Nov 2020 Monthly Market Update

https://youtu.be/M9-A0vG5F1w

All right folks. It is November, 2020 monthly market update. Today’s Easter egg. He would like to download is the full, who he shared jive with. Pretty much all the goodies in their investor files and spreadsheets plus free access to the first three bottles in the e-course. Go to simple passive cashflow.com/club and join in there.

But if you haven’t met me, my name is Lane Kawaoka. I am the creator of simple passive cashflow, all about the stealing, the secrets of the wealthy, but on today, we are going to be recapping some of the news that has been happening this last month. We’ll get into the election a little bit right now. It’s still a little bit of a up, it looks like Biden is probably going to come out ahead.

But what’s teaching points that I’ve been working with some folks on lately. So a lot of people have been taking advantage of the cares act, getting a hundred thousand dollars out of their retirement accounts as we call it. Jailbreaking one tactic that is being used is safe. Investor has a big salary.

So they’re, they’re making over two, $300,000 a year. And they have a lot of money in their retirement account, but when they take money out of their retirement account, they slide it out as ordinary income. So if you’re making over two, $300,000, you’re in the highest tax bracket, it may make sense for you to put it into what’s called a QRP.

Instead, there’s more information at school, passive cashflow.com/prp. It’s another two out there, right? Every situation is a little bit different and the QRP is not the right situation for everybody. But in certain cases, it is, I think what’s another investor in our group, which you guys can join on Facebook.

Just shoot me a message. We’ll get you access to bear. But folks are using, you don’t get any tax benefits. Unfortunately, when you invest via a QRP. So it’s great for investing in Bitcoin or all these things that don’t give you the tax advantages of real estate, or if you’re just a private money lender or a debt investor, which I don’t really see why you would want it to do that in the first place.

But if you that’s what you do, or maybe you do life settlements. Two, that’s a great use for the QRP for my video window. There it is another teaching point here we’ve been using a lot of lately because we are able to be a little more liberal with the deductions. Some of the things that we had, we can do, or by calling, we don’t do full offices.

That’s a bad word. Call them administrative offices. And we do this Augusta rural. A lot of this is in my taxGuy@simplepassivecashflow.com slash tax. I’m not a CPA. I’m not a tax attorney. It’s not giving you any legal advice. This is just to get the juices flowing so that you can also go to your tax professional and pay less taxes.

That’s what it’s all about because you guys are the ones putting money into the economy and investing in. Oh, I had a thought here. It looks like this is probably going to happen. If Democrats would win just an idea. Maybe we should convert more of a retirement accounts. Or maybe take up any of your career pap.

I have one to cash. I’m thinking taxes will likely be going up generally, but understand it is mostly for the higher tax bracket folks. They’re trying to hurt the guys that are $400,000 EGI and above. But if you guys are smart, your AGI isn’t that high and you’re able to bring in a lot lower. So I don’t really want to get into the election or anything like that, but I, frankly, I don’t care who wins.

Because all the tax stuff, I personally fly under the radar and that’s really what the full sibling, passive cashflow gravy train is all about. Investing in deals, getting passive losses, loitering your ordinary income with real estate professional status. It’s all a game to game, paying less taxes equally, all the, all these rules you don’t really apply to you.

So it doesn’t really matter. Who’s in office and Oh, by the way, it’s really more depends. Who’s in the Senate because they really make the laws. My opinion, the presidents come up more of a figurehead us, especially when it comes to taxes and those types of things. But I’m probably going to be having Toby on the podcast next week, discussing implications on taxes based on who wants to be figure out who is actually the winner, but yeah, getting into the monthly news.

President Trump got COVID-19 and I think it got swept under the rug after he got it. And everybody heard the story get closed out, but shock the financial markets. And I’m just like, what the heck does the president getting COVID have anything to do with the market’s going up or down? It’s either that or newscasters are just fishing for news.

Again, the other thing big that’s still at play. We’re still waiting for that second really big, similar plan that. It’s taken a really long time to come through. Democrats want it a lot higher than Republicans and it’s in a stalemate or probably get pushed through here in the next month as selections happen.

We’ll have those talks, but either way, I think a lot of real estate investors tend to be more on the right more libertarian, if anything. But I don’t really care. One bit simple. Passive cash is not about being pulled at and go one bit, but understanding which way things move and reacting the best way as an independent investor.

But typically the Republicans are better for the economy, but if the Democrats win, they’re pretty more liberal with. Pumping fake money into the system. So that can be, I think of it as hell heads. I win tails. I win type of a scenario. That’s really where you should. You guys should get to at some point to figure out where the puck is going and skate to it as the other great ones said, but overall bright outlook for housing, the demand for housing is very strong and the confidence required for individuals to purchase a foam cannot be understated because of the bowl mortgage rates.

And right now it’s pushing up prices in a lot of areas is the low supply. So people aren’t putting their homes on the market. I don’t know if demand is higher or lower than normal. The prices are dictated by supply demand right now, supply we know as well. So that is why I says are going. So I would like the New York times.

So they came up with this article, whereas the model, the temporary laid off right after. Cool. If it happened. And I really bulged out in April and then may, and then has been tracking down in June, July, August, really visualizes how big the temporary layoffs were. And on the right side, here are the Kermit late layoffs throughout the months.

Those of you guys listening in the podcast for miles puts this on the YouTube channel. You can check it out. At simple passive cashflow.com/investor letter, where all these monthly reports will be held in case you ever miss these, we are invested in Biloxi, Mississippi, or Gulf port, and maybe you’ve seen some of the hard rock t-shirts I know that’s the first time I saw Biloxi, but I went and stayed down here on it’s like a casino role on the boardwalk there, but we have a couple of smaller apartments.

Couple of hundred units sizes there, but we chose not to do a cost segregation because in cost segregations, the crossover point to do one and spend five to $10,000 to do one to extract that bonus. Depreciation only makes sense if you’re going to hold onto the property longer than three years. And you’re just not too bullish on Biloxi in general, in a really long long-term thing.

So something it’s a great market, but we opted not to do that cost segregation because once we rehab those units and we’re going to probably just be out, but. This new story popped up. So universally music and Diane Chi U ventures is putting a 1.2 billion entertainment destination in Biloxi is eclipsing the 750 million who refridge resort and casino that the rate Steve, when developed back in 1999, I’m not saying that this one project.

It’s going to sway my thinking on my exit strategy and those a couple of deals, but that’s a lot of money. $1.2 billion, a lot of money to go in on a small town like that. So I’ll be watching this and these are the stories to be on the lookout for just like in Nashville. So Southwest value partners opens a 591 roam brand Hyatt Porto within Nashville.

Now not saying that you’re investing in full tails or anything, but hotels are a great indicator of progress. And Nashville is another market that I watch. In that’s still cash flows and it is a little bit of a buzz around the town of Nashville. Haven’t found anything yet, but always looking like I said, but Nashville is another market to be on the lookout for this is reported by Ari business online, a pretty nice building.

So news out of California and Florida for the Mickey mouse fans out there, Disney to lay off 28,000 employees at the part of, so that ain’t good or they’re closed now. No one’s going to this stuff. So this kind of makes sense. I’ll show these things will bounce right back once the pandemic fades away next year.

Moving to Texas. So business now reports that Texas central Reeses fed approval to move ahead with the Houston Dallas bullet train. So this thing is supposed to go 200 miles per hour and traveled between Dallas and Houston and less than 90 miles. I don’t know when this thing is going to be coming online.

But that’s going to be pretty cool. Texas is amazing. That’s probably why it being more democratic because everybody else, California is running to get the heck out of California. That’s part of it. I think that is why Arizona’s as long as a state to vote Democrat, because heck a lot of people are Californians for X Californians moving over there.

But again, not to get political or anything, but that’s just people moving away and you got to follow where the people are. Texas is on fire still. And something like this, even you can’t build something like this, this will get there a lot quicker, I think, than the Sacramento to California. I used to build railroad as my first career as a project engineer and track engineer.

And I’ll tell you it’s. To build this track. All it takes like moving mountains to get all the land and that ain’t going to happen in a place like California, but Texas is the one place that you’d get nice long linear pieces of land. John Burns reports. They put that together. These meat infographics.

Again, if you guys check out. The investor letters@simplepassivecashflow.com slash investor letter, you can see these right. I’ll usually pull these to Instagram channel or the Facebook page, but they want to compare. What’s a better place to invest Florida or the Southeast three categories here. As far as the housing market, they think Florida has the advantage there.

The rental market, they see it as a tie. And as far as economy, they’re giving the nod to the general South. Benefiting from biotech banking, manufacturing, industrial sectors. The reason they nudged it over Florida was because of Florida service oriented, economic. Like the Orlando was what they’re probably talking about, but Florida Southeast great places to invest, especially if you’re looking for cashflow.

All right. So we’re looking at a chart from Arbor. Ranking the top markets. So Seattle, Phoenix, Austin, San Antonio, Dallas, Portland, Baltimore, Denver of Indianapolis Columbia. This is a list of, this is like, what they see is the new opportunities CEO’s of the top. I don’t really quite buy that. I think sales a great market, just doesn’t cash flow.

So I’m out, but Phoenix, Austin, San Antonio, Dallas. Our next Phoenix and Austin follow closely behind Seattle bending from resilient labor markets. Texas met shows led by Dallas and Houston. Continue to capture an outsize share of large multi-family investment. So little sub-note here. I always recommend reading the whole article.

Maturing millennial households have a growing desire for mixing the amendments of class a multi-family will also enjoy the space of the suburbs. So this is that push for what’s. Being called the term suburban won’t they family. So not really in the CBD for business district, not the marijuana CBD, but that other CBD, but more on the outskirts and suburbs, maybe 20 minutes an hour outside the city center is what they’re talking about.

These suburbs they founded before. That’s what I like to invest in because there’s a nice push towards that. A couple more graphs from Arbor. They’re showing on the left here. Large multi-family lending is going out to Dallas, Houston, Phoenix, Atlanta than DC, New York, Denver, Philadelphia, Orlando sentence only is.

So for those markets, I like a lot. Dallas, Houston, Phoenix, and plans on top for large multi-family lending to round out the other chart, which is they’re ranking at percent share of low count Dallas, Houston v-necks Atlanta and New York. Washington Orlando, Philadelphia, San Antonio. And then, so the biggest and the last chart for Arbor here, they’re trying to show the large multi-family lending.

Now, where is the lending volume per capita happening? So the tops are Orlando, Denver, Phoenix, Las Vegas, Jacksonville, Florida, San Antonio, Austin, Charlotte, Nashville, Dallas. I don’t know all this typically means, but it’s just showing you where the action is happening. Where’s the activity happening a little bit sad.

You guys know a black Panther chatter Bozeman died last month. There was a story here that unfortunately the guy didn’t have a will. So the wife files probate case. So that’s unfortunate that when you don’t have a, will you actually, when you, even, when you do have a will, all your stuff means public out there, would you really want to have in interest?

So that’s like one of those. I think that’s a shitty thing that lawyers do. They shouldn’t make you a will because by making a well, they did sure they get, they get the probate or when you die, really, they want to do it. They should be making you get a trust. So make sure you guys get a trust this year, especially if you have kids.

Friends. Don’t let friends have wills joint center for housing studies from Harvard university must be legit. It’s Harvard says that most whole water’s started do it yourself projects during the pandemic. So normally they’re hovering around the 60% and it went up to even as high as 78% in may of people starting a duet Bureau.

Cell full maintenance project. So this is probably why my lumber prices skyrocketed right before we’re going to sign a contract. Like we love her prices have come back down and it’s probably the same phenomenon. Why you guys can’t buy flour at the grocery store? Cause everybody’s. Bacon sourdough bread or whatnot.

Another thing that I watch every year is this price, water, Cooper. Accounting firm comes up with this. They team up with the urban land Institute to have this conference every year that they call your emerging trends and they come up with this really core board. It’s a nice read. It may not be super actionable.

But they released the top 10 emerging markets that are as follows Raleigh, North Carolina, Austin, Texas, Nashville, Tennessee there’s Nashville. Like I said, Dallas Fort worth. We would talk about Dallas all the time. Charlotte, North Carolina, Tampa, Florida, salt Lake city, Washington, DC, Boston, and long Island, New York, those top 10 merging markets.

From the urban land Institute and price, water merchants in trends. I read this report. I always keep in the back of my hand that they’re capturing a lot of the luxury markets. So in this list, I probably throw out Washington DC, Boston, New York, because they don’t cash flow. So I, as an investor am not hitting that niche national real estate investor.

Reports San Francisco, apartment rents, creator of the 31%. And yet most people are getting the heck out of San Francisco. A lot of the employers are telling their people to work from home because a lot of them are tech jobs and tech guys can work wherever they want for the most part. And if you have to stay at home and shelter in place and can’t go out, why would you want to be in the hustle bustle in the city where there’s in this time?

No social activities. So, this is why people aren’t getting the heck out of San Francisco. A lot of them are moving over to the Bay or Oakland or spreading out elsewhere. It is the view hall report time. Listen, I’m getting, I always get excited every year that you call report gets for these. Here are the winners and losers, California, Seattle, Portland, just get a bomb.

That’s sort of getting people are getting the hell out of town there and they are going to yep. You guessed it, Texas. The Southeast Jacksonville’s labeled all here, Austin and yep. You’re getting the heck out of the Northeast, New York, Boston, all those types of places. And if you haven’t heard it, you need to get out of Chicago.

Cause that’s that’s state is going underwater fast. I’m hoping a lot of people get into turnkeys in Gary, Indiana, which is just on the other side of the border. So they’re getting their beneficiary of a lot of people are trying to get out of the state. Gary Indiana’s to Chicago, Illinois is like people living in Vancouver, Washington, but working in Portland, Uber reports that Las Vegas, top the U S rise of apartment tenants, not paying rent.

Those Las Vegas people, 10.6% of Vegas tenants have missed a rent payment of two, 4.1% year earlier. I don’t know these last, I don’t want to say anything bad, but add, I think like gamblers there, but yeah, this is why I like to invest in more, uh, red States, especially in the South Southeast, it seems to be typical of the, of the California type of, or West coast type of mindset or blame it on somebody else.

If you can’t pay your rent, you never had your savings accounts, but yeah, maybe it’s near side of me. I love these guys. They just can’t work. So when you’re a tourist based economy and the hotels aren’t open, you don’t have very many options, but I don’t know. That’s just me. I think if you can’t page until your landlord and move out.

So if you guys are struggling building your network, we always say building your network network is all about building your net worth. It’s all about surrounding yourself with the right people, going to the local media and the free online forums out. There are some of the worst places to go for passive investors.

Because everybody’s broke, right? They’re all into house flipping and being more active. A lot of people in our tribe are more passive investors that are pretty good with their money. They save them money prudently. So we’ve got a couple options for folks. If you guys are new, trying to build your net worth up to over at least.

Quarter million dollars. And your prescription for that is buying a single family home or renter, especially if you live in a high price area or blue state, I check out the remote investor can keep ADR. And of course that’s at simple passive castle.com session can keep it, or we’ll be starting the next class probably in January, February.

And if you guys are accredited investors and looking, you’d take your way to the next level. One third of our scope is to analyze syndication deals become a sophisticated investor, and at very least. Not go onto those sucker deals. The Daisy chain deals up there. You guys can check that out@simplepassivecashflow.com slash journey.

And this is where we teach and we put our, all our heads together on how you can do the simple passive cashflow gravy train, which is all about paying little to no taxes via getting the passive losses. Um, these larger syndication deals and using that to pair with a real estate professional status tax strategy, a lot of ways you can do this raw, but every situation is different.

This is where we are me with information to take it to your tax professionals, to set this stuff up for you. But we are probably rebranding this as the family office, Ohana, trying to make it more of a community of high net worth investors. And it’s going to be more of a collaborative environment. Now this is the time or I switch gears and I talk a little bit about what I’m up to personally.

Hopefully I’ll give you some ideas and things to work on in December or January, but this always goes and follows the framework of Tony Robbins, six eats, but first is. How do I find growth? What was I working on as a lot of you guys know, I work with a coach and I don’t know my business, but I see it more as like accountability.

I paid people to keep me accountable because I don’t help . It is. And how much time I waste and how much leverage I can get when somebody has helped do that. But we really work. This month. That’s a big, super basic that I wanted to share with you guys. It’s called the RPM tactic, but it’s all about figuring out the first thing.

What the heck do I want? What do I want? Like if you were for spouse giving you a hard time, yelling at you, what do you want? What is your end goal, right? Or you’re not happy and you want to change something. What do you want? And then from there, once you define what you want, then you can figure out what specific actions.

That you wanted to happen and then, but to really make it stick, you need to do what purpose? What do you really, why do you want this? You have to root it in, right? It’s for example, what do you want? I want a six back on washboard. Abs. I want to flex and beach. All right. What specific actions do you have that make it happen better, blah, blah, blah, blah.

Exercise. A lot of people forget, what is my purpose? Why do I really want to do this? Because if it’s simply for vanity reasons, I guess that’s a pretty good motivator. Or maybe you just don’t want to look like you’re lazy at the beach. That can be a big motivator on nothing wrong with that, but maybe you really want to live a long life to see your kids.

But when you’re older, but that’s really important to root that. Why are doing it? How do I find contribution? I recently interviewed the now mayor of Hawaii. Bland GRD is interesting talking to him, getting into him and then talking offline with him a little bit. And this guy’s turn at burden. And that, that older age, I think he’s like in his seventies, pretty amazing watching him go.

But I pissed them off. I told them I didn’t really care about politics and you gotta get all upset with me. And I’m like, I was like, dude, like I do. All right, push your values on me grow. But yeah, I see where he’s coming from, but that’s why he’s putting his time and energy and his passion, his politics.

And I think I saw it right through and I think that it’s. That he’s the guy you want for mayor. You don’t want me, I have more thinking about myself and I’ve just quietly want to grow my empire, not at this point where I want to become there at this point. Call it six. Flustering significance will be closed.

A couple of deals this month. I think it was yesterday. Actually we closed with spring Oaks on Git 40 unit in Conroe, Texas light value. Add stabilize apartments. 140 out of 140 units are already rehabbed the already proving the business plan on the higher rents, great property. And I was there about a month ago.

I felt really confident on that one. And then a couple of weeks ago, it closed on a little 27 unit in Tempe, Arizona suburb of Phoenix, a great debt on both of these properties, both Fannie Mae. Long 12 to 15 year terms, 3.06 on the with spring Oaks deal. And that’s my strategy. These days, you can get it for such a low interest rate, like at 3%, your cash line day one.

Really your downside is pretty low. Really. The only risk is if you can keep the property occupied more than 50 or 60%, it’s usually the breakeven point and you guys have checked out the Huntsville three pack. This was the biggest year to date, but 407 unit. It was three properties. One of the properties took a really long time to close.

He find it close it much earlier than this months, but that kind of wraps up that portfolio. So the first two properties are going awesome. Higher performer rents. Those sedan often move in. I think he was a great year to toot. My horn is always to have a fulfilling life and get a little uncertainty in it.

We had some hurricanes there. Hurricane Delta messed up some of the mobile home parks in Southern Alabama uncle force. We, I forgot what the first hurricane was. I think it was like Sally, but we got through that one with a little bit damage, but Delta, these are some pictures of Delta, but right. Not just working through the insurance and that’s why you have insurance.

So the problem there is you have to put up your own working capital. That’s why you have cash reserves in your budget. So you can pay, you can overlay these types of repairs before the invoices come in, you pay your invoices. And then you get reimbursed by the insurance company. That’s the kind of painful thing, but that’s all we have commercial insurance to cover us for this type of stuff, a certainty.

He was really nice to finally pay out the first. We always tell investors that we restabilize the asset in a couple of quarters and we did, we were able to do this on Huntsville deals. Yeah. 51 grand went out for the first quarter distributions to investors. And some people like to show a bunch of checks.

We don’t do checks direct and positive. It’s 2020. So here’s a screenshot of that. Going out to me makes me feel good. Cash money going out to investors. That’s what right about making money and also celebrating a little bit too. I was in Cleveland, Ohio. We did a little investor reception to celebrate the closing of the Rockefeller.

We rented out a little space in the rock and roll hall of fame. Got to check that out. Cause I’ve talked to some investors and I sell some of you guys. In Houston in early October, too. I had a loyal investor, picnic and boy also, but I want to also announce we are not going to be doing the in-person retreat in Hawaii due to everything that’s going on, but we are going to be taking the virtual and is going to be like nothing you’ve ever done before.

It is not going to be a bunch of lame speakers giving you. They’re saying warm presentation. They give 20 other places. It’s going to be me. I’m going to be distilling the information of all of these little tactics and tricks that we’ve gathered over the past few years. The simple passive cashflow gravy train using passive losses.

The bonus integration. Yeah. We’re going to talk about that. Why you don’t want to use 10 30 ones, the hot air balloon analogy. Yeah, we’re going to talk about that, but we’re also going to implement in a lot of networking. So I’m going to teach these concepts, but I’m going to break you guys up into little mini groups.

And you’re going to be able to teach each other, the concepts and actually talk about specific strategy. Everybody’s going to be vetted coming in here. It’s all going to be pure passive investors, and everyone’s got to apply to get in, and I’m still creating the agenda and be on the lookout for that this next month.

But it is going to be amazing. I’m so excited, but new podcasts and articles that I released. This month, it’s been nice having some help creating these videos, helping me get this content out to you guys. But if any folks have any questions on any of these specific topics, let me know or ask the question in our Facebook group.

Well, we can all chime in or resistance and barriers. I need an intern. If anybody has any type of kid that is willing to do a little bit of prep work and need a little bit of a mentorship, I’d like doing that. So I want to grow this a little bigger. So I bought some decaf coffee, some channels. Stop drinking as much caffeine and I’m trying to grow like the lawn a little bit better.

And so I bought this air rater. It’s like you step on it. And there’s two pins in there. And just even if you do it several hundred times, and this thing is one of the most therapeutic things that you will ever do in your life day, you recommend it. It’s good for your lawn too. And it’s good exercise. It should listen to podcasts.

Or whatnot, but that’s something that I’m working on the side. We’ll see you guys next month, dr. Claire bye.

This website offers very general information concerning real estate for investment purposes. Every investor situation is unique. Always seek the services of licensed third party appraisers inspectors, to verify the value and condition of any property you intend to purchase. Use the services of professional title and escrow companies and licensed tax investment and or legal advisor before relying on any information contained here in information is not guarantee as in every investment there is risk.

The content found here is just my opinion and things change. Right. I reserve the right to change my mind above all else. Do your own analysis and think for yourself because in the end. You are the only person who is going to look out for your best interests.

How to Set the Reversion (Exit) Cap Rate

https://youtu.be/yyxcm3F0u4I

0:00
Then the reversing cap rate that we’re using is 6.25, using a 6.25. But what are assets trading here with low fives,

0:10
yeah, five, and even under five, depending on where it is,

0:13
we’ll get into that in a bit.

0:21
Going back to the reversing cap rate, we’re using a 6.25, or version cap rate. I’ve kind of got to this a lot of times, but it’s still good worth repeating, took me a long time to find a grasp this concept. But this number that we plug in here at 6.25, is one of the biggest factors in coming up with all these projections. this number right here is the assumption of what kind of market we’re going to sell in, say, five years. So now, we want to assume that, you know, when you’re being conservative, you want to assume that you’re selling in a worst market. So we’re going to expand the version cap rate higher. So 6.25, is what we’re using. And that is how we you know, we put in 6.25 like how we are that’s how we’re getting the projected onto 2% return in five years. Now the question is like, well, what did you guys are less conservative or don’t expand your version Capri as much? Well, if we went to five and a half percent reversion cap rate, you know, we’ll be we would be putting this deal out at onto 58% return in five years, which would look awesome. But no, we like to over promise under develop under deliver. Poppy raised a lot of money and fill up this deal really quickly. But

1:41
yeah, no, that’s a that’s a good education point for people who, you know, if they are looking at other deals by other operators, you know, that’s a common that’s a that’s an easy change to make that really makes the returns go one way or the other, as you can see here. So if you if you ever see something that looks too good to be true in that range, you know, may dig a little deeper and ask what their assume reversion cap rate is that they’re using for the deal.

2:10
Right, and you know, the 6.25 con, I kind of go back and forth several days deciding on this number plus or minus a quarter point to have a point where we’re about what we’re going to use. If this this is again, a more of a Class B type of asset in a good area, a minus area. So that’s why you 6.25 but say it was more of a class C 1960s 1970s build, we probably would have used what like a 6.5% reversion cap. So you can’t just you can’t just compare the reversion cap rates for two deals, because the assets might be different, the locations might be different. The geographic locations might be different. I think we’ve used like for Huntsville, we’ve use 6.25

2:57
Also give us 6.25 to six and a half. And even on some of our earlier deals, we use seven but we use a little bit too conservative.

3:06
But the thought there was you know, Houston is a little bit more major market. You know if you compare that with your cap rates out in like Los Angeles or San Francisco, which is in the twos and threes, that’s kind of where we come up with some educated guesses and you know, if there were if the cap rates stay the same Tibet it is today at 5.25. You know, that means this deals looking like it’s gonna be 180% return in five years. But let’s keep expectations low because life is hard enough.

 

Dealing with Natural Disasters – Multi-family Real Estate

https://youtu.be/RYlKILsj2Js

0:02
On question seven here, investor asks, you know, these Gulf states are always getting hit with storms. I think we were just reminded about that. A couple few weeks ago, we’ve actually got some properties in Biloxi. Kyle and I are in some projects not with each other. So we have bring a wide range of responses to this question. And we let you talk about garden place to let you take that one. But, sure, as far as like insurance goes, you know, this is why it’s nice to not be a little landlord, what’s your little State Farm Allstate Insurance, right, we have big kid insurance here, for commercial assets were insured for the loss rents. And when we have a claim, we hire a claims person to fight on our behalf. And they get compensated based on how much the claim is. 

So a lot of times, I’ve actually had like two fires, and we’re full building has burned down twice. And the initial settlement that they gave us was like a third of what we actually ended up with, which goes the show why these claims adjuster guys are just totally worth it. And on a bigger project like this, we have the scales and the means to, you know, the working capital or pay them to get them going to fight or claim for us to get everything that we’re worth. I feel like, yeah, there’s administrative headache, for sure, we may have to pull some money out of our reserve capital. 

But at the end of the day, most times and not like, come out ahead. I’ve gotten like a brand new roof, put on a apartment building one time, which I thought was totally unfair, but hey, I’m gonna take it, I’m gonna take that I got a brand new building built on that one, we negotiated just a lump sum payment to go build something entirely new. I think the only problem is like, it just takes a while. Maybe Carl, you can talk about the garden, place the treat and submit to just kind of work. Yeah.

1:59
Well,

2:00
Unfortunately, you’re working with these big insurance companies. But at the end of the day, you’re also still working with people in human error can still creep in every now and then, which is what happened to us at garden place. So it, you know, we had a big tree that fell. Fortunately, nobody was hurt. There were some high winds in the area, and the tree just fell down. And this is Huntsville. So it’s not like near the Gulf or anything else, you know, they might have, you know, some tornadoes every now and then. But it’s definitely not in Tornado Alley, like in Dallas, or Oklahoma or Kansas or something like that. 

But anyways, it took this was almost a year ago, now we are we are about to finally took 11 units offline, we are finally wrapping up the last four units, but it took forever because the insurance company, just something so simple. They were sending the check. The first the first check, which is where we pay the contractor deposit, they were sending it to the wrong address. So how it was a never changed on their part, I don’t know. But they sent the check three different times over the course of like, you know, three months. And we were just at a loss. But But I do you know, I live here in the Gulf states. Hurricanes is just something that we deal with. You know, it’s not any different than if you’re in California, excuse me, California, and you have to deal with with wildfires. Or if you’re in, you know, Tornado Alley, like I just mentioned, you know, there’s a ton of obviously great assets in the Dallas area. Dallas sees tornadoes on, you know, annual basis, you know, every now and then there’s at least two or three big tornado storms that come through the Dallas area, you know, between the spring and the summer, it’s not uncommon there. And same thing with Oklahoma and Kansas. 

So you know, and then a way up north, you’ve got these crazy blizzards and everything else that can just, you know, take a toll on your property itself, just from the the bitter winters that they have up north. So, you know, it’s like anything else, we each area of the country has their own natural disaster. 

So you just make sure you have the right insurance that is going to cover you like Lane said we have lost rents, which means that for every month, that goes by that, you know, in our case, those 11 units are offline, we’re actually getting paid by the insurance company, the average of those rents, you know, the average for like, I think it was like the last six or nine months, whatever the average rent was for that specific unit. That’s the amount that they give us. So we’re covered there. So yes, it’s never a good situation. I would say to have to file a claim, especially on you know, when you’re talking about fires, I mean, because, you know, at the end of day we are talking about displacing people and having the final alternative housing for them. And then a lot of cases when we have a fire or down units in general. So, you know, we’re certainly sensitive to that. 

But to not, you know, we don’t want to downplay it by any means. But from an investor perspective and a risk profile, we’re covered. And we’re going to take the right amount of insurance out there, you know, I think people often forget that our our number one biggest investor on every single deal is our lender. Our lender is going to have certain parameters and certain guidelines and certain requirements from an insurance perspective that they’re going to require us to do. And Fannie and Freddie is notorious for that. And just having you know, additional coverages and things like that, that, you know, a normal traditional insurance agent is going to say, hey, look, you know, yes, you can take that type of coverage. It’s, it’s cost more, it’s just more of conservative, you know, it’s I’ve had multiple insurance brokers tell me that type of make those type of comments. So you know, they’re gonna require us, so we’re going to be fully covered there.

6:09
Yeah. And, and all that debacle is happening, we’re collecting loss rents. And the beauty of that is like, now these assets aren’t decaying on us. They’re not incurring expenses. We’re not having property management of these on top of that, and there’s a bit of a nice little Delta in there that we come out ahead.

Accredited Coaching Call – CPA from Hawaii

https://youtu.be/0NaO8faSOdY

What’s up guys on today’s podcast, we are going to be interviewing on a coaching call and a credit investor who is a CPA here in Hawaii. We’re going to dig in and see what his net worth, see what he’s been up to and advise them along. But before we get going, and I just wanted to give some commentary on where we are in the year 2020.

I think most people will say, it’s been a pretty rough year. depending what you’ve been up to. we’ve been. In our week group, we’ve been pretty much prudent picking up deals that cashflow staying away from more of those class C deals that have bad collections, that tenant base. And I’m thinking of better assets with better tenants, with a little bit of a value add.

I don’t see all the strategy can go wrong, right? if it’s cash flowing day one, you underwrite it where the occupancy can drop 20, 30% and you’re still in the black. I don’t see why. Why you would need to wait like this narrative, a lot of people go by, Oh, I’m waiting until their lecture. I’m waiting until next year. Just three reasons why I think waiting is just a bad idea here. Like number one, you’re not gonna have access to those deals. If you’re not already in the game plan, you’re not going to have access to those relationships, the lender relationships. And you’re not going to know what the deal is.

Most people who say that assert the guys get started. Number two, I’m not buying assets that are distressed deals. Anyway. if you notice that my stuff is 90% occupied or more so I can get that Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac debt, but you per se, I don’t really go after distress assets. And I think like a lot of these guys are saying, they’re going to wait till this distress inventory comes online and I’m like, dude, you’re not even a sophisticated investor.

You haven’t bought anything. What are you going to do with the distress asset? It falls into your life. You’ll probably screw it up. I don’t want, I don’t want to touch those distress assets. Neither, personally. I like stabilize ass to make it go. And lastly, by the time you’re ready to jump in. How are you going to know?

Like we, did you jump in around 2009 to 2014? No, a lot of people did it. They didn’t know when the bottom was maybe because they didn’t have the relationships and connections. Those who are already in the game strategically and prudently picking up Castro were the winners back then. And I think that’s what it is now.
And I do believe that this will all pass and I don’t follow people who are trying to get rich off doom and gloom and getting people to buy gold and get a little bit affiliate commissions done in that way. A little bit of me personally, lately, I’ve been trying to not work 12 to 14 hours. Been taking a little bit of a lunch break.

Normally I just work right through, but I, make my simple little lunch put on the YouTube. And yesterday I was watching a video by Kevin O’Leary, the shark tank guy, people call him mr. Wonderful. And I’m looking here with a video. If you want to look it up, how I made my first million dollars part one, it’s a 20 minute video, but I thought it was pretty cool.

And he talked about it, the story of how. No, you can get tricked into taking a salary. He gives a story. He repeats a story a lot, but I’ll summarize it, he, his first job was working in ice cream shops. Who’ve been ice cream. And the reason why he did it was there was like a cute girl next door in the adjacent store.

He wanted to be close to her. So he took that job. And after his first day at work, he was scooping ice cream and they’re wrapping up shop and. normally when people ask for samples, they throw their gum on the ground. And it’s, I guess it’s really nice Mexican tile. It looks really beautiful.

And so he was wrapping up and then the owner told him to go pick up the gum that people dropped on the floor. And of course, he sees the girl in the adjacent story. He doesn’t want to bend down and do it. And he’s no, you paid me to scoop ice cream, not like scraped gum off the floor.

And then she told him to get on his bike and never come back again. And today he’s very thankful for that. Because after that, he said he never really worked for money now, I think not a lot of people were like, mr. Wonder, he comes, it comes across as a little jerk. But I think that, a lot of people that they follow their career path a little bit too long and it never really go after their passions.

And maybe they’re, they just want to hit a financial freedom. That’s cool too. And a job is a means to the end. Not everybody’s going to become an entrepreneur and crack that $5 million, $10 million, $15 million net worth level for a lot of us, they listen to the civil past the cashflow that come out to our events and know your guys’ profile. You guys are hardworking professionals. It’s not practical to tell your boss that you’re just here to scoop ice cream. You’re not going to pick gum off the floor. You got to go pick up gum off the floor because you guys got a, you got families and you got to put food on the table.

But I think for me, the takeaway and where I disagree with mr. Wonderful. Here, you got to pick up gum off the floor, but if you put your money to good sound investments that all perform the retail stock and mutual fund market, and he’d do it in such a manner where you paid very little taxes. you guys can check out my taxes on school, passive cashflow.com/tax, but that’s enough on that.
you’re going to get financially free. And, I’d say under a decade, if you’re able to save 30 and $50,000 to investments every year. maybe your goals as in five, 10, $15 million, but mr. Wonderful kind of also outlines, how do people get to that level? Five, 10, 50, a hundred million dollars net worth.

Now maybe I don’t aspire to be there and maybe you don’t either, people who get to that level. There was always this getting to this pedestal of your first million dollars. And somebody talks about in this video is stories was going and learning how to be a cinematographer, making videos.

And that was his trade. He made a deal with his business school to make a MBA video promoting the program, but he just made like 40,000 bucks, but he parlayed that into another venture. Putting together short bits. And then he eventually sold that company or a, undervalued dollars amount of money, but that allowed him to get into the next software venture with another person who did the software.
He sold it. And that was obviously a soft key and his other business there that parlayed into the five, $10 million plus range. But yeah. all these entrepreneurs that you see that are very famous, it’s usually about two or three steps, two or three things that went right for them to get there.

And they’re outliers, I’d say most of us that are listening on the podcast. We’re just trying to get our first one and then invested smartly. And yeah, you may not do some business venture, but your job can get you there. Especially if you’re making over a hundred, 200 grand a year. If you just invest there, Be smart with taxes. You’re not going to make soft key, like how Kevin Larry did and sell it in a few years. if you work at your job for 10 years or maybe even 20 years, if you’re doing it the slow mutual fund way, it’ll get you to that first level. And once you get up to that first level, that’s where you take it up to or legacy wealth creation.

I talk a lot about, getting to your first hundred thousand dollar level for the guys in the incubator group, getting their preferred keys. And then once you get up to the half, a million million dollar Mark is a net worth, and then you get to this, a credit investor status. But for those who are credit investors, the next nice threshold they get to is a three and a half, $5 million market.

At that point, you’re able to live pretty comfortably. And when he talks about this video as most entrepreneurs. At some point, they just realize that they’re rich, they’re affluent at that point. And it’s a very binary thing that you’re living very cheapy me personally. I feel like I’m still pretty poor at this point.

Maybe I’ll one day I’ll have that epiphany, but check out the video, how I made my first million dollars part one asked mr. Wonderful is the YouTube and continuing to watch more of these, inspirational videos. But yeah, enjoy the coaching call. And if you guys would like to get on a coaching call and we still do these four volunteers are willing to put themselves out there.

I haven’t checked out the website yet, and there’s a whole bunch of stuff out there. One thing I would suggest is if you’re looking for some kind of activity to do in the winter time from home, try and check out our guide on trade lines, go to simple, pass a castle.com/trade lines. It’s a great way that I made at least $10,000 these past two years doing this on the side, renting out my credit card slots, my authorized user slots on my credit cards.
And if you haven’t yet join our club at simplepassivecashflow.com/club. 

Hey, simple passive cashflow listeners. Today. We are doing a numb, another who we member coaching call. And I think this one’s gonna be a good one. We’ve got a credit investor here worth 1.2 million bucks, a semi high income earner, not too high, like in the three hundreds, like some of the doctor dentists we’ve got, but definitely making a good professional salary.

So this should apply to a lot of you guys. But we have Brian, who is a CPA from Hawaii, a local guys here, but yeah, Brian, why don’t you tell us your story a little bit. Give us the context. Before we start digging into your personal financial statement. Yeah, sure. So like many folks, I ended up leaving Hawaii and I went to college on the mainland.

I got my undergraduate degree from Oregon, a school in Oregon. And after that, I was fortunate enough to get a job here back in Hawaii. So when you get a degree in accounting, usually start off as like in public accounting, working for a firm. So that was the route I took. I was doing, assurance or audit work.

And after about three and a half years there at that firm, I was like, I don’t think this is really for me. I don’t think it’s going to be, I’m not going to be in the partner track. so to speak. So I jumped off and went to private industry and I’ve been there ever since. I’ve worked a few different jobs.

I actually ended up working for a few real estate companies and I’m still working for one right now. They’re a developer of resort properties. And golf courses and similar type acids and yeah, that’s basically it. Oh, and prior to that, I was working as an analyst for a home builder, a national home builder.

So I was able to get a good grasp on the numbers side of working for a real estate company and working real estate deals. But now I don’t really do that. I focus more on the accounting side, so not as cool. That is exciting. And sexy, but it’s a job. Yeah. Pays well. And just for a little context, probably of a, I would say nine, 10% of the members are actually here from Hawaii, but it’s so Brian and I actually went to the same high school.

I don’t know. We haven’t seen each other since what, like 15 or 20 years ago. we’re on the golf team. We both kind of suck. yeah. And for those of you guys don’t know the bottom tier guys. Yeah. Like they send us out and because we have to play for a position, but it’s just we’re just here because it’s free.

And our parents told us to do it, told us to do it because this is the way to stir up resumes to get into college. At least that was what I was told to do. but yeah, so people in Hawaii, they usually go to school in the mainlands because the school is not too good here. Yeah. How long were you on the mainland?

Like after college working? I actually didn’t really work up there. Stayed up there for a little while after I graduated, but I graduated when times are pretty tough. So to speak is like 2010, 2011. So there were too many jobs available. I probably didn’t do a good enough job marketing myself when I was in college also.

So yeah, it was, I was lucky to get a job here. I think. Yeah. Around that time. Yeah, no offense, man. But you and I are similar. We’re like underperformers at the, the corporate life, which is probably why they didn’t read, circle you to a be partner or level thing, which is why we’re here.

And this is why your net worth is this way, because you chose a different path along the way. Possible. Yeah. Any feedback for younger guys and the CPA track? Cause you, you look like you’re 25, but you’re really actually Oh, you’re two years younger than myself. You’ve been working for quite a while.

how does it kind of work? You’ve worked for four years getting coffee for people or. How does it normally work? Yeah, I think it’s probably similar across the nation where you start out at a firm, you work these long hours doing pretty menial tasks. You’re the grunt, the low man on the totem pole, but I still would recommend.
That folks that are doing accounting out of college do work for a firm. I think you gain really valuable experience doing those horrible menial tasks for years and making a pretty poor salary. But yeah, overall, the experience I would say is it’s pretty good. And you come out of college with.

Sort of a year, your own group or cohort people that are similar aged with you. And they all are hired to firms at the same time. So it’s a nice stepping stone into work in the real world, so to speak. So you’re working with people that are your same age and similar experience and background a lot of times.

So it can be fun a lot of times. And also horrible, but yeah, I’d definitely recommend it. Yeah. So we break that we work backwards. The net worth is the score, right? A $1.2 million net worth. You make about 90, a hundred grand a year, living in Hawaii where salaries are maybe like 20 or 30%, less than counter promise on the mainland.
When I first see this, I’m a, head-scratcher all the C I do, unless somebody gave you a lot of money. She think you got a little help, I think, right? Like shit for a down payment, but not much, but I automatically know right now that you did something real estate probably related. I’m just have a hunch.

I kinda know, but tell us about like, when did she start investing in real estate? Because I see this all the time, right? Like doctors, for example, they make over 300 grand a year. I very rarely see them above one to $2 million network. But the guys who are investing and doing this stuff, like there are like three, four, five plus million at least.

So it’s like night and day numbers don’t lie. So tell us, how did you get to 1.2 here? Yeah, I guess part of it was luck and a lot of. some unlucky ness also, but I started young when I was about maybe two years out of college. I bought my first unit and it was a fixer upper that required a lot of a sweat equity, so to speak.

So I bought it. it was what’s called a leasehold property, which is common here in Hawaii. So people were overlooking it and while it was a leasehold, the fee was actually for sale. So you could buy it. Outright and own the unit. So I was able to get it all in with the fee at about 300 little over 300,000.

And I put in about maybe 20 or $30,000 of work and materials. And that was my first place. And I lived there for about three years, maybe two or three years. And I had a roommate also because it was two bedrooms. So that helped me out a lot, as far as paying down. My monthly expenses. So how’d you get the dump for that?

Cause it was like, yeah. So I was able to save up enough for the down payment myself. But on the fee portion, I had, a loan from my parents that I’m actually still paying them back right now. So I borrowed about maybe close to a hundred thousand from them to purchase the fee on the unit. And eventually I was able to refinance the whole package together.

To get a fee simple loan on it. So yeah, my parents definitely helped me out with my first place with the cash. they own rental property themselves. They used to. Yeah. Yeah. And the one of the units on my sheet is really, I code with them. So that’s a rental unit that they own, and they actually bought it for me when I was in college with the intent that I would live there.

But I stayed up on the mainland for a little while and then they ended up renting it out to a family friend. yeah, it’s the one that’s like on the bottom, the last one there. Okay. Yeah. So I. Yeah, I don’t really have anything to do with it, honestly, but I put it on there because I was able to get a line of credit on it because I’m technically the owner on it, but yeah.

I mean that worked right. That got you started. we could have, they could have not done that. You probably just working on your ratchet Subaru WRX drinking beers in someone’s garage right now. Just go into your day job, right? it couldn’t, that could very well happen at that point.

Yeah. Yeah, no, definitely. I, my parents definitely had a positive influence on labor. They’ve had rental units as far as long as I can remember, they had some, even off Island and out of state. So not anymore other than this one, but yeah. Yeah. that’s why we both went to the mid-back writer turns to cut in and have some money.
Not rich, but yeah. It was, I was fortunate enough just like you. I think my parents actually sold one of their houses, I think too, to put me to mid back in college, but I never really did that. though, they just did. Okay. Yeah. Yeah. But you and I both know that a lot. Yeah.

All of our classmates started like trust fund kids. And their parents did it incredibly the wrong way where they just paid for college. They, the kids didn’t do anything. And now we’re seeing them all like the grandparents, parents dying right now and giving their one to two to $3 million estate and then just buying a bigger house to live in.

What they did here is not to say there’s a lot of different ways to generate the second generation wealth. But this worked. So note that, some of the older listeners can, I think can, should think of that. what, looking back, would you do the same thing? you don’t have kids, but like that’s sparked it.
All right. Yeah. I think so. It was a good experience fixing all my first place. Some of it good. Some of them did that, but yeah, it was definitely a learning experience. Yeah, for sure. I think that’s the hard thing. A lot of people just can’t get that first 30 grand right. To get started. Yeah.

Yeah. so the next thing I look at here is after we look at like the net worth, I know where to start which side of the couch to start shooting. And then I break down the sort of the sources, which is you make a decent salary. You’re obviously not Like you said on the partner track, but Hey, that’s cool because your rental income is more than that, right?

You probably make, you probably make more money than your boss’s boss at this point. I don’t know about that patient. She’s a pretty, is a pretty successful dude. but yeah, I think I’m on the right track and I just, I need a while. I was hoping to get some guidance and maybe just if you were in my shoes or what would you do next steps wise?
career-wise, you’re already on the right track. you’re at this point, like when I got up to I’ll be on 11 rentals back in 2015. That’s like when I hit the hockey stick. And you’re right at that cusp. it took you what, 10, 12 years to get up to this point to build your passive cashflow up to about a few grand.
to double that it’s going to be like a quarter of that, That’s why I’m saying like, yeah, you’re just going to blow past your boss’s boss. Take home. Very soon. Yeah. I’d hope so. the tough thing is in Hawaii, I have a few condos here and the cashflow is really not that good. So I think long term, I’d like to sell them.

That was always the intent actually, but it just worked out where I kept having folks that wanted to stay in rent. So like I kept rolling. Yeah. And that’s the hard thing, right? Like you, I tell you one thing. But like until you go remote and you see it for yourself and get comfortable with it, it’s hard to get away from almost paid off.
Like these condos you have in Hawaii, you got a pretty good equity position and which is not good.

Yeah. Yeah. Yeah, but they don’t really produce very much monthly cashflow, really nothing. I just look at them as pretty much breakeven. At least they’re paying off my monthly mortgage and maintenance, but. Yeah. you’re playing the appreciation game and up to this point, you’d been, you invested in the right decade and with the whole pandemic happening and the short-term sellers market, I think it’s a great time to start selling them off slowly, but we can get boring in that, but yeah, wrapping up that, and then I just peek over.

you’re pretty good. Your net cash flow, which is like your take your, how much money are you able to put to a new investments? Is over 60, 70 grand a year. That’s awesome, man. that’s, this is the most important number. I don’t really care how much money you make. It’s the kind of the net, right?
there’s so many guys and like the Bay area or bigger cities that make three times as you, but make, are able to see half this. Okay. Most people in our group, they’re able to save at least 30 grand a year. You’re in like the top 10% ish, but I know you. Yeah. And I didn’t really budget in for any major repairs or anything.

So that number can definitely go down pretty quickly. But I’d say in a good month, I guess that would be where we’re at. Yeah. I would say you. You’re already on the path and it depends like what your goals are. Like, if you just want to like stomp on the gas and get there really quick and love.

I know you probably live a little fruit, Billy. what car are you? Oh, I have a Ford truck. Yeah. Yeah. Go figure. look, if you want to go and spend like 10, 20 grand a year on a vacation or a nicer car. I wouldn’t have any Harper. It’s the guys who are able to save less than 30 grand a year.

That’d be need to type with bell a little bit and Schrader Tesla for that for Chuck or the, maybe not on the civic, but let me skid the Camry or something decent. But yeah, this, these are all, this is like your cash flow, right? This is your, where, what direction you’re heading. And I’m telling you, man, like you’re going to get there pretty damn soon, like three to five years to financial freedom.

So you can get there in two years or you can get there in four years, but like actually live a nicer life start living. that was. Like, there’s nothing sweeter than taking some of those cashflow and buying something nice for yourself. You never know what you’re going to die. Definitely. I think though, part of the reason why I listened to you and I started really getting into your content is I’d like to have the freedom or the option in the future to look elsewhere, for employment or maybe not work.

I probably would always work, but maybe just doing. Something else or just having the option. So I think that would be my main driving factor right now is just freedom. But yeah, on a scale of one to 10, how stressful your job? Yeah. It goes up and down and ebbs and flows, but I would say on average, it’s not overly stressful and I don’t not like what I do.

It’s not horrible. So it’s something that I could definitely keep on doing, but just having the option to maybe go on and follow something that I’d be more interested in or have more passion. I don’t know, maybe work for a nonprofit, even something with the mission really resonates with what I’d like to.

To see happen in the world. I don’t know. Maybe I’m speaking too crazy right now. it’s, I think it’s idea. And unfortunately, unless you’re like, you’re able to free your time up and get three to six months of twiddling your thumbs doing nothing. You don’t find that thing you’re talking about right now.

It’s just an ideal, but it’s not like a concept people see will take to get there. So what I’m probably hearing, I’m just assuming this, like you’d rather take the 10, 20% pay. Cut. For a little bit or chilled job. Yeah, I think so. Or maybe not even more chill, but just having the freedom to look for something that would be a little bit more of a passion project, so to speak versus like just clocking in and clocking out.

Yeah. Unfortunately in your career, even still you gotta go like full-time right. You got to stay full-time. Yeah. I was just going to say, I might even consider working at a job like this, but just not full-time. I think it’s possibly an option, but I don’t know. I haven’t really explored it because I don’t have the ability to really, yeah, who does, right?

it’s funny people who do this stuff and then they go have that conversation with their boss. It’s funny that they often get more pay and they get a few days. Taken off of the week. Nobody has everybody else lives by this paradigm where they’re like their employer has a by the balls and they have to keep them.

Working and coming in just like everybody else, but yeah, you’ll get there, Matt. What’s your like your living situation and you’re married. You got 50 kids. Just get some context. I have, I have a girlfriend, lead. We both live together. We actually bought, if you look on my sheet, I think it’s five under the real estate tab, the primary residence there, we just moved in earlier this year and we bought a place here.
So that’s like she and I are both 50% on that are our primary. And the, we bought a big house here in Hawaii and we’re able to rent out half of it or so, so that’s why there’s some income there, but that represents my 50%. house houses here, like pretty crazy, ridiculous, expensive.

So yeah, that’s actually a cute house, right? 700 grand in that kid. She’d possibly. Oh, no, that’s well, that’s my 50%. That’s my 50% of the, okay. Okay. So it’s a $1.4 million house. That makes more sense. Yeah, we, we paid like 1.2, 1.3 million for it, but yeah, luckily we can rent out a lot of it or a portion of it.

So it helps us quite a bit with our money. Otherwise, we’d be stuck with this big bill every month, but what did they do for work? she works for the government for the state. So she has a pretty stable job, not really high, super high earner, but yeah, she has a stable career, I would say. Ooh. I don’t think she likes her job very much right now, actually.

Perfect. Perfect. I know she makes less than you. So at some point you guys need to start doing the real estate professional status gig. Yeah. I heard you talk about that before and she can get her license and we can get some better deductions, right? Getting your real estate license and doing 1000 hours of real estate has nothing to do with real estate professional status.

it’s going to silver. Yeah. She just has to have active participation in your real estate portfolio. But we talked a lot about this in the mastermind where it’s a little bit of a gray area, which is why I don’t like to record this type of stuff, but it’s totally legit BAE. It needs to be like 700 fishing.

It doesn’t have to, he can’t have a full-time day job, which I’m sure the state will be cool with her going like part-time at some point. And she has 750 hours of active participation using your portfolio. So at this point you’ve already got a lot of voice stuff, but we’ll talk a little bit here. I’d probably want you to unload the Hawaii stuff because the rent to value ratio soccer, right?

Like I would say like maybe think about doing like a little thinky, Airbnb rental or something. An average change sheets for 750 hours a year. That can be an option or some of the higher net worth investors. They like to come on as a general partner in our deals. That can be another one, but yeah, a myriad of different ways.
of course. Talk to your CPA attorney, but yeah, I would say that’s in the cards for you guys, maybe in the next, not now, but. I would say three, four years from now and beyond, but this is all coming together, right? this kind of optimal, she makes probably way less money than you. She doesn’t like your job.

Cool. This is really hard for me. When you guys love your job and you make a lot of money and I’m like, God, dang it. it’s hard. That’s hard. It’s good. When people have a mismatch in salary. So you cool. clear path there. But it makes sense. Okay. yeah. That’d be perfect.

she wants to stay, she wants to be a stay at home mom slash wife eventually. So that’s your girl. Yeah. that’s good for you, man. unfortunately that Mary or like a rich doctor, sugar mama, but this is not a bad second option. Maybe that was the one that, yeah, I hear what you’re saying.

The one that got away right by the one. So look at if they quit or went part-time, you still probably be good, right? That cashflow. there’s, I would say as long as you keep that above 30 grand a year, you’re already on crew, you should already be at cruise control at this point.

It’s just a matter of just digging into these properties and. I don’t know if you saw my return on equity spreadsheet, folks can download that@simplepassivecashflow.com slash Roe, but it’s basically what I’m the exercise I’m going to do right here is just figure out what your debt equity is at.

So I’m going to take your fair market value minus your how much work you have on here. I’m a sum them up. Does this make sense? You’ve got like about 1.1 million in equity. Does that sound about right? Or maybe, yeah, that sounds probably about right. like I was saying that last property though.

I don’t, I sorta, I wasn’t even going to put it on there, but I just put it on there because I have a line of credit on it. So I dunno, maybe it’s, it would be more accurate. You’d just take that off. Okay. Okay. Yeah. at some point, yeah. At some point we play around with it. I don’t even know if I spelled that.

But, so this is really bad, man. Like your net worth is 1.2 and your dead equity is 1.1. That’s really bad if I was a doctor. And these are like your vitals, right? I would probably wonder while you’re still living. So in this sense, I would probably picture a really like my, like really cheap, wiser, who is house rich or EKI rich or super poor and just rise, like drives around in a POS.

And it’s super cheap. I dunno. That’s how you feel like, but that’s how, if I didn’t know you and I was just looking at this, that’s how I would think, and people. Maybe people don’t give people more context. People in Hawaii, this is very common, right? And people are very debt averse, and they’ll have $1.2 million homes that are paid off, but they don’t even have money to fix it down roof because they don’t have cash.
She’s a strange phenomenon. It’s very unfortunate. But yeah, I do feel like that sometimes. Like I just, I have a decent amount of assets, but it’s, I know I’m not really utilizing them utilizing the assets to their full potential, I don’t even know if that’s the right verbiage, but yeah, I get what you’re saying.

So that was one of the reasons why I wanted to talk to you. Yeah. you can make up your own decision, but let’s just figure out which does sell first. So you can do it two ways with one, like how I outlined it here and just go after the biggest fish. Or you can go by percentage of equity, which one of these is making you the least amount of return based on equity or return on equity percentage.

So like you take this property, this condo, how much money you making per month on this one? What’s the rent. Yeah, I 25, 50 a month, but again, I counted as almost just net zero. Maybe I cashed a little positive, a small amount, but. Yeah, so that’s pretty common, a half a percent method evaluation in Hawaii with the big ass HOA and just sucks it dry.

So I would say probably be the first candidate to sell because of equity positioning or it’s one of the bigger fish plus it has the lowest amount of return on equity. you can probably, you should probably sit down and really watered down, but that’s what I would do both first after. And then probably this one, I, and I know this one has the highest amount, but like you said, your family part of it, right?

We don’t want to give mom and dad a heart attack. They’re old. Let’s get some, let’s get some proof of concept with these crazy ideas and filling your head with first, before we, we tell mom and dad. Maybe get married or something or have kids that are happy and then three candidates to that, but that’s a couple of years or something like that.

So I think the point money, especially for you, that someone super new at this stuff, like 200 grand deploying that in one year is going to be, I think that might be a little bit ambitious. So this is now I’m like starting to like Mark it off into a year. So like 2000 and. 20 2041, 2023. And you can make the diagram for this, for yourself later on, but I would invest maybe.

A hundred or 150. I don’t know. what do you want to do? Do you want to buy some turnkeys on the mainland or do you want to do like passive syndications? What do you want to do? I don’t know. I guess that what I was one of the questions that I had say you were. In my position, what would you be looking for and how would you want to deploy, say I was able to sell these places.

How would you want to deploy it? Would you try and look for syndications or multi-family or single-family home deals? That’s where I wasn’t too. Sure. Especially now the times are a little uncertain and shifting around everything is shifting around. So yeah, I was going to get your take since you’re pretty plugged in and tuned into this stuff.

I would just do also indications, especially if your network is over a million bucks. I think, what is seriously? What is like a hundred thousand dollars kinky property in Birmingham going to change your life other than just keep yet another headache, but it will. you already know how to be a landlord.

Yo, you already know how to dance. I, so I don’t think you would gain much in terms of experience being able, just buy like a turnkey or even you certainly shouldn’t do a Burr, That’s just for like broke people. We’re trying to, they need to take more risks and they need to go after business.

She’s thinking about, I was actually thinking about trying to do some out-of-state burgers after I listened to. I think one of the guys you had on your podcast was talking about managing burrs from auto state when I was like, Oh, that sounds interesting, but it always sounds interesting.

And then when they talk about it, they rave about all these returns, but here’s my thing, man. You’re fighting with one arm tied behind your back on somebody else’s home court. I wrote a big article on this, like why would not do like burgers, but like number one risk of embezzlement with contractors.

I comes from like construction management, right? So I’m the one who always works change orders with the contractor. I not pay these tasks, but dude, you’re, you’ve done this in the past. But most people they’re trying to play like. Owner and trying to do this, like it’s just outside your realm.

And you’re doing this remote me I’d much rather have you just flip a house in Hawaii, At least you’re you see this stuff as opposed to relying on a third party to do it. And it’s just not worth the risks. Yeah. Bezel man. Shit. Why I’m over large sums of money and you’re not able to verify the scope of work was completed and to what level of quality.

And everybody knows. You’re just some rich person from Hawaii, even though that’s not the case. You got to like a piece of junk Borg Ford, They don’t know that they, their ideas, like you’re just some like rich investor, polite drinking, pina coladas. Yeah. I just don’t think it’s worth it for people making over like 80 grand at their day job.
And especially having a net worth of over half a million bucks. But if you enjoy it. Yeah, man do it. But I think maybe a hobby, maybe I think it detracts, right? I think like the name of the game is networking and building relationships with higher net worth higher credit investors. That’s where you should be focusing your time and energy on.

Not to screw it around with some toolbox Tim out in Indianapolis or something like that. It’s no carry over. What are your thoughts on I have a line of credit on my place in Las Vegas. And I was thinking, instead of selling those two rentals I have in Nevada and in Texas, because they pretty much have been managed themselves.
they manage themselves, but there hasn’t been too many problems. There I’ve got pretty good tenants so far, not the wooden pretty good property managers. So I was thinking about maybe just pulling the money out of there and trying to do something with it. Instead of selling them off, that’s a good intermediary strategy, For an hour, To get you. We’re trying to get you proof of concept right before you go all in. So like when you have equity, if you have three options, you can sell the asset. Which is what I’m proposing. You can do a cash out, refinance get at it. But unfortunately you got to pay the lenders.

Love it, right? Because that’s how they make money. If you come to the origination fees or like you said, do a hilar, right? The problem with the hilar is that it’s, you’re not getting at the full, in this case, 194 grand probably wouldn’t get at half, but the half of it, you got a lot of money there.

Half of it. It’s enough to go into a couple of deals. It’s you proof of concept that way. you have so much equity here. I would say the HELOC is a great way to just test the waters and then eventually sell. But whatever you want to do, man, I think all those are all steps in the right direction.

is that what you’re probably going to do? He locked that thing and then play around with a hundred. Yeah. I already have a, I have a hilar on that property, and I, when I refinanced my first condo here, I paid off the loan on that house. So it’s, that’s why it’s free and clear right now.

So I was thinking, yeah, I was thinking I could take some money out that way. And just like you said, proof of concept and try it out and see how it goes. Yeah. however you want to do it either. This one or this one, getting a lock on both. Get it now. it’s just filling out the same paperwork, emails, just cut and paste the name and do it.
Get a geeky Lux on them. All. The locks don’t cost anything. And so what about as far as, what should I be looking for in say I do go into syndication. What should I be looking for? You think I see they have these ones that give you a debt position versus an equity position or some that are like value add plays.
And they’re trying to fix it up and refinance out or more of a, like a yield play. I saw some of those as well. what would you think would be the best that’s syndication as a very general term? You can syndicate anything. You can send the, get very like conservative stuff, like a debt position, or like value, add a light value, add yielding assets.

Or like a brewery, a restaurant like developments, like you can syndicate anything. It ultimately comes down to your risk tolerance. Like when I first started it, I was looking more for like late value, add more cashflow based type of deals, things that were cash flowing right away. And, or you start to collect checks and the second border, that’s what I thought was a prudent way to dip my toes into it.
And that’s what I learned. And I built my community around that, but I would say stick to like more of a debt position or pref equity position or more of a lighter, medium value add type of project where they’re, maybe putting in definitely less than $10,000 rehab, continuing every unit, but yet stay away from The developments and all that heavy stuff for now, I would say, especially, it’s baby steps, right?
I know you’ve been involved in a lot of these syndications and a bunch of folks that do this type of syndication deals. have you ever seen one that went wrong or went South and what happened? I’m in one of those, I had a bad partner and that’s pretty much the risk, right?

Like syndication deals. You’re going to always going to be better. If you invest with honest people that are competent and that’s the, to the GP kind of went astray on you. Yeah. Yeah. So then I had to involve my GP rights and I don’t want to go down a rabbit hole still fighting through it, but yeah, great example.

And that’s with uncertainty, right? You want to be investing with the pros, right? I would say this is probably the end of the road for most people. Who’ve made it as far as you, at least. That’s the way I saw it. I don’t think you can do this remotely. I don’t think you can. certainly you can’t run a syndication deal from Hawaii.
It ain’t going to happen. I have operational partners that are boots on the ground. And it has to be like your full-time day job, none of the site gig stuff, When you’re taking other people’s money, it’s gotta be full time and these guys can run it better than you. And I think what a lot of people don’t realize is if you’re working with the right people, they have much better deal flow.

They’re getting like the one out of a thousand deals because they’ve closed big deals on the past. And that’s just something that you don’t have access to, but it’s hard as an LP to figure out what’s what, because anybody can pay some VA 20 bucks to make a really nice, shiny PDF pitch deck.

Often there’s nothing in the pitch deck that tells you if it’s a great deal. So it ultimately comes down to your network. You need to build a network with other high paid professionals, people that do this stuff and kind of get referrals. And who are the right people to work with, Because you’re not shied away so far.

Yeah. Yeah. and this is why I’m like, don’t screw around with a Burr. That’s just a waste of time. Okay. Yeah. Going back to your point. I think that’s why I’ve strayed away is because I don’t really know exactly what I should be looking for in a syndication deal. So to speak. So that’s what I was trying to get your take.
And I did the same thing, right? Like I had 11 rental property and I knew about a performance in vacation, but what I was doing was working, I got in my net worth up to a substantial level by myself. And it was working, but I knew that it wasn’t going to be a long-term sustainable solution.

So I went and I eventually slowly went into it after I’ve built my network around it. And I was able to ask these guys, all right, are these deals actually really work in it, who to work with? So that was how I eventually I fell into this and I transitioned to bowl for, but that’s why it’s a reboot.

You’ve got to come into different circles and then you got to learn how to evaluate deals from more of a passive investor standpoint. But a lot of that is just can be like proxy by just. Building relationships with the right people. But I would say stay away from class C properties there.

They don’t really cash though, like how they do on paper or just stick to good yield based assets. And I think that this is where it’s a lot better than turnkeys cause turnkeys. Yeah. You’re not buying value. Add you’re not buying, you’re buying retail price. So if the market insurance on you or you’re gonna lose the value of your property, Maybe 10, 20%, which is fine because ultimately you’re just buying an income stream, but with a apartment deal that’s value add, it has real value add in under it’s in the right way.

In times of trouble. You’re often forced to appreciating that property. We haven’t units increasing NOI faster than the market can be tracked. So it’s the ideas like a turnkey you’re on by yourself, right? You’re in a little rowboat by yourself, but. In a syndication deal. You’re a passenger amongst a big priests battleship.
And that battleship has engine, which is in this metaphor, like the forced appreciation, couple of hundred to fight the tide, which is the market. It’s a good metaphor. Yeah. I had a lot of time to think about it. You want to join Noah’s arc? Who would you like to just be out there by herself? You got like ducks and events.
Monoceros to have every time. Okay. that’s what I think I’ve been with just shooting from the hip, on my own, trying to figure things out. I think there’s a lot of people just like in your same pedigree, where you in your twenties, you bought properties, you actually fixed it up yourself.

You save 10 years later, you have mass a pretty good at net worth. There’s a lot of people like that in Hawaii, everywhere. And. To me. I think all roads, the syndications, there’s no better way to scale up, build your wealth and especially with all the taxes, right? this is, this deal stuff is only a third of it, right?
Like in the mastermind, we like, it’s all about legacy creation. If net banking, if tax legal, like paying no taxes, like uncle Trump, right? It’s funny. People are talking all about that. Like he’s not paying in taxes. yeah. everybody does that. Biden does that too. Mick Romney did it.

Like we should be asking, how are these people doing it? I know how they do it. But we should be trying to implement their strategies. Instead of just saying that there are deed, right? I would say just to give you like a working blueprint care, maybe invest maybe a 20, 20, I would say invest like 50 grand and just so you can see like a Q1 come back March of 2021 and you can see, Oh shoot.
This is what that’s, what that damn Costech segment. No, I know. Understand why the rich do this. They’re getting the bonus depreciation. Now. I really love those house slippers because they pay all my taxes for all their active income taking all that risk. And the bird people.

And then I would say maybe get on like a routine where you go into a deal. I don’t know, every six months. So that’s like a hundred grand. And then at that point you should see these deals start to cash flow, Versus six months, it usually takes the deal to restabilize. And then maybe around late 20, 21, you should be able to realize, all right, where do I go for my next traunch of capital?

You’re still messing around with the hilar. So it was awesome. Like a law. This is first of all, You don’t have to sell anything. You don’t have to pay a mortgage broker to originate them a new loan and pay feeds. But eventually now you start to go pick her, You a hundred. And then you do that for a couple years.

Then you’ve deployed all this money, right? If I just sum this up, that’s 750,000 bucks. And then at that point, I would say around 20, 24, you might have an instance, we’re selling. deal in Atlanta that we did two and a half years ago. And we’re two and a half exiting people’s money. that’s, it’s phenomenal.

it’s not typical. But I would say if you go into four or five deals by year 20, 24, it won’t be that five-year period where we it was projected to sell. But I would say pretty confident. You’d see at least one like refinance. And then at that point it’s Oh boy, like this stuff works.

And that’s when you go to mom and dad and say, Hey, I’d like to buy you out for this thing. And then look at like, all this deployed capital. You’re not making any cashflow here. You have $750,000 on 0.2%. Well done. Let me go just 8% a year. That’s 60 grand. Tax-free right, because you’re going to have so much passive losses.
You’re not going to know what to do at that. it’ll sit this stuff. I’ll certainly be tax-free in the first three years, every year, the cashflow. And this is not what you’re not seeing now. You’re not seeing this additional sum come to your bottom line here. And if I just plugged that in year, cause right now this stuff just levels off.
You’re making 3000 a month. But if I just increased it by three valves and. see what that does now you’re making an extra 40 grand a year to put some more investments, right? this is a good problem that happened. Like it’s like eating Skittles on the rainfall. I can’t stop eating Skittles.

There’s so much Skittles because once I put more Skittles up there, it comes in my mouth. Like one of those unicorn rainbows, right? This is where it starts as the most important, all this stuff will just happen. That’d be good. I can get some losses and enroll them if ever sell those. Let’s talk about that.

When I sold my seven rentals in 2018, Ida $200,000 capital gain. And because I went into four, I think four deals at that point I had over three, I think at $300,000 of capital gain. So I bought the 300,000 or 200,000 other passive losses offset the capital gain. And this is why 10 30 ones are obsolete at this point, as long as bonus depreciation is in play.

So let’s just say you sell. You sell this one, right? Your cost basis was two 50 and you sell it for that much. I would say you’re actually, it’s the same thing as me, right? $200,000 capital gain plus depreciation recapture 200 grand. That’s not about right. So you’re, you probably have a lot of passive losses built up right now.
I’m guessing you might have 50 grand. I’m just guessing, but when you go into these deals, He put in 150,000 bucks, you probably will get maybe a hundred grand of passive losses from this. Of course, you’ll see this firsthand, right? don’t listen to me. It’s see it for yourself on the Caitlin, right?

With this first 2020 K one, which you’ll see in 2021 March. So you’ll have a lot, 150, a hundred thousand dollars of passive losses. Plus you have, like I said, you probably have $50,000 of passive losses now. So $150,000 passive losses. And that is what offsets this sale. But if you’re smart, you do it.

You sell the asset probably in 2023. When you have, when you’ve deployed this 200 grand and you’ve gotten in another hundred grand, a passive losses from that. So total you’ll have $250,000 of passive losses to offset this $200,000 gain. And you still have passive losses, the despair that may make sense.

Yeah, definitely. Yeah. Yeah. Why would anybody want to flip houses, right? Yeah. How the wealthy deer, I don’t know what I was thinking of doing, but I just wanted to get some. Confirmation. yeah. Yeah. that’s hard, right? who the heck does this, right? Yeah. Yeah. It’s hard. Other than reading, like blog posts or watching your videos since like you I was still felt like I was piecing it together myself, so yeah.

I’m, this is the public service announcement. Like I am not a CPA. I’m not giving you tax illegal advice, but. I think I, Michael, is to empower you guys with a working knowledge of this. So you can have the right information to go have an educated discussion with your CPA. Be tax guy. Because you’re the one who should be driving the ship.

Most CPAs and tax guys are lazy and they don’t know what they’re doing. That’s why they have a day job. Any last questions, maybe some specifics on what, as far as a syndication deal, I should look for any regions maybe that you think are worth looking into, or I don’t know, maybe even diving down into some of the.
Yield percentages are, what should I be looking for? I, this is where you just talked to you build up a network and you ask people, what are you investing in? Why? What is your risk tolerance? if you asked me, I like stabilized deals from the get-go, where it’s already cash flowing, and there is a proven concept for some value add where you just do simple things and you change out the flooring and new appliances.
You’re not putting any more than like $6,000 to rehab into a unit like value add. And if you can lock it up for like under 3% debt, I think that’s a no brainer in secondary markets, tertiary markets in both population areas and in red States. So that’s what I do. If that doesn’t make sense to you, but we’ll go find something else.
But I think that’s. Again, it comes down to your network. Your network is your network. Everybody has a different investment philosophy, too. But to me, for the greatest amount of success, with the least amount of risk, I don’t think that there’s anything better than that kind of strategy or risk return spectrum that you staying in that middle America, where the rents are 700 to a thousand bucks a month.
The pandemic it’s pandemic proof it’s been proven. Okay. So stay away from C-Class jumping into a good cash flowing syndication with some trusted partners. Right? Sound advice. Sounds good. It’s all right. It’s all simple. But it’s the hard part is connecting with the right people, right? Because they’re not at the local RIA.
They’re not at. the free websites, right? Just finding the guys who are just here, that real estate is a great way to make some money, to get on broke or get out of debt. Okay. And maybe you could speak a little bit more by your mastermind group. how exactly does it work? So my group is all about, we split the group up.
I have a incubator group for like people just trying to get their first rental property. That’s probably not for you. But that allowed me to make the mastermind group or for accredited investors. But I do like a mastermind in January. If like people want to check out the last name and go to simple passive cashflow.com/ and check out what we did there last time with great opportunity to meet past investors, accredited investors and.

Drink beers, go hiking, build a real relationship. That’s the key here. I’m thinking about doing, I gotta do some meditation on a plane here shortly. I think I might do the thing virtual this year. I was in another mastermind and we did it virtually. And then the organizer, there was a lot of planning involved, but they hadn’t been, we used the breakout rooms very creatively in a very different formats.
So I think that might put this thing together for a Chile. And I think that’s, you’re not gonna there. Ain’t going to be some that comes close, man. You don’t want to sound off over profit, but I’m super confident that this is what I would want it right when I was starting out. Unfortunately I had to spend almost 50, a hundred grand to get into groups, myself and do a lot of travel.

But, we do things for our credit investors here in Hawaii when people are, there’s no pandemic, but I’ll let you. Okay. That at least you can actually see cause. I think that’s the trouble, right? if you’ve never been in, you never been around. Yeah. More than two accredited investors. You don’t understand what the value is there.
And that’s why I think why I want to do that for actuals networking. I’ll be at like a two day event, you get it. And you’re like, there’s no going back to rubbing shoulders with not a credit investors anymore at that point. Yeah. I think that would be super valuable. And like you’re saying, just to hear what they’re doing and where they’re investing and how they’re investing.

I think it’d be really, yeah. Cause there’s discussions. Turn more into like, all right, yeah, this is what everybody is just doing. Check. I answered that question, but now you can build relationships to have discussions on Oh, you’re 20, 23. When this, when you go all in, right? that’s where your life starts to open up.

Maybe you, you already got a big house, but maybe that’s when you like you quit your date or you have your spouse quit your day job at an old car. Yeah. Okay. But that, those are like those higher level decisions. And then you wonder if you want to send your kid to private school. It’s the first world problems. Sounds good. Lang yeah. Anything else? ELLs? I think, yeah. I’m just leading you to water, right? Like it’s the people I know, like I think that’s pretty much it. I think it’s been really helpful. Like I said, just talking through this. Yeah. Like I say, I’m pretty impressed.
Most people are H with good paying jobs. They’re lucky if their net worth is half a million bucks, if they invested in that garbage stock market 401k stuff. Good job, man. thank you. High five. Yeah, this is a clear indication of how real estate works right here, but you can do a lot better.

And now I would say you got to focus on most credit investors. The goal is to get to four and a half million. That’s the real goal. That’s like a seat wealth right there. Cause you can have two, you can have two or three bonehead offsprings, send them the mid pack, have them do whatever. And it’s really hard for them to squirrel what you built.

Yeah. So gotta make sure they on the golf team though, So that’s where the apparently that’s where we met. All right. Cool man. Cool. If you guys like this and you guys want to do one of these two, let me knowLane@simplepassivecashflow.com. Join the, clubs, simple, passive cashflow.com/club, and yeah, be on the lookout for the next mastermind, whether it’s in person or virtual, a simple passive cashflow.com/week three was last year’s event.

You can check out the video there. And I’ll see you guys next time. Bye
website offers very general information concerning real estate for investment purposes. Every investor situation is unique. Always seek the services of licensed third party appraisers inspectors to verify the value and condition of any property you intend to purchase. Use the services of professional title and escrow companies and licensed tax investment and or legal advisor before relying on any information contained here.

How the Repo Market Led to Printing Billions of Dollars

https://youtu.be/XE947Ea1DOQ

0:00
So I dug into what the repo market is. And just to keep it super, super simple, it’s basically a pawn shop for banks. So imagine a pawn shop, you’re short on cash, and you’re like, Okay, what do I have, I got a watch, and you go down to the pawn shop, and you basically sell it to the pawn shop operator, but you have the ability to redeem it in a certain period of time and they charge you interest for the use of the money but presumably, whatever you are Hawking your asset for is important enough that the premium you have to pay to get access to that is there and of course, the the rate that you pay is, you know, kind of based on the risk. 

So anyway, so banks are showing up in the repo market, and they’re bringing in their treasuries and they’re Hawking them they don’t want to sell their treasuries or they don’t want to be divested of who have the right to get them back it basically saying the banking system is low on cash that’s what activity in the repo market is and just like maybe you’re not proud to tell all your friends Hey, I had to Hawk my watch right the banking system they’re not like proud that they had to go Hawk their treasuries to raise cash. It’s an indication of dollar shortage in the system and the Fed accommodated that by printing a lot of dollars.

How to Get Into the GP With No Money Down

https://youtu.be/a6YimSdAVu4

0:15  

So the question often comes up, how do I become part of the general partnership and get a little bit more bang for my buck, one of those ways is becoming what’s called a key principle or loan guarantor for the team. So what this is here for as we go out and get one of these big loans for these Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, or any other loan, we need to have a partnership team or keep principle slash loan guarantor roster of individuals whose network gets us over the hump greater than or equal to the loan. So for example, for going after a $20 million building, probably going to need a several guys or one guy who has $20 million net worth to be able to sign a debt. So in order for us to qualify, or in order for your qualified typically, that means, you know, you’ve got a million dollar net worth or above, I mean, most guys in our sphere about a one to $2 million range. So guys, unfortunately, those guys are kind of a diamond doesn’t just one of the guys, it’s the same. But if you know, if you’re above $3 million dollars or more, you’re actually very valuable. And you can definitely get compensated for sending off a debt on one of these deals, it has nothing to do with bringing in any money involved. So what a lot of these guys will do these high net worth investors, they’ll sign on debt, and I get a little piece of the deal just for doing so there is obviously risk involved, right. But I think there’s a difference between non recourse and recourse that and before you start doing this, you know, I would say you got to really strongly feel confident in you’re working with defeat, I wouldn’t be doing it on your first board round with somebody doesn’t matter how much they’re paying you. Because essentially, in a way, you’re putting all your family network on the line. And you can encumber your debt several several times. So I’ve signed on, I don’t even know how many deals at this point, also with non recourse debt, but it’s crazy to me how you could sign on multiple walls. But then again, you know, a lot of these are asset backed deals. And as real estate bows, the value is there built into the asset with some common questions that come up are how does this work? How does this book my return? Well, it’s not really bumping your return, you’re just kind of picking up some general partnership shares overall shares in the process. So there’s always a set aside a certain amount for people who do this type of stuff. And talking back about the non recourse components, you got to remember that even if a deal is non recourse, there’s usually a bad actor clause involved with the bad boy carve out where if somebody in the general partnership does anything fraudulent steals money and vessels that the agency lender can avoid that non recourse component and come back for everybody for the debt. At that point, I’m just speculating, you know, I think they’re gonna kind of come after the people with the biggest wallet folks. And then it becomes definitely an internal litigation issue, but hopefully it never goes that far. And you know, another way that people will get into deals with Latino money as a general partnership is for putting up the hard money on these deals. So certain markets such as Dallas are super competitive and to be considered serious and for them to even look at your offer, they have to put in 100 or $200,000 of hard money and for a lot of new sponsors, they may not even have that money in their pocket. And this is why I like working with people who are at least a million dollar net worth and above the fray Why’d I shy away from investing with house flippers because a lot of those guys are under half a million billion dollars unless they’ve been doing it for several years. I just don’t want to get screwed over by guys who don’t have a net worth to cover it personally and this is one of my criteria when investing personally but I digress there so what you could do is you could come in and put up the hard money for somebody who doesn’t have it and negotiate some percentage of the general partnership for doing so there it is long as the deal closes you should be able to get your hard money back and in return you get shares of the deal but I don’t know I feel uncomfortable with this. I think it’s a lot of money I don’t know if it’s quite worth it. I’ve seen deals go through due diligence and for some reason it falls out I also see a lot of deals that get shoved through because the operator doesn’t want to lose their hard money or they don’t want to pay off their hard money lender and not because they didn’t close the deal. That can always be a little shady too but are they for me I sign on the debt on loans I think that is pretty fair in terms of what you’re compensated with and you know you should like the deal you should trust the people you’re working with. The same goes for any work with people you know, like or trusts to begin with, and yeah can be a great way if you’re higher than a few billion dollars net worth to get a little bang for your buck but if you if you guys have any more of these questions, I would check it out at simplepassivecashflow.com/kp or go to simplepassivecashflow.com/syndication for the complete syndication guide there and I am coming up with the ecourse I’m actually working on this month as I’m wrapping up wrapping up the home arrest here why it’d helped me get stuff done without a lot of other distractions. So be on the lookout for that and we’ll catch you guys next time.

 

5:07  

This website offers very general information concerning real estate for investment purposes every investor situation is unique always seek the services of licensed third party appraisers inspectors to verify the value and condition of any property you intend to purchase. Use the services of professional title and escrow companies and licensed tax investment and or legal advisor before relying on any information contained herein information is not guaranteed as an every investment there is risk. The content found here is just my opinion and things change and I reserve the right to change my mind. Above all else, do your own analysis and think for yourself because in the end, you’re the only person who is going to look out for your best interests.

 

New X1 Credit Card – Should You Get It?

https://youtu.be/5wn0CJRc4OE

0:00
What’s up guys, I’m on to do a quick pre review of this new credit card, I found the x one credit card, which the reason why it’s kind of exciting is because it’s made out of steel. And it gives us 4% cashback or points, which is pretty high for your general credit card. Normally the highest for just a general category is about 2%. Of course, there’s a lot of them out there that it will give you five or 4%. But that’s only on one category. I kind of like to simplify my life. And when I spend money on like my car insurance or large purchases that don’t really fit a grocery category, or like Office of my category, I want to be using these general cards. But yeah, let me show you this screen here. And we will walk through it. 

So here’s the website, it’s at x1creditcard.com And it’s gonna check out the link below. But right now they’re doing it as a waitlist right now. So this thing hasn’t been launched. As you can see, it’s 17 grams of sheer stainless steel, what else could you want, if there was a annual fee, I wouldn’t be looking at this, you know, I try to stay away from any annual fees on anything, it’s To me, it’s just not worth it. It was even $1 20 bucks. But yeah, it’s your annual fee, it’s worth a shot, we’ve seen that there’s some higher limits here. I think the cool thing is like they’re, I mean, it’s pretty much as offering higher rewards 4%. And they’re doing this based on a word of mouth. And, to me, that’s how they’re able to insert paying out referrals, or all these affiliate commissions, which is very common in the credit card industry, they’re able to give it back to the customers and it comes in a cool box. But kind of did a quick, cursory review over this. And, you know, gonna be a roll out some high notes here. So it’s not released yet. And the nice thing is there’s no foreign transaction fees. 

But to kind of go over the pros here, you know, virtual card numbers. So you can those guys can like to sign you up your stripe accounts or the subscription services. Or you can give them the big middle finger and you can change the virtual number at will based on probably an app or online for those you guys who are stuck in those gym memberships. I don’t know if it’s part of your subscription. But you know, it’s a way to fight back against that. Supposedly, there’s some hot, flexible, higher credit limits with this. And I don’t know how much more higher but see how that comes through. No annual fees, like I said, no foreign transaction fees, which is a big thing, then, of course the Forex risk rewards and to get that forex level Did you need to be able to refer a buddy to get that. If not, it goes down to three extra words, which I think is still pretty decent for general credit card you to be able to get that you need to hit $15,000 A spend per year for a lot of us in a simple passive cash flow nation that’s really not that far from us, fortunately, and if you don’t hit the $15,000 threshold, you hit you get to two X on air rewards there. 

So here are the cons hot one. And I was kind of looking at this wasn’t really seen as like cash back it was more seen as like points. And I’m always like a little wary of points because points kind of go through like a Pachinko machine, kind of a set where you get these points, you got to get these gift cards and the gift cards are are kind of a pain to deal with. But we’ll see they say you know, just looking at the website here, we gain points that brands you love, you can use points to pay off your stuff. So it seems like it’s not going to be too difficult to use those points. And I think the biggest issue with this card is this is this card even going to happen there was a card earlier that was called the zero card that I think they finally stuck a fork in it earlier this year. And that is didn’t get enough traction. My understanding and they I don’t know zero card was the car but there was another card that those of you guys have seen them the documentary where they had the the fire festival that never happened. That guy also another one of his scam projects was one of these kind of cool credit cards. It was more of like a black, super high end credit card. And this cards more made for everybody. 

But you know, in conclusion, I’m going to try it out. I’ll put the link in the webpage so you guys can help me get it quicker. That’s how you guys if I can get it, how it’s going. But you know, it may be not much better than my 2% double cash, Citi double cash card which I think everybody should have. I also do the Swiss Army Knife method where I have multiple cards that give me four to 5% in specific categories like I have an American Express blue for groceries at 6%. I have like another American Express simply cash I don’t think they have that card anymore. I think it’s something else these days but that gives me 5% of that office. And I have another one that you know gives me higher executive saver card or something gives me three or 4% at restaurants. The Costco wants pretty good too. I think now it’d be 3% at restaurants there and then travel through percent travel, but I’m going to give it a try. 

And if you guys are into this type of stuff, maybe not the best return on your time but I find it very fun. Also trial tradeline hacking where you can put an authorized users onto your credit card I mean, I made about 10 grand in 2019 I’ll probably make just as much in 2020 go to simplepassivecashflow.com/tradelines. To learn more about that we have the full e course there. And if you guys want to learn more about this go to info page I have built on this card at simplepassivecashflow.com/x1card that’s /x1card you guys try this out. Let me know i’ll be posting into on that website. If I actually get the card and start playing around with it.


All Credit Cards

How to Best Utilize Passive Losses w/ Brandon Hall

https://youtu.be/umCsNG8sLNc

0:00
The passive loss will be suspended in period four because I cannot use it I don’t have I’m not a real estate professional, I’m not defending anything, so I can’t use that passive loss.

0:13
Anyone they even try to rent them out.

0:21
Hey, simple passive cash flow listeners. Today we have Brandon Hall, a CPA, we are going to be talking about some of the very commonly used tactics that we talked about almost every other week in the mastermind, you guys can learn more about that. It’s simple passive cash flow, calm slash journey. We’ll see accredited investors in there. We’re talking about how we’re going to customize what we’re going to talk about generally today. But yeah, thanks for jumping on Brandon, these questions always come up. So it’s always great to get a real CPA to kind of break it down for us.

0:53
Yeah, happy to be here and happy to help.

0:55
So let’s kind of start start from the top right, like syndication investors get passive losses, maybe you can kind of break that down, and then we can kind of get into Well, how do we use those? Sure,

1:07
sure. So when you invest in a syndication as a limited partner, the losses coming back are definitely going to be considered passive. And those passive losses can only offset passive income from your other passive activities. So I could have like a syndication that is producing positive net income, and that’s passive income. And then I could have another syndication that I’ve just invested in, that’s going to push back at the last from like a cost of creation study, I can use the losses from syndication beams offset the income from syndication a, so you can cancel them out. But if I have net losses, even after I do, even after I offset all my income, by net losses, they are net passive losses, and they get suspended and carry forward into future years until it can generate passive income, or until I sell a syndication investment adding game. So we don’t lose the suspended losses, they just sit on our books to hang out until we can generate income to tap into them at some future point.

2:05
And one of the main reasons why I invest in syndications these days, instead of your little one off single family home is single family homes, you can deduct it over what 27 years or so which is very lame, it’s gonna take forever to get that but with those with when you do a cost segregation, which I typically pay maybe five grand to do one of those, I can extract a third of all the depreciation in the first year distribute that to all passive investors. And I don’t know what you’re seeing Brandon, but like, typically, on an investor load where they’re using pretty healthy leverage 70 to 80% loan the value, they put in 100 grand they’re getting anywhere from 50 grand to over 100 grand a passive losses to the first year. But what do you kind of seen as you guys put together all these k ones?

2:54
Yeah, yeah, I think we pegged somebody with somebody my firm was tracking, I believe the average was around 90% of whatever dollar you invest is going to come back as a passive loss across all syndicates investments that are out there. So that includes the 50s. That also includes hundreds.

3:11
Yeah, something I’ve been seeing these last few months. And if you’ve been seeing deals with like COVID reserves, I don’t know if that’s the right term, but you’ve got to stick three to six months of reserves in the bank can be a substantial amount of money, but it’s definitely been diluting the cost segregation a little bit, maybe bringing it down. 10%. But still pretty good. I mean, can’t complain. Yeah,

3:32
yeah, definitely. Definitely. I mean, we’ve seen I think gold reserves smart. Just never know what’s going to happen over the coming years. But yeah,

3:41
yes. And what’s a newer thing too, yet, you’re seeing a lot of these deals that people are using this different class of investors private equity, what it’s called, it’s kind of a fixed rate of return. They get paid first, but they don’t get any upside. But the one cool thing is they still are considered equity investors and therefore get a piece of the losses too. Yep. Yep. The nice thing about LLC syndicates is that you can structure them really hard you like losing all sorts of interesting structures. I mean, the typical structure is some sort of 2080 3070 4060 split between the GP and LP pref on there. But we’ve seen special allocations of depreciation and all sorts of fun stuff. Well, so investor, you know, puts in 100 grand and maybe gets 50 or $70,000 of his passive losses. Maybe take us through how to use that, right?

4:34
Yeah. So if I invest in syndication, and I receive a passive loss of Indian mount, the question is, can I use the passive loss and let’s assume that I don’t have any other passive income. I don’t have any other passive activities, that passive loss will be suspended in period four, because I cannot use it. I don’t have I’m not a real estate professional. I’m not materially defending anything, so I can’t use that passive loss. But on the flip side, let’s say that I’m built out my own real estate portfolio, so I have five duplexes, and I self manage those five duplexes. And let’s assume that on those five duplexes I, I’ve materially participate and I qualify as a real estate professional. So those five duplexes are non passive activities. When I then go and make a syndication investment, I can make an election to aggregate all of my rental activities into one activity for the purpose of this section 469 tests. So what that means is, if I put $50,000 into syndication, when I’ve already qualified as a real estate professional, and I already materially participate on my own portfolio, I can aggregate in the syndication investment into my overall portfolio. And then I can take a loss, a non passive loss from that syndication investment. If I don’t make that aggregation election, what happens is that syndication investment will still be considered passive. So even if I’m a real estate professional, and even if I materially participate in my, my own portfolio, if I don’t make that aggregation election, I still might not be able to use those losses. So by making the aggregation larger, what I’m, what I’m effectively doing is I’m re characterizing that loss from passive to non passive, and then I can take that loss. So what we’ll see a lot of our clients do is build out their own real estate portfolio, they’ll self manage, it will do all the repairs, or coordinate with all the tenants themselves. It doesn’t have to be anything, it doesn’t have to be a substantial portfolio, but one that will drive you to the 750 hour test in more than half your time test to qualify as real estate professional. And through that they’re also materially participant, so they have that non passive portfolio, and then they’ll go and place syndication investments to boost their current year losses.

6:46
And that’s something that’s common that CPAs will not get on board with the aggregation or that grouping.

6:53
Oh, no

6:54
aspect right there. That’s probably why you need a new CPA, listen to this right now, and need to look at you cross side, I just all I say is like, well, that’s why they have a day job, right?

7:08
So but if you if it’s a good point, and if your CPA ever challenges you on that, then I would ask them to go fill out form 8582. That’s where all these losses get aggregated at the end of the day. And see what they say that

7:23
a good point. I mean, we talk a lot about this stuff on these podcasts or in these groups. And we’re just giving you the ideas and the ammo. I mean, it’s, I always tell my folks in my mastermind, like, Look, you guys are empowered with this information. Your CPA to me isn’t really a tax planner. I mean, they’re not planning for you that they’re there to do your paperwork. If you get a good one. Yeah, maybe they can, but they don’t know what deals are going into. They don’t know how much passive losses they’re going to be. They don’t know what the time horizon or the risk reward profile of those deals are. It’s unfair for them to be able to tax plan out in the head, this is your job. This is your number one costs him like a to do it yourself. But these are kind of the building blocks of starting to do it by yourself and kind of steer the ship on your own. But you kind of are talking about a little bit so people ask a high paid professional making over 200 $300,000 a year, how come I can’t get these passive losses are pals for short and offset my active that’d be to salary that I chose supposed to eat them down? What’s the deal, man?

8:26
Yeah, well, the most simple way to explain it is that your W two business income, capital gains, stock sales, interest, dividend income, all of that income is considered non passive. So if I go out and create a passive loss, I can’t net my passive losses against my non passive losses. So my goal then should be to re characterize my passive losses as non passive. And there’s quite a number of ways that you can go about that one of which I just described is especially affecting those that are investing in syndications. But that needs to be the goal at the end of the day is how do I re characterize my passive losses as non passive if I’m trying to offset my other non passive income?

9:07
And one of the big strategies that we like to use, if that’s possible, is the real estate professional status that any breakdown that I don’t know what we’d call it, but that it’s like a two part test, right? there’s kind of two things that they need to qualify for.

9:22
Yes, yeah, two steps toward tests. And then the third hurdle that you have to get over. So the first two tests, you have to spend 750 personal service hours in the Real Property trader business in which you materially participate, personal service hours, real property, trader business, material participation, 750 hours, the second,

9:43
let’s let’s break that one down real quick. So that means being an LP and five syndication deals does not work, because you’re not you’re not a managing member. But what are a couple of examples that you see, like you mentioned, a few rental properties is that work?

10:00
It will. So let’s talk about that syndication investment. So it’s 750 personal service hours a real property trader business in which you materially participate. Now the syndication is going to qualify as a real property trader business, but you your personal service hours, if you think about the litmus test of a personal service, our what that really means is or the litmus test for it is, if I did not log the time that I’m logging, or if I did not spend the time that I’m spending on this activity, the activity would fail the operation, the day to day operations would cease. If you’re a limited partner, investors in your personal service hours are not going to affect the underlying deal. So therefore, we’re automatically out. But then we’re also not materially participating as a limited partner, there’s just no way that we can. So whenever we invest in limited partnership stakes, or syndications, as a limited partner, we’re not able to hit personal service hours for material patients. So we’re trying to hit 750 personal service hours, and real arbitrators in which we materially participate. We’re already out because none of the hours that we log against that activity will actually count towards that 750 hour test.

11:09
And another thing that we will just leave as a teaser for now is becoming us all part of that general partnership and being an active participation in there get we can we’ll talk about that more next week when you come in, join us on the mastermind call. But that’s more of an inner circle type of activity. But what about for moving on to rental properties? Somebody just owns a few of them?

11:29
Yeah, well, so that second test that second statutory test for real estate profession, statuses spending more than half your time in real estate than you do anywhere else, which could, we will kick out the W two people and business people to be working part time or not at all, in order to hit that second test. So assuming that you can hit both of those tests, 750 hours, and more than half the time, the next hurdle is to materially participate in my rental portfolio. And the the issue that we run into or is typically, it’s typically not gonna be an issue for landlords if you if landlording is your only real estate activity, and whether your landlord in large projects or single family homes, if that’s your only activity, you typically don’t have to worry about the material visitation tests, because you’re going to hit them to visitation on your way to 750 hours. But if you are a real estate agent, then you’re not materially participating in your rental portfolio, but you at the same time can still be a real estate professional because I as a real estate agent could spend 1500 hours brokering deals all day long. Well, that’s a real property, trader business. They are personal service hours, and I materially participate. So I meet test one 750 hours. And by spending 1500 hours during the year, that indicates that it’s my full time job. So I also meet test too. So I’m a real estate professional as a real estate agent. But what if I forget to also material materially participate in my rental portfolio, then my rental losses are still passive. So what we’d like to see is pretty significant participation by either you or your spouse in the rental portfolio itself, in order to hit those material participation pass, or you do the landlording full time, that’s all you do.

13:16
And that was that’s a big misnomer, right? Because people think, oh, I’ll just have my spouse get a real estate license. So then just sell one house a year or something like that. It does not gonna work. Not gonna work. Yeah. Yeah. Another other thoughts are that I think for more of a credit investors listen to his podcasts. It’s like, Is it worth it to buy three crappy houses and be the landlord and get real professional status? Well, in my opinion, unless your AGI is over 300,000, in probably a year, you’re not paying too much taxes? Let’s be honest, it may not be worth it.

13:50
Oh, we have a progressive system. Right. So I think 300 K, I think the 24% tax bracket goes up to $317,000. If you’re married filing joint, so only after 317. Are you taxed at what’s the next 130 2%? So if you’re in like 30 to 3537. Okay, yeah, we want to get creative here and try to mitigate but but it’s also similar conversation to what I’ve been had with a lot of clients and cares Act came out. Everybody wants these big net operating losses. And so they’re like, how much real estate Should I buy to create a non passive loss that wipes out all of my income and increase the net net operating loss that I can then carry back five years? Because that sounds cool. And like, Well, sure, but 100 and whatever $15,000 of this real estate loss that you have is only going to save you 10 to 12% per dollar. So to what extent do we want to create this loss, like we want to maximize the savings, so we might not want to create a huge loss in one year, we might want to space it out. So we stay in that 35 37% range? Yeah,

14:57
just to kind of highlight that for people. If you’re making over $300,000 a year real estate professional status is definitely something you should be looking at. I mean, there’s wonderful things that can come with this, right? Yeah, one spouse being a lot of money, one that isn’t perfect, that person can stay at home, take care of the family more. And actually, at the end of the day, the net on the financial statement is better. Because you’re enacting this strategy. And if you’re I would say, if you’re under 100, maybe even $200,000 of AGI this stuff isn’t probably for you, which is why this is accredited investor mastermind Today the topic. But I think for the lower net worth, guys, the lower income guys, it’s Can you still take 25 grand of passive losses off of like, if you’re making under 100? Was 100 150, or something like that? Yeah, we get gifts, some of the lower the lower income guy something.

15:47
Yeah.

15:49
Yeah. And I think that if you’re in the 22, to 24%, tax bracket, these these losses are still beneficial to a degree in for married filing joint, you drop into the 12% tax bracket, you earn less than $80,200. So that’s that 22% threshold. And 24%, I said was 115. But that’s actually 171. So between 80,000 and $171,000, by married filing joint, I’m getting taxed at 22% after 171 K, now I’m being taxed 24%. So if you’re in that threshold, I still think that it’s potentially applicable. But to answer your question, specifically, if you’re earning less than $100,000, you have what they call a $25,000 passive loss allowance that you can claim, you have to be actively participating, you also have to own 10% of the activity. active participation just means management decisions are much lower bar than real estate professional status than material participation, you have to worry about all that, if you’re earning less than 100, you get a full $25,000 passive loss allowance. As you scale up to 150 k in earnings, that $25,000 passable, passive loss allowance phases out, it phases out $1 for every $2 above 100 K. So if I earn $110,000, I phased out $5,000 of the passive loss allowance and half of whatever my income is above 100, is how you calculate that. And so there’s some strategies here, the first strategy is to manage my income. If I’m in that, in that area, how do that I can max out my 401k contributions, we’ve had people at 150 K, contribute the full 401k contributions of 19,000. And whatever that is, in 2020, make that full contribution, drop your income, your modified adjusted gross income down to 141. And now you’ve just unlocked 90 $500 of that passive loss allowance that you can then claim. And that 90 $500 passive loss allowance then yields another $2,000, assuming taxing for you. So all of a sudden, my $19,000 contribution, my 401k saves me a lot more money than it would otherwise because it unlocks some of this passive loss allowance that I’m able to claim. So if you’re less than 100 K, you get a $25,000 passive loss allowance. If you’re more than 100 K, that starts phasing out. And once you reach $150,000, you’re 25,000 passive loss allowance has been paid down to zero dollars.

18:18
And I think like most I don’t know about most, but a lot of CPAs, especially the more conservative ones will definitely say yeah, you’re not active manager, they’ll tonight kind of fight you on that claim. So you as an investor need to kind of know what the rules are to get what you’re looking for. Because if not, they’re not going to check the box for you. And this topic comes up a lot, right? Like their CPA says, Well, are you actively participating? And they’re like, well, you have a property manager. So they say you’re not?

18:46
Hmm, yeah, you can be actively participating with a property manager, you might not be materially participating if you have a property manager. But those are two separate tests.

18:56
Right? material participating, like you said, is for real estate professional status, but for what we’re talking about right here is just active participating. And you’re you’re making the shots, somebody else is doing your dirty work, but you’re calling the shots.

19:07
Exactly.

19:09
And but like just using an example, this is kind of tax time right now, this is tax time for everybody who is more of a sophisticated investor, that actually files in October, like once you get your return back, this is the stuff you should be checking, right that they they maximize that $25,000 if you have the passive losses, if you’re under that threshold, so this is where you would have to kind of keep that in check and kind of drive the ship. But I’m sure that it just does it does it automatically.

19:37
We trained our staff and try to do that automatically. We do make mistakes. I think everybody makes mistakes, especially when you’re trying to crank through tax returns leading up to the deadline but for the most part, we get it right we ask you questions.

19:50
Yeah. And I know you guys you kind of share my the same sentiment as me is like you’d like to work with good clients, right that know this stuff as opposed to walking in a meeting with a client and then They are asking you why blue ocean questions? What should I do Brandon, those, those are bad clients to work with. Like, you want them to kind of know this stuff. And that kind of you can work collaboratively with them and see what you guys can create.

20:14
Yeah, absolutely well, and that’s kind of my my new mission is to educate investors across the country and empower them to have better conversations with their own advisors. So we’ve been like focused on a lot of educational content recently, to help facilitate that it’s been going pretty well.

20:31
So just to kind of wrap things up, things that you’re seeing in the the stimulus plan, I think we’re recording this in October before the election. But what do you what are you kind of excited that might happen to be on the lookout for Trump’s taxes?

20:48
So the new stimulus plan, not a whole lot in there for real estate investors or the real estate investors should be aware from a tax perspective, obviously, they have all the eviction moratoriums, and definitely get up to speed on. But going forward, right now we have this big payroll tax deferral that nobody’s using, that I’m aware of. If the republicans win in November, the thought is that they will make that that payroll tax deferral permanent next year, that’s the thought that’s a that is a prediction, I can’t confirm that that will or will not happen. But that is something that they have promised, if they win. On the flip side, if the democratic party wins in November, then we’re going to, we will most likely see a lot of changes related to the tax code, we’ll probably see some 2017 tax cuts and jobs act provisions rolled back, we might see the elimination of the step of basis rules, whenever you pass away and you pass real estate on to heirs. They get to inherit the property at the fair market value, they can start depreciation all over that wipe out all the gains all the depreciation recapture. So that could potentially go away. And then 1031 exchanges are being challenged again, but I don’t think that I would expect in 31 exchanges to stay within the code and not actually be pushed out.

22:12
Yeah, I’m a big advocate for like, I don’t really care about the 1031 exchange let them have it. I mean, with bonus depreciation, that’s what I really care about. Right now the sunset it starts at what 2022 or something like that starts to step down. And phase out. You think that’s going to be going away or extending gym bonus depreciation? Yeah, with the heavy with the cost segregation to bonus depreciation.

22:37
Yes, bonus depreciation is going to start being phased out in 2022 or in 2023, it drops to 80% and then the next year 60 then 40, then 20 and zero so I would expect at some point Congress to reconvene on that and try to figure out if they want to keep it or not bonus appreciate has been around for a while whenever it sunsets it gets extended we might see similar treatment again

23:03
Yeah, and when you seen Democratic or Republican Party you’re meeting the senate right so that people okay, clear. Yeah, presidential just a figurehead. Yeah, but yeah, I want you to give her contact information folks get a hold of you and yeah, thanks for coming on.

23:18
You had a problem you can contact me at www.therealestateCPA.com we’ve got a lot of educational content on there, that real estate professional status, we have a 12,000 word guide on exactly how it works for with Internal Revenue Code citations and Tax Court cases that we’re not seeing you. There’s a lot of bad content out there on real estate professional status. So we decided to set the record straight so check that out. That’s all on our website. Again, that’s www.theRealEstateCPA.com

23:48
and I’ll put on all these resources including this video a bit simplepassivecashflow.com/tax, that’s slash tax. And if you guys want to join our mastermind, check it out. It’s simplepassivecashflow.com/journey. Brandon’s gonna be in there I think next week Monday answering all my more devious questions on tax and different ideas I have that we kind of talked about in our little cave works ourselves. So Alright guys, we’ll talk to you guys later right this website offers very general information concerning real estate for investment purposes every investor situation is unique always seek the services of licensed third party appraisers inspectors to verify the value and condition of any property you intend to purchase. Use the services of professional title and escrow companies and licensed tax investment and or legal advisor before relying on any information contained herein information is not guaranteed as an every investment there is risk. The content found here is just my opinion and things change and I reserve the right to change my mind. Above all else, do your own analysis and think for yourself because in the end, you’re the only person who is going to look out for your best interests.

Should You Buy or Rent?

https://youtu.be/dHWnZuVhPUI

Should we pay off rental properties first before primary residence, ultimately, where should the debt be? So overall, I don’t really believe in owning and primary residence, unless you have too much money. You don’t know what to do with it. I’m a believer of renting. I wrote a big article on this. It’s simple, passive cashflow.com/home.

I mean, do the math for yourself guys? Actually, I have a calculator for this. It’s at that URL symbol pass the cashflow.com/home, but it’s this big calculator I created where you’re able to put, you know, what is your rents? What is your mortgage payments? And then it kind of compares the equity build up.

And then what would happen if you would’ve just done something simple, like buy some rental properties, how much the equity would grow and it kind of compares the two scenarios. And whenever you’re trying to figure what should I do? I would recommend just putting it on a spreadsheet and figuring out what the math says first.

So whether you pay off the rental properties or the primary residence, it really doesn’t matter from like a numbers perspective because. Once you buy a property, it just goes in your portfolio anyways, the way I see it. But from a liability standpoint, I would rather encumber my rental properties with debt first because that’s the higher liability, but you know, here’s the problem.

This is why you don’t really want to. Pay off your debt, because especially if you own your primary residence and you want to outright every litigator out there knows exactly what, where you stand with your debt. There’s like things I subscribe to that I can kind of pinpoint how much equity everybody has in their house.

I mean, that information is out there for the taking. And when you pay off your primary residence, I mean, you’re a sitting duck for all this liability. Of course, there’s other things that you can do that we talk about our masterminds, like your vocable trusts and doing that some homestead stuff. But I think you’re going about this, the wrong way of like, well, what should I pay off?

What you want to be doing is. You want to be looking at your return on equity? There’s my handy-dandy chart that I show a lot of people, but you know, when you first had that rental, you’re making a lot of money, maybe 30% on your rentals, but as the appreciation happened and you paid down your mortgage and maybe you paid additional payment, don’t do that.

Because your return on equity is going down. And most people like after they own it, a decade or two, they’re making like single digits in terms of return on equity. I have a calculator on this@simplepassivecashflow.com slash R O E. I’ll put it into the Facebook group here too. So you guys can download that.

That’s the name of the game as investors return on equity case in point here, I mean, I’m living in this house. That my landlord owns outright. They are getting almost like one or 2% return on equity. I mean, heck for that much pain in the butt worrying, if I’m going to move out or not, they probably better be off in a saving spot and making I’ll be double what they are now.

It makes no sense to me, but Hey, I’ll rent from people like that and I’ll be on the winning side of it.