Category Archives: Real Estate Investing

Buy Your Investment Property Right To Sleep At Night

The following is  a true story about a California real estate investor who bought his investment property here the right way.   The names and minor details have been changed to protect identities.

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Real estate investors here in Kansas City, California and everywhere else hear all the time “you make your money when you buy.”  But what does that mean?  Can I give you an example?  Well, yes, I can.

Steve has been an investor client of mine for about four years.  He owns property in California (one investment house, I believe) and a couple here in Kansas City.  He’s in the local business of Los Angeles which is to say he’s works with television.  He’s paid very well for what he does and he’s been nominated for many an award.  (May have even won a few for all I know.)  When a television series is a hit he can have job security for years.  When it closes down you just don’t know when your next steady check will be.

dragon_unemployedSteve hasn’t had a steady check for just about a year.  He’s done odds and ends jobs but that just doesn’t cut it.  He’s been spending his savings and while he’s not anywhere near destitute it was time to take some drastic action while waiting for his next big thing which begins this fall.  Which brings us to his current rental property holdings.

One place he has through me is a duplex that has not only his original equity from four years ago but also about a 10% –  12% gain in value since his purchase.  The place more than pays for itself each and every month, attracts high quality tenants and has a huge upside when this economy ramps back up…whenever that may be.   Another place he has through me is a single family home that he bought about 18 months ago.  We got it at a steal.  At the time the going rate for that house in Kansas City proper was, in my opinion after accounting for condition, neighborhood, etc., about $110,000 to $112,000.  I helped Steve buy this potential investment property for $97,500 with the bank kicking in $500 for closing costs.

Of course, to get it at this price we had to do some wrangling and looking.  And we had to put in a brand new heating and air conditioning system that ended up costing about $2,600.  We rented it for $925/mo and the first year or so went great.   But then the tenant lost her job and rent stopped shortly thereafter and we had to get rid of her.  We tried to rent but forty days and nights went by without a new tenant (about average for the neighborhood) and that just happened to coincide with the monetary pressures of our Steve.

Still 3 months from steady work, savings dwindling and one rental property vacant it was time to do something.  We looked at the entire situation.  Not dire.  But why wait to get there?  Why not use the assets at hand to ease the transition.  Kansas City will have more rental properties available when the time is right.  Of that, I’m sure.

I worked the numbers for Steve who said if I could get $110,000 for the place he could cover his initial investment, closing costs, HVAC and some vacancy along with my commission and he would be tickled pink.  Also, there would be very little capital gains and/or depreciation recapture to worry about since he had owned just shy of 2 years.  Vacancy losses would offset some of the taken depreciation.  They key was he could get his hands back on his initial equity investment and use that as his cushion after writing another huge tuition bill for his daughter’s college.

Now, because this house was located in a part of Kansas City that does pretty well regardless of economy and because this house is attractive to home buyers and renters alike and because this house was functional but not fancy it was not too difficult to sell.  I showed it to a different out-of-state investor who jumped on it.  A house right down the street had just sold for $129,500.  Now that house had about $3,000 worth of closing costs built in as well as a modernized kitchen and bathrooms. 

USA Costa Rica

Not to drag out the story too much, the buyer got the house for $108,900.  He got a house he could make money on and then modernize when the time comes to sell. He’ll have a modest equity gain when that happens and a quality rental house/house for his son going to UMKC in the mean time. He’s happy as punch.

Our seller, Steve, is happy because his gains/losses are absolutely negligable especially when you consider he only owned 19 months!  No, he didn’t make any money on this particular investment property.   But he also didn’t lose any.  And he bought the property in what some have called the worst housing crisis since the Great Depression.

I just want to hammer in the importance of working with a professional real estate agent that understands and works with investment property when you are looking at acquiring more rental property.  If you do, just about no matter what, you won’t lose money.  Here is a perfect example.

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It Just Got Harder To Buy Investment Property

Dear Fannie Mae,

Thank you for continuing to screw up the mortgage market for real estate investors.  I’m referring to your new guidelines effective September 1, 2009.

It’s nice to know you have no clue whatsoever.  Why are you punishing the wrong people?  Idiots.  (That’s my own personal opinion.)

Chris Lengquist
Keller Williams Realty
Diamond Partners, Inc
913.322.7515
listwithchris (at) kw.com

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Quality Income Properties Make Your Life Easier

mapOver the years I’ve had on-line and off-line discussions with people about my philosophy of owning income property around Kansas City.  I’m basically a snob when it comes to real estate investing.  I want quality rental property.  I want my rent homes to be in good neighborhoods that will attract a middle class tenant.  I want my properties to be in neighborhoods that appreciate.

I want a lot of things.  I want my rental property to be in a neighborhood that will sell in good times and bad.  I want 5% or less vacancy in good times and bad.  I want rental property that pays for it’s self but doesn’t necessarily kick off cash flow.

Why?

Because of now.  That’s why.  I have two clients with income properties that they acquired before we met.  One is soon to be vacant on both sides and we can’t seem to sell it for anywhere near what he paid for it.  The other has had a vacant side for the better part of 6 months and quality clients are seemingly impossible to find.  One is in Missouri (Independence).  One is in Kansas (Kansas City).  Neither I would have probably even shown them let alone wrote up a contract without serious counseling from me to not purchase.

Meanwhile, my own personal rental property located in a pretty upscale neighborhood (for a duplex neighborhood) has been vacant for zero days and I already have a couple of applications in.  You see, the current renters that are in my income property have been there three years and I just helped them buy a house that closes next week.  I put up a For Rent sign two weeks ago.  On August 1st I’ll have new tenants moving in.  The rent will be 8% higher than it was three years ago.

manager_rented_signYes, in these “bad” times with increasing vacancies for lower end income property my middle class three bedroom, 2 bath, one car garage half-duplex located in Olathe, Kansas will have new tenants in with zero days vacancy!

I stretched and stretched and stretched to afford that half-duplex rather than buy something that was less expensive in a less desirable neighborhood.  And I’m glad I did.  Realizing that not everyone can do the stretch I would encourage you to save and save until you can upgrade if you are thinking of making your first investment property purchase.

Now, you need to understand what I’m saying.  Price isn’t necessarily the determining factor on a quality neighborhood or property.  Far from it.  But it can be everything.  You probably need professional help to determine the difference.

Real estate investing is not rocket science.  But it is a study that needs to be taken seriously.  Finding a quality income property will make your real estate investing life so much easier.

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Personal Real Estate Investor Magazine

real estate investorFrankly, I had forgotten about this interview from a few months back.  Along with Dan Reedy and Ben Edsall I’m interviewed about real estate investing here in the Greater Kansas City area.  I don’t come off sounding too foolish.  🙂

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Summer has set in to Kansas and yet we are still getting spring-like storms.  Go figure.

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It’s summer in Kansas City so you know the Royals are 12 games back at the All-Star break.  Go figure.

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Every offer I’ve put in this month, every offer, has multiple bids.

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Investor Loans, Flooding & Soccer

Wow.  What a weekend.  First, I watched the US Socer team squander their greatest opportunity in 125 years by losing to Brazil 2-3 after leading at the half by two goals!  We (the US) are developing better players with better soccer skills. But playing against the greatest of soccer nations show we still lack the foot magic, the ability to control in tight places and the lack of understanding to know how to keep possession to kill a clock.  (Jeez.  Now I’m sounding like Herm Edwards.)

Then, I sold a house.  The bad news?  Some of my best tenants are buying a house.  The good news?  They used me as their REALTOR.

Then on Monday one of my investors locked at 6.5% with no points (75% ltv) on a non-owner occupied loan.  Not too shabby.

Then today I get a call from a tenant for a house I manage to say water is coming under the wall to his basement.  Uh oh.  I drove over immediately and found water coming out of the front door of the lower unit of this duplex.  Somewhere between last Tuesday (when we were there last) and today a hot water pipe fitting had burst.  The kitchen ceiling lies on the floor.  The kitchen cabinets are ruined.  Oy.

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Things To Do While I’m Away

austin 1I’m going to take my wife down to Austin, TX for a few days beginning tomorrow morning.  No big exciting real estate deals though we will be meeting for lunch with Benn and Lani of AgentGenius.  And I will be getting some docs signed by a client who currently lives in Austin but is closing on a house in Kansas City here in about three weeks.  So I may not post for more than a couple days.

Watch the BawldGuy
Jeff Brown over at BawldGuy.com has promised to talk about figuring expenses.  He did a teaser last evening that I commented on.  Can’t wait to see what he comes up with.  If you are a real estate investor you will definitely need to see what Jeff has to say.  Jeff may root for the wrong baseball team.  But he knows his numbers. 

Calculate Your Principal Reduction
I’ve said many, many times before that my favorite of the 4 Benefits of Real Estate Investing is Principal Reduction.  If you own rental property you need to know what this benefit is to you this year.  It will cheer you up knowing that someone else is helping you to pay down your loan.  Trust me.  Just get out your amortization chart and figure out how much of each payment is going towards principal reduction.  It’s free money!  Or at least I like to think of it that way.  🙂

header_r1_c2_f2Smoke Some Ribs
Here’s what I like to do.  Get some K&M Barbeque dry rub from the Kansas City BBQ Store and rub a healthy dose into a slab of ribs.  Set up your grill/smoker to about 225-250 degrees of indirect heat with plenty of hickory chips or cherry chips for flavoring.  Smoke for about 2 hours.  Then pull the ribs, wrap in foil and continue to cook at 325-350 degrees for the next 3 hours…or so.  You’ll have to check them to be sure they’re done.  Usually by this time I’ve quit paying attention to the time and I’ve had a couple beers while shooting the breeze with friends and family or listening to the baseball game.  When you can bend the slab in half while the meat begins to pull from the bone you’re done!  Slather on your favorite bbq sauce ( I like to go with Zarada’s, Gates or whatever I’m experimenting with at the time) and smoke an additional 10-15 minutes or so uncovered.   Now, it’s time to eat.

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Net Operating Income: Nothing Has Changed

learn to crawlI promised last week to hit some of the very basics of real estate investing here in Kansas City…or anywhere, for that matter.  And while spending a little time on this real estate investing blog  over the weekend I noticed that my messages really don’t change.  Good market.  Didn’t change.  Bad market?  Didn’t change.  Basics are the basics.

On January 29, 2007 I wrote a post titled Net Operating Income – Formula For Success.  It’s a short, sweet post about figuring your Net Operating Income.  Almost every way imaginable to figuring out whether or not an investment property will make you money or make you lose money is based on a realistic NOI.  What is the real income?  What are the real (and sometimes un-thought of) expenses to the ownership and operation of the said rental property?

Before we do anything we just need to know what the Net Operating Income of the proposed rental property is going to be.  Got it?

Income – expenses = NOI

Income includes rent, parking space rent, coin-operated laundry money, etc.  Expenses include lawn maintenance, vacancies, utilities, etc.  But expenses does not include debt service.  Debt service is something different and will vary from investor to investor making a house affordable for one but not affordable for another.  We’ll talk more about that this week.

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