool.

Mindy:
That reminds me of a job interview I had once where the interviewer said, “And if you’re here after six o’clock at night, the company will buy you dinner.” And I’m thinking to myself, “I don’t want to be here at six o’clock. Why are you acting all excited? I can make my own dinner at home. I don’t want to work till six o’clock at night.” And they would also buy you a cab home, and like, “The train’s $1.50, I’ll just take the train. Thank you.” Because I don’t want to be there so late. They make it sound like it’s so great. Well, we’re remote now. What do you mean you don’t want to come into the office and move to San Francisco? And like, I told them to take my name out of consideration. It sounds like they passed on me. That’s a good thing. That’s a great thing.

Daniella Flores:
Absolutely. Because I was looking at houses in San Francisco, and I’m like, “Pretty sure we can’t get one under $2 million.” So, that’s a no. It’s a hard pass

Mindy:
And that’s a shack that needs a lot of work, and broken foundation, no plumbing. electric is sparking, so they’ve turned it off.

Daniella Flores:
Right. There’s no floors.

Mindy:
Who needs floors? Why are you so picky, Daniella?

Daniella Flores:
I know right.

Mindy:
So, you just mentioned 5:00 A.M. calls when you were talking to your team in Missouri.

Daniella Flores:
Yes.

Mindy:
That’s not cool.

Daniella Flores:
No, it’s not cool. So, the nature of that team at the time, since we were an external customer facing application, so these are people using like rewards on their credit cards. We were an external facing application. But we worked with various teams in different regions, which a lot of the teams at that company are structured that way where you have a program, which is like your group of teams. And in that program, you have all the regions. And you all have to find a way to connect when time zones never match. I was the one who got the not the best end of the stick on that one.

Daniella Flores:
It also was a team of… it was a very male dominated, well, I was the only woman. I was only like female present. At the time, I identified as a woman. To people I’m female presenting, as you look at me, you think of female. But at my team, the only person who was a woman was a… she was part-time. And she was very good to work with. I wonder if any women in tech or listening to me right now. But they might often feel like they’re being stuffed into secretary tasks or administrative tasks as someone in tech. And that often happens on teams like that. And I was someone who is often shoved in these things to run meetings like, “Hey, Daniella. You want to run this morning meeting? They like to work with you. You’ll be great for it.” And I was like, “Well, sure.” I should have said no. And I say no, now. Now, I say no.

David Pere:
So, here’s the question. Did 5:00 A.M. call equate to two hour earlier being done? Or was it like, in addition to your normal work hours, you’re going to be on the phone at 5:00?

Daniella Flores:
Well, I was able to get off earlier, as long as nobody sent me an instant message on Slack right at last minute that they need me to fix some life shattering issue. That slash is there in evening.

David Pere:
I’m the weirdo who would love that. Like, “You mean I can wake up early, but I get to be off at three in the afternoon every day?” So old.

Daniella Flores:
That is a good thing. I do get off earlier. So, now, I don’t start that early. I start at 6:00, and I get off at 2:00, which is perfect.

Mindy:
But still, 5:00 A.M. I’m assuming, and maybe, I’m just being too American, but I’m assuming that you’re working with people in America on your team. So, I mean, even if it’s Pacific and Eastern Time, there’s a large chunk of time that you can still find in the middle of the day to not have to get up at five o’clock in the morning for some stupid meeting that probably could have been an email.

Daniella Flores:
I should clarify that when I say regions, I mean global regions. So, morning calls are usually with India. So, Pune, our Pune team. So, that’s a big part of all the teams, those teams over in the Asia Pacific region.

Mindy:
Okay, okay. Maybe, that’s just me being American. Everything centers around us.

Daniella Flores:
I know right. I’m always thinking that my time zone is the one.

Mindy:
It is. Except it’s my time zone that is the one.

Daniella Flores:
Yes.

Mindy:
Mountain. And I’ll even send emails to people that I know we’re in different time zones, like, “Can you do this at 10:00?” Then, they call me at 10:00 their time, they’re like, “Hey, where are you?” Like, “It’s 8:00. What are you talking about?”

David Pere:
I know. And the funny thing though… and it would almost make it easier if you always spoke in your time zone. But Mindy’s actually pretty good about remembering what time zone you’re in and sending it in your time zone every now and then. So, it throws me for a loop when she doesn’t. And I’m totally lost. I’m like, “Oh my goodness. Now I’m super confused.”

Mindy:
I try to put it in all caps to bring it up. This is mountain time zone. But sometimes I forget, like, “I feel bad.”

Daniella Flores:
That was a good one. I know that one. It’s only an hour after me.

Mindy:
Let’s talk about this next tip you have, “I made sure to prioritize my time.” I love these next two pieces that you have, “I stopped saying yes to everything. I started denying meetings that would be emails.” If only we all had that power, and especially, “denying all meetings outside of my working hours.”

Daniella Flores:
Yes. When I first started in tech, and even up until a couple of years ago, I would say yes to everything because I was anxious that if I didn’t say yes, I wouldn’t be seen as somebody who is performing well. Because there’s expectations that they set, but always you feel like you have to go above those to feel like you’re even being adequate. Obviously, that’s not true. But I figured out that me wanting to be available for everything and wanting to do everything was only hurting me, not helping me. So, I stopped saying yes. I started saying no. And I found out it was like, it’s not that bad to say no people really don’t care. It’s okay. So, that was nice.

Daniella Flores:
I mean, sometimes occasionally you get that person who they really, really want to have that meeting. It’s really necessary. And all you have to do is… I mean, what I did a lot of times is like, “What are your questions that you want to address on this email?” And then, they’ll send me the questions, and I’ll send them their answers, or send them the resources that they need. It’s like, “There you go.” That’s all you needed to do.

Daniella Flores:
But now, the number one thing that’s helping me the most is, because people will load up my calendar with meetings if they see slots because that’s how everybody schedules meetings, I guess, through slack, is that they want to see what your open slots are. They don’t really ask anymore. So, I’ve been time blocking the things that I need to do throughout the week at work. So, I make sure that those are actually taken up too.

Daniella Flores:
Because like, all right, I know I have a bunch of reports. I have to run for a month end kind of data stuff. So, I have to block this many hours on this day to do this. And so, if I do that, that makes sure that I don’t have all these meetings coming in and taking up my time. So, then I have to push this work to whatever else that can get done. Because I don’t want to do it on off hours. That’s a no, not going to be working on off hours. And I want to get my time done, when I want to get it done. I mean, my work done when I want to get it done.

Mindy:
Yes, during work hours.

Daniella Flores:
Yes.

Mindy:
Especially as a working at home person. I quit at 5:00, but now it’s 6:30. And I’m still sitting in front of my computer, because I just have one more thing to do. I mean, in IT, in tech, in almost everything, there’s always something else you can do. I am very fortunate that when I started at BiggerPockets, I think Brandon sat me down and said, Josh will always give you 150 more hours of work that you can do, and he knows it. So, do what you can and then stop at the end of the day, and start the next day. There’s always more work than you can do. It was like week one that he said that. And I’m so glad that he did because I would have felt overwhelmed with all the work.

Mindy:
It’s an online website where there’s people who can come in and talk any day. And I was in charge of the forums. So, anytime day or night, there’s somebody posting there. So, I could have literally been online all day every day. And never slept and never ate and never saw my family and just trying to keep up and frantically. And, of course, that’s not sustainable. And I would have to sleep and eat and whatever. But you can work 18 hours a day if you want. Don’t want that because that’s not a fun life.

Daniella Flores:
No, not fun at all. I guess a lot of people, for the folks that had the experience of going home to work remote, you might have realized that there is like an influx of meetings. I feel like when I went home remote, it was like, all my days are just people are trying to create all these meetings. And my dad works in tech too. And we were talking about this because like, “I feel like all I’m doing all day is meetings. I can’t do my work.” We like to kind of complain back and forth about our jobs because we have very similar jobs. So, we’re talking, is like, “Just all these people.” He’s like, “They’re just managers or things that they don’t know what they’re managing. And they’re just sending me meetings so they look like they’re busy.” We talked about, it’s like, “All right. Stop accepting them. And start filling up your calendar with the things that you know you need to get done. And make sure that you’re not completely sabotaging yourself at work.”

Mindy:
Exactly. Well, let’s move into your next life.

Daniella Flores:
My next life, yes.

Mindy:
What does your next life look like?

Daniella Flores:
My next life looks like a little bit like my life now. So, I’ve been working on my brand and my blog iliketodabble.com. I’ve been working on that since 2017 on and off. So, those first couple years, I stepped away from it a lot because I was getting burnt out with the content generation, kind of roller coaster that you’re on as you’re generating content. So, I burned out here and there. And I stepped away from it, and then I would come back.

Daniella Flores:
And then the last few years, I really went hit the ground running, got more serious about it. And as I started to hone in on ways to help people like me, people in the LGBTQ community, creatives, and people looking to increase their income if they don’t feel comfortable negotiating or comfortable looking for those opportunities. I tried to hone in on the things that I felt strongly about, and I was like, “I feel really passionate about this.” And a long time, I’ve had a problem with the word passion because you could have so many passions in your life. There’s not just one. So, I was like, “This is something I really want to do.”

Daniella Flores:
So, I got into therapy last year, and that was the one thing that helped me a lot. We were talking about this because I was like I’m not sure if this is the right move because my job has all these amazing benefits, but I really want to do this. I really want to do this full-time because I feel like I’m wasting all this time, not wasting, but you use your energy throughout your workday doing these tasks, the energy to build up for the stuff you want to work on. So then, after that, I’m like, “There’s all these things I want to do. And I feel like I’m losing this time to something else that my heart isn’t into. I don’t see a future in.” And we talked about, and she’s like, “I see the way you talk about your blog.” And she’s like, “I don’t see your face light up like that when you talk about your work.” That’s all you need to know. It sounds like you know what to do. And I was like, “That’s right. I do, I guess.”

Mindy:
So, I have a firsthand experience with this, from your wife’s point of view. My husband said the same thing, “I don’t want to work here anymore. I want to do other things. But I make all this money. I have these amazing benefits. Who am I to leave this great paying job to go pursue my passions, my dreams? Why would I leave this? It seems so selfish.” And it took him a year to come to terms with this. And even then, he asked his boss, “Could I just go three days a week?” And even that was like, “I should ask him, but I don’t want to. And what if he says no?” And then, he finally asked his boss like, “I don’t care.”

Mindy:
It feels like this huge decision because it’s so life altering to you. But it’s not such a huge deal to your boss because then they still got him. He had proprietary knowledge of… he wrote blood bank software for the VA hospital, David. So, if you need blood, if you got blood in 2010 to 2015, 2008 to 2015, he made sure you didn’t die. So, you’re welcome.

David Pere:
I can’t imagine that being a super high stress job. I mean, the VA does everything super slow and inefficiently. So, they probably don’t care when you get anything done.

Mindy:
Except it could kill you. If it gives you the wrong blood.

David Pere:
Not me. I’m AB positive. Anything you got, I’m good. I’m the one that can take everything.

Mindy:
Well, good for you. I don’t know anything about blood. Carl knows it all. But it was really stressful. So, he stepped down, and the boss is like, “Sure, no problem.” And then, when he finally quit, he’s like, “Wow, I should have done this years ago.” And I think that that’s going to be the same too. You mentioned just a few moments ago that somebody at work works part-time. Have you considered stepping back work instead of quitting cold turkey to test it out?

Daniella Flores:
So, this is something I’ve been thinking about. And I haven’t tackled it. This is another one of those fears, I guess, where it’s like, “I’m back at this thing,” where I want to ask this thing. I want to ask for a part-time work. And I’ve looked into it, and I asked HR portal, and I asked like, “Hey, are we still eligible for benefits if I were to move part-time?” And they said, “Yes.” So, I haven’t asked my manager yet, though. I just asked HR for informational. They didn’t say, “Yes, you can do it.” It was just informational of, “Yes, you can still get benefits at the same rate you do now if you’re part-time.”

Daniella Flores:
So, I can try to ask my manager that. But I tried to take stock of the current situation I’m in. Unfortunately, they just started going back to the office a couple of weeks ago. So, I’m on calls. And all of my team is required to be in the office. Two days a week, I think, is what they’re doing now. Some of them do like three or four. That depends on the person, like their style. But I can tell that there’s like a… I don’t know for sure if it’s there or not, but there’s like, “We all know Daniella gets to work from home all the time.” And they even have these benefits.

Daniella Flores:
So, the job has actually added new benefits to their benefit package called Work From Anywhere Weeks. But they have entire teams and people that work remote full-time that always worked from anywhere. And they were talking and they’re calling other day like, “I’m picking up my Work From Anywhere Weeks and stuff.” And I was like, “No comment.” I can’t say anything. So, if I bring this up to my boss, like, “Hey, can I move to part-time?” I don’t know what she will respond to that like. And I haven’t tackled it yet. But it’s an option I’ve been thinking about. Yes. But I’m also trying to think about the timing for it. Because it’s right, everyone just went back. And I feel like I’m the odd one out, and they don’t like it.

David Pere:
Just punch your own ticket in the IT system, and make it look like you worked the full week.

Daniella Flores:
There you go.

David Pere:
You run the system that catches people so you’re good.

Daniella Flores:
There you go.

David Pere:
Legal disclaimer, I’m not an attorney.

Daniella Flores:
Exactly. So, I’ve thought about moving to part-time. Maybe it’s something I should ask before I try to quit. So, that’s great that you brought that up.

David Pere:
So, your blog is all about side hustles, right? And dabbling and freelancing, and a lot of those things are not passive or recurring income. So, when you say retire, are you taking the money that you’re making from there and reinvesting in something that is going to be able to give you like cash flow or passive income? Or is your idea of retirement like mine? Where I’m retired, and it’s my office. Therefore, it’s me doing whatever I want. And you’re going to continue to push the blog forward and freelance and everything. But you’re viewing it as retire just because it’s on your own terms.

David Pere:
Just got curious the financial position there because usually when people… not like I’m an expert. But usually, when people make the transition from employed to successfully unemployed, there’s the finance question. And then, once you check that box, you’re like, “I’m good.” Then, it becomes like, “Now, what do I do?” And those are two totally different problems. But they both arise when you leave the employment world.

Daniella Flores:
Right. So, I’m leaving my employment world, but I’m not retiring and living off of investments. So, we are still actively investing, but we won’t be withdrawing from those investments during this. The only one we have is like our brokerage account, which that is like 10 years in the future kind of thing. So, we could use that money if we needed to. But we also have emergency savings that we’ve saved up. I’ve been saving up for months.

Daniella Flores:
I actually originally wanted to quit last year. And I just keep extending it because of all of my own doubts about yada, yada, yada. So, I’m not retiring from all work ever. I’m just retiring from like a W2 employee to being a self-employed person. So, what my plan is is to run the blog, but also do my freelance projects that I do, do the consulting and the coaching that I do, work with the several different publications that I do. And some of those do have like passive income streams. Like the blog brings in add income every month. We have affiliate income, some digital products that planned around those launches will have passive income come in. And we’re also trying to work to build up systems to make sure that I can automate a little bit more of that, and guarantee a little bit more of recurring income as we continue to save more and prepare for me to make the switch.

David Pere:
Does your job offer decent vacation benefits? Or is it possible to do a sabbatical? Because, like in the military, you could take 30 days paid vacation. And you could take a full month off, and at the end of the month, you’re like, “Wow! Yup, I’m ready.”

Daniella Flores:
[inaudible 00:42:30]. That’s perfect.

David Pere:
All right. I’ll give it a little bit longer. So, if that’s an option, I would definitely recommend doing that.

Daniella Flores:
Sabbatical. I don’t know if they have sabbatical as a benefit. I haven’t seen that on their benefits, but we have 30 days of vacation. I’ve already been using vacation this year like crazy because I know that I want to use them all up. We still get paid out though, for any that we don’t use. But I’ve been using them way more this year, like in the beginning of the year. Because usually, I have it from the summer offloaded to like the end of the year. This year, everything’s been offloaded to the beginning of the year because I want to leave. But I’ve been taking a little bit too much vacation lately, which actually, there is no such thing as too much vacation.

David Pere:
No, I mean, that was exactly what I was going to suggest is take as much as you have. Like, if you have 30 days on the book, take 30 days. And don’t think about work at all, and pretend you’re retired. And then by the end of that time period, you’ll probably know if you’re actually ready or not.

Daniella Flores:
So, I did that kind of a month. My mom and I went to Napa, California. I haven’t talked to her about it. Because my parents were the number one, not the number one, but one of those people in the back of my head being like, “Real bad. Can’t leave it. What about your 401(k) match, blah, blah, blah.” So, we even talked about it. Because I was showing her this product I was working on with another publication. And she was like, “This is really cool.”

Daniella Flores:
And she was really engaged. And she’s never been engaged in the stuff that I do. Because it’s tech, and she was in nursing and administration, hospital administration for a while. So, she’s doesn’t really vibe with all the tech stuff. So, I was talking about it. She’s like, “You excited when you talk about this stuff. I’ve never seen you talk about your work like that.” And I keep hearing this from other people. And I was like, “Yes, I love it.” And I want to do this full-time. She’s like, “Right away? You want to quit or you want to quit like down the road?” And I was like, “Well, I kind of want to quit like this year.” And she’s like, “Well, I mean, you enjoy it.” So, I was like, “Well, I didn’t expect you to say that.” My dad is the one that you have to convince, though. But either way, I don’t need to convince them anymore. It’s not like I live with them.

David Pere:
You just got to convince yourself.

Daniella Flores:
I know right. That’s the real one I have to convince.

David Pere:
I’m not saying that you have to convince yourself to make the leap. I’m just saying that’s the hardest part of the decision is coming to terms with, “I feel like this is the right move now. And I wrestled with it for like six months.”

Daniella Flores:
I’ve been wrestling with it now for about a year. I’m wrestling with mostly because of just the way I was raised and the way work is in my family. My dad was an immigrant from Venezuela. So, when he came over here, he worked several different jobs. He got into IT. And he worked up from Help Desk to a lead architect position. He’s a union worker. And he’s very much like work, work, this is the way to work in America. This is how you become successful and get what you want.

Daniella Flores:
And when I was a kid, he’s like, “America is the greatest country in the world.” Where he came from, and the tradition over there was to send the males to America to get an education. If you were in a well-off, not a well-off family, but a family that was able to do that for their male children. I don’t know why that’s a tradition per se. They weren’t really technically well-off. My grandma was a teacher. I think they actually had eight kids. But he was, eventually, able to come to America.

Daniella Flores:
And that was ingrained in my head as a kid, of like that culture of work is… this is what you’re going to do. And I don’t want to go for tech for school, originally, but I was good at it. And I was interested in it. And I knew it made money. Really wanted to go for fine art, but I did not have the money to pay for a fine art degree. I wanted to take out loans, but I didn’t want to take that many loans out. And my parents wouldn’t help me pay if I did fine art. So, I had to meet somewhere in the middle. So, I kind of did both. I did tech and graphic design.

Mindy:
So, you can take your tech salary. And now, you can finance your fine art love, and do whatever you want because you have set yourself up to be in this position. And I’m kind of glad your parents didn’t let you take fine art because my parents did. And for a long time, I stayed at that $30,000 level that you started out at. I didn’t get up to $200,000 because I was working in… what can you do with a fine arts degree? Would you like fries with that? I studied fashion design. David’s laughing at me because I’m not a fashion person at all. So, it was a stupid thing for me to study. It’s not my passion. I really don’t even know why I did it. I would have been better off studying business or I don’t know. The tech is my friend. When I was in college, it really wasn’t a thing. And I’m glad that you were on that path. Now, you can continue making money in tech things. Can you freelance in your tech job? Are there freelance opportunities or contract work?

Daniella Flores:
So, I started out in my tech role. After that startup, I worked as a freelancer for a while. And even after I got a “real job” like my parents would say, I stayed on with that freelance client for a while doing one-off work for them because it was a nice extra income. So, I can freelance. But I did freelance web development for a long time on the side of my job. And basically, attributed to me burning out with tech in the long run. I would never actually work freelance in coding or programming or anything like that again. It’s just like I’ve been in tech for 11 years now. So, I’ve rode this wave for a while. And I’ve tried a lot of different things. And I’m just ready to move on.

Mindy:
I’m just trying to gather up some ideas before I give you advice. I love David’s idea for a sabbatical.

Daniella Flores:
Sabbatical? Yes. That’s great if it’s available.

Mindy:
If it’s available.

Daniella Flores:
Right. But I mean, I’ve been building up the income with my business for a while now. That I’ve gotten it to, at least, to match my pre-tax income to my job. However, I have expenses. Everything that makes the blog run, I have people to pay that helped me with the blog. I have to pay taxes with that money. I have to pay my own health insurance with that money. I won’t be able to get a match anymore. All those things go into this whole decision. That’s what’s really holding me back is because these expenses are going to increase a lot.

Mindy:
So, can you get health insurance through your wife?

Daniella Flores:
Yes, health insurance through my wife is more than our mortgage.

Mindy:
Awesome. Welcome to America, the greatest country in the world. We have amazing health insurance.

Daniella Flores:
Right.

Mindy:
So, then maybe not that one.

Daniella Flores:
We’re a family that… we use our health insurance a lot. There are certain health care needs that we have to see a doctor every month. And there’s a lot of prescriptions that we get. So, we have to opt for her private healthcare that’s through her employer because there’s nothing on the marketplace that meets our needs. We don’t want to buy health insurance. That’s not going to cover anything.

Mindy:
Right.

Daniella Flores:
This is the only option that we have. People have gone back and forth trying to give me all these options for health insurance. And I was like, “Can someone give me an option that makes sense. Geez!”

Mindy:
Move to another country.

Daniella Flores:
Exactly. Right.

David Pere:
It’s part of why I stayed in the reserves was because six months, I still get TRICARE. And then after that, after this month, I guess, I go to paying for TRICARE out of pocket. But on the reserve side is like $270 for the family. And when I was looking at health insurance, I wouldn’t say that we have any kind of crazy medical stuff. I mean, I’m crazy. But you know otherwise.

David Pere:
I mean, there was a comma in there. And I was like, “Are you kidding me?” We live in Missouri. And we believe in like, “Butterfly Stitch? That’ll do.” I’m on a farm, “What do you mean I need to pay this much money?” So, it was definitely eye opening for me to see that. So, that was that was one of my biggest concerns getting out was that expense. And I ultimately… I had an option that I took, but I get that one.

Daniella Flores:
It was one that I did not see coming because the cost for was last year was different. It was still high, but it wasn’t that high. And we went back and looked at it again during open enrollment period for them. I was like, “This is the time. I’m ready to do this. Let’s see what their insurance is.” We brought it up. And we call the lady from like… because we looked at the form, and we’re like, “That can’t be right.” So, we call them. They’re like, “Yes. That’s right.” And we’re like, “Okay, never mind.”

Mindy:
So, does your company provide you with good health insurance?

Daniella Flores:
Yes. So, currently, we pay about a little under $300 a month for both of us. It is pretty good insurance. It’s still high deductible, like $3,000 deductible, but it’s 80-20 after that, which is about the same as this insurance that’s under her but with a way larger price tag on the premiums.

Mindy:
So, looking at your options, this is more of like a research opportunity for you, but what is your job? What do you excel at your job, like your day-to-day job? You mentioned tickets, and you’re doing it stuff. And I know already that’s way over my head, you could tell me exactly what your job is. I’d be like, that’s not my job. What do you do better than anyone else? What do you enjoy doing about your job? What would you spend your part-time doing?

Mindy:
So, just like you went to your boss and said, “Here’s all of the data about how I used to be a remote person. And this is all the stuff I did.” How can you present to your boss a good pitch for allowing you to be part-time? Look, I do all the stuff that everybody else hates. Or look at all the stuff that I’m so good at that nobody else knows how to do or whatever it is that you’re doing. How can you pitch it that it’s in their best interest to let you stay on part-time with these amazing benefits, so that you can work on your side stuff, but you still have the benefits?

Mindy:
So, you take that equation out that like, what am I going to do for health care equation out for a while, while still being able to do the stuff that you enjoy doing at work. Because you don’t want to be like, “Hey, I’ll take all the garbage work that everybody hates.” And then you’re working their 20 hours a week that really suck, 20 sucky hours. Can you load up to 40-hour weeks and then two weeks off? Or a part-time is whatever you make it, they just have to say yes. You can like cobble together whatever it is that you can do. What is it that you’re great at that you can solve a problem for them? Do you know what I mean?

Daniella Flores:
Yes. No, this is a great… this is an angle I’ve never thought of before with asking for part-time. I thought originally, if I was going to pitch this to my manager is, “Okay. I do this currently. If I take X, Y, and Z out of this equation, I could still do all of this currently at 20 hours a week, rather than 40 hours a week.” So, I originally was thinking of ways. We spent a lot of time hand-holding people that are higher up at the company through like… so our team supports this reporting counsel and stuff that they used to retrieval, other data metrics that they use for their things. And we have trainings for all this. And all this stuff is out there like Automate where they can go and grab that training themselves and all these things that we spend a lot of time hand-holding them for things that they don’t really want to take that extra step to go find it themselves. I mean, I take a lot of time every week to do this.

Daniella Flores:
And I was thinking about kind of pitching that angle a little bit where it’s like, “All right, here’s all this work that I’m doing that isn’t really valuable, that is already actually out there and available for people to actually retrieve themselves.” It’s just a lot of manual work that isn’t necessary. I can still do my job in 20 hours a week, maybe give up one project that I could… I don’t know what to do with that yet, but give up on project. And then also, we can try to, I guess, increase communications about the resources that are out there. So, our time isn’t wasted.

Mindy:
Just because you’re asking for part-time doesn’t mean I want to start part-time tomorrow. “Hey, I’d like to start part-time in June,” and see what happens. Or “I’d like to start part-time and test it for six months and see how it goes.” And here’s the suggestions that I’m going to make and leading up to that, June is a great time because that’s summer. So, leading up to June, any one of these hand-holding requests that comes in, instead, send them to me. And I’m going to say, “Here’s that resource. You can just click right here and find that information.”

Mindy:
And then, when they come back and say, “Can you show me how to do this?” It’s right here. And then, train them to do this. I am very guilty of that. Because my thought is, “Why should I go have to figure this out? Daniella knows how to do it. I’ll just ask her.” Now, if I asked Daniella, “How do I do this?” And “Hey, it’s right here.” “Okay, I’ll go get that link.” And you will become very familiar with all those links and where they are. And then, they will become familiar with where those links are as well. A lot of times, they don’t know where to look. Probably they do know where to look, and they’re unwilling to look, they would rather you just tell them, “Click here. Click there, whatever.” But if you continually push them over there, I’m hopeful that they will actually continue to go over there. But you can start to train them into that once they stop getting their hand held. Maybe they’ll take the initiative.

Daniella Flores:
Right. And that’s kind of already been in place. Those little practices that we put in place to reiterate things to people. We’ve been doing that for a while. But, I mean, that’s a great point that you put to maybe look at part-time and ways that I could talk to my manager about ways that we could do that, which I need to put more thought into figuring how that would look like.

Mindy:
And what’s her big pain point? Does she have? Does she have a big pain point? What problem can you solve for her? Does nobody ever do tickets on Friday afternoons? Then, you can make sure you’re working on Friday afternoons.

Daniella Flores:
Everyone’s always doing tickets, unfortunately. The worst thing about working at a global company is that there’s no nine to five office hours. It’s 24/7.

Mindy:
Well, that’s not a helpful hint, then.

Daniella Flores:
But it does highlight a pain point of hers is that she doesn’t want to be available on the other time zones. Neither do I really, though. The only one that I would maybe be available for is Australia, which is right now, would probably be when they’re getting online. But I could probably think of stuff like that. Where like, “What are her pair of pain points with our partner teams that we work with? Maybe I can take off some of that from her plate.” But I don’t know how to structure that with the work that I’m already doing. How would she receive it like, “If you want to move to part-time, what things you need to move off your plate? And I can’t give that to anyone else. Would I have to hire somebody else?” So, I don’t know how that part of the conversation would go.

Mindy:
If you’re not holding somebody’s hand, you can do your 20 hours and still get it all done. Then, she takes the hand-holding off of your plate, who’s going to do that? That could be more evenly distributed throughout the team.

Daniella Flores:
Yes, it could be. Right now, the way that they resource stuff, wherever they can is like trying to not hire anybody new. They try to maximize productivity, I guess, a lot of companies do, obviously. But there are things that I do. There’s projects that I could be doing, but I can’t do because I don’t have room for them on my plate. And I’ve said like, “I can’t do that. I don’t have the capacity for that.” So, there’s actually products out there that I can’t do because I’m already doing too much, though. So, I don’t know how I can transfer that to 20 hours and have her be like, “That’s a good idea.”

Mindy:
So, research opportunity.

Daniella Flores:
I can definitely. I’m going to research it, though. And see how maybe other people have approached this conversation and in a similar environment. So, that gives me a good idea.

Mindy:
And then if she says, “No, you can’t go part-time at all.” You would leave. Would that change her mind? Sometimes that changes minds when you’re like, “Hey, I would really like to go part-time.” “No.” “Well, here’s what I’m proposing.” “No.” “Well, here’s my two-week notice.” “Wait, let’s talk.” But sometimes that doesn’t happen. And sometimes, here’s my two-week notice, “Well, we’ll miss you.”

Mindy:
I worked at one place, and this girl said, “I can’t work here anymore. I have to quit.” And then the boss was like, “No, no, no. Let’s keep you. Tell me what’s going on.” And then a couple of weeks later, she was having a bad day. She’s like, “I can’t work here anymore. I have to quit.” And they’re like, “Okay, bye.” And you could tell she was really ready to quit the first time. And she was really not ready to quit the second time, and was like, “Well, I guess I’m going to leave then.”

Daniella Flores:
Well, I mean, that that could happen to, which I’ve already thought about. I’m good to go. If this health insurance wrench did not come up, I’d be gone already. I already had the meeting setup. And I had to cancel it. And I was like, “Is everything okay?” Like, it’s totally fine. Everything’s fine.

David Pere:
I would say if you’re that close, the one thing you… I don’t know, maybe you are factoring this in. But how much additional revenue can you bring through your platform by being full-time because I would be willing to bet that whatever that health insurance costs, you’ll cover that gap very quickly. So, I’m not going to tell you to make the leap because that is for you to decide. But I will tell you that I am paying more in salary right now than I was earning when I left a year ago. And it has grown very quickly with me being able to make those decisions and have all that time.

Daniella Flores:
Right. And that’s what I’ve been thinking about a lot lately, is that I’ve only been working on this platform like 10 hours a week. If I had 40 hours a week to dedicate to this. And even with the income I’m bringing, we would be able to do the health insurance costs still. We wouldn’t feel comfortable about it, the scrimp and stuff. That’s doable, of course. But it’s like, this is the income now, though, with how much I can work on it. If I can work on it four times as much, what would it be? That’s huge, then. And I don’t know what that looks like yet. But I know it looks better than it does now. So, that’s a great point, too.

David Pere:
And as you think about things from the marketing standpoint, of the brand standpoint, or whatever, right? The tagline of “I’m side hustling to earn extra income and leave my job” is one thing. The tagline of, “I left my job because of this, and I will never have to work again.” That will also help drive your… again, I’m not going to predict the future and tell you what to do. But I’m just saying, you will be surprised when you do make the leap whenever that is. You will be surprised, hopefully pleasantly, by what happens with the revenue at your side hustle when you’re able to focus on a full-time, not have things thrown off your creative flow and distractions. You’re able to use that tagline.

David Pere:
One of my buddies has a Ferrari, right. And he sells coaching programs. And one of the things he said when he was looking at weighing the cost of the car was one of his coaches was like, “Well, do you think if people see that you have a Ferrari, they’re going to buy into your course more?” Well, tangibly he’s paid for the Ferrari in course sales. And that’s something people don’t often think about. I think that even just being able to say, “Hey, I’ve already made it, and here’s why,” will help everything grow that much quicker.

Daniella Flores:
I’ve thought about that as well. Part of my brand though is always been like, “You don’t have to quit your job. You can use your job to help you. Then, build your side hustles and all the stuff to eventually move away from it.” That’s tracked until I got to this point now where it’s like I don’t see myself still going in this direction. And I know how it actually would look if I do. It’s so funny because I can actually visualize all of it. I’m ready for it. But my own limiting belief’s obviously still blocking me. But now, I finally figured out like all these things that I thought were roadblocks. Now, I get to plan around them. Now, I won’t have any more surprises.

Mindy:
You said that your side hustle, your blog is bringing in the same pre-tax income as your W2, but then, you have all these expenses to pay. What is your blog income after all of your expenses in terms of your spending?

Daniella Flores:
For like our family spending?

Mindy:
Mm-hmm.

Daniella Flores:
So, that would be fine. Looking at the numbers now. Like right now, after tax for my paychecks, and after all the other stuff, I get about a little bit above $5,000 a month. There’s a lot of stuff that gets taken out my paycheck but about $5,000 a month. With my blog, of course, it fluctuates once a month depending on projects and launches that are going on and seasonality. It’s been fluctuating this year before tax and before expenses like 6, 8, 10 the last three months. It’s kind of all over the place, still. But after all that, though, I still think I can put in after tax, at least three a month, with my wife’s, we just won’t be able to contribute as much to retirement, which it’s fine. For a while it took me to get around that because of my retirement benefits at my work. I’ll be missing out on that 10% match, which is like, that’s fine. I won’t be able to contribute that much more extra outside of my 401(k). And it’s like, that’s fine. It’s going to be fine.

Mindy:
Right now?

Daniella Flores:
Right now, yes, exactly. Right now.

Mindy:
You won’t be able to. When you are self-employed, and you have no full-time employees other than your spouse. And you have a self-directed solo 401(k), you get a 25% company match.

Daniella Flores:
What do you mean I have a 25% company match?

Mindy:
When you’re self-employed, if you open up a self-directed solo 401(k), your company can match up to 25% of your salary into your 401(k). So, up to 52 or $54,000, contributing to your 401(k).

David Pere:
It might actually be 56 now.

Mindy:
56?

Daniella Flores:
How does that work if I’m the company, like I’m an LLC?

Mindy:
That’s a self-directed, solo 401(k) is for self-employed people.

Daniella Flores:
Yes.

Mindy:
You open up your 401(k). You personally can contribute this year. It’s $20,500. And your company can match your salary, as contributions to your 401(k), up to 25% of your salary. So, your personal LLC can match in there. And I’m not a CPA. I’m just telling you this is another research opportunity. My company matches. So, first $20,500 automatically goes into my 401(k). And then 25% of that is $5,000. So, now, I have $25,000 in my 401(k), all legally because that are $26,000. And then, I’ll be over 50 this year. So, I’ll get the over 50 bonus. And then, any money that I make, my company matches 25% of my salary. So, right now, you have a 10% match. And, of course, you have bills to pay and all of that. But once you get over that, where you are making a lot of money, then your company can throw 25% of your salary in up to a total of $54,000 or $56,000. So instead of your measly, little $20,000 a year in your 401(k), you could be getting up to $54,000 in your 401(k).

Daniella Flores:
But where does that money come from? Is it expenses over my business, then?

Mindy:
No, it’s the income for your business. Let’s say your business makes $100,000 this year, and you pay yourself $50,000. Your company can match your salary up to 25%. So, 25% of 50,000 can go into your 401(k).

Daniella Flores:
I understand that. I understand how it works when I work for a company, they match it. I thought it comes out of their pocket, but it’s my company that I have. And it’s my LLC, and I’m [inaudible 01:08:14] this solo 401(k).

Mindy:
It’s like an expense for the company.

Daniella Flores:
So, that’s what I was asking. So, that’s an expense?

Mindy:
Yes.

David Pere:
It would basically be like you paying yourself $50,000 to take a salary from your company, and then paying your solo 401(k), $12,500 as the 25% match. And then the company, the LLC, that $12,500 is not income because it’s whatever or however that all plays out. You’re basically paying yourself an extra $12,500. It’s just going into the 401(k) instead of your pocket.

Daniella Flores:
Yes. I did kind of know this. I just never looked into how that would match. But now, I get it. I get it. So, it’s never going to be income because it’s going into that solo 401(k).

Mindy:
Yes, so definitely talk to a CPA. Neither of us are CPAs.

Daniella Flores:
Obviously, yes. I’ll talk to my CPA.

Mindy:
Talk to somebody who knows what they’re talking about. But there are ways for self-employed people to save for retirement. You’re just not able to save for retirement right this minute, like as soon as you quit your job. But as soon as you quit your job, you can dabble a little bit more in these side hustles that you enjoy and make money and bring you more joy.

Daniella Flores:
And have the time to look into these things to set up a solid 401(k), and talk to my accountant about how to do that because that actually changes my mindset a little bit about around all of this.

Mindy:
I think the bottom line is you don’t have to make a decision right now. What are you going to do? You can take the time. You have a job that you like. It sounds like you enjoy what you’re doing. You’re just ready for the next step. So, take the time to really explore the options that you’re going to go to, the options that you have and the choices that you have, and really choose the right adventure for you. Talk to your wife. Look at what she’s got. Look at what you’ve got. Her insurance is terrible. Does she want to quit her job?

Daniella Flores:
No. No, she doesn’t want to quit her job. She has a really good job. That’s a good job, and she enjoys it.

Mindy:
I don’t like the word stable. But that’s a stable position that can help support you while you are doing this side job, which can be the reason, the stability that you need to take the leap. And what’s the worst that can happen?

Daniella Flores:
I mean, there’s nothing really that bad that could happen. At first, when I was like, “I’m going to quit my job,” is like, quit your job. I never thought when you get your job, you can always go back and do something else if you want to. It’s not like you’re stuck doing this thing. I could do whatever I want with my life. I’m not tied to this job.

Mindy:
Yes, you’ve been in tech for 11 years.

David Pere:
Given that you’re in the IT field, going back and saying, “Well, hey, it’s not that I’ve been unemployed. I’ve just been working on this project.”

Daniella Flores:
Right.

Mindy:
“I was employed at this company. And now, I’m going to this company.”

Daniella Flores:
And there wouldn’t be a gap on my resume anyway, because I include my business on my resume.

Mindy:
There you go. Perfect.

David Pere:
If I ever create a resume, I’ll do that. That’s cool. I never thought of that. I don’t think I’ll ever have a resume.

Daniella Flores:
You don’t need one, but if you ever do create one.

Mindy:
Hopefully, you will never need one either.

David Pere:
You’ll be fine, Daniella.

Daniella Flores:
I’ll be fine. I’ll be fine. I mean, we had a good plan. We still have a good plan. I’m not on anyone else’s timeline but my own, sometimes I feel the pressure where it’s like, who’s making me? Who was urging me to do this stuff so quickly? Nobody, just me and my head. I could take some time.

Mindy:
But your head can be so… it’s such a bad place to be because you just get these thoughts. And they cycle back and forth. And you’re like, “I can’t see outside of this.” I get it. I hear you. Daniella, is there anything else you want to share with our listeners before we let you go today?

Daniella Flores:
Nothing, besides don’t let anyone tell you your job isn’t a real job.

Mindy:
Yes! Yes, yes. yes! If it makes you money, it’s a real job. If you enjoy it… what is that? If you enjoy it, you’ll never work a day in your life, whatever get paid to. She is Daniella from iliketodabble.com. Daniella, where can people find out more about you?

Daniella Flores:
You can find out more about me on my website iliketodabble.com. You can take the free side hustle quiz or anywhere online on social media as I like to dabble, and I like to double blog on Instagram.

Mindy:
Awesome. Thank you so much for your time today, Daniella. And we’ll talk to you soon.

Daniella Flores:
Thank you. Talk to you soon.

Mindy:
All right, David. That was Daniella from I Like To dabble. What’d you think of the show today?

David Pere:
That was good. I think they’re absolutely prepped to leave the corporate world. And, eventually, when they realize that it’s all going to work out for them.

Mindy:
I really liked your suggestion of the sabbatical. I liked some of the ideas we had for maybe stepping down to part-time, or maybe, cobbling together something that could really work out. I really liked the idea that you had that once you separate from full-time employment, you are going to see your side job, your side hustle, your dabble money increase because you have more time to focus on it. You have more time to, to spend on it. And what did you say? Your creative flow isn’t broken up halfway through the day, and “I got to go fix this ticket.” So, I’m super excited for everything in Daniella’s future. And I really know that they’re going to just crush it.

David Pere:
Absolutely. Going to be totally successful. It’s not a comfortable leap, but if you’re financially ready, which it feels like they are, then once you make the leap, it’s just a matter of overcoming that fear, that doubt, the imposter syndrome, and making it happen.

Mindy:
I completely agree. And I have first-hand experience with that. And it’s absolutely right. Now, my husband’s like, “I have too much stuff to do. I can’t believe I ever had time to work.” And he’s happier than he ever was working. So, I’m very excited for Daniella’s possibilities. And the future is wide open. Okay, David, should we get out of here?

David Pere:
Absolutely.

Mindy:
From episode 305 of the BiggerPockets Money Podcast, he is David Pere, and I am Mindy Jensen saying, can’t say blue jay.

 

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Here’s what you need to know about reverse mortgages


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With the stock market getting volatile but the housing market still hot, reverse mortgages have become a more attractive tool for older Americans who need cash for retirement but want to stay in their homes.

Home Equity Conversion Mortgage loan volume was up 26% in March, according to data from the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development reported by service provider Reverse Market Insight. It dropped 3.8% in April but remained well above 6,000 loans for the month — above the average in the last few years.

The economics of reverse mortgages are not as good as they used to be. In 2017, rule changes made by the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, which administers the HECM program, increased the mortgage insurance premium on the loans to 2%, from 0.5%, with the aim of reducing potential losses to taxpayers. That increased the upfront costs of reverse mortgages by $1,500 per $100,000 mortgage face value.

The market conditions for reverse mortgages, however, are favorable.

More from Life Changes:

Here’s a look at other stories offering a financial angle on important lifetime milestones.

“This is still a great opportunity to consider a reverse mortgage,” said Wade Pfau, PhD, a principal and advisor with Tysons, Virginia-based McLean Asset Management. “There’s been a big increase in housing prices, and interest rates are still low historically speaking.”

Reverse mortgages have developed a strong following in the financial planning profession, with advisors like Pfau recommending them as a potentially useful option in retirement distribution management.

Home equity represents about 66% of the average retired American’s wealth, so using it as a potential source of funds if you’re strapped for cash makes sense — even if costs are higher now.

“Research in the financial planning profession consistently shows that reverse mortgages can improve retirement planning outcomes,” said Pfau, who has written a book about the products. “It helps to have another source of funds outside an investment portfolio that can provide a backstop for people.”

The idea is that even if you don’t need cash immediately, setting up a line of credit through a reverse mortgage on good terms can provide access to significant funds down the road. The line of credit will continue to grow at the rate of the reverse mortgage’s interest rate, regardless of what happens to the value of the home. In other words, a reverse mortgage hedges the risk of falling home prices.

If you have an investment portfolio, you can then decide to either sell investments or draw on the line of credit when you need cash. That may sound a bit like market timing, but Pfau suggests a simple rule to guide the decision.

“If your investments are worth more than when you retired, sell from the portfolio,” he said. “If not, draw from the reverse mortgage line of credit.”

Not all advisors are sold on reverse mortgages. Certified financial planner Howard Hook, a senior wealth advisor with EKS Associates in Princeton, New Jersey, has only spoken to two clients about the reverse mortgage option with one ultimately getting a loan.

Top pros and cons of reverse mortgages

Pros

  • With interest rates still relatively low and housing prices very high, borrowers can tap an average of close to 60% of their home equity on very good terms as either a lump sum, monthly payments or as a line of credit that carries interest only on withdrawals.
  • Reverse mortgages are non-recourse loans. As long as you pay property taxes and maintenance expenses, you can stay in the house as long as you like and the terms won’t change, regardless of the housing market or changes in prevailing interest rates. The loan is due when you die or leave the home.
  • A reverse mortgage line of credit provides flexibility in managing the distribution of retirement benefits. It allows a borrower to take tax-free withdrawals on the credit line rather than sell investments (and pay taxes) after a drop in the market.

Cons

  • It is easier to qualify for a reverse mortgage, but they are more costly than other mortgages and home equity lines of credit. If for health or any other reason, you don’t stay in the house for long, the costs will seem even higher.
  • If you use the proceeds of a reverse mortgage for questionable spending or risky investing, you’re setting yourself up for financial ruin. If it represents a last resort for funds, you are probably living an unsustainable lifestyle. “The better option is to downsize your home and reduce your spending,” said Hook of EKS Associates.
  • Homeowners are still required to pay property taxes, insurance and maintenance costs on the home. The lender could seize the property if you don’t.

 “I know a lot of reputable people like reverse mortgages, but I’m still hesitant to advise clients to consider them,” said Hook, though he agrees that the current economic environment is good for the product. “You have to be careful using debt to finance living expenses or to bridge a fall in the [stock] market.

“It’s easy money and it can foster bad habits.”

Hook believes reverse mortgages may be appropriate where borrowers need to pay off health-care expenses or a more expensive mortgage or personal debt and don’t want to sell investments. But the all-in cost and risk of the reverse mortgage is still high.

“Setting it up as a line of credit reduces the cost, but it’s still expensive,” said Hook. If you end up staying in the home for a short period, the costs will seem significantly higher.

“All the sudden, you may find you can’t climb the stairs, or you develop dementia,” he said. “Sometimes the decision to stay in a home isn’t up to you.”



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3 Types of Real Estate Deals that Work in ANY Market Condition


Home flipping, wholesaling, and BRRRR-ing rental properties are all solid options in the real estate investing space. But, as most experienced investors know, different markets favor different strategies. In some markets, flipping outweighs the risk of renting out a property, while in others, something like the BRRRR strategy is a no-brainer. In 2022, after two years worth of wild appreciation and huge rent raises, which strategy is the best for investors?

We couldn’t have this sort of debate without our buy-and-hold expert, Henry Washington, our master house flipper, James Dainard, and our wholesale addict, Jamil Damji. Together, they each bring their own unique outlook on these strategies and give advice on which is the best to use for certain types of deals. Henry, James, and Jamil bring real-life deals to debate, and you’ll hear how experts analyze properties, even with just basic information.

If you’ve enjoyed listening to On The Market, we would love it if you gave us your feedback on the On The Market BiggerPockets Forums. Participate in our audience feedback survey or give us your take on the current housing market. Let us know what you think so we can keep making episodes that help you on your investing journey!

Dave:
What’s going on everyone? Welcome back to On The Market. Today, we have my friends, Henry Washington, James Dainard and Jamil Damji joining me for what is going to be a very fun episode. How are you all doing?

Henry:
Awesome.

James:
I’m doing great.

Jamil:
So good.

Henry:
We’re not doing as good as James because he’s in phenomenal temperatures and bragging about it, but.

Dave:
He looks so relaxed. He’s like Kathy. Yeah.

Henry:
Right?

Dave:
It’s that California lifestyle, just looking relaxed and healthy.

James:
Kathy is the most… She’s got the most peaceful vibe on her. She’s just a roamer.

Jamil:
Yes, that’s a nice life. Nice temperatures, nice life, Southern California.

Dave:
Today I know all three of you are excited to get into our due diligence section where we’re going to be going into deals that you all are actually thinking about or doing right now, which will be super fun. But before we do that, we’re going to go into between the headlines, talk about some of the latest news impacting the world of real estate investing.
And today we are going to play a new game called fortune tellers where you need to give me a 30 to 60 second reaction and prediction about what is going to happen given the information I give you. Everyone good?

Henry:
Let’s do it.

James:
Yap.

Jamil:
Yes sir.

Dave:
All right, sweet. So the first topic is about second home sales. I don’t know if you have been following this over the last couple of years, but at a certain point demand for second homes spike to 90% of pre-pandemic levels. So nearly doubling over the last couple of years. And all those gains have pretty much been reversed.
Redfin is now reporting that mortgage rate locks for second homes were up 9.1% from pre-pandemic level. So that was 90%. Now at 9.1%, basically back to where we were. Do you think this is going to impact the housing market? And do you think second home demand is ever going to spike like we just saw or was this a temporary blip? Jamil, what do you think?

Jamil:
I think it was a temporary blip. We all got trapped in our houses during the pandemic and we had these dreams and these ideas that, oh man, I want to live near James Dainard in Southern California, and I want that other lifestyle. I want to have options, right? And I think the pandemic gave us this idea that we all have options.
And so yes, there was a great demand, but with that demand, we have all of these situations that we’ve created from there. So I think that the spike in second home purchases was absolutely indicative of the time. And I think that there’s no chance of us getting back there again without another black swan event that pushes us there again.
And so personally I think that’s curved, but I still believe that just the general housing market with respect to rates and pricing, I think that’s also playing an effect. And so I don’t think we’re going to see it come back the way that we had it.

Dave:
Henry, what do you think?

Henry:
Man, I 100% agree. I mean, when you think about the pandemic changing everything, you were 100%, right? You no longer had to live where you worked, right? And so people got these grand… They got bored, and then they started thinking of these grand ideas of where they could live because they didn’t have to work there.
And then also you think about, you’ve got people who now had to live and work in the same space with their family members. And you saw a shift too in pre-pandemic. It was all about open concept and then pandemic hits and people are like, well walls and separation aren’t so bad, right?

Dave:
It’s so real.

Henry:
So people started looking for homes that fit their new lifestyle, right? So the second home spike was huge because people were well like, now I need a place that’s got more space because now I need a dedicated office space so I have to be working. I need to be away from my family in a room somewhere where I can get some peace and quiet or I can’t get my job done.
And the last thing that people wanted to do was lose their job in those unfortunate, uncertain times. And so yeah, that spiked second home and you just got people that got bored. They got bored and they wanted to feel good. They were scared and buying a new home kind of gave people that temporary, hey, this is exciting. I can be excited about something again.
And I think you saw a spike, but this is what everybody’s been saying, when are we going to return to normal? When are we going to get back to normal? Well, this is part of getting back to normal. We’re going to get back to the financial normal that was before, right?
So we’ve got, we’ll get back to second home price sales being down, we’ll get back to interest rates being where they were before that. All these things that people weren’t thinking about when they meant get back to normal is part of that too.

Dave:
Yeah, that’s a great point. James, I’m curious what you think in a broader sense, but also if you believe that this will impact pricing for short-term rentals, because a lot of second homes are in the same markets where people are targeting for short-term rentals. Curious what you think will happen there.

James:
I do think that that asset class is going to be the one that deflates the most or one of the most over the next six to 12 months. It reminded me and I was talking to somebody six months ago about this because these secondary home prices went through the roof in areas that do not typically appreciate that quick.
And they were appreciating probably 10 times as fast as they’re typically done. And, it reminded me of 2007 because it was the same type of concept. In Washington, we had this place called Suncadia. It’s a nice golf course community. People live there, they rent it out. It’s amazing. I had a BRB there myself, but I remember it inflated at almost the same rate as what it was doing right now.
And those secondary markets are the ones that popped the worst too. And so as the demand goes down, I do think that there’s going to be a good 10 to 15% deflation in that market. In 2008, we saw a 40% drop in those asset classes. That was a different thing. It was a totally different type of banking crisis. But as we see things come down, yes, people’s novelty of them do wear off.
They’re going to start selling them and then as people start to get a little worried about inflation, the secondary market, I do think that the VRBO market could slow down as well as liquidity dries up and an inflation starts really eroding people’s access to capital. The first thing that goes is vacations, going places and traveling.
And so I do think that the secondary home market, the Airbnb investor market it’s going to have a little bit of trouble over the next four to six months as it kind of normalizes out. But it’s what comes up must come down and the ones that hockey stick the most, those are the ones that are going to probably come down the quickest.
And if you really look at the secondary hallmark right now, as inflation’s eating up people’s expenses, you don’t want to go buy another house to service if you’re not going to rent it out. And in addition to when you factor in the new rates that are 30% higher than they were four months ago, it really affects your monthly payment to where it just doesn’t become worth it. And if it’s not worth it, things don’t trade.
So that’s where I think things are going to really settle down and come backwards. And and if you are looking for a secondary home, you’re probably going to be able to get one in the near future.

Dave:
That’s a great point, James. And one thing I’ve been reading about that I think was really interesting in this Redfin article is the authors were speculating that a big reason this is dropping off as well is due to the stock market just tanking.
There’s just so many people who had a lot of cash and just a lot of excess money to spend on a second home because of the stock market now that it’s down 20% of the year or whatever it is as the time of this recording. That until the stock market goes back up again, which could be a while, probably not going to see that demand go up.
All right, for our second headline today we’re only going to do two today. I want to talk about the lock-in effect, which if you haven’t heard already is this idea that because interest rates were so low for so long that so many home buyers and homeowners have locked in rates that are ultra low. And we may not see again for a while.
We might not ever see again in our entire lives. Just to bring some context to this, for years, we were seeing mortgage interest rates at 3%. At some point in January of 2021, it actually went as low as 2.7% for a 30-year fixed rate mortgage. Now it’s at about 5.3 at the time of this recording. And the idea here is that why would you sell?
If you were a homeowner right now, why would you sell your house so that you can enter an ultra competitive market with high prices only to pay more interest on your loan? And that makes sense to me, but the implication here is that inventory could remain down and that could help continue to provide upward pressure on housing prices over the next few years.
So Henry let’s start with you, get your crystal ball out. What do you think is going to happen? Are people going to stop selling in large numbers and is the lock-in effect going to be a real phenomenon over the next few years?

Henry:
Oh man, of course you made me go first so I can say I’m the jerk face. Here’s my general thoughts, right? Yes, people are going to be comfortable with those lower interest rates, especially right now. They’re thinking, I don’t know how high these interest rates are going to go. I’m going to stay put where I’m at.
And all that sounds good now because they just locked in their new interest rate six months ago, a year ago, a year and a half ago. But people don’t typically sell homes as a financial decision. It’s more of an emotional decision, right? They are selling for a particular reason. Maybe their family’s expanded. Maybe they’ve got a new job and they’re making more money. Maybe they are downsizing and want a smaller home.
Maybe they need to move closer to family. People sell their primary residences for more situational or emotional reasons. And does that mean interest rates or what it’s going to cost you doesn’t play? Of course it plays into it, but it’s not the only factor that they’re considering. And a lot of the times we know people see motions overrule the best financial decision point most of the time. And so will the lock-in effect slow down inventory?
Yeah, I think so. I think there are some savvy homeowners out there who are just going to say, hey, it’s better for me to stay put because their lifestyle or their family situation will allow them to continue to stay where they are. And I think the ones that whose lifestyle or family situation changes, they’re still going to look to buy.
I mean, as long as interest rates aren’t 15% or something like that where it just doesn’t… You literally can’t do it. But I think if people have the financial ability to do it, their situations are probably going to dictate that they do it and they want to.
It feels good to buy a new home. It feels good to upgrade your lifestyle. And most people are… There’s tons of people who just aren’t thinking financially for this decision. It’s just not that important to them if they can afford it.

Dave:
All right. James, what do you think? Do you think this is going to have an impact on prices in the housing market? Or is this just going to impact a small number of people?

James:
I think there’s always going to be a section of the population that it’s going to really impact or to where they’re going to be fixated on the rate cost. I mean, I talk to investors all the time. They’re always pricing the rate, because they’re going after rate first like, how do I get the cheapest rate?
And so there is that mindset where I think people are going to lock-in. They can’t see past anything else, but their rate and their uncomfortable payment and they’re not going to be selling. But I do think that investors and people and just the… Or especially Americans, they live in the now.
So it’s always right now, it seems expensive on the money, but it’s going to get normalized in the next six to 12 months. And the more normal it is, people are just going to say, well, I’m going to go do those things now. I’m going to have to refi, even though my rate’s going up. For the next six to 12 months, I think people are going to not be wanting to move around.
But as it gets more normal, as rates seem they stay where they should be, that people are just going to go for it or just going to get used to it. One thing I do think is that a lot of people locked in low rates. They have a lot of equity position.
And if we move into some sort of recession, which it looks like we might be doing, and then with the inflation factor eating up people’s extra income, I do think there’s going to be a boom of cash out refis to where people all of a sudden that’s going to become the norm.

Dave:
Because they need it, because they need the cash rather than because the rate is attractive.

James:
Yeah, I do think that the general public has gotten used to spending money the last 24 months, or at least a portion of it. Not everybody, but people that are buying homes and they’ve had access to money. They’ve seen their equity positions explode over the last 12 to 24 months.
At some point though, as inflation’s getting to 10% in the market, things are getting more expensive. We got these Ukraine… We got these conflicts overseas and we’re going to be going into… As a recession rolls in that could be less paying jobs. There’s other things that are going to eat up people’s disposable income.
And I do think because people do live in the now, they want to keep going with that disposable income and they’re going to be fixated on that rate until they’re not. And they’re just going to say, hey, look, now I’m going to go tap into my good purchase and do refi it out. In addition to people, also bought homes and they went to go build them out and design them themselves.
They traded a house that they lived in for a long time. They got a new property, they got a bigger one and their bids are coming back at record high numbers. And they thought they were making the right trade, but now they don’t have the liquidity to finish the rehab.
So I think there is going to be a little bit of a reset where people are going to have to pull out cash out. And so I do think people are going to do what they have to do. If they can keep their low rate, they will. And if they can’t, then people get used to paying a higher rate.

Dave:
That’s a really good point. Living in the now is a very good way to describe how people spend their money. All right, Jamil before we move on to our deal analysis, part of the show, what is the last word on the lock-in effect?

Jamil:
I 100% percent agree with a blend of both of what these guys are saying. I think what James really nailed there was just how short-term our memory can get with respect to what’s happening in life. Because look, everybody’s talking about, oh my God, these rates are so high. These rates are so high is because we’ve all forgotten.
We’ve all forgotten that 5% mortgage rates or 6% was normal. And then we got used to this two, 3% for a little while, and we’re like, oh my God, that’s where it needs to be. But our brains will reset, and just like James said, we’ll be in the now and we’ll say, yeah, five is normal, 6% is normal. This is totally okay. We’ll forget about the two and 3% mortgages.
We’re going to forget about that. It’s just going to take a little bit of time, and then people are going to move along in a life. And Henry was talking about, situations are going to continue to persist. Life will happen. And no matter how much we want to pretend that we all love to make these really smart and strong financial decisions for ourselves and our families, when it’s time to buy some jet skis, we get jet skis. That’s what’s up. And so I think…

Dave:
It sounds like you’re speaking from experience here Jamil.

Jamil:
I don’t jet ski, but I’m.

Henry:
You ever seen a sad guy on a jet ski?

James:
It’s not possible. It’s a smile factor.

Dave:
You can’t be sad on a jet ski. Well, alright, so all three of you are selling the idea of the lock-in effect. I actually think it is going to play a role until the market gets less competitive because why would you enter this market? Why would you sell only to face more bids? But we’re already seeing the market get less competitive.
So I think it will sort of be this trade off. As the market gets less competitive, people will be more willing to sell and get back into it. With that, we are going to move on to our next section where Jamil, James and Henry are all going to share a deal. I know that they’re all chomping at the bit to talk about deals and actually get into the numbers.
This is going to be a lot of fun, but first we’ll take a quick break. We’ll be right back after this. All right, we are back to this episode of On The Market and we are going to do, I think this is the first time maybe in BiggerPocketss Podcast history we are going to break down some actual deals in real time. And we were all chatting before this.
And I know there’s some contentious undertones behind some of these deals. So I just want to get started with Jamil first because he’s got a deal and I think Henry’s going to rip him apart. So let’s just start with this deal. Jamil, tell us what you got.

Jamil:
So to give everybody a little bit of backstory on me, if you don’t know I’m a wholesaler and it’s in my DNA. And so I haven’t held a lot of property. I’m constantly trading. I’m trading, trading, trading, trading, trading. Look at Henry’s already disappointed in me. I haven’t really held anything.
I hold a beach house in California and my home, personal home. And other than that, I trade everything. That’s just what I do. It became really clear to me how much of a mistake that was when just for my last tax bill was just over $800,000, okay? And so my lifestyle has absolutely changed over the last few years.
Success has come our way and I’m super grateful for it. And I’m looking at my best friend and co-star on our TV show who is doing a tremendous amount of business as well. And he got a refund. He got a $3,200 refund and meanwhile, I’m paying $800,000 plus in taxes. And it’s sad, right? It’s sad to me that that’s the differences in our lives because I’ve been so inefficient with respect to how I’m approaching life.
So what I’ve done is I decided I came across this deal and I don’t know if we can pull it up on the screen, if not, I’ll just kind of give us the deal points. This is a multi-family acquisition in the Arcadian neighborhood of Arizona. That’s 85018.

Dave:
Is that near Phoenix.

Jamil:
In Phoenix, correct.

James:
That’s where everyone wants to live right now, right?

Jamil:
Correct. So this is the neighborhood that I live in. In fact, this building is around the corner from my house. I can walk there in 30 seconds. It’s a 53 unit multi-family all one bed, one bath. To give you an idea of the neighborhood, the annual household income, the average annual household income for this Arcadia area is $122,000.
Whereas in Phoenix, the average is about $72,000. So gives you an idea of the demographic that lives in the neighborhood. The median home sales price as of April was $1.7 million. And in comparison to Phoenix, the median sales price is $515,000. So this neighborhood is incredible. Now let me tell you about the deal. So the acquisition cost of the deal is $12.5 million. That’s $235,000 a door.
Looking at the comparables of what is traded in the neighborhood with the same sweet mix, with the same sort of parameters, we have an as is value of around 280 a door without any repositioning. This is a group that owns it right now. They’re out of Canada. And for whatever reasons they are deciding to liquidate.
They had started a renovation. They actually renovated 46 of the 53 units and they renovated them to incredible standards, beautiful, beautifully modern. They’re incredible. Seven of the units are left to remodel. Currently the gross monthly rent is around $63,600. And the units are renting at about $1,200 a month.
Rents can increase to $1,700 a month and that’s conservatively based on the style, the neighborhood and the type of unit that we’ve got. So there’s a large gap in a reposition there. Now, here’s where my problems run. We can take this building down. It’s going to require us to come out of pocket around $2.5 million for the down payment. And we’re looking at a debt service of around $60,000 a month.
So cash flow, as it sits right now is negative or flat. There’s not a lot of income to be made right now without a reposition. But if we renovate the last seven units and re reposition the building, increase the rents to $1,700, we’re looking at roughly $18,000 a month in net income after you adjust for expenses and vacancy.
So we’re looking at a total value once we reposition the building of around $17.5 million. So there’s a gain of around $5 million to be made. On top of that, if I look at and do a cost segregation study on the building, I can save roughly $2 million in taxes. So when I look at this, I can put $2.5 million down to acquire the building.
That’s going to save me $2 million in tax liability. Or I can take the exit strategy that I’m good at and know, and I actually have a contract right now. I have a buyer for the building right now at $15 million. So I can make a $2.5 million assignment fee, would be the biggest assignment fee I’ve ever made, add to my tax liability.
Or I can take the building down and do the right thing, which is, I know what Henry wants me to do. Take the building down depreciate, save money on taxes and create cashflow. So this is the deal. The risks that I see the current rental market could turn. We might see some… Our projections could be off with respect to how much rent’s escalated.
I don’t think so, but it’s possible. We could run into some issues with project management, because this would be a deal that I really don’t have a lot of experience in doing. And so we could mismanage it and we could totally fumble the ball, and ruin that just because of our lives and how busy we are.
So that’s kind of what I’m playing with. Do I take the $2.5 million right now, add to my tax liability and do what I do as a wholesaler? Or do I take the building down, save money in taxes and create cashflow?

James:
Well, my first question is, do you have the 2.5 to buy?

Jamil:
Yes.

James:
Or do you have to raise money and, and give out the equity on the deal? So it’s 100% owned by you?

Jamil:
I will bring in Pace Morby as my business partner on the deal. He’ll acquire it with me. So each of us would be coming in with 1.25.

James:
1.25, and then it’s a 50/50 split on that deal.

Jamil:
Correct.

Henry:
I will give you $1000 for 1% of the deal.

James:
So on this deal, you’re looking at a tax savings of a million in-

Jamil:
Each, correct.

James:
Yeah, a million each on that deal. So basically you’re coming up with 1.25, and you get $1 million tax savings, which is, or off the top, which is going to save you, what? In your bracket, if you’re hitting 800 grand, it’s going to save you 400 grand right away on year one.

Jamil:
Correct.

James:
Or not year one, but it’s going to pop back. One of my biggest questions would be, if these things are all renovated, why is the performance 25% higher than what it’s at right now? If they’re an investment company that stabilize it, they renovated to the highest and best used. Why they’re so far below market?
And do you think that has anything to do with Arcadia being a family neighborhood and one bed, one bath won’t trade well in that kind of climate?

Jamil:
Well, they’re 100% occupied and again, looking at just the rent comparables, 1700 is actually pretty conservative for a one bed, one bath in the neighborhood. You’re absolutely right, it is a family neighborhood. And so there’s less demand for that type of unit. That’s the hands down real thing, but the schools are better here.
There’s still a lot of the population here that’s servicing the people that live in the neighborhood, there householders here. And so I think that just having access to that type of product isn’t needed for the neighborhood, because you can just check, see by the vacancies there’s a demand for it. Now, why are they so underperforming?
That’s a great question, and I think a lot of the rent escalation that’s happened over the last 12 months is a reason for it. I think at the time when they had increased to $1,200 a month, that that was a deal at the time. But I think that they thought that that was the highest that they were at.
And now with where rents have gone, and again, we’re banking on rent staying where they’ve spiked to, right? And so I think that’s the juggling act that we’re in right now, because if for whatever reason rents go down, we’re in trouble.

Dave:
But how much trouble? If rents went downtown 10%, how long would it take for that 10% decline in cashflow to eat away at the $1 million in tax savings?

Jamil:
You’re absolutely right.

Henry:
I agree, and that was my exact thought. You think about what you’re getting in savings from taxes versus what you’re having to put down versus the cashflow you’re going to create by finishing the renovation and putting all the units at market rents. All that’s great. Rents typically don’t go down, Jamil. I mean, does it mean they can’t?
No, absolutely not. Sure, something could happen when they do, but the benefits of this property for you are on the tax side more so than they are on the cashflow side, and you are going to get the appreciation from this property as you continue to hold it. And the thing that I think is great… So I love one bed, one bath units.
I love one bed, one bath units in neighborhoods that are super desirable and family neighborhoods because it gives a subset of people who want to live in that super cool part of town who can’t afford a house a way in. A way to say, this is where I live.
I live in this neighborhood. And so I think you just tweak a little bit of your marketing and you’ll have more people wanting to live there than what to do with. Because being able to get a one bed, one bath in a neighborhood where it costs 1.5 to buy a house on the average is impossible to find, right?
And so I think you’re always going to have demand because even if rents go down, it sounds like in this area, your rents aren’t going to decline as much as maybe Phoenix, Metro might decline, right?

Jamil:
Correct.

Henry:
And so this is… I mean, I’m a buy and hold guy. So for me, this is a no brainer, right? You buy that.

Jamil:
So you’d hold this all day and you would forego the $2.5 million quick assignment fee that as a wholesaler, I want to take?

Henry:
Yap.

Dave:
I want both.

James:
So do you get 100% of the 2.5 or are you 50/50 on that too?

Jamil:
It would be 50/50 because I brought Pace into the deal. I needed his money before I even… I’m $250,000 non-refundable on my EMD.

James:
Yeah. So on that scenario, that’s 1.25. So you’re walking with 650 grand after taxes. And so it’s really if you’re picking up $5 million in equity, if your numbers are right and you’re picking up that upside right there day one on the buy-in margin and then you get up there, you’re picking up three to four million in wealth, plus picking up a million and two in tax savings all for 600 grand. And so do the math on that, you’re 3X in your money at that point, but you have to wait. And so…

Henry:
You can always exit, Jamil. Somebody will always buy this deal because of the desirability of the neighborhood and frankly, the desirability of the units. My one bed, one baths are my best performing units. I can’t rent them fast enough when they’re vacant and people stay forever. I love them.

Jamil:
There’s also a play where we take a portion of the building and we turn them into short-term rentals because it is a resort style building. We got a beautiful pool. There’s a fitness center. I mean, it’s an incredible property. It’s an incredible property.

Dave:
Do it. Hold it.

Henry:
Hold it.

Jamil:
Hold it.

Henry:
Hold it.

Dave:
All right. Is everyone voting hold? I don’t know, I guess we’re turning this into a voting show, but I say hold it Henry’s obviously hold it. James?

James:
I think honestly it’s a no brainer to hold it. You’re 3X in by keeping it right away. Just keep it.

Jamil:
Keep it, okay. Thank you guys. Every bit of me is like, you’re so dumb Jamil. There’s $2.5 million, there’s $1.125 million that you’re going to have to pay taxes on it, but it’s still like, come on.

Dave:
I mean, it’s very tempting, but-

Jamil:
It’s so tempting.

Dave:
We’re here for you Jamil. This is-

Henry:
I’ll be your support group for sure. I’ll be your accountability partner.

Jamil:
James, should I go raise my portion of cash that I require to get into this deal, bring in an equity partner, not be into it for cash at all and just have this as a depreciation play?

James:
I mean, that’s what some people do. You can get the best of both worlds. You could package that deal up, charge an assignment fee to the deal most indicators do. So you can still get your wholesale fee, give out a portion of the equity. Typically, it’s going to be, you’re giving out 70% of the ownership of that building.
Keep the 30, so you can get the best of both worlds, get your assignment fee, keep 30% ownership. You can continue to get fees by managing that project with Pace, and then all of a sudden you’re still making your income and getting the ownership. Plus you’ll get 30% of the cost side depreciation over the tax return. So there is the middle answer of do both.

Henry:
Yeah, I think that’s awesome for someone not in your financial position. I think you can afford to do this on your own and you need to do it based on what you just told us. You pay taxes. Might want to keep this one for yourself.

Jamil:
Thank you guys. I appreciate the advice.

Dave:
All right, we’re going to have to come back to this and see how you’re doing, make sure you’re not just going to sell it randomly one day.

Jamil:
July 11th is my close date. So the audience, hold me accountable, ask me the questions. Henry, James, Dave ask me the questions. July 11th is the day. I’m either going to be walking away with my assignment fee or I’m going to be walking away with a building. We’ll see what happens.

Dave:
All right.

Jamil:
Or maybe both.

Dave:
Okay. With that, let’s move on to Henry’s deal. Henry, I’m sure it’s going to be a buy and hold after this. Tell us what you’ve got.

Henry:
It’s a similar situation too. So yeah, let’s talk about it. The numbers aren’t as amazing as Jamil’s, but this is just one unit. So I’ve got a deal. It’s a three bed, one bath single family home in Bentonville, Arkansas in a very desirable neighborhood of Bentonville, Arkansas, right?
And so purchase prices 225,000. Now this area of town is a really, really highly desirable area because of a couple of things. It’s near downtown Bentonville, which is where people want to live in the Bentonville area. There’s so much money being poured into there. There’s museums that have gone up, walking trails.
It is where people in Bentonville want to live, hang out, party, socialize shop. And then it’s maybe a two to three minute walk away from where Walmart is building their brand new state of the art home office complex. And so they are building this complex to compete with the Amazons and the Apples for the talent that they need to hire to keep Walmart relevant.
And so it’s supposed to be this phenomenal state of the art, and they’ve already started construction. And so the purchase price is inflated because of the neighborhood. Typically, if I were going to buy a three bed, one bath 1100 square foot home that was built in the 60s in any other part of Northwest Arkansas, I would probably pay no more than a 100 grand, right?
Maybe 120 grand, but we’re paying 225 for this one because the ARV on the property, because of where it is. They just built a brand new private school. They call it [inaudible 00:33:38] school. You can throw a rock and hit it from the front yard of this place. And so, because people are going to want, wealthy people are going to want their kids to go to this school, right? They’re going to be looking for properties that are closer to these areas.
And that makes it a great Airbnb location too. So the ARV on this property is 550,000, right? And so we’re buying it at 225 and to renovate it to the nines, which is what we would need to do to get that 550. We’re going to have to put 70 to 80 into it. And then we can exit that thing for 550, which puts my potential profits after commissions and fees above 200,000, which is phenomenal for a single family flip-

Dave:
Off 225,000.

Henry:
… In Arkansas, right?

Dave:
So you’re almost doubling your money.

Henry:
Yeah, absolutely. So phenomenal flip, right? But I love the location. And so I have more than one exit. And so I can look at, hey, do I whole tail this thing? Which is just sell it in the current condition that it’s in. And the market says, I can probably get around 310 for that. And I could probably stick that thing on the market and have that money in my pocket in 30 to 45 days.
And that’s about a 60 grand profit to do almost nothing. Clean it up, make some minor repairs, make sure that it’ll pass an FHA or a conventional inspection, right? And that’s about a 60K profit. So I can get 60K quick or I can make sub two or above 200 in four to five months, would be what I would think it would take me to get this done or we can rent it, which is what I would normally do.
But when you look at rents right now, I think I could only get about two grand a month for this thing. And so when you’re buying at 225 and then you’re putting… And now if I rented out I wouldn’t have to put as much into it, but I’d still have to put 30 to 40 into it, right? And so I’d be sub 250, 260, 270 and renting it for 2000. That’s negative cashflow, but I would get off.

Jamil:
What about short-term? What would you get on the short-term rental?

Henry:
Short-term rental, I’d have to put more into it, 70K probably, but I could get four to five grand a month.

Dave:
Before we get into this, can I just ask you Henry? How’d you find this deal?

Henry:
That’s phenomenal question. So I found this deal through direct mail. So this was a direct mail marketing driving for dollar. So I have people, I’ve got about two people who consistently drive for me. So they go out and they identify distressed properties. And then I send those people direct mail. And then I also cold call. I have a cold caller that cold calls this list.
So this was one I’d been sending mail to for a while and didn’t get much of a response. Had a cold caller call him and then boom got them on the phone, and it was just timing. They were just ready to sell. It’s funny. I went to go look at the house. So they called me and they were like, hey, we want to get out of this thing. We’ve had a tenant in there.
She’s not paying rent, and we just want to sell it with them in there and be done with it. And I went to go look at it and it was the first time they’d been in the house in over a year. And so I’m walking the house kind of with them and they’re seeing the same things I’m seeing.
They hadn’t seen it over a year. I literally walk in the bathroom and the floor is having so much water issues that they had covered up with rugs that I literally fell right through the floor.

Dave:
Oh my God, just stepped through the floor.

Henry:
Yes, stepped right through the floor.

Dave:
Wow, that’s ridiculous.

James:
I’ve also fallen through the floor. It’s a sign of a good deal. If you fall through the floor, buy it now.

Henry:
I was like, good timing, because they’re… My price just went down when I went through the floor and they had no idea there was a problem there.

James:
I might need to get an engineer up here.

Henry:
Right, absolutely.

Dave:
So you found it driving for dollars, which is great for anyone listening to this. Obviously that works. So I know a lot of people who say they can’t get deals. This is obviously a good example. How would you finance the 225?

Henry:
Yeah, so we’re going to use a small local bank to finance the deal and they are going to finance it at 70% of the appraised value. And so as long as it apprai… Whatever it appraises for, they’ll loan me up to 70%. So as long as what I need to purchase and renovate that property.
So the 225 plus the 80, if that is under 70% of that appraise value, then I won’t have to bring anything to the table. The lower that appraisal comes back, the more money I’ll have to put in.

James:
And so Henry, what is your plan with this property? I mean, because the math hits on a lot of different ways. It obviously cash flows well on the short-term, but not so well on the long-term. Unfortunately about 90 days ago, it actually probably would’ve broke even.

Henry:
Right.

James:
With rates.

Henry:
Absolutely.

James:
I was playing with all the rates yesterday and I was like, man, this is brutal. So now you’re at a point where you’re not. So are you planning on keeping this? I mean, I know what I would do with it, but…

Henry:
Yeah, I love the location. And just like I said to Jamil, I can always sell this because this new home office complex at Walmart’s building is coming and there’s a higher chance that that increases values than it does decrease the values. I don’t think this is an area that becomes any less desirable any time soon.
So I’m willing to bank on the fact that it’s going to go up. And so my initial reaction is I’m going to keep it as a short-term rental. And if I make cashflow every month, that’s awesome. And if I don’t and I break even, I’m okay with that too for now. Because once they finish building what they’re building and as that area continues to appreciate.
It’ll be a cashflow monster on the Airbnb side. And if it decides it’s not, then I can sell it at a different point and still make a phenomenal profit. I’m entering it pretty well for what the ARV is.

Dave:
Can I ask Henry, do you have enough deal flow that if you flipped it, you would be able to reallocate that money into a good cash, other cashing assets that have a better cash on cash return than this one?

Henry:
Yeah, I do. I’ve got other deals that I could flip it into. But I honestly, if I sold this, it’d be one I’d want a 1031 into something. And I like the idea of 10301s, but I think if you don’t have something lined up that’s a good deal to 1031 into, a lot of people sometimes end up buying an okay or not so great deal just because they have to 1031.
And then was it really that much better than paying the taxes? Sometimes it is, sometimes it isn’t. And so if I had something lined up perfectly that was going to be a better cash flowing machine then I might consider doing that. I don’t have anything in the pipeline for that right now. I could probably go get something. What would you do, James?

James:
So my vote… I mean, honestly, I’m a guy that sells that deal. I like the… Path of progress is a great thing. You know what’s coming in there, but if I’m losing six to seven grand a month on that property in negative cashflow, I’m going to claim the equity and reposition that profit into some other deal, or like what you said, keep it as a, I call those equity earner properties or equity in my portfolio growers, where I keep that deal for one year, I take the short-term pain.
I limp along on that property for a 12-month period. And then I 1031 it into something else. Because then you can take that huge equity spread, defer the taxes and pick up some major cashflow or trade into that same exact neighborhood with your equity position and actually get it to be cash flowing. So you’re kind of moving things around.
But right now with things the way they’re going, I just don’t buy appreciation. And so for me if I’m losing money on this deal, which you’re probably negative, what? Five, 600 bucks a month on that, two grand a month on the rental, I don’t like the liability.

Henry:
I absolutely would not long-term rent it. I would short-term rent it.

Jamil:
And that’s assuming that short-term rentals stay as robust as they are. I mean, James had a great point at the beginning of the episode that we may see some pain in the short-term rental market in the coming while. And so that could be something that could become a factor for you, Henry.
For me my vote on this would be the same as James. In fact, I wouldn’t even do the renovation on this thing. I would take your first approach. I’d whole tail that thing, I’d make the 60 grand and I’d move into the next deal.

Henry:
I knew both of you would say those things.

Dave:
I’m tempted because I also am primarily buy and hold investor, but I agree that I’m worried about the short-term rental market. I only have one, but I’m seeing bookings seriously down from last year, and I know several other short-term rental investors who are experiencing the same thing.
These are A class properties in good neighborhoods that are seeing declines in bookings. And I think we haven’t even hit a recession. So I’m personally a little concerned about that. I’ve never flipped a house in my life. So I’m being a total hypocrite here, but I would say flip it.

James:
Oh, one thing I will say is hotels just skyrocketed the last 60 days. I went to book for work out and they’re two and a half times what they were for the last 12 months. So I mean, that could protect the Airbnb a little bit, but yeah, they stepped on their pricing for sure. And these are not areas that I’m going to that people want to travel to. It’s just a work destination, but they’re expensive.

Henry:
What I didn’t get into with this market that’s kind of aiding my decision is that Bentonville is a phenomenal Airbnb market because this is such a tourist destination for outdoor sports. It’s the mountain biking capital of the world. It’s got the Walmarts, the JB Hunts, the Tyson Foods, all headquartered here bringing people to come here to work and stay short-term.
And so you have a lot of people coming here to visit and you don’t have nice hotels here. There’s maybe two to three really nice hotels in the area, and then everything else is extended stays and LaQuintas, and people don’t want those when there’s nice Airbnbs. And still there’s not a ton of Airbnbs and they go quick. So it’s a really unique market for short-term rentals.
And so yeah, absolutely, I know I am picking the riskier strategy and I don’t want to encourage everyone to take the riskiest strategy when you’re doing something like this. I have a portfolio that will help me stay insulated if things turn. So I can choose to be a little riskier when the location, location, location factor is good.
So don’t take me making this decision, new people, as you taking the riskiest option or the riskiest exit strategy on a deal. I have the benefit of being able to do that because I have a portfolio that will hold me up if something goes awry, but I’m also willing to bank on A, the location and B, what’s coming so that I can continue to cashflow this thing big time in the long-term.
And at the end of the day, if in 12 months, 24 months, I look at this thing and I want out, I know I can get out of it pretty well.

Dave:
All right, you convinced me Henry. I’m on team short-term rental now. It’s just my instinct. I mean, there’s just only so many opportunities that be close to a slam dunk economic engine, right?

Henry:
Yeah, absolutely.

Dave:
If you could pick being in Silicon Valley or any of these giant things back in the day-

Henry:
That’s what I’ve been telling people.

Dave:
… Walmart is not going anywhere. And Walmart in a recession is going to do better, I want it.

Henry:
Going to do better.

Dave:
Hotel this to me, Henry.

Henry:
What I tell… Go today, James, Jamil, anybody listening go today and look at home prices in and around Microsoft’s home office. Go look at home prices in and around Amazon’s home office. Go look at home right around, literally less than a mile away from it. Go look at what they’re selling for compared to anything else in that area.

James:
But how much is the 550 ARV? How much is that up from 18 months ago?

Henry:
Not a ton. That’s a phenomenal question.

James:
There we go. Well, then the upside could be then Henry, I’m not totally against your idea. I’m not a short-term rental guy, man. That thing is painful for me. I don’t know why.

Henry:
I’ll just give it to somebody else to manage it.

James:
You’ve got to have a certain thickness of skin.

Henry:
I don’t manage it. Absolutely not.

Dave:
All right, well, speaking of Microsoft’s headquarters, let’s move to Pacific Northwest over here with James. Tell us about your deal.

James:
Yeah, Henry got me with the Microsoft’s. That all of a sudden I started thinking about it. Hey, so we found a deal. We have deals in all different types of price ranged up at the Pacific Northwest. Sometimes we’re spending $2 million to buy it. Sometimes it’s much cheaper depending on what you’re looking to get.
So this is a deal that we sourced off market. We actually hired a call room called Call Magic. And so we pound the phones on landlords that maybe want to trade out. So this guy had owned the property for a long time and it was a good time for him to sell it. What it is, is a three bed, one bath, 1,250 square foot house in Tacoma, Washington, which is about 35 minutes out of Seattle, 40 minutes out, sub market that’s been appreciating at a pretty high rate.
And in addition to, it’s got a 450 square foot unfinished basement on the house. So right around, it’s going to be roughly around 18, 1900 square foot fully finished. The reason I like this deal all the way around is because the purchase price is actually $285,000.
The reason I like that is this is going to be a recession proof deal. So there’s multiple exit strategies on this. And so as we’re looking at this, we can look at three different options. The first option is we just renovate the upstairs, 1200 square feet. We put 70,000 in and we sell it for sure at 469.
We have comparables that are actually at 475 to 485, but because of what we’re going into with the rates adjusting up, we actually kind of tick that back down 5%. So at the 4 69, we already baked in the cushion on the resale. Or we can put in 90 to 100,000 into the renovation, finish the basement, add another bathroom and then the value’s going to be at 499 to 535.
We have three comps at 535, but again, we kind of backed down our comp to 499 to adjust for the interest rate hikes because all those comps were from February, March, and April, which the market was a little bit hotter then. So what we’re looking at on the two flips is we’re looking at we can make about 50,000 on the first way, the cosmetic, which we can probably get in and out in four to five months which is going to be about a 50% cash on cash return.
Or we can do the larger renovation, which is going to take about seven months and we’re going to profit out about 60,000 with a little bit of upside to where we’re going to get about 55 to 60% cash on cash return in the next six months. Or the third option is we can do a bur on this one. And the reason it’s going to work as a burs is hitting all the different metrics.
We’re getting that equity position. We’re buying it cheap enough to where we’re at 285 to max out the rents on this. We’re not going to have to finish out the whole basement as well. So we can do a quick renovation, put a renter in there. It will rent for $2,500 a month. We have four different rental comps. One’s at 2,800. So there’s a little bit of upside still left in the deal as well.
And then we’re going to be able to cashflow that deal about 150 bucks a month after we renovate it. We purchase it with hard money, refi it into a new conforming loan. We’re going to leave about 15,000 to the deal, cashflow about $150 a month, which isn’t that much, but we’re picking up $100,000 equity position.
So the reason I like this deal all the way around is I look at when I’m looking into transitioning markets or any kind of recession type of market that we might be going into, right? Stock markets, it now is a bear market rather than a bull. We can do this deal any which way. And we ran our numbers at our rental. The cashflows at $150 a month at 6.5% rate.
If the rate settled down, it drops down to 5.0, we can actually increase our cashflow to almost 250 to 300 a month and keep that equity position. So typically with single family houses, we own a lot of different apartment buildings, a lot of different… We go with larger rental properties typically, but I call this my portfolio builder type of purchase where you can buy this.
You can leave very, very little money in the deal, refi it, keep it for one year. And then I’m planning on trading that out in one year and then reloading that into a two to four unit at that point with the $100,000 gain. Just because the tax hit on the first two flips just isn’t going to be that big of a benefit to me.

Dave:
Can you tell us a little bit more about Tacoma? I don’t know anything about it. What’s the big economic engine around that area and what kind of neighborhood is this in?

James:
So Tacoma’s got a lot of ports. The one big thing that’s driving is the transit, has been drastically improved over the last two years and is continuing to grow. So they have a big train transit station going into all the different neighborhoods of Tacoma, especially North Tacoma. I bought a 12 unit right next to that as well.
I like to go where the path of progress is just like Henry was saying. He likes the areas where he knows there’s growth. Transit’s helping with the growth to get people to Seattle. It’s about 40 minutes out. It’s kind of like a hipster city where it has a similar vibe to Seattle, but a little bit more settled down.
I would say that the job growth is still developing down there. Most of people do commute quite a bit to Seattle. The transit is helping. That’s what surged it recently. And then the affordability factor of people getting just burned out on the expensiveness of Seattle is they move to Tacoma. They can get the similar vibe. They got a similar feel.
They kind of like this more quiet in general down there, but they’re paying 75% less. So people are going where the affordability is. There is some things in the works right now like in the… It is a port city. So there’s more import export going on in there.
Tesla, from what I hear is looking at opening up some warehouse space. So there is some anchor businesses starting to come in through that area just for affordability reasons.

Henry:
Yeah, man, well, you’re speaking my language as far as the rental numbers go. So for sure, I like that. I’d actually do something a little different with this one, is I would do everything you said on the rental side, except I wouldn’t cash out refit. I’d HeLOCK it. And I wouldn’t sell my equity.
So I’d take a HeLOCK out on that, equity on that 100,00 get about 85 of it on a HeLOCK and then leverage that to buy something else if I needed it before then. Because if I’m in a cash position where I don’t need to sell or to refi something to take the money, then I won’t, because your interest is front loaded on a new loan, right?
And so cash out refi and getting access to that money. It’s more expensive to cash out refi it than it is to get a HeLOCK on it at like four to 5%, maybe a little less, and then leverage it that way is what I would do.

James:
Yeah, a lot of the reason we do the cash out refi anyways, or it ends up being yeah, a little bit of cash out because when we’re doing that deal to buy that we need 15 to 20% of total project costs. So if we’re at 230 or 285 is the buy and we’re putting 70 in, that’s roughly 350 grand. So we got to come up with about 70 grand to do that deal.
And that’s going to finance us back all the construction costs. Reason we do that is we’re setting it up with usually a hard money or soft money lender to close quick, because these are deals that to get this price, the seller’s also saying, hey, close in five to 10 days. And so we’re kind of beating those terms. And so no matter what we’re going to have to refi anyways.
A lot of times when I am looking at if I know I’m going to leave less than my down in, I can bring in a secondary partner too and line up the financing at the same time and do a rate and term refi. Because yeah, that cash out, it does bang you for half point right now.
And so that’s a great thing to bring up, but yeah, so a lot of times we’ll bring in a secondary lender too just to cover part of it to where they’re almost… We have a first at 75% of total project cost, maybe a secondary guy at five to 10% just to get the rate and term refi done. And that’ll keep your rate lower.

Henry:
We’ve got to get you working with some of these small local banks and get you 100% financed on these things, man, on these quick flips that you’re turning around.

James:
Oh, we love the local banks. Problem is they can’t fund in five days.

Henry:
Yeah.

James:
And I’m a five day offer guy. I’m going to come in. I want the right price, but I’m going to close quick. But yeah, local banks are the most untapped resource with a lot of small investors. Yeah, I like your program. 70% of ARV, that’s a great loan.

Henry:
Yeah. Wells, 70% of appraised value. They appraise it as it sits, but they’re in-house appraisals. So they base it on comps and usually it’s pretty favorable.

Jamil:
I was taking notes listening to the way that James is approaching this deal. It’s so outside of the way that I do business. I mean, it’s brilliant James and I love your approach to this. I think what Henry had mentioned getting the HeLOCK on that, sounds to me like the most favorable way to pull the money out without having to take that hit on that fee.
But again, my brain’s just like, the lizard brain in me is just like, James, what kind of assignment fee could you get if you wholesale that right now?

James:
So on that, that would roughly… We’re probably picking up 15, 20 grand on an assignment fee on that deal. Because I mean, there’s got to be meat on the bone for that next investor. if they need to… They’re going to need to get 25, 30K out of that flip.

Henry:
Jamil, send him a hedge fund to assign it to it like 95% of-

Jamil:
Oh, yeah, I’ll get you a better… I’ll get you probably 25 or 30K on an assignment fee on that.

James:
That is true. And that’s something we always factor in. We wholesale a lot of deals ourselves too where I would wholesale this. If I can’t cover my mortgage, I probably am not the guy to flip that property down there. We spend a lot more times on larger projects. I like to be on bigger, more profitable deals because it eats up a lot of my resources.
And so I probably wouldn’t flip this. I would wholesale it to a client at that point that is down in that market, that has the contractors that work on that type of product. But I’m going to keep it because I want to build up my portfolio. Anything that I can stick inside my portfolio that’s giving me a massive equity push that’s paying for itself when I run in my numbers conservatively, that’s something I want to stick in my portfolio.
I’m going to keep it from a minimum of one year. And then again, I’m going to trade it out for something else. I don’t like taking on more debt on too many properties. I got that 2008 whiplash where I got kind of smacked from over levering.
And so for me, I’d rather deleverage and roll it into something else just to reset. Plus I like resetting my depreciation schedule. Every time you make that trade, you can reset that and then get the more tax benefits in there as well.

Dave:
So you’re keeping it, you’re holding it for at least a year.

James:
I will have this for one year and a day, probably. It’s one year and a day, get it to the 1031, get it to my… So I can save the taxes.

Dave:
All right, well this has been fun guys. We should-

Henry:
This is super fun.

Dave:
We’ll ask our audience, but I think we should be doing this a lot. This is a lot of fun. I learned a lot. I hope everyone listening to this learned a lot as well. We’ll be back in just a minute for our crowdsource section before we get out of here.
All right, welcome back. We just have a couple of more minutes. We did let that section go along, because that was just great guys. Thank you all for bringing these deals. It was super helpful. You guys learned anything?

Henry:
Yeah, man, I learned I need to have James review my tax strategy.

James:
I definitely get smacked with taxes. So yeah, I actually want to go check out, I was serious, I want to go check out Arkansas.

Henry:
Come on.

James:
I mean, I like the Walmart factor. I like the outdoor. I mean, it sounds like the Pacific Northwest, but a little warmer.

Henry:
Dope bro.

James:
You’ve got tech. You’ve got outdoor nature and you don’t have 50 degree, 45 degree rainy days.

Henry:
Dude, this place will blow you away. We’ll show you a good time. Come on out here.

James:
Done.

Dave:
James, let me know when you’re going. I’ll meet you there. Jamil, are you in?

Jamil:
I’m so in.

Henry:
Come on, let’s just record an episode here. Let’s do it.

James:
I’m in. Done.

Dave:
Yeah, let’s do one in Arkansas. That’ll be a lot of fun. We’ve been talking about doing it in Amsterdam, but I think Arkansas might be a little more beautiful.

James:
Same, same.

Dave:
All right. Well, we were going to get to some questions from the On The Market forums on biggerpockets.com, but this show is running a little long. We do have to get out of here. So I am just going to leave everyone with one call to action, which is to go on biggerpockets.com and fill out our audience participation survey.
I don’t know, participation, whatever you want to call it. Audience feedback survey. We want to hear what you think about On The Market. You can vote on what your favorite episode is, what type of information you’re getting the best out of it. If you have any ideas, topics you want us to cover, we would love to hear from you how we’re doing so that we can get better.
Topics you’re interested in, it would be super helpful for us. Just go to biggerpockets.com. When you go to the forums, one of the top forums is On The Market. We will be posting a audience feedback survey there. So please go do that. And thank you all for being here for that. I will say goodbye on behalf of Henry, James and Jamil.
We’ll see you all next week. On The Market is created by me, Dave Meyer and Kaylin Bennett, produced by Kaylin Bennett, editing by Joel Esparza and Onyx Media, copywriting by Nate Weintraub and a very special thanks to the entire BiggerPockets team. The content on the show on the market are opinions only. All listeners should independently verify data points, opinions, and investment strategies.

 



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3 Types of Real Estate Deals that Work in ANY Market Condition Read More »

Lucrative Lot Splits & Lowering Your Liability as a Landlord


Rental properties come in all shapes and sizes. You may be investing in short-term rentals, long-term rentals, glamping sites, or, maybe you’re trying to help someone else buy a rental property. Regardless of where you choose to hang your hat on the real estate investing spectrum, David Greene probably has a golden nugget of advice for your next purchase, sale, or client.

In this week’s episode of Seeing Greene, David takes questions from investors, agents, wholesalers, and more to help answer some of the most common real estate inquiries. You’ll hear topics such as: whether or not a special use permit will increase property value, when to sell and when to refi a rental property, whether or not each separate short-term rental needs its own LLC, and why David stopped looking for under-market properties and started looking at something else entirely.

Want to ask David a question? If so, submit your question here so David can answer it on the next episode of Seeing Greene. Hop on the BiggerPockets forums and ask other investors their take, or follow David on Instagram to see when he’s going live so you can hop on a live Q&A and get your question answered on the spot!

David:
This is the BiggerPockets Podcast Show 615. If you’ve got two different duplexes that are sitting on their own lot, you’ve added value to the property, you’ve actually literally created equity out of nothing, and value out of nothing. You can now refinance them, you can now sell one of them if you want. You won’t increase your cashflow, so to speak, but you will increase the value of the property, and that gives you options. Like I said, you could sell one of them and reinvest into something else, you could refinance one of them to get the money and put into something else. I would be a bigger proponent of this.
What’s going on, my people? This is David Greene, your host of the BiggerPockets Real Estate Podcast, coming to you live. Well, it’s actually recorded but it’s live when I’m saying this. With another Seeing Greene episode of the BiggerPockets Real Estate Podcast. In these Seeing Greene episodes we take your questions directly from the BiggerPockets community, submit them here for everybody to hear and then I do my best job of answering them. The goal of this podcast is to help you see what goes on behind the scenes and get a deeper dive into different questions that people have so that you can learn from the experiences of myself, as well as others, and those that are asking the questions.
In today’s show we get into some really good stuff. We talk about how a Special Use Permit can affect property value, particularly if you want to sell it. We talk about how an agent can get started in a new market and crush it if they don’t know anybody, and we talk about when to subdivide a lot, when to leave it alone and how to approach it if you’re going to subdivide it. We get Into a lot more stuff regarding different markets you can invest in, as well as different strategies, so please listen all the way to the end.
Also, if you’ve been wondering why the Quick Tip sounds different, if you make it to the comment section you will see, in this episode, me addressing that very question. And I want to know, do you guys like the deeper Batman-style Quick Tip voice or do like Brandon man voice, which is a little bit higher pitched.
Moving on to today’s Quick Tip. If you like something you heard me say, if it triggered more questions after you’ve heard me give an answer and you want to dive deeper into it, or if I totally botched an answer and you didn’t get your question answered, consider going to the BiggerPockets website and checking out the forum. At the BiggerPockets Forums there’s tons of questions being asked all day, every single day, and a lot of answers being given. You can search the entire website for different questions on different topics. And if you like something that came up here and you want more, go get it there.
Also, check out our new podcast page. If you go to iggerpockets.com/podcast, you can see a whole library of different podcast that we are offering you at BiggerPockets, and find more stuff to listen to when you’re waiting the next show of Seeing Greene, or the Real Estate Podcast to come out. So, getting more involved in the community, go check out th website, get everything that BiggerPockets has to offer and keep listening to these shows here. All right, let’s get into our first question.

Chris:
Hey, David. My name is Chris Jube, my wife and I run a glamping operation down here in Monument, Colorado. In fact, and one of Rob Abasolo’s students in his glamp camp. So, Rob, if you’re watching this, how you doing, brother? It’s good to see you. We’re doing a great job here in Monument and we’re entering into our fourth year, and getting ready for it. My question has to do with financing, because this year we’re applying for a Special Use Permit, chances are very good that it’s going to go through and it’s going to help legitimize our business and make it even better. But I’m anticipating justifying financing to duplicate this, so either later this summer, this fall or maybe next year, to keep running glamping opperations.
How would a Special Use Permit change the valuation of my property? Because it’s kind of like a little commercial property now< when you think about it, even though it’s a single family residential property and it’s not a large piece of acreage. Now I have a Special Use to put this business on it and the Special Use goes with the and not the person, so I could actually sell it or approach a bank. See where I’m going here? Approach a bank to justify financing for another property and another operation, maybe two or three, or four, something like that. So, that’s my question, how does a Special Use change the value of a property and how would a bank value that? So, your answer much coveted. Thank you for all you do, David, you’re crushing it with BiggerPockets. And same with you, Rob, it’s need to see… Actually, Rob turned me onto BiggerPockets, so thank you for everything you do, and I look forward o your answer.

David:
Hi, Chris. Well, first off, congratulations on your whole enterprise over there as well as your Special Use Permit, and any friend of Rob’s is a friend of mine. All right, let’s talk about will this Special Use Permit increase the value of your enterprise. First thing to consider is you’ve got properties that are improvement, then you’ve got land, then you’ve got a business that uses those land and those properties to generate money, and all of those are going to be evaluated differently. So, if you were to sell the land with that Special Use Permit, theoretically that would make it worth more. If you’re going to sell the properties on that land individually, somehow, with that Special Use Permit. Yes, theoretically that could make them worth more, but that’s mostly because the properties you have, these glamping, I don’t know if they’re tents or if they’re actual structures. If they’re not structures, if it’s just a tent then I wouldn’t actually call that a property and I would take that back. But if it was it wouldn’t be valued based on comparable sales because you’re not selling a typical property that has comparable sales.
Then you’ve got the business that you’re going to be running, and this permit would help that too. Here’s the best advice I can give you for how to look at this. The permit allows you to get an income stream that more legitimized, makes it harder for someone to shut you down, it’s making what you’re doing safer. So, when you go sell this to someone else, the value f that permit is they’re getting safety and a protection of the income stream. The permit itself does not necessarily make everything else worth more, because if you’re going to a bank and you’re saying, “Hey, my property’s worth this much.” All they’re going to look at is how much income is it generating. The bank is concerned with the income that it’s generating because they want to know that you can cover the debt service on any loan that they would give you. So, I hope you see what I’m getting at here.
Having the permit does not automatically make your business worth more money necessarily, but it does give you the ability to increase your revenue and the increased revenue will make your business worth more, both to a bank or to a business, if you’re going to go sell it. So, this is a step in the direction you’re trying to go, but until you get all the way there, which is actually creating more revenue, you’re probably not going to see an actual increase in the valuation of your business, but that doesn’t mean that this isn’t important. There’s many steps along the journey, this is a big one for you, keep going. And when they’re all in place you should have a business that generates more revenue and, therefore, is worth more money.
All right, our next question comes from Peter in Sacramento, my hood. “I’m single, in my 30s and was fortunate enough to have bought a home before the pandemic at three-and-a-half percent down. After only a few months it was obvious the house was more of a fixer upper than I expected, and even without those costs I was house poor with just the mortgage and utility so moved out and turned it into a rental. As of today I have $120,000 in equity. I would like to buy a duplex or a quadplex in the next two to three years. The current property is in a great up and coming neighborhood that would make a nice retirement home for me in 30 years’ time. At the same time, if I were to sell it I could buy a duplex as 100% rental and move in on one ide. Do I hold onto the house ad take the money out of it that way, or do I sell it for the cash and walk away?”
All right, so this is a question of do I keep and refinance or do I sell, or do I do nothing and just save up money and buy more homes? Well, here’s the first thing, Peter, I don’t think looking at this and saying, “Hey, this house is in a great up and coming neighborhood so should I hold it and move into it in 30 years?” There is no way you can know in 30 years if this is the house you’re going to want to live in. There’s a bit of a scarcity mentality gong on there, there’s a lot of houses, you have 30 years to make money, save money, buy real estate moving around, and who knows if you’re even going to want to be in California in 30 years. So, let’s just throw that out completely, it does not matter if this house is where you’re going to live in 30 years.
What matters is, will you have enough money to buy the house you want in 30 years and how can this house help you get to that point? So, that’s where I’m going to give you advice. It’s in an up and coming neighborhood so the question I’d be asking is, “Is it going to continue to grow in value faster than something else that I buy?” If you sell a house in an up and coming neighborhood to buy a home in an established neighborhood that’s not growing in value, you’re losing out on future equity over the years. However, you’re probably going to gain in cashflow if you get a quadplex or a duplex, so you have to weigh out, “Am I going to get more in equity or am I going to get more in cashflow over the long-term?”
If you have $120,000 in equity, here’s what I’d like to see you do. Sell that home, buy another home with another three-and-a-half percent down payment to replace that home that you’re going to house hack. Use the rest of the money that wasn’t in the three-and-a-half percent down payment and buy an investment property. Now what you’ve done is trade in this one house that was a fixer upper for two homes, one an investment property, one a house hack. Keep your own living expenses low by hacking out the house hack and get some cashflow from the investment property. Let those home appreciate, once they’ve gone up in value evaluate if you should do the dame thing or if you should hold on to them.
Focus on growing your equity and growing the amount of money you have n the bank, to on buying a house right now that you might want to live in in 30 years. Having money gives you flexability and then you can make choices in life that make you happier. But hands-off to you for doing a great job on your first property, let me know if there’s anything I can do to help with this.
Peter also says, “In response to a comment you made on the April 10th YouTube clip, I appreciate your direct style so please don’t stop. For those learning about something as expensive and complex as real estate, the truth needs to be told. Thank you.” Well, thank you for that, Peter.

Siri:
Hi, David. My name is Siri, I’m from San Diego. And my question pertains to how to hold ownership of property, short-term rental properties is what I’m into. My business partner and I have just purchased our first one, we’re in the middle of rehabbing it and our intention is, once it’s done and renting we’re going to BRRRR it and buy more. We’ve heard several things, we currently own ours as an LLC and we’ve heard that you should own each property separately in a separate LLC, for liability reasons. So, I was wondering if you know if that’s correct. And also we’ve heard that if each property is owned in a separate corporate structure, or not corporate if it’s an LLC but that you can sell the business to just sell the property when you sell it. True, not true?
Once you get many, many properties, because we have a 10 year plan that has some pretty expansive growth, what is the best structure for holding a short-term rental piece of property, or multiple properties? We were thinking maybe [inaudible 00:11:13] would save us money in bookkeeping if we’re not having every single one in a separate entity, but just wondering because I haven’t been able to find what best practices are in the industry and I though, probably, you would know. So, thanks for your help.

David:
All right, thank you for that, Siri. My question to you, I’ve got to know. You’re surrounded by people that have to be saying, “Hey, Siri,” to have get your attention. How often are iPhones just pinging all over the place everywhere you go that you just hear Siri’s voice responding to everybody saying, “Hey, Siri.” I think that would be hilarious that everywhere you go phones are just going off, you’re the first Siri that I’ve ever met in real life.
Now, as far as your question to me, it’s a good one. So, here’s what I think I hear you saying, “I’m going to be buying a lot of properties, do I need to have an individual legal entity,” think that’s what you meant when you said corporation, I understand, “… for each property or can I put them all into the same one?” Then you also asked if you have a business can you sell the business but keep the property. Let me answer that one first because I think I can do it quickly.
From what I’m understanding of your question, you own a business that would be a legal entity, which is incredibly easy to do. So, first off, everybody out there, when you hear someone say, “I’m a business owner.” That could mean nothing. It’s kind of like saying, “I have a podcast.” It’s pretty easy to make a podcast, you can have three followers and say you have a podcast these days, same as self-authoring a book. Being a business owner doesn’t mean anything, a business entity is just a way that you take title to a business and you run your cashflows through. Well, if you have no cashflow you have no business.
If you’re buying a business and putting a property inside of it, if that property is the only thing generating cashflows you would have to sell the property with the business or else nobody would be buying it. Let’s say that you owned a assisted living facility and you had a property that you ran this through, in that case you could technically keep title to the property but sell the actually labor of the business, sell the business and the income streams that people pay to rent out your place, and you could run your opperations in the house and have whoever bought the business pay rent to your house.
So, there’s some situations like that where the real estate is independent of the business and that might be what you’re thinking about when it comes to this Airbnb situation. So, I guess, technically you could sell the business which would be the right to list the house on Airbnb and manage it, and have someone buy it with an arbitrage model where they just pay you rent to use the house, but I wouldn’t think that would happen very often because most people are going to want to use the 30 year fixed rate loan to buy the house and inherit the business with it. So< I don’t know, for your situation I don’t think it’s good to think about business and how separately they’re going to be too tied together.
As far as how you should keep title to these properties, the reason you would do this is if you had one accident happen in one of your properties and you’re sued. The person suing you would theoretically only be able to get access to the equity of whatever is in that LLC. So, if you have one property in that LLC they’d only get access to the equity that is in that LLC, if they were to win a judgment. The problem is, if you put a new LLC together, or a new legal entity together, every single time you buy a new property you end up with a lot of them and it’s very difficult to manage. So, most people try to find some happy medium. They keep several properties in one LLC.
Now, I want to highlight, my understanding of this from the people that we’ve interviewed on the podcast that do legal protection, is it doesn’t matter how many properties you have there it matters how many equity you have there because that’s what someone is going after. So, having one million dollar property completely paid off has $1 Million of equity, whereas having five million dollar properties that have a loan of 900,000 on them, there’s only $500,000 of equity. So, even though there’s five properties there’s less for somebody to get after.
That’s what I’d be looking at. There’s no problem to keep all your properties in the same legal structure, and then as the equity grows consider moving an individual property into its own legal structure at that time and leaving the other ones in there. Just remember, it’s not how many properties are there it’s how much equity is inside of that individual entity. Thank you very much for asking this question, and please go on YouTube and let me know how often you hear, “Hey, Siri,” and hear phones going off.
All right, thank you everyone for submitting the questions that we have so far. If you would like to submit a question, please go to biggerpockets.com/David, where you can submit your video or your written question there and hopefully we get to answer it on the show. In this segment of the show we go over the comments that other people left on YouTube after watching these videos. Please consider going to YouTube and leaving me a comment yourself, I’d like to know what you think about the show, what you’d like to see different and what you don’t like a all.
All right, our first comment from Rena [inaudible 00:16:02], “David, you and your analogy is like a man in the Biblical times speaking in pericles, lol.” That’s not me saying lol, she said lol. “One of my predictions has been that people are going to start saying lol in real life because we do it in text so often. I love it, I love the content and all BP continue to share.” Well, thank you Rena, that’s very sweet of you to say. I appreciate that.
From Kevin Katao, “Seeing Greene is the best BP show right now. Thank you David.” Well, that’s pretty cool, thank you for that. Next show question, “Many in this community believe that landlords provide an important service by providing housing to others. How do you refute someone who is anti-landlord that states landlords are taking away homes that owner occupants could buy, particularly in single family residents? If landlords buys homes they aren’t taking away opportunity and raising market prices for non-investors looking to live in the dream of home ownership.”
Yeah, there is a pretty big debate going on in that space, so here’s basically how I see it playing out. When home prices go up people say, “Why are so many people buying homes?” And often will all these greedy investors get brought up. And the idea is, because investors pay more than somebody would for a normal home, they’re driving the price high and making homes unaffordable for someone that wants to just live in it. So, the argument would be, if landlords were not allowed to rent out homes, they would not buy them, then there would be less competition and home prices would be lower, and somebody could buy a house to live in themselves.
And to be fair, that’s probably true. If you took investors out of the housing market then it would make homes more affordable in most cases, and easier for someone to buy. But here’s the thing, not everybody actually buys homes. In fact, a lot of the time the reason that landlords are renting them out is they’re renting to people that don’t want to buy or can’t buy. So, I don’t know that there’s as many home owners out there that are really trying to buy and they just can’t, as what people think.
And here’s the flip side, if we did that you have all these tenants that now can’t live in a home, where are they going to go? Well, they’re going to have to go into an apartment, which means we’re going to build more apartments, which means we’re probably going to have more public housing to support all these people that need a place to live. Public housing is usually not the best housing, think about your experience with anything public like the DMV. It’s usually not great.
So, if we did what these people are saying we would just have a different problem. We’d have a bunch of people that are living in apartments that are complaining that it’s not fair to them, because don’t they deserve to have a yard, don’t they deserve to be able to rent a house in an area where they want to put their kids to school, why are they being discriminated against just because they don’t want to own real estate or they don’t want to buy a house. Maybe they have bad credit and so they’re going to claim that it’s not fair that they’re unable to buy a house, and they’re regulated into cheap public housing or project housing that the government has made to house these people.
Even if they go in the private sector they’re still stuck in a small apartment complex, they don’t get a bigger home, it’s harder to have pets, it’s harder to get outside, you don’t have a yard, you can’t have a garden. There’s a lot of things that would suck, then we would just have people complaining about that. So, when it comes to refuting someone like that, the best advice I can give is if you’re going to engage with them, paint a picture for what it would look like if they got their way.
It’s very easy to complain about something and only look at the first step, but if you allow wisdom to run its course and actually think about how things would look if that person won, the end result is often worse than what we have right now. Hope that that helps.
All right, these next couple of comments come from my changing up of the BiggerPockets Quick Tip because I don’t love the super high pitched Brandon Turner Quick Tip that he made me do for years. Coming from Primetime21, “I love the analogies, David, and the Batman Quick Tip.” So, that’s something that I brought to the podcast so I was a little different than Brandon. I use analogies and I like to say, “Quick Tip.” Jimmy, “Fr the Quick Tip new sound, put in a clip of Brandon’s voice. We all love Brandon and it keeps it OG.” Not a bad idea, so there could be times where I’m saying, “Here’s today’s Quick Tip,” or we could have Brandon singing his very high pitched melodic, angelic version of the Quick Tip.
Hammer Radiology, that’s kind of a cool name, says, “Definitely the high pitched Quick Tip, it makes me chuckle too,” which is I think why Brandon did it because he likes to make people laugh. Batman vs Brandon, I’m glad we’re getting into this debate. Do you guys want Batman or do you want Brandon man? Your call.
All right, are these questions and comments resonating with you? Do you enjoy hearing what other people on BiggerPockets are saying? Look, you are a part of a community if you’re listening to this podcast, get more involved in that community. Get in the YouTube and leave comments, say something funny, say something positive, say what you’d like to see more on the show. Ask the question that’s never getting asked on the show, that you wish was, so that we could get into it. As long as you’re keeping it classy, we want to hear more from you.
So, please, if you’re listening to this on iTunes, on Stitcher, on Spotify, on SoundCloud, wherever you listen to the podcast, just check us out on YouTube and go there, leave a comment and let us know what you think of the show.

Oladimeji:
Hello, my name is [inaudible 00:21:11]. I am from Brooklyn, New York, and my question is about ethical wholesaling. Now, in your BRRRR book, David, you seem to place an emphasis on the buy and you tell us that the way to build equity is in the buy itself. Now, correct me if I’m wrong, that kind of comes across as you telling us that we should figure out how to pay less than market value for a property. So that way once the purchase is completed, we have equity built in that property already, before even doing a rehab, et cetera.
Now, in your Ethical Wholesaling episode with Jamil you seemed to place more of an emphasis on paying market value for a property and figuring out how to add value to that property, as opposed to focusing on how to pay less than market value for the property. Hope this isn’t confusing, but those two messages seem to be at odds to me, they seem like they’re conflicting. Please clarify, my apologies for the long-winded voice note. If I haven’t mentioned this already, I am [inaudible 00:22:16] from Brooklyn and looking forward to hearing from you. Thank you.

David:
Hey, Oladimeji, my man, thank you very much for asking this question. It doesn’t bother me at all. I actually appreciate that you’re asking this because it means it’s on the minds of other BiggerPockets community members, and gives me a chance to address it, and there is a really good answer. So, when I wrote the BRRRR book we were in a different market than were in today. At the time I wrote it I was just ripping through BRRRRs because nobody wanted fixer upper homes. Real estate investing was not as hot as it is right now, and so when someone looked at a fixer upper home what they saw was a problem they didn’t want to deal with. And the way that I was solving the problem that no one wanted to deal with was through a rehab.
So, I would give the advice on how I was finding deals, at the time I was looking for properties that had been sitting on the market for a long time, stuff that some other flipper had started to undergo and then ran our of money and couldn’t finish. I was looking for things that wouldn’t qualify for conventional financing because they were in such bad shape, so I could go in there and buy it cash at the discounted rate that I described to you, put money into fixing it up and then when the house was in better shape and would qualify for financing, I would go refinance it.
The strategy was working and I was buying two to three houses a month, at a certain point. It was amazing. Well, I wrote that book and then I also wrote Long Distance Investing, and then BiggerPockets published them, and then everybody in the world was able to see what I and other investors were doing. And what do you think happened? Everybody rushed in and did the same thing. At the same time that was happening the Fed was putting ridiculous amounts of money that was just inflating the economy by a lot, and they were holding interest rates super low so that people that didn’t want to invest in real estate were forced to because they couldn’t keep their money in the bank, and the values of real estate was going up ridiculously fast because interest rates were low. It was a perfect storm that caused everyone to flood into the market.
Well, what happened is those fixer upper properties were now problems other people were also looking to solve, it wasn’t just me and investors like me. And that’s why my advice changed, because the market evolves and so does my advice within it. This is not uncommon for anything else in life. You look at how people played football in the 1930s, it’s a lot different than how they play it right now. The advice that somebody would be giving to somebody in the NBA in the Bob Cousy days is a whole lot different than what they would be giving to someone in the Shaquille O’Neal days, and now in the Steph Curry days.
We have to evolve our strategy, now I totally understand why this would be confusing for you because you’re getting into this space and you’re seeing all of this information that’s being presented at one time. Your not understanding the timeline of how it was evolved. So, I believe when you were referring to the latest advice I gave I was saying, “It’s okay to buy a property at market value if the area is continuing to go up in value.” I’m giving that advice because if it’s market value r nothing, market value is better. Previously, in a different market, if it was market value or less, less was better.
Now, I’m not turning down opportunities to buy deals below market value, I find them occasionally. I just got one in Moraga, California that I got way below market value. Before that I got one in Pleasant Hill, California where it was the same thing. But then there’s other properties that I bought, like with Rob, were only slightly below market value, and other properties that I buy at market value. You don’t always know how it’s going to come in, but what I’m doing, and I can only share how I’m investing, is I switch from saying, “Here’s market value, I want to buy a house below it, to the area being below market value.” I’m looking for undervalued locations. Okay, so where I used to say, “All right, Jacksonville, Florida, the property is worth 150, I’m trying to buy it at 120.”
I’m now saying, “All right, I can’t put a number to it but where are people moving to? Which areas are appreciating in both rents and values and demand, faster than others?” And I want to go buy in the area that I think is undervalued, meaning the properties in that area are likely to have rents that go up faster than properties that are around those. Now, this is a harder way to do business, I totally recognize it because you can’t put this information into an Excel Spreadsheet and let the numbers do the work for you. But that’s where the advice that I’m giving comes from.
If you’re able to buy a property that cashflows 2% in Miami, Florida, it’s probably going to crush it five years later because Miami is going to appreciate a whole lot more that Gary, Indiana. It’s just a different way of approaching it and, to be honest, I don’t love it, I don’t like that this is the way that I have to play the game right now. I wish that I could go back to just fining properties that were under market value and only buying those. Here’s the problem, if I only buy the very best deals in my situation I’m going to lose a lot of money from buying solid deals, just getting base hits and getting on base, and letting the market carry it.
Now, not everybody is in that situation, if you don’t have a lot of reserves, if you don’t have a ton of money, if you got to get it right, you’re going to have to work harder to get that deal under market value like what you’re saying. But if you’ve done well, if you’re in a strong financial position, if you’ve saved money, if things are going well for you, don’t hit home runs every time. You can’t always get a home run, sometimes you just got to get on base and then let somebody else bring you in. For me, that’s the market, I get on base and I’m letting the market bring me in. Thank you very much for asking that question, I appreciate you giving me the opportunity to clarify it. I’m really hoping that put off a lot of light bulbs over the heads in the BiggerPockets community members, as a whole.
Let me know in the comments below, what are market that you guys like, what are your concerns with trying to buy in a market versus buying a property, and are there strategies that you’re seeing that are working that I’m missing on the show, that you’d like to share?
All right next question comes from Britt in Placerville, California, which is also not too far away from me in Northern California. “Hi, David. I have two duplexes on a large lot that can be split into two lots, both units are lined up along the street.” That is helpful information, by the way, because if they’re both lined up on the street horizontally, you can have two addresses. If they’re lined up vertically you’d have a house behind the house on the street, very difficult to build it out. “I believe there’s a lot of potential benefit to splitting up the lot and eventually selling them down the road, if I choose. But is there any benefits of splitting it up a lot sooner rather than later, if so are there any downsides to insurance or taxes?”
Okay, Britt, this is a great question and you’re in my hood. So, side note, anybody who’s in California, please reach out to me, DM me, message me on BiggerPockets, let me know. I want to get you in my database because I do run meetups out here I’d love to invite you to. I’ve got a real estate team in Southern California as well as a team in Northern California, so we are pretty well situated.
Now, your question about splitting up your lot, the first thing is you’re going to have to ask the city if they’re even going to allow you to do this, they may say no. If they say no you’re going to keep checking back every six to 12 months to see if they’ve changed their mind and they’re going to let you do it. As far as having higher insurance and taxes, yes that is true, If you do this you may end up having slightly higher taxes and insurance because you’ve now take two duplexes on lot and turned it into one duplex on two lots, and you just have two of them. So, that’s okay, but my guess would be the overall value is going to be much better than the increase expenses, and here’s why. If you’ve got two different duplexes that are sitting on their own lot, you’ve added value to the property, you’ve actually literally created equity out of nothing and value out of nothing.
You can now refinance them, you can now sell one of them if you want. You won’t increase your cashflow, so to speak, but you will increase the value of the property, and that gives you options. Like I said, you could sell one of them and reinvest into something else. You could refinance one of them to get the money and put it into something else, I would be a bigger proponent of this. Now on the downside, let’s say you don’t do it and say, “Hey, I’m just going to do it later.” You don’t know what changes are going to happen in zoning, you don’t know who’s going to get onto the city council that doesn’t like landlords. If you’re in a favorable position now it could get worse if you wait. So, I don’t think that the increased expenses are going to be worse than the increased value, I think you’re better off to do this sooner rather than later. And if they tell you o, I would keep checking until it’s a yes.
All right, now let’s consider a hypothetical situation here where you have a property on a big lot, and that lot could be divided into two pieces. So, if that was the case you’d have one lot that has the property on it and another lot that you’ve now created that is unimproved or doesn’t have a property on it. I’m going to answer that same question as if someone asked it in that format.
As far as the downsides to insurance or taxes, I don’t believe you’re going to have any insurance on a lot without an improvement, you typically only get insurance if you have an improvement on a lot. I’ve never owned vacant land so, please, if this is wrong don’t everybody jump down my throat, I’m just sharing my understanding of it. There’s no fire insurance if you have a building that can catch on fire.
Taxes could go up, so what you need to ask the city is if you split it into two lots, how are they each going to be valued because you’re probably going to end up paying property taxes that are a little bit higher if you do it earlier, because you may have a lot that’s valued at 300,000 and once you split them into two they’re each valued at $200,000 which is an extra 100,000 you could be taxed on. However, land is typically not valued nearly as much when nothing’s built on it so the taxes are a lot lower than most people would actually realize. I would be looking at doing it sooner rather than later.
You never know when opportunity’s going to come around, this is something I’ve learned a ton. A lot of times we wait until an opportunity comes and we scramble to try to get ready and it passes us up. If you’re ready before opportunity comes, if somebody wants to buy that lot or you meet a builder and you want to build on it, whatever it is that happens you’re ready to go and you don’t miss the opportunity. So, if it was me I would jump on it sooner rather than later.

Ryan:
Hey, David. Ryan here from Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. I am a real estate agent and investor, I started buying properties last year and I have eight doors in Cleveland, and then I also have a short-term rental in the Smokey Mountains. My question to you, though, is more geared towards the real estate agent side of things. I got my license back in 2019 but I was only part time for the past three years, I went full time this past March because help from the rentals, and everything, I was able to get out of my nine to five.
My question to you as far as the real estate side of things of being an agent is, if you had to move into a new market, for whatever reason, a market where you didn’t know anybody or you didn’t know very many people, what would you focus on to generate leads and basically dominate that market? I just started doing videos because heard obviously that that’s a big part of it, but I wanted to get your insight on it and I have your first book, I have the second one pre-ordered and everything so I’m waiting for that to come out. But just would like to get a gauge from you, and answer from you on what you would do in a new market like that, if you were presented one, and how you would go about it to generate leads and everything, and get noticed in that market.
So, that’s it, that’s my question, and appreciate everything you guys are doing at BiggerPockets. You truly are changing lives, and you’ve changed my family’s trajectory for sure in the past year just alone, with eight doors and the rentals that we’ve gotten. So, I appreciate it and looking forward to hearing your answer. Thank you.

David:
All right, thank you for that, Ryan. And thank you for mentioning the books that I wrote, they’re not as well known in the agent series. So, everyone knows I wrote the BRRR book, people know that I wrote Long Distance Real Estate Investing, but not everybody knows that I wrote books for agents. Sold is the first one and the second one, Skill, is coming out in a couple of weeks, if you go to biggerpockets.com/skill you could pre-order that book.
Personally I think Skill is twice as good as Sold and Sold is doing really well. The premise of Skill is, this is how you become a top producing agent, this is how you be someone who does a lot of business and makes a lot of money that different than just a person who can have a career where they make some money in real estate, which is where people start off and that’s what Sold was written for.
All right, here’s what every realtor needs to know if they really want to do well. Instead of starting where you are and saying, “What’s my first step? All right, I should make videos, I’m told that. What’s my next step, I should cold call. Okay I’m going to do that. What’s my next step, I should go knock on doors. Okay, I’m going to do that.” What happens is you end up taking all of these steps and then seven of them don’t work, you finally get the eighth one that does and then you start over and you take another eight steps and only one of those is going to work. It’s very time intensive and it’s not very conducive to being successful.
What you want to do is go actually to the end and say, “How do I want to look when I’ve done a good job? So, people come to me to have me sell their house or help them buy a house because they trust me that I know a lot about real estate. If you’re listening to this and you have a house to sell, I want you to come out to me and let me know because I’m into real estate, that’s what I’m doing.” And that’s really what we’re all looking for, you guys are listening to BiggerPockets because you trust that the people that are giving you advice are good at what they do. We all want to work with someone that we believe already knows how to do the thing better than us, I hired a mechanic for my car because I believe they know way more about cars than I do and they’ve done it a lot.
When I’m looking for an agent I’m looking for someone that owns the type of real estate that I want to buy. Their advice is much more valuable to me. I’m not looking for someone that answers their phone every single time I call, I’m not looking for someone that is super friendly and makes me feel happy, I’m looking for someone with experience. And if they’re quirky, they’re a little bit weird, I have to work around their schedule, that’s okay because I value experience that much more.
You’ve mentioned something that gives you a huge advantage, you have eight rental properties. You’ve done this, you understand what it’s like to own real estate not just to be a sales person. I always give this example of someone who goes into a car lot. I don’t want a salesman who’s really nice being the person to sell me a car, I want to talk to a mechanic who understands that car or a person that owns that car themselves, who can tell me what it’s like to drive a Ferrari versus a Lamborghini. And I use those luxury car example because to most people buying a home, the purchase is so big and scary it’s the same as I would feel if I had to go buy a Ferrari or a Lamborghini.
I don’t understand, I don’t know what all my expenses are going to be, what if I choose the wrong one, which one’s going to go up in value more, which one’s going to lose value? I have all these questions, it’s a scary thing. That’s what owning a home is like for people that haven’t bought it, and you’re somebody who owns eight exotic cars. You can tell them which cars they should buy, what cars work best for which purpose, and what to expect when they buy that car. This is a huge advantage.
So, if you were to go into a new market where you don’t know anybody, the first thing you should do is set up educational meetings. You should be doing meetups, you should be making videos that specifically talk about home ownership and what people should expect. You should drop what I call hooks, and in my book series I talk about these hooks, they’re little lines that you can mention at a open house or in a meeting, that tells people something they would not have know if you didn’t say it and makes them wonder what else do you know.
So, for instance, many people don’t know that property taxes are different in different parts of the city. There are special assessments that are put in place, there’s things that are called [inaudible 00:37:34] in certain areas, which are extra taxes to pay for schools or fire departments, or land improvements, or whatever it is the city’s doing and they’re making the people who buy a house in that area subsidize those decisions. If you can tell clients that certain areas have cheaper property taxes than others it makes them wonder, “Well, what else do you know? I want that to be my agent.”
And that’s what you should be doing, you should be talking about real estate, the benefits of home ownership, the risk that you can help them navigate and you should be doing this to as many people as you possibly can, and then just work backwards from there until you get to where you are right now. Thank you very much for asking this question, Ryan, and remember you have a huge advantage over other agents, you need to take advantage of that.
“Hello, all, I have a question about NOI. I have seen it the way you get net operating income is your gross income minus expenses. It is taught on BiggerPockets to put away for vacancy, CapX, et cetera. Would all those fall as an expense reducing my NOI when it came to looking at my cap rate to round out the value of a property?” Okay, I see your question here, Daniel, and I think I can also see why you’re confused. This is also coming from Daniel in Northern Arizona.
NOI is a metric that we use most often with multi-family properties, okay. When we talk about BiggerPockets, when I say we I’m referring to our calculators and how we’re telling people to analyze a property, we’re letting them know you’re going to have expenses like vacancy, capital expenditures, maintenance, stuff like that. You’re kind of conflating those two worlds, so different people are going to come up with their income minus their expenses differently. NOI as a bank is going to use it, it’s going to be different than how we’re telling the individual investor who’s buying a house, “This is what you should look for.” So, don’t make the mistake of mixing up multi-family with residential property.
Now, it wasn’t in the notes I read but my understanding is you’re looking to buy a six unit property which is technically a multi-family property, and it’s going to be evaluated like that. Here’s the best way to move forward, talk to the lender who’s going to be funding the deal and ask them the question you’re asking right here, “Hey, when we’re coming up with the NOI that we’re going to use to determine the value of the property, are you going to look at these things and if not what things are going to be included?”
There you have it, another episode of Seeing Greene BiggerPockets. Appreciate you guys hanging out with me, and I really appreciate those who submitted questions, we can’t have the show without questions. So, if you like these shows please go to biggerpockets.com/David and ask your question. It doesn’t matter what it is, it could be about getting a deal, it could be about how to better manage a deal you already have, it could be a philosophical question about real estate or it could be a tactical question about real estate. I want to know all of them because what’s important is that you all figure out a way to buy the right kinds of properties to give you the life that you really want. If you got some time please consider checking out another one of our videos and make sure you follow me on social media, I am DaviGreene24.

 

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A look inside the Boca Raton mansions commanding Miami Beach prices


The $28.5 million mansion that recently hit the market in Boca Raton, FL located at 2633 Spanish River Rd.

Danny Petroni

Ultra-high-end real estate in Boca Raton, Florida, is on a stratospheric rise, breaking record sale prices every year for five consecutive years. And the price per square foot of the town’s top-end homes is now on par with Miami Beach pricing.  

“People tend to think of Miami when the subject turns to high-end South Florida real estate,” said Douglas Elliman real estate agent Senada Adzem, “But Boca Raton is, without question, one of the region’s premier luxury residential markets.”

The all-time top sale in the town, located about 45 miles north of Miami and 28 miles south of Palm Beach, traded last year for $24.5 million, delivering a price per square foot of more than $2,800, according to public records. That’s more than four times the average $670 price per square foot for a luxury home, representing the top 10% of sales, in Boca.

The record sale also tops the average price per square foot achieved in Miami Beach, at $2,766, according to the most recent Elliman Report for Q1.

“Trophy properties have gained momentum in the South Florida market over the past three years — for tax benefits, for safety reasons, and because of the pandemic,” Adzem told CNBC.

The great room at 2633 Spanish River Rd in Boca Raton, FL.

Danny Petroni

This year’s already seen three more mega-homes hit the Boca market, each one priced to break last year’s record and push the town’s high-end even higher.

Here’s a closer look at the three highest-priced homes for sale in Boca Raton:

169 West Key Palm Road

The waterfront home at 169 West Key Palm Road was listed this week for $26.9 million. It’s located behind the private gates of Boca’s swanky Royal Palm Yacht & Country Club community, and the asking price is just shy of $3,000 a square foot.

Living room with marina views.

Danny Petroni

The almost-9,000-square-foot residence is being sold fully furnished. Dustin Nero at Douglas Elliman, who co-lists the home with Adzem, says high-end buyers moving from places like California and New York are wiling to pay a premium for a turnkey mansion.

Sunset view from infinity pool and dock.

Danny Petroni

“It overlooks the Royal Palm marina. You don’t look at a house — it’s a very premium view,” said Nero, who believes the home’s unique view will help it break the town’s sale price record.

Owner’s suite overlooking waterway and marina.

Danny Petroni

The six-bedroom home sits on 104 feet of waterfront with deep water dockage on the Fishtail Palm Waterway and includes five full baths and two half-baths.

One of two walk-in closets in the home’s primary suite.

Danny Pettroni

Nero, who represents clients in both Miami and Boca, believes a trophy home in Boca is still a relative bargain compared to the very top-end in Miami.

“This home in Miami would list at $4,000 or $4,500 a square foot,” he said.

The pool and hot tub situated above the home’s dock and overlook the community’s marina.

Danny Pettroni

Another selling point for Boca: Buyers can land their private jets here. The private airport in Boca recently added its own customs office, Nero said, the ultimate convenience for local residents traveling internationally by private jet.

2633 Spanish River Road

The home’s entryway is flanked by a water feature that spans the entire walkway on one side and lush vegetation on the other.

Danny Petroni

“It’s like a work of residential art that manages to walk the line between artful splendor and resort-style comfort,” said Adzem, who is a co-listing agent on the property with Nero.

The view from the cantilevered primary suite.

Danny Pettroni

The contemporary home, which is also being sold fully furnished, unfolds over two floors with six bedrooms, eight baths and one half-bath. The owner’s bedroom is cantilevered over the deck, so when you’re laying in bed the room appears to float over the water.

Owner’s suite terrace overlooking pool and waterway.

Danny Pettroni

The home’s great room has a double-height wall-of-windows that deliver panoramic views and drench the room in sunlight.

The ground-level glass panels slide away blurring the lines between indoor and outdoor space.

The room also includes a 12-foot double-sided fireplace clad in grey and black porcelain.

A retractable glass wall opens the great room to the outdoor lounge and pool.

Danny Petroni

Adzem told CNBC the home also includes an ultra-high-end, hospital-grade air filtration system that’s tied into the central air system.

“It’s designed specifically for a Covid-free home environment, with separate zones of HVAC for every room,” she said.

 298 West Key Palm Road

The highest priced home for sale in town is a $35 million mansion spanning almost 11,500 square feet, built by developer SRD Building Corp.

“We’ve been setting new highs consistently,” said SRD’s president, Scott Dingle.

The newly constructed modern residence, also located on West Key Palm Road at the Royal Palm Yacht & Country Club community, is situated on the Butterfly Palm Waterway. It includes a private dock and more than 166 feet of waterfront.  

The waterfront home’s private dock.

Living Proof

The view into the garage from the home office.

Living Proof

The home’s five-car garage doubles as a supercar showcase that’s visible through a floor-to-ceiling glass wall from a desk in the home office.

Roberts, who sold $545 million worth of homes in the community just last year, said the spec builder’s record-breaking strategy is simple.

“They buy premium [lots], and they put premium on it,” he said.

The pool deck and lanai areas.

Living Proof

The home’s $3,050-per-square-foot asking price is a high bar for Boca Raton, which has yet to see a sale breach $3,000 a square foot. But Dingle, who said he’s built 160 homes in the community over the past 28 years, is confident it can happen.

The spec builder told CNBC he has another home in the community under contract for $26.5 million, scheduled to close later this year at a record-breaking $3,200 per square foot.

“This year you are going to see some new records set,” he said.

The modern interiors at 298 W Key Palm include a mix of stone & wood finishes with a dramatic floating staircase.

Living Proof

Dingle says 95% of the homes he’s built are in this one community and, after almost three decades, he continues to bet on Boca breaking records.

“With a country club, marina, championship golf course, direct access to the beach, it’s a special spot,” Roberts said. “We have all our cards and chips in.”



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The Fastest Way to Pay Off $300k in Student Debt


It’s a strange time for student debt. On one hand, many college graduates are electing not to pay their student loans while they sit in forbearance. On the other, some debtors are choosing to take advantage of the zero-percent interest period as a way for them to pay down their loans faster. While neither of those choices is inherently wrong, they may also not be right. Today’s guest, Colton, finds himself in this position with a good $300,000 worth of student debt.

This number encompasses both Colton and his wife’s student loan payments. A good portion of their loans can be forgiven over twenty years, so which loan balance should he handle first? Thankfully, with Colton’s sizable take-home pay, he has options that many wouldn’t think of. Scott and Mindy debate on whether or not paying off debt early, waiting for forgiveness, or investing instead would be the best course of action for Colton.

Regardless of whether you have student debt, a car loan, a medical loan, or any other type of timely payment due soon, this is a calculation worth performing. Scott and Mindy also take a look at Colton’s diversified portfolio of assets, arguing that diversification could be leading him down a long path to FI, instead of helping him gain financial footing.

Mindy:
Welcome to the BiggerPockets Money Podcast, show number 304, finance Friday edition, where we interview Colton, and talk about making a prioritized set of investment and debt pay down decisions.

Colton:
Here’s a problem noticing overall about your situation, I got student loans here. Some that I might pay off, some that might be forgiven. I’ve got this cash position. I’ve got a little bit 401(k). I’ve got this live in flip project I’m doing. I’m spending my free time flipping furniture that I’m driving around picking up and sending it around, right? I think what I would advise is you make a prioritized list of these opportunities, and then go more all in on your top one or two of them.

Mindy:
Hello. Hello. Hello. My name is Mindy Jensen and joining me today is my co-host, Scott, not just another pretty face, Trent.

Scott:
Thank you as always for the great looking introduction, Mindy.

Mindy:
Scott and I are here to make financial independence less scary, less just for somebody else, to introduce you to every money story because we truly believe financial freedom is attainable for everyone, no matter when or where you’re starting.

Scott:
That’s right. Whether you want to retire early and travel the world, go on to make big time investments and assets like real estate or start your own business, we’ll help you reach your financial goals and get money out of the way so you can launch yourself towards those dreams.

Mindy:
Scott, I am excited to talk to Colton today. He has a great set of circumstances with a little bit of a monkey wrench. He makes a great income, but he’s got some student loan debt to tackle.

Scott:
Yeah. Colton has a tremendous… He has positive cash flow, but he’s got huge amounts of student loan debt. He’s got a live in flip going on. He’s got a side hustle. His wife’s a veterinarian about to have a baby. There’s all these different convoluted things, and they’re tugging at different financial strategies. Today, we have to kind of unpack that convoluted situation between life, debt, investment options, house hack, live in flip and two different careers and come up with a prioritized set of initiatives and to design a financial plan around that.

Mindy:
Yup. I think he’s got a lot of great opportunities. We just have to focus on which one is the best for him given his different set of circumstances. Colton, I am required to tell you that the contents of this podcast are informational in nature, and are not legal or tax advice and neither Scott nor I nor BiggerPockets is engaged in the provision of legal tax or any other advice. You should seek your own advice for professional advisers, including lawyers and accountants regarding the legal tax and financial implications of any financial decision you contemplate.

Mindy:
Okay, Colton. Colton and his new wife have a great income, but they took out some hefty student loans to help finance their college degrees. Those loans are now in forbearance, and they’re looking for tips for what to do with the extra cash that they have on hand. I said extra cash in air quotes because as we all know, there is no such thing as extra cash. If you have extra cash, go ahead and send it to me. Colton, welcome to the BiggerPockets Money Podcast.

Colton:
Thank you so much. Great to be here, Scott and Mindy.

Mindy:
We’re going to jump right into it because we have lots of things to talk about. Colton, what is your income and where does it go?

Colton:
Yeah, absolutely. Roughly, we bring in around 11,000 to 11,500 depending on the month. That’s a combination of W2 income. Then, I do kind of a little some side hustle on the side doing some flipping of furniture and things like that on Facebook marketplace. That’s very minor in the scheme of things, but it does pay for some bills here and there, it pays for car payment. That’s kind of the main reason I do it is to pay for the truck. Justify that truck payment a little bit. That’s the income side of things. You want me to go into liabilities or expenses?

Scott:
Is that pretax or post tax?

Colton:
That’s net.

Scott:
It’s net?

Colton:
Yup.

Scott:
Okay. That’s cash coming into your bank accounts?

Colton:
Exactly. Yeah.

Scott:
11.6?

Colton:
Yeah. Approximate.

Scott:
$11,600, okay, great. Yeah. Where’s that going? What are your expenses like?

Colton:
Yeah, we just bought a house in January. The mortgage on that is 2,500. Our utility is a little bit south of 200 to 190, cell phone 98, internet’s 45.

Scott:
Where are you living?

Colton:
Reno, Nevada.

Scott:
Reno, Nevada. Okay.

Colton:
Yeah. Internet’s 45, car insurance for combined is 190, food, it varies on the month but we kind of average about 800. I know there’s room for improvement there but we buy organic and we eat pretty healthy, not to mention my wife’s pregnant so that kind of throws a wrench into things.

Scott:
Awesome.

Colton:
There is no choosing as to what we eat. The baby chooses at this point, at least, for the most part. Gas for the vehicles, we average about 180. We both work remotely. That’s why that number seems pretty low, kind of force ourselves to get out of the house sometimes to actually use that gas budget. We have a dog between his pet food and pet insurance, it’s about 175. That seems also kind of high, but my wife has a veterinarian background so that food is very expensive and pet insurance.

Colton:
Most people don’t have, is an expense that we justify. Our miscellaneous category, it’s kind of random things such as gym, gifts for friends and family, and some household expense up at that at about 400 per month and that varies really depends when you need to buy toothpaste or toilet paper, et cetera, things like that.

Colton:
Entertainment category also varies, it’s about 125 per month plus or minus, depending on the month. We have two cars, as I mentioned. We have a truck and an SUV. The combined car payment on that 624 with a little bit skewed towards the truck, because it’s a little nicer, a little newer. That breaks down to 322 and 302 on the SUV. We have an orthodontic payment that we have at 0% interest that we’re debating, killing with some FSA money. Right now it’s 246 a month. I think the term on that is, I think there’s about nine months left on it. We’re debating if we just keep it at 0%. Keep paying it or just knock it out with some FSA funds that need to be used regardless by the end of the year.

Colton:
Then, lastly, we have subscriptions, Spotify, I think Amazon is amortized over 12 months on that as well at $30, not terrible on the subscription side of things. If my math is right, or if Excel’s right, that’s about 5,603. Then, in August, is when student loans may or may not kick back in. That will be an expense of 20 to 40. It would be our minimum payments if it kicks back in in August. That will be added to our total expenses if that forbearance does not get extended.

Scott:
Great. What are your assets and liabilities? We had a lot of tactical items there to go in, so that’d be fun. We’ll come back to that.

Colton:
Yeah. The assets, our cash position, we try to keep it about one and a half to two months right now, just because we have some things that we’re trying to pay down such as the cars. There is a balance transfer card, which I’ll mention on liabilities that we’re going to strategically pay down here over the next six or nine months. Cash position really depends. We just bought the house too, so depends on home improvement matters as well. We just had a fun irrigation project. That’s a little damping on the cash position.

Colton:
Equity in the house is approximately 100. I mean, that’s really just based on the number that I was looking at as its estimate. We could probably list the house for a little more than that right now, but obviously we’re not looking to go anywhere. I just threw that in there. The truck technically has equity in it. Vehicles obviously are not assets in my but I mean, there’s still, if we needed to, if we could sell the vehicles downgrade and get something cheaper. It’s approximate 14,000 value in the truck. I’d put approximate, probably 8 to 10 value on the SUV. There’s only about 4,700 left on that loan.

Colton:
I have a 401(k). It’s sitting at about 6k with my current employer. I have a rollover IRA. It’s just a traditional sitting at 25. A Roth IRA sitting at 5,500. Then, my wife has a 401(k) at approximately 10 plus or minus 7 check that 100% and then she has a Roth IRA as well sitting at about 6.

Scott:
Awesome. What do we pay your net worth at here?

Colton:
Not including student loans or including student loans, Mint technically says net worth is around a hundred, I think it is, but I don’t put my student loans on Mint because I don’t like to see that number pop up. That was assets. I mean, if you’re including the student loans, we’re technically negative. Negative approximate to 200 to mid-200. I actually haven’t done that calculation exactly which is because forbearance has been in place for so long that that we forgot about our student loans. It’s that the payments haven’t been required for this whole time.

Scott:
Got it. Okay. What are your goals? How can we help you here?

Colton:
Yeah. I had mentioned to Mindy, that I’m looking for some live in flip tips, because we just bought a nicer house that was mid renovation when we purchased it. Kind of curious on because Mindy has some experience on obviously live in flips and that’s her arena. That’s one topic I’m curious is we know some home improvement, how to help on the cost side of things when you’re doing that live in flip. How do you stay sane with your spouse, those types of things?

Colton:
Then, we were we just purchased in January, we put down 10%, so we have PMI. I’m curious about strategies that you might think about when we should think about doing an appraisal, because the market conditions, I think we’re pretty close to that 20% mark, which is kind of crazy. It’s only been about four months since purchasing. I think we got to hit maybe 5k more to be at that position where the PMI might be shut off.

Colton:
It’s the traditional loans. It’s not FHA. We’re not stuck with it for the course of the loan, but we’re kind of curious when might we start thinking about that, so you don’t want to pay for an appraisal, just for fun. Then, also a secondary point is thinking about a potential HELOC once there’s some equity in the property to do some of these renovations. Nothing is in dire need, but the kitchen is a little, it’s old as the house. It’s 21 years going on now. There’s some upgrades that could be done there. Kind of twofold on that as when might we start thinking about getting rid of that PMI?

Colton:
Kind of a naive question is, I assume that we’re paying for that appraisal. I don’t know the process behind that. I’m not sure if either of you have experience of shedding PMI. I know that FI community hates PMI. They’re allergic to PMI, but in our situation, we were comfortable taking on the PMI. Our lender was phenomenal. We got a really good rate at the end of 2021, closed early in 2022. Then, obviously, their rates have gone up since.

Colton:
Sitting at a very good interest rate on that mortgage at 2.99, PMI is only about $100 a month. It can improve our cash flow a little bit getting rid of that 100 bucks off of our mortgage. Yeah, I’m just kind of curious strategies on that point. Then, if we have time, I’m curious if you think that downgrading on the truck might be a good idea to get rid of that truck payment. I think my wife’s pretty set on keeping her vehicle. That’s not on the table at all.

Scott:
How about longer term goals? Is there anything like, what do you want to be in a couple of years from a financial standpoint?

Colton:
Yeah, a couple of years from now, my wife and I foresee paying down loans, targeting mine first because there are some strategies where she could pursue the forgiveness side of things. She’s on that pathway right now. We’re not 100% sure if we’re going to stay on that path because 20 years for forgiveness on her pathway. Well, she’s part of the way through already. Basically, you pay the minimums on that income based program, and then you are forgiven after the set timeframe.

Colton:
Mine, I’m just paying traditional. The goal would be to tackle those student loans on my side and then potentially tackle hers and maybe pay them down faster and just avoid the income-based program payments and get it paid off sooner. The way we’re thinking of doing that is through real estate. We just bought this house and I call it a live in flip. It’s a nicer live in flip. It wasn’t that dilapidated when we moved in. I foresee either renting out this property and moving to another house and doing another live in flip or house hacking to some extent if we can get a duplex or triplex, quadplex.

Colton:
As I mentioned earlier, our family situation has recently changed. We’re due in August. We’ll see if the baby dictates no house hacking or duplex will be fine. I mean, but house hacking, sharing bedrooms is probably not in the picture. We’re in a different stage in our life. I think 5 to 10 years ago, I probably, I could have house hacked a lot more. I could have done what was it a credit card [inaudible 00:15:24] that lives in his living room and rented out every single square foot of his house. It was possible. We’re a little beyond that phase, I think just because of family planning, and just where we’re at in our career and those types of things.

Colton:
Eventually, I think ramping up the real estate side of things and probably with property management, would be my thought. I don’t know if I really want to be on the ground doing all that irrigation, and toilets and all those types of things but we’ll see. We’ll see where things go.

Scott:
Great. Well, that’s super helpful. Thank you for sharing all that. Let me just make a couple of high level observations about your position here. We’ve got the, what? $300,000 plus in student loan debt, is that right?

Colton:
Yup.

Scott:
You’re accumulating cash at a great clip, you’re accumulating 5000, $5,500 per month after tax, right? That’s hitting your bank account right now on average.

Mindy:
Is it?

Colton:
Yeah.

Mindy:
Okay.

Scott:
That’s $60,000 per year, was that $65,000 per year. You’ve got five years. If you want to pay off your student loan debt, you could just do that for five years, and you paid it off, plus whatever the live in flip equity comes in if you’re able to generate equity on that.

Colton:
That’s what the caveat, that’s without student loans. We’ll see what happens with student loans. I don’t know if it will be a five-year timeline necessarily because we have student loans that takes our cash position down 20 to 40 each month.

Scott:
Well, that’s perfect. We need to face this problem head on, right? The bogey in your financial position is the student loans. You don’t include it in your Mint because you probably don’t like looking at it too much and there’s the forbearance and all that, but let’s approach it head on. That’s coming back in August. Maybe it’ll get postponed again, but that’s the elephant in the room for your financial position.

Scott:
I’ll tell you that it’s a lot but what you just told me from a savings rate perspective, it’s not that much. You’re saying, “Hey, yeah, I’ll have the baby in August.” There’ll be additional expenses that come with that. You’ll have to pay interest on the student loan debts whenever they come out of forbearance, but you’ll also get a raise, at some point in the next couple of years. Your wife will make more income at some point in the next couple of years, if she chooses to continue to pursue that or do this, it depends on the student loan forgiveness programs.

Scott:
Sometimes they don’t have quite as much income generation potential on those but you’ll have plenty of options to generate more income, in addition to some additional expenses. I’d say puts and takes on that. I’d still give you five years, maybe less if you get lucky with a couple of things with a live in flip audit. Is that a grind? Yes. But is it insurmountable? No.

Scott:
The other option you have there to eliminate these student loan debts is to invest instead of paying them down. If that’s the case, then you said you’re going to pay 2,200, 2,250 per month on those student loan debts as required payments, essentially, when they resume in August, is that right?

Colton:
Yes.

Scott:
At that point, you’re going to generate $35,000 per year after tax in cash. That’s called 36, 37,000 per year, and after tax cash, again, with the opportunity to potentially expand that to some degree, and again, with the opportunity to have live in flip income. There’s another case there where you invest that and then pay off the student loans in lumps over the next 3 to 5 to 7 years, or 10 years depending on how you want to manage it and that will come with perhaps less linear gratification of paying off one loan then the next, and the next, and the next but maybe more wealth at the end of that 7 to 10-year time period. Have you kind of thought about it with that lens before?

Colton:
Yeah, and we’ve, we even have friends who… Being in the veterinary industry, she’s in one of the industries where you take on a lot larger of loans than the income potential justifies, I mean, there’s a debate on that. It’s a passion industry. A lot of people do it for the passion not for the money. The loans I mean, it’s crazy that there’s similar to being a doctor in human medicine. We’ve talked to people who have kind of done that grind, especially during COVID where they were looking at it as 0% interest, and we’re paying it down that whole time.

Colton:
Retrospectively, do we wish we would have done that? Probably. Were we in a position to do that? Probably not. We kind of checked all the boxes at once. We got married. We bought a house, and now we’re having a kid. We were kind of progressing through our relationship, family planning, all of that. I think, looking forward, we have thought about, we need to kind of do that grand, like you said, and potentially look at some of the buckets that we have, and see if we can pull back on some of them or see if we can increase our cash flow to some extent too because then that would accelerate that process even more, but even at our current position, I agree, we can just grind it in and get it done probably five, six-year mark, maybe faster, if our careers accelerate faster than we anticipated.

Scott:
Remember, all these different things will happen over that same time period, right? You have two cars, both of which are financed, right?

Colton:
Yup.

Scott:
How long is the loan term on those cars? When do you pay off the first one or the second one?

Colton:
The SUV is shorter term. It’s only got 4,700 left on it. I think that would be paid off, if we just kept paying by middle of next year, I think is approximately where we would be at. The truck was a 60-month and I just took it out last February. We’re still looking at four years and change on that. That’s another potential strategy is kill those car payments. Either paying them down or selling and downgrading to something a little, get a beater truck or get a beater.

Colton:
Ironically, I own the Corolla that was paid off before I bought this truck, so that I put down on my notes to Mindy. I was the five friendly Corolla paid off. Then, I decided I wanted to buy a truck because we camp and we hike and we kayak and you know, we cycle and all those types of things. The recreational piece living in Northern Nevada, we wanted a vehicle that was easy to do all of those things.

Colton:
Ironically, in 2021, we didn’t get to do a lot of that because of the crazy fires from California, Oregon, everybody was on fire and our air quality was probably, I think, it was the worst in the world. At the time. There was a lot of news articles about-

Scott:
We had a similar thing here. Probably it wasn’t quite as bad but yeah, we went on a trip to Fort Collins around that time, and it was raining ash from the sky, from one of the-

Mindy:
[inaudible 00:22:55] Fort Collins and it was raining ash in my pool. Yeah. Okay, I’ve got a couple of things. First of all, let’s go back to the student loan thing, because you had mentioned a forgiveness plan that is 20 years long. Are you any sort of timeline into this or have you not yet started the 20-year forgiveness plan yet?

Colton:
Yeah. It would apply to her loans only. All of her payments would qualify and also the forgiveness or forbearance months also supposedly qualify. There’s been some news articles about some servicers not properly applying them and things like that. I think that that’s probably been straightened out recently, but yeah, every payment she’s made since getting out of school has been towards that. I think she’s in the four or five-year mark on that, but really, the calculation is can we pay it down faster than waiting that additional 15, 16 years? Yeah, absolutely.

Mindy:
Yes. You can.

Colton:
Yeah.

Scott:
How much of the loans are hers?

Colton:
Approximately two thirds.

Scott:
Two thirds. Okay. It’s like 100k, 115?

Colton:
Two thirds of 300? No.

Scott:
Okay.

Colton:
She’s in the 200 range. Yeah.

Mindy:
Two hundred.

Scott:
Two hundred.

Mindy:
Yeah.

Colton:
It sounds like [inaudible 00:24:11].

Scott:
Wow, four seats. I’m not supposed to be doing this.

Colton:
No, yeah. She’s in the 200 range. I’m just north of 100.

Mindy:
Okay, what is not, I don’t think what is not really promoted in this forgiveness plan is that you will owe taxes on the amount forgiven and $200,000, taxes on that is going to be a fair penny. That’s not over the course of 20 years. That’s all in one year. I am with Scott, since you are five years into it, if you were 19 years into it, I would have way different advice, but you’re five years into it and you would have already been paying those loans anyway.

Mindy:
I would go with Scott’s advice to try and tackle, I mean, first tackle your loans and see where you are. Continue to pay on hers, when the forbearance is over, start back up with the payments, but tackle yours first because you don’t have any benefits to keeping yours for a super long time. Pay all of yours off, and then look at your financial position. Okay, now we’re seven years into her loans. It looks like we could just knock them out in a couple of years. Do that because 20 years, that’s you having to work for 20 years and pay for 20 years, whereas you could be done with it and on your way to financial independence.

Scott:
I would say, I’m not necessarily at camp, grind and pay them off. I’m definitely in camp grind but it’s camp grind, and then pay it off or grind and invest in alternative assets and ignore the student loans or make the minimums on them. Those are the two options that I see here. As a huge bet, one direction or the other about what’s going to happen over the next 5, 10, 15 years from an economic personal standpoint, to make that decision. There’s no right answer there. I think there’s something we can discuss at this point.

Scott:
I do think that it would be wise if the interest rates are close to pay off your student loan debts first, if you’re going to pay off the debt, and then attack hers, but if you find, “Hey, it took us a year and a half to pay off my student loans of 100,000 and I come back into and now a year and a half later, I got this promotion at work. My income’s at this level. Inflation has been really nice,” but inflation is your friend in this particular scenario because higher inflation means that the debt value is lower than a few years than in real terms than it is today and you’ll hopefully be earning more with that.

Scott:
Those are all positions to think through in terms of paying off, but I don’t see any reason why you guys would have to, in this situation, wait 20 years to get forgiveness on this. In 20 years, you can build a position that’s worth millions of dollars, literally, with compounding and investing. Why would you sacrifice that or box it off into a corner for 200 grand, 1/10 of the amount that I think you could reasonably accumulate with your income over a 20-year period.

Colton:
Absolutely. I agree on that. It’s just kind of an interesting calculation because if you were to go on a standard plan, that minimum would jump up surprisingly. It’s kind of a weird strategy to stay on the income based until mine is paid off. That’s what we’ve determined is the best way to do this. From a tax standpoint, it also throws a wrinkle into it because I don’t think she would qualify on the income base if we were married filed jointly. This year, it was our first test on that is we had to file, married filed separately in order for her to keep that income-based plan, which kind of threw a wrench. We’ll see what 2022 taxes look like.

Scott:
You should think through that once you have your regular strategy because those loans are still accruing interest, right? The pile is getting bigger and bigger. If you do decide to pay it off, that might be biting you because you’re paying more in joint taxes together. If you do decide to pay it off, you’re just going to be piling interest onto the pile. You’re going to pay off in the next couple of years anyways.

Colton:
Yeah, good point. That’s an analysis that we have yet to do, but it’s a point that we were looking towards because of the tax deadline that just passed. We did it married filed separately just for this year, just to kind of keep it a little less complicated. I don’t think we’re going to change it in the short term. I think that that loan minimum would bump up to, because my minimum is 1,590, which is almost a mortgage payment in itself.

Colton:
Obviously, our mortgage is more than that, but I just listened to one episode where the woman in Southern California had a $1,600 mortgage and I’m just like, that’s my student loan payment. I was over there cringing. I’m like, I wish I lived in, I think it was San Diego or wherever she lived in Southern California. She said she has $1,600 mortgage payment. I’m like, yeah, I would take that, but yeah, I mean, I think that the analysis there is there’s going to be restricting our cash flow significantly if we were both on standard payments.

Colton:
I mean, we probably still would have made like, it could be backing into that math by 2,000 or 1,500 leftover if we bump up those student loan payments to standard plan on both, but yeah, I mean, we will do that analysis. There’s definitely an analysis to be had thereof.

Scott:
That’s going to be the right choice. If you decide I’m going to spend five years and pay these things down aggressively, then you combine the income, you get the taxes advantages and aggressively pay them down. If, for example, you go the other avenue and say, I’m going to buy a bunch of real estate and stocks and invest, or I’m going to invest, and try to arbitrage the spread between my interest rate and what I can get from a return perspective, then what you’re doing may make sense because you’ll preserve more cash flow to invest in those types of assets.

Colton:
Yeah, that’s what gives me pause is the opportunity cost to work with that cash be deployed in investments, I think. Could we generate significantly more money by doing investments rather than paying them down on those standard plans? There’s definitely an analysis that happens, maybe is to happen there.

Scott:
Which of you has more time to invest outside of your work activities?

Colton:
We’re pretty even as far as spare time.

Scott:
Okay. Are you both kind of jointly interested in the real estate space?

Colton:
I would say I’m more interested than her. I’m sitting here, listening to BiggerPockets two to three times a week. She’s a FI, all these types of FI, podcasts, things like that. I tell her about it and she kind of just, “Yeah, yeah, yeah. We’ll get there. We’ll get there.”

Colton:
I’m definitely the one that’s the more frugal one, the one that’s saying we should do this. We should have a game plan for this. I think I would be the one sort of starting those conversations, but we did pretty well. I mean, we do our money dates about once a week trying to stay on the same page. That’s something that definitely picked up from you guys. It’s an awesome tip of staying on the relationship page as far as finances go.

Colton:
These conversations have come up on student loans. How do we, do we invest and just ignore them, so to speak, and keep these minimums or do we both go to standard plan? There’s definitely an analysis that needs to happen there, but I don’t know what the right answer is. You just kind of got to pick a path and go with it.

Scott:
Yeah. That’s going to be the big thing is you have to make a large decision with imperfect information. The sooner you make the decision, the better off you’re going to be, either way, right? It’s like, I’m going to either pay down these things aggressively, or I’m going to invest and go all out in that, because you’re going to generate $60,000 in cash this year. It’s a question of whether it goes to student loan payments, or whether it goes to real estate. You’re going to generate at least 35, 40,000 in cash this next year. Where are you going to put it?

Scott:
The question is, if I’m going to sustain real estate as a 10-year plan for my wealth building approach, then maybe that makes sense. If I feel like I’m going to be very casual participant and kind of in and out of that while I’ve got all these other demands on my time, then maybe the student loan payments make a lot more sense. That’s super simple. You just pile on the money into the student loans, and you passively invest in index funds, once you get them paid off and have a little party and then and then go on.

Scott:
Either way, in 15 years, when your student loans would have been forgiven, you will have a much larger pile of money, in my opinion, doing it this way and 10 years of your life with optionality, for your wife at least, that you wouldn’t have had otherwise, or 15 years that you wouldn’t have otherwise.

Colton:
Yeah, it’s kind of funny. The conversation shifted on that forgiveness, because it seemed like that was what she was gung ho about when I first met her. She met with a financial planner. She knew about the tax penalty. She was kind of setting some money aside planning for that. I kind of was scratching my head, like, “Does that really make sense?” You could tackle that a lot faster than 20 years. Even if you had a 10-year timeline on it, you could pay it down faster.

Colton:
Yeah, I think the conversation shifted towards, yeah, we’re going to kill both sides of the student loans, mine and hers. It’s just picking that strategy that we want to go with. There’s a little bit more analysis that I think we need to do there. Then, we need to just pull the trigger and do it.

Scott:
Yup.

Mindy:
Something that we haven’t talked about is the fact that there are 7% interest and their federal student loans. When we spoke with Robert Farrington from The College Investor back on Episode 267, he said for everybody who has already refinanced out of their federal student loans, the forbearance doesn’t apply, but if you have not financed out, now’s not the time to finance out because you have a 0% interest rate, and it’s in forbearance, so you don’t have to make any payments.

Mindy:
Once it comes out of forbearance, and it is currently at the end of August as we record this today on April 26th, but who knows, maybe every time I record an episode about student loans, that next day, the government’s like, “Hey, we’re going to extend it.” It’s probably going to be extended. There you go, Colton. That’s my gift to you and I’ve extended your student loans by talking about them.

Mindy:
Once they come out of forbearance, 7% seems like a high interest rate. I would look at what you could refinance out. I think SoFi refinancing student loans, well, I know SoFi. I don’t know who else refinances student loans. This is one area of the world where Scott and I are actually rather uneducated is because we didn’t have student loans, but Robert Farrington from The College Investor, and Travis Hornsby from Student Loan Planner, both have a lot of information on their websites about student loans and where you can refinance and repayments and things like that.

Mindy:
The forgiveness plans, et cetera, they can help you make a more informed decision about your choices, but I think once you do come out of forbearance, look into refinancing and interest rates are going up, maybe that’s going to be a really great rate. It certainly has helped you over the last two years to have a 0% interest rate.

Scott:
I like the real estate and the house hacking for this as well, right? You add value to your house via the live in flip in a really calculated way and then you cash out refinance or you have the option to cash out refinance, if and when interest rates are, interest resumes, forbearance ends on these student loans.

Scott:
Now, you’re swapping that 7% rate for three and a half or four or maybe 5%, depending on where rates go this year and your home equity on a 30-year amortization period, which may be more advantageous than your payments for your, well, for owner occupant, I think the rates will be, I can imagine the rates jumping past 6%, Mindy, on owner occupant loans this year. I mean, payments last words, but we’ll see.

Mindy:
I don’t know that they’re not there now.

Scott:
For owner occupants?

Colton:
Yeah, they’re close to five and a half right now. I wouldn’t be surprised if they’re at six.

Scott:
I’m going on an investment property at 5.8 right now, but I didn’t realize that was the case for owner occupants as well.

Mindy:
When did you lock it in?

Scott:
Four weeks ago?

Mindy:
Yeah, it’s oh, there’s been a lot of change in the last four weeks. It’s unreal how fast rates have moved, but yeah, I think that’s a good point. Hey, if you’re looking at rates, get quotes early, get quotes often because they’re changing rapidly. That 2.9% interest rate that you have on your house, I would not pay an extra dime towards that because that is, I’m assuming that’s a fixed rate.

Colton:
Yeah.

Mindy:
Yeah.

Colton:
[inaudible 00:37:41].

Mindy:
[inaudible 00:37:41] on that. Your truck is at 1.9%. I wouldn’t pay extra on that. Your SUV is at 3.5%? In my opinion, with 4,700 leftover and you’re generating 5,400 extra in cash, knock it out now, pay it off, and then take that payment and put it towards something else. I mean, it’s six of one half a dozen of the other, but you don’t have to think about that anymore. You casually mentioned that maybe you could get rid of your truck. I don’t see your truck as being a huge burden to you financially.

Scott:
Yeah. I agree.

Mindy:
However, if you want to free up $14,000 or $28,000, take that truck and sell it. Get a tow hitch on the back of the SUV and buy a trailer off of Craigslist. I just quickly looked in your area. There’s one for $1,500. Sell the truck. Get whatever kind of car you want. You have a tow hitch on the SUV.

Mindy:
Now, you can pull the trailer around and still pick up your Craigslist items, still take your kayaks. You’re not going kayaking anytime soon with the baby on the way or biking. Maybe you don’t even need the trailer right away. You probably do if you’re going to do more of that Craigslisting stuff but I think that that would be a personal decision. I don’t think that’s the difference between success and failure financially for you.

Scott:
I agree. You got a really strong income, 11,000 after tax, that’s probably like 175 a year in combined income, and somewhere in that ballpark for pretax, is that about right?

Colton:
Yeah, it’s a little it’s a little more than that, because we have health insurance 401(k) backs out of that. Our employers don’t cover 100% of the health insurance. It’s a little bit more than that, but yeah, it’s a strong position. And I don’t see that as a breaking point. It’s just, it’s an easy target in my mind like that 14k equity in the track could be applied towards other things and then or you can put it in a brokerage account, put it in VTSAX and let it ride, right? There are strategies there.

Scott:
I think you’re in great shape from an overall strength. Ten years looking back, if you look back from 10 years from now, you’re going to be able to accumulate a large amount of wealth If you stick with one of these variations of the plan and crush it and continue to generate that cash flow and put it towards your financial future instead of buying things with that, but you can afford to have a few luxuries along that journey, and still crush your financial goals, because of the income and expense gap you have.

Scott:
This truck may be one of them that’s super reasonable in your position, if that’s something that you’re going to use and enjoy. If you’re not, then I think Mindy’s suggestion is great, and do something else, but you can definitely, both of you have a $500 a month expense, guilt-free, I think in this particular situation. That’ll delay you somewhat, but it won’t change the game for you in a huge way. You’ve got a huge surplus, you can take 10% of that surplus and, and enjoy life a little bit here.

Colton:
Yeah, absolutely. We try not to live this super frugal life, but we try to be frugal where it makes sense. When I was looking at trucks, I went to Toyota and like Chevy and test drove the brand new shiny one for $45,000 and I didn’t see a difference between that one and then the used one that I bought on Facebook. The guy on Facebook was a firefighter. He had 60,000 miles on the truck and it’s like a brand new truck to me. I paid half the price for that truck. That was kind of a frugal win in itself that I was like, “Oh cool. I found this truck that was four years old, not a brand new off the lot but brand new to me.”

Colton:
It just kind of hurts on the car payment because I just haven’t had a car payment in so long. Going from that Corolla, which was very, very frugal, very gas friendly, very, everything about it was cheap. The registration was cheap. Insurance was cheap. Then, everything about the truck is polar opposite. It’s not, crazy guzzler but it definitely is a luxury. That’s just why. It’s low hanging fruit is all.

Mindy:
It is and if it weighs heavily on your mind, then sell it. But I don’t see it as a big problem.

Scott:
I agree.

Mindy:
A moment ago, Scott said that he is on team grind. I am going on record as being opposed to team grind. A lot of people know that my husband has a blog, and he wrote an article called, My Death March to Financial Independence. It was kind of, he published it in 2017 and it was kind of a recap of all the things that we did. We didn’t enjoy ourselves. We pushed and pushed and pushed and pushed and it was a big grind and he was working full time and flipping a house full time. I was momming full time and it was just this like, we never took a break ever.

Mindy:
You have a similar income to what our income was when he was working. It wasn’t any fun. I want to send you that article. I’m going to link to it in the show notes because I think it’s really important to read and remind yourself that life is still meant to be enjoyed.

Mindy:
I’m saying this right here like I live it now. I’m still learning this lesson, but if I can take my years of knowledge and pass them on to you at your age to enjoy your life instead of just push, push, push, if you get to financial independence three years later, but you enjoyed the whole journey. That’s better.

Colton:
Yeah. I agree.

Scott:
Yeah, I would completely agree with that, with the caveat that you need to set up a lane that you’re comfortable swimming in for a number of years, knowing that if you do what you’re currently doing right now, and the student loan debts, for example, remain, with that you’re going to generate $60,000 in cash per year, ideally a little bit more than that with puts and takes over the next couple of years, baby coming in, but also hopefully raises promotions, income increases at work with that. That’s the journey, right?

Scott:
If you want to delay that to six years or seven years to have more of the comforts during that journey, that would be totally fine, but set up the grind and you can use a different word if you want, the journey and the parameters, and you just need to cruise with that over a period of time either investing or paying down the debt.

Scott:
That’s the reality of your situation. It’s not a bad situation. You’re going to be able to accumulate a lot of wealth if you stick with that, but you can’t escape the fact that there’s going to be time that needs to pass while you generate this surplus and put it towards the debt and/or investments here.

Mindy:
Yes. Agree.

Colton:
Yeah.

Scott:
That’s what I call the grind. My grind was brutal all out for three, four or five years to get to the end state. I think I enjoyed my life but I definitely said no to lots of trips and other types of things with that. For me, I didn’t mind that so much, but I definitely wouldn’t go to a place that makes you and your family miserable.

Mindy:
I don’t think we knew that we were miserable in the moment, but reflecting back, we’re like, “Wow, that really kind of sucked.” Yeah, just read the article and you’ll get a sense. I mean, I just reread it and it’s like, “Oh, there’s a lot of despair in here.” You had asked about a reappraisal to get rid of PMI? I am going to send you to your lender or whoever is currently holding your mortgage, it would really, really stink to pay like $700 for an appraisal, only to come back $5,000 short, and you can’t get rid of the PMI?

Colton:
Yeah.

Scott:
That would not be the end of the world because if you think you’re close, you can gamble and do that and then just pay $5,000 more towards your mortgage to get out the PMI, right?

Colton:
Good point.

Scott:
That will get you to your equity level with that.

Mindy:
Okay. That’s a good point.

Scott:
That wouldn’t be efficient, because you’re not really avoiding the interest payments, you’re just speeding them up by a handful of months or whatever. It’s not a great investment but if you think you’re close enough that you’re in the bubble, you want to take the gamble, that’s how you would get around that problem.

Colton:
Even that’s not a breaking point like that $100 cash flows’ not going to change our position very much. Maybe we just wait and when we know, for certain/ that it’s crossed that benchmark, we just do it. Yeah, unlocking that $100 cash flow, pretty minor point but if we kill the ortho pay, that we kill the car payments, we kill that, we take that down 100 bucks, there’s some extra accumulation there that can be had.

Mindy:
Yeah.

Scott:
That’s what I’m talking about where you grind, if you don’t like the term, accelerates, right? You just knock out 100 bucks here, the car payment here, the orthodontist bill here, one of the student loan debt there, right? Then, that all just continues to snowball your cash generation.

Mindy:
I’m glad you brought up the ortho. With the FSA, that is a use it or lose it plan. I believe 250 or $500 rolls over to the next year depending on your plan documents, and definitely read those ahead of time, but I would plan to use that in the last month of the year that you can since it is a 0% interest loan. Just in case something else that’s FSA eligible doesn’t come up.

Scott:
You’re going to have a baby.

Mindy:
Well, but I think they-

Colton:
Yeah, I don’t think we’re going to have any issue spending that money to be honest.

Mindy:
Yeah, well but FS, do you have an HSA plan or a regular plan?

Scott:
He can have both.

Mindy:
Okay. You can but FSA is only for teeth and eyes. You can, but FSA is for teeth and eyes only if you have an HSA plan and it’s for anything.

Colton:
Yeah, it’s a different type of FSA.

Mindy:
Yeah.

Scott:
I did not know that.

Colton:
We actually have an HSA from a prior employer. I just don’t know what the balance is, now that you say that. She has an HSA with, I don’t know, probably 2 or 3,000 bucks in it. That’s why I forgot about it, because it was just sitting there. We might, well, I’m just going to let that one ride, though. That’s an investment account as far as I’m concerned. I’m not going to use it.

Mindy:
I would definitely look into that as being an investment account. I’m not sure how that works with regards to current expenses. I thought you could only use the HSA account for expenses incurred when you had the high deductible plan.

Colton:
Good point. That might be a research point to look into.

Mindy:
Yeah, research opportunity and we’re going to ask that in the Facebook group, HSA expenses question. I’ll just make a note so I put it up there, but yeah, definitely make plans to spend all of that on that just because why pay for that with post tax dollars if you don’t have to. Yeah, going into next year, the baby’s due in August, you’ll probably be able to spend all of that FSA money.

Mindy:
Next year, you’ll have a lot of doctor’s visits just because babies go to the doctor all the time for well checkups and things like that. Look into your FSA for that as well. Now, if you both, do you both have separate insurance plans?

Colton:
Yeah. I might get on hers when it goes up for open enrollment because hers is way better than mine. Her plan says that to have a baby, it’s like 300 bucks. That’s unheard of. It’s this crazy grandfathered in plan that is awesome.

Mindy:
That is fantastic.

Colton:
We’re separately paying through our employers right now because we weren’t married until late last year, but yeah. There’ll be some changes in that arena moving forward, but nothing that it’s going to be too drastic.

Mindy:
Okay.

Scott:
Great.

Mindy:
Then, you wanted to talk about live in flips. I’ve saved the best for last.

Colton:
Yeah.

Mindy:
How do you save on costs? DIY. How do you have time for DIY with the baby? I can’t even remember those days anymore. I had no sleep. I have no recollection of how we did this DIY, but we basically did everything DIY. We popped the top and we hired somebody to add on and then we finished all the interior work. I don’t do roofs. I don’t do cement flat work. I don’t do gutters. You can hire these out way cheaper than you can do it yourself, but Home Depot and Lowe’s teach classes on how to do things and the University of YouTube is an excellent place to learn.

Mindy:
Like you said, you have a basically cosmetic flip. All of these things that, all these jobs you’re going to do, are going to be fairly easy to DIY. Definitely check with your city’s building code to make sure that you can do them yourself. Some cities require that you hire everything out or hire out things like electrical and plumbing. Some cities will allow you, the homeowner, to do the work yourself so long as you live there for X number of time afterwards. My city says I have to live here for a year after I do all the work myself.

Mindy:
We just DIY-ed solar panels. I mean, you can DIY anything you want here in the lovely City of Longmont, Colorado. You just have to live there afterwards. That’s the number one tip for saving on costs. If you don’t have time, or don’t have the knowledge to do it, and you don’t, I mean, learning how to do electric is going to be a tough job. I should say that my father in law was an electrician for 40 years. We had kind of an in. We’ve learned with real help. Electric and plumbing is kind of the same thing. It’s not the same thing, but it’s like they’re easy to do if you know what you’re doing.

Mindy:
Step number one is turned off the source. Turn off the electric, turn off the water, and then it’s not so hard. If you make a mistake, you know real quick that you made the mistake, but I can understand why people would be very leery to do these themselves. If you’re going to do a plumbing job, all the plumbing all at once have the guy come in and the person, I’m sorry, the provider, I don’t want to be sexist, have the provider come in and do all the work at once.

Mindy:
Have all the faucets you’re going to have changed out, all of the work that you need to be done all at once so they’re not coming out multiple times, and you’re incurring multiple charges just to come visit the site. Think about what you really, really, really want to have done. You can paint yourself. You can install flooring yourself. I’m such a proponent of DIY.

Colton:
Yeah. We’ve already passed that route.

Mindy:
I’m such a proponent of DIY, because it’s so easy to do and renting a tool versus buying a tool. I mean, I have every tool just because I’ve used it at least once and it doesn’t all have to be done right now. I mean, you’ve got a baby coming. You’ve just moved in. You’ve got two years in order to hit the capital gains exclusion. Make a plan for how you want to tackle it and then just get to it when you get to it.

Scott:
I also think, in addition to all of Mindy’s great tips, here’s a problem I’m noticing overall about your situation, I got student loans here, some that I might pay off, some that might be forgiven. I’ve got this cash position. I’ve got a little bit in 401(k)’s. I’ve got this live in flip project I’m doing. I’m spending my free time flipping furniture that I’m driving around, picking up and sending around. I think what I would advise is you make a prioritized list of these opportunities, and then go more all in on your top one or two of them.

Scott:
For example, here’s an incongruency in your situation, I’m trying to pay off my student loans, but I’m also trying to flip my house at the same time, right? One strategy is conducive to having a very small cash position, finding all the dollars in your budget, knocking out expenses and keeping that grind consistent and paying off all the surplus into your student loan debt.

Scott:
The other situation calls for a very large cash position so you’re able to make these calls and say, “I’m going to do this project myself and I’m going to buy all the materials and spend these couple of weekends doing it and it’s going to cost me three grand.” This one, I need to do call the plumber and do all of the plumbing all at once and it’s going to cost me 15 grand. It’s going to be much cheaper to do it all at once but 15 grand, right?

Scott:
That’s going to be your challenge here in the next couple of months is you need to pick a framework, prioritize these things and stick with them. There’s no wrong answer or there’s no right answer to it, except to attempt to dabble in all of these different avenues a little bit. You’d be much better off, in my opinion, kind of pick one and go on with that. Mindy, I imagine, all that said, Mindy, did you have a large cash position or make that a component of your situation when you were doing some of these live in flips?

Mindy:
We had a large cash position and the ability to find more cash if we needed to. We also could have benefited from that advice, Scott. Where were you 15 years ago? Because we don’t even do that now. We’re like, “We’ll do it all. We can do everything and we’re going to prioritize. Everything’s number one.”

Mindy:
Then that’s how you get to the position where, on your days off, you’re laying flooring in your daughter’s bedroom, until 8:00 at night while she’s like, “I’m tired. I want to go to bed.” You’re like, “No. I just have three more pieces to put in.” It just kind of exacerbates itself over and over.

Mindy:
I like Scott’s advice even better than mine. Make a list of the things that you want to do, make a list of the extracurricular you want to do. Make a list of all the things you want to do on your house and prioritize one or two at a time because yeah, that baby’s going to come in. You made a comment, “Well, the baby might dictate,” the baby will dictate.

Colton:
Absolutely.

Mindy:
The baby will say, “I demand all the things.”

Colton:
Yeah, Scott, you hit that point. I hit that nail on the head. My wife is going to listen to this and be like, “Yeah, that’s exactly who you are.” Pinball brain, back and forth. We’re going to do this. We’re going to do this. We’re going to do this. I think the student loans we kind of ignore right now just because they’re in forbearance. That’s not something we’re like, super focused on.

Colton:
I think the house is really the focus right now. The flip activity really doesn’t take a lot of my time. It’s actually on an auction site. I don’t like to run around town all day. I buy things on this auction site, put them in my garage, put them together, like maybe an hour to a week and then, people come to your house for Facebook marketplace. That’s kind of interesting… Like last month, I made six, almost [inaudible 00:57:10] for two hours of my time, which is I thought it was a decent ROI.

Scott:
That’s awesome. That’s your hobby, it sounds like.

Colton:
Yeah, it’s kind of a hobby side hustle thing. It’s kind of funny, but yeah, definitely not a huge-

Scott:
If your house is the priority, which makes perfect sense, right? Say, what’s my after repair value? What’s the project plan to get there? That is the first priority. I’m going to talk about the money date each week or each month when I have that and I’m going to go in and say, “Great.” Is the rest of my plan backing into that as the number one priority, right?

Scott:
First thing I would do, if the house is your number one priority, is bump up that cash position from 1.5 to 2 months to 6 months and that’s your first financial priority, because you’re going to need that cash in order to make judgment calls about that project, to execute the project plan, right? That’s totally fine. That makes perfect sense.

Scott:
Once you have the equity realized in the house, what am I going to do with it next? Am I going to cash out refi? Am I going to pay off the HELOC? Am I going to sell the place and go on to the next one? That’s great but I would have no problem as an outsider looking in saying that the house is a good first step there.

Colton:
Do you do the six-month emergency fund before paying off the balance transfer? In my mind, the balance transfer probably needs to be paid off. I mean, technically, it’s August 2023. It’s a sitting at a $6,600 balance. It’s not something we couldn’t tackle in the next four to six months.

Scott:
What’s the interest rate going to be on it right now or when?

Colton:
Right. I mean, it’s 0%, so August of next year, and then I think of bumps to like 19 or 20. Definitely, it’s not something we want to be sitting there [inaudible 00:58:46].

Scott:
We’ll do sixth month cash position right now, and sit on it and use that to fund your house. Then, when the when that comes up, you can decide to pay it off, just like you will with the student loans. You’ll have the cash. You’ll be able to allocate it and say, “But there’s no interest accruing on it right now and you have all that liquidity to build. You could spend the next couple of months building the equity in the house and do that. You’re not going to run out of liquidity unless a catastrophe happens to your family right now. Right?

Scott:
You have to juggle some balls. You can have it all perfect all at once, until you go through, let some time pass and your position but I would build a liquidity position right now and begin using that to attack your number one priority, knowing that you’ll have to allocate 6,600 by the end of the year to this balance transfer in order to avoid accrue in 20% interest. There’ll be no higher use of your dollars than avoiding 20% but it’s not 20% right now. It’s zero.

Colton:
Yup.

Scott:
The return on cash is going to be huge if you’re using it to flip your house or it’s a good bet.

Mindy:
That’s only one month of spend spending. If you have a six-month emergency fund, you use the six-month emergency fund to pay that off, and then you rebuild your emergency fund. I mean, that’s slightly more than one month of your extra.

Scott:
Yeah. Now, once your house is finished as a project, you have another decision plant, am I going to do another live in flip? In which case keep the six to month emergency reserve and maybe move it to 12 months? Because you need a lot of cash to continue doing these projects, especially you take on a bigger one or am I going to sit? Am I going to sit? Am I going to show him his house, refinance to something that gets rid of the PMI or get out of the PMI, and I’m going to start granting the student loan debt.

Scott:
Okay, at that point, I’d go down to 1.2 to 2 months, or what you currently have, essentially, keep a small bank thing and just drive all the excess cash flow to the next highest debt payment. That’s where I think, if you can come up with a prioritized set of investments in a plan for the next couple of years, you’d be much better off, because you’re able to prioritize where things go and build your whole position around those priorities.

Colton:
Yeah, absolutely.

Mindy:
Okay, the last thing I want to tell you before we let you go is you asked about staying sane with your spouse during a live in flip, we generally tend to jump in with both feet and rip out everything and that is not the way to go. The way to go, the way to stay sane with your spouse is to have one room with a door that closes that is untouched. Usually, your master bedroom or a different bedroom if you’re working on the master bedroom where you can retreat away from the dust, because every once in a while, you’ll have a day, and she’ll have a day and the baby’s off schedule and you’re just like, I can’t handle this. I can’t concentrate on this at all.

Mindy:
You go into your bedroom, you close the door, you watch a movie, you eat in bed, you just don’t flip the house that day, and it recharges your batteries but when you’re in the middle of dust and all the walls are ripped out and you can’t find any place to not be in the middle of your flip, it’s really weighing on your conscience. I’ve only had a few days like that in every single house that I’ve lived in flipped and it passes but you just need a space that you can retreat to that is door closed that is untouched on the inside. That can be the first room that you do. You work on that room and then you move into it as a nice space. Right now we’re in our master bedroom and it’s still ugly. I have wallpaper from the 1970s, the foil guy that’s really, really gross.

Colton:
I think that is our master bedroom right now.

Mindy:
Yeah.

Colton:
For us, it’s still the safe space. The rest of the house, the 80% of the house has no baseboards. It just seems like the whole house is unfinished to us because you see like the old paint where the baseboard used to be and it’s just, it’s funny. When we moved in, I came in and sprayed the whole house with fresh paint because the walls were like yellow from nicotine. Disgusting.

Mindy:
Yeah. That’s my house too.

Scott:
Smells like money.

Mindy:
It smells like money, sure did. Nobody else smelled that money, but yeah, now, go in and get the baseboards. Make that your next priority, and it will feel more finished. Maybe she will be more excited about the house in general because it’s not unfinished.

Mindy:
My daughter really hated the fact that we didn’t have any window trim up for a long time. She was embarrassed that we lived in such a disaster of a house. I said to her, then if your friends care. They walk through the house to go to the pool. That’s part of the reason that we got such a great deal on the house is because they had this pool that’s in terrible shape, but it holds water. She can have a pool party. None of the kids care that the house is a disaster because they don’t spend any time in it.

Mindy:
She’s so embarrassed by it. Once we got that finished now she’ll invite friends over. Little things can make a really big difference. That is my advice to you, have a place that you can go, to get away from it all and also put in baseboards.

Colton:
I appreciate it. Thank you.

Mindy:
Okay, Colton, is there anything else we can talk about today for you or answer any questions for you?

Colton:
I don’t think so. I think we hit most of the high points there. Obviously, it’s just picking a lane and going for it like Scott said.

Mindy:
Yeah, I agree with Scott.

Scott:
Yeah, I don’t think you have any wrong or right choices here. It’s art. There’s no, you have to make huge guesses about the economy, your personal situation, interest rates, all this other kind of stuff. I think you pick one that you’re comfortable with. Pick a prioritization, a list of prioritization that you’re comfortable with and design your whole situation around the top priorities and you will be just fine.

Scott:
You’ll be cruising out of this in over the next five to seven years with a significant increase in wealth and/or students debts paid down depending on what you decide with it as long as you kind of keep the income and expenses relatively consistent over that period.

Colton:
Awesome.

Mindy:
Okay. Well, Colton, thank you so much for your time today. This is a lot of fun. I think you’ve got a great position ahead of you and congratulations on your baby.

Scott:
Yeah, congrats.

Colton:
Yeah, thank you so much.

Mindy:
Send me pictures when the baby’s born.

Colton:
Absolutely.

Mindy:
Okay, we’ll talk to you soon.

Colton:
All right. Thanks so much. Have a good rest of your day guys.

Scott:
Bye.

Mindy:
All right. That was Colton with his great set of circumstances, his not so great set of student loan debts, but a good opportunity to pay them back. I think that does some great ideas for him and some great research opportunities for him, Scott?

Scott:
Yeah, I think this theme, this probably applies to a lot of people who are in similar situations to Colton, right? I’ve got some debt. I’ve got some investment opportunities. I’ve got a hankering for real estate. I want to become financially free. I want financial flexibility. How do I allocate my surplus dollars here, once I get into a strong fundamental financial position, which is what he is in his way of have a strong and have a strong positive net household cashflow, and are likely to continue that for many years to come barring a problem.

Scott:
When you have that situation, you can do anything. There’s a lot of good options out there, but you can’t do everything. You have to prioritize a set of initiatives, one by one, and build your strategy around that. That decision, we’ve harped on that, we have done that multiple times throughout the show so I don’t want to beat a dead horse, but you have to make that decision. You have to prioritize it, there’s no right or wrong answer, but once you do, you go from there.

Scott:
This problem is going to affect the $200,000 a year household income family like Colton’s family, and it’s going to impact the $50,000 person who’s just getting started the same way. That’s where we have all these tradeoffs around, retirement account, investing, or building financial runway, or your emergency reserve.

Scott:
You can’t do all of those things. You can’t take all the advice out there, you have to prioritize according to a plan, and then stick with it. The worst thing you can do is have a little bit in all these different areas and diversify away your chance of actually moving aggressively towards any of the financial goals, debt free or long term wealth or passive cash flow or whatever it is you want.

Mindy:
Yeah, ultimately, you can only take that dollar and deploy it in one place at a time. Now, it’s just up to Colton, to decide where is this dollar going to go and sit down with his wife and his weekly money dates, I love that, and decide where are we going to deploy these dollars? Where are we going to deploy these dollars? What’s the best use of these dollars at this time? Then, you can change your mind down the road, but right now they need to just formulate a plan. I think they’re going to have a huge amount of success. I’m just super excited for all the opportunities that they have.

Scott:
Absolutely. You can think about a couple of different situations, though, where, hey, I’ve got a, one case A, I’ve got a paid off all my student loan debt, paid off my house completely, have relatively few investments, and a six-month emergency reserve and five years, it was called seven years. That’s a great position to be in, completely debt free, and have an emergency reserve and are now able to invest.

Scott:
Another great situation to be in is, I’ve got $800,000 in assets that I’ve invested in across real estate and stocks and 250,000 down from 300,000 in total student loan debt and still have a mortgage on the house, right? That’s another position that could be very, very, very strong, but a position that would probably be very weak is, I don’t have much cash, I have a smattering of investments, mostly in retirement accounts, a little bit of home equity, and still have my student loan debt in seven years.

Scott:
That’s the least flexible position with the least promising outcome. You have to make one of those extreme choices in one of those two directions to get to that more positive situation. You can see that playing out with many of the folks that we’ve talked to on BP money where you want an ideal, what is your ideal portfolio and how are you backing into it?

Scott:
A debt free, modest portfolio that can sustain financial independence is a great outcome with that. A optimized for long term value creation portfolio with a healthy amount of leverage, is a great outcome. A mixed bag where I’ve got money in my 401(k), mostly in my home equity, a little bit of cash and relatively few investments outside of that, that’s the middle class trap that’s going to lead to the least amount of freedom. You’re not going to be able to realize that benefits, that financial position until retirement age unless you make very drastic life, and 401(k) penalizing decisions, which is really hard.

Scott:
I think that’s where we come back to make a decision, go into direction. There’s lots of good ways to go about it but have a plan and go with it and know your to make tradeoffs. You’re not going to be able to go down the whole stack, maxing out your 401(k), and having real estate, and having a paid off house, and having no debt and having stocks and get to your end goal soon. You have to make a choice.

Mindy:
Yes. Oh, that’s great. That’s a great wrap up, Scott. Great recap.

Scott:
Mindy’s telling me my rant is going too long. We need to wrap up.

Mindy:
No, I’m saying that’s a good wrap up. That’s what a great way to phrase it. Okay, but you’re right, you’re going on too long. We got to go. Are you ready?

Scott:
Let’s do it. From episode 304 of the BiggerPockets Money Podcast, he is Scott Trench and I am Mindy Jensen saying Get in the Truck, Cock.

 

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Judge dismisses Trump lawsuit against New York Attorney General James


Former U.S. President Donald Trump looks on during a press conference announcing a class action lawsuit against big tech companies at the Trump National Golf Club Bedminster on July 07, 2021 in Bedminster, New Jersey.

Michael M. Santiago | Getty Images

A judge on Friday dismissed a federal lawsuit by former President Donald Trump that sought to bar a civil investigation of his business by New York Attorney General Letitia James.

The ruling by U.S. District Judge Brenda Sannes came a day after a state appeals court in New York upheld subpoenas issued by James compelling Trump and two of his adult children to appear for questioning under oath as part of her probe.

James, in a Twitter post Friday, called the latest ruling in her favor “a big victory.”

“Frivolous lawsuits won’t stop us from completing our lawful, legitimate investigation,” James tweeted.

Trump and his company, the Trump Organization in December sued James in federal court in the Northern District of New York.

The suit claimed the attorney general violated their rights with her investigation into claims the company illegally manipulated the stated valuations of various real estate assets for financial gains.

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Trump and his company claimed that James’ “derogatory” comments about him when she ran for office and after her election showed she was retaliating against Trump with her probe, which was commenced “in bad faith and without a legally sufficient basis.”

Sannes, in her 43-page ruling Friday, dismissed those arguments, writing “Plaintiffs have not established that Defendant commenced the New York proceeding to otherwise harass them.”

Sannes noted that James has said that her investigation was opened as a result of the testimony before Congress by Trump’s former personal lawyer Michael Cohen in 2019.

“Mr. Cohen testified that Mr. Trump’s financial statements from the years 2011–2013 variously inflated or deflated the value of his assets to suit his interests,” Sannes wrote.

The judge also noted that under federal case law embodied in a 1971 ruling in a case known as Younger v. Harris says that “federal courts should generally refrain from enjoining or otherwise interfering in ongoing state proceedings.”

Sannes said Trump had failed to offer facts that would warrant an exception to that case law being applied in his lawsuit.

“Plaintiffs could have raised the claims and requested the relief they seek in the federal action” in state court in Manhattan, Sannes wrote.

The parties already have litigated numerous issues related to James’ investigation in Manhattan Supreme Court.

James, in a prepared statement, said, “Time and time again, the courts have made clear that Donald J. Trump’s baseless legal challenges cannot stop our lawful investigation into his and the Trump Organization’s financial dealings.”

“”No one in this country can pick and choose how the law applies to them, and Donald Trump is no exception. As we have said all along, we will continue this investigation undeterred,” James said.

Trump’s lawyer, Alina Habba, in an emailed statement said, “There is no question that we will be appealing this decision.”

“If Ms. James’s egregious conduct and harassing investigation does not meet the bad faith exception to the Younger abstention doctrine, then I cannot imagine a scenario that would,” Habba wrote, referring to the element of Sannes’ decision related to the case law from Younger v. Harris.



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How to Close on Off-Market Properties


This week’s question comes from Aaron on the Real Estate Rookie Facebook Group. Aaron is asking: What paperwork do I need to close an off-market deal? If presenting a cash offer, can it all be done between me and the seller? Do you typically ask for an inspection period?

Off-market real estate deals can seem tricky when you’ve never done one before. For the most part, investors only deal with on-market deals where their real estate agent walks them through the closing process. When you’re pursuing off-market deals, you’re on your own (for the most part), but that doesn’t mean that closing on a new deal has to be complicated.

If you want Ashley and Tony to answer a real estate question, you can post in the Real Estate Rookie Facebook Group! Or, call us at the Rookie Request Line (1-888-5-ROOKIE).

Ashley:
This is Real Estate Rookie, episode 186. My name is Ashley Kehr, and I am here with my co-host, Tony Robinson.

Tony:
And welcome to the Real Estate Rookie podcast, where every week, twice a week, we bring you the stories, the lessons, the information, and inspiration you need to kickstart your real estate investing journey. Ashley Kehr, what’s going on? What’s what’s new in your neck of the woods? How are things on the east coast today?

Ashley:
Well, I think I’m going to head over to a property that I recently purchased, and just kind of wander around a little bit. It’s 30 acres. It’s got three ponds and it’s finally a nice day. I’m finally walking kind of [crosstalk 00:00:42].

Tony:
I was going to say, how are you going to wander around? You mean hobble or bear crawl your way through those 30 acres?

Ashley:
Yeah. My son actually hurt himself on a trampoline last night, my youngest one, and he decided last night that he needed to use my crutches. So we put them as low as they could go and, obviously, still not compatible for him. And he just basically drags them around the house that he needs crutches. So at least they’re still getting good use, I guess.

Tony:
There you go. Like mother, like son. I love it.

Ashley:
Yeah. What about you, Tony?

Tony:
Actually, today, my big focus is working on the presentation for our Big Bear resort. So, whenever you do these big syndications, so I’m learning a lot as I go through this process. Whenever you do these big deals, and you have one big meeting where you invite all the potential investors and they kind of see what the deal looks like. So yeah, we’re just working on that, so that way all of the accredited investors that are interested can kind of learn the ins and outs of what we’re doing. So we’re super excited about this project.

Ashley:
Is there a pitch deck you’re putting together?

Tony:
Yeah. Yeah, it’s a pitch deck. Yeah.

Ashley:
Cool. Yeah. I can’t wait to see it.

Tony:
It’s going to be the pitch deck. Yeah. There’s so much upside here, so we’re really excited. So it’ll be a fun day for us.

Ashley:
Are you using a software yet to manage the syndication?

Tony:
So the actual investor’s portal and all that stuff? So what’s been recommended to us is called InvestNext. We [crosstalk 00:02:06].

Ashley:
Did you sign up for them yet? Because, I have an affiliate link. That’s what I was getting at.

Tony:
You do have an affiliate link? Well, there’s some guy that does, it’s called fund administration. So he helps you make sure that your distributions match what your PPM says. So I guess this guy has some kind of relationship with InvestNext. He’s actually creating the account for us.

Ashley:
Yeah. Cool. Well, nice.

Tony:
Yeah. So it’ll be exciting.

Ashley:
Yeah. InvestNext recently just sent me a super nice North Face zip-up, so make sure you get one of those, too.

Tony:
Oh, okay. Yeah, I got to grab one. Are you using InvestNext for one of the campgrounds?

Ashley:
No, I’m setting it up as just a portal to collect names, to create a list of accredited investors, so that when I am ready, I have that list set up, so.

Tony:
Oh, cool. That’s awesome. Yeah. So if you guys haven’t heard of InvestNext, they’re a software tool that a lot of syndicators use to help manage their accredited investors that come into the syndication. Well, I guess technically, they don’t all have to be accredited investors, because some syndications you can allow for non-accredited. But anyway, when you’re doing a big fundraise like this, it’s a platform that kind of helps you manage all the people that are investing. So if you’re doing that kind of thing, be sure to check it out. All right. So today’s question comes from Aaron Nygaard, and a quick side note, if you guys haven’t watched the show Fargo, the main character, his name is Lester Nygaard. So anytime I see the last name Nygaard, that’s what I think of.
So anyway, Aaron Nygaard is today’s lucky guest. So Aaron’s question is what paperwork do I need to close on an off-market deal, and why? If there are cash offers, can it all be done between me and the seller? Do you typically ask for an inspection period? Any help with those questions would be great. So I’ve done a few off-market deals, so I can kind of share my experience. Typically, what we do first, Aaron, is that we’ll get a purchase contract set up. And then once we have that purchase agreement signed between both parties, we’ll take that, here in California, I usually take it to an escrow company. And then escrow is the one that kind of facilitates that transaction between me, the seller, and title. And then they’ll draft up pretty much all the other documentation you need to make it a legally binding agreement.
You can still ask for everything you would ask for on an on-market deal. So you still maybe put an earnest money deposit, you still have your inspection period. If you are buying this with a loan, you can have a loan contingency. So all of the things that go into a regular on-market transaction, from a purchase agreement standpoint, can also go into this off-market transaction. The only difference is that the property was never listed and typically, there’s no real estate agent kind of playing the role of middle man between the buyer and the seller. So you guys make an agreement, take it to title and escrow, they facilitate that transaction. So how has it been for you, Ash?

Ashley:
So usually what I do is I’ll do a letter of intent first. So usually it comes out to one or two pages. And basically, it’s just stating your intent is to purchase this property, located at, the buyer is, the seller is, it’s going to be a cash offer at this amount, the deposit is going to be this, and then if there are any contingencies. So I always put contingent on attorney approval, contingent on if there’s going to be financing, financing, or you sell your own house or something like that. I always put that in there. And then there’s just a couple other things. If you Google letter of intent, you can kind of get a bunch of ideas, a bunch of samples, of what it could look like. It’s really not meant to be a contract. It’s really just to get them to agree to the terms.
And then I take that letter of intent, in New York State, you have to use an attorney for closing. So I take that letter of intent and I send it to my attorney, who actually takes that information and puts it into a real estate contract for the property. And then my attorney takes it from there. And the seller, I’ll recommend them an attorney to use, or if they have their own attorney, I’ll give them a copy of the contract, once it’s executed, for them to give their attorney. And then our attorneys communicate from there. And basically, it’s out of my hands after that, and they take care of everything such as the title work. So definitely the letter of intent is nice, because if they don’t accept your offer, you didn’t waste a ton of time going through a real estate contract at first.
And then I also like to do multiple letter of intents, maybe one seller financing, and then one conventional financing, or a cash offer. And then I present them to the purchaser, or the buyer, that way. And then as far as an inspection, it depends what type of house I’m buying or what property. So I’m trying to buy a campground right now. I am doing an inspection on that property, because if the water lines are bad, that could be a huge expense to me. But if I’m buying a $20,000 dumpy little cabin that I’m gutting anyways, I do not do an inspection. But as Tony said, anything that if you were buying a property off the MLS, you can put any of the same contingencies or things in the contract as you would if you were buying on-market, including furnishings, if you want furnishings included or the lawnmower or things like that, too.

Tony:
Yeah. So I guess the last piece of advice to Aaron would be just go out and find a local, either attorney, escrow company, title company in whatever market you’re in, let them know that you have this off-market transaction, and most should be able to kind of guide you through that process, because that’s how we got started the first time we did an off-market deal.

Ashley:
Yeah, Tony, that’s great advice. And even contacting them before you even start looking for those off-market deals too, so that you have them ready and they can kind of guide you, this is what we would need from you in order to put together a contract, so you know what you could put into your own initial contract or your own letter of intent, too, so. Okay. Well, we have to get out of here, and Tony is actually doing something exciting today. He’s got interviews for a personal assistant.

Tony:
Finally. So if you’ve ever sent me an email or a text message and it took me days or weeks to respond, hopefully that will all change after we finish recording [crosstalk 00:08:25].

Ashley:
Yeah. Well, exciting, Tony, and I hope the interviews go well. Thank you guys for listening. And if you missed out on applying for the position as Tony’s administrative assistant, make sure you follow him at Tonyjrobinson on Instagram to find out about any more new hires he has, and then you can follow me at wealthfromrentals. And I have no idea what I need, so if you listen to this podcast and are a loyal listener and you know something that I need and that you can help with, please message me a DM, slide into my DMs and tell me what I need and how you can do that for me. Thank you guys so much for listening. My name is Ashley and he’s Tony, and we will be back on Wednesday with a guest.

 



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