Real Estate Lending Update + Non Conventional Home Purchases With Benson Pang

https://youtu.be/wlKJQ7M0N2Q

Hey, simple passive cashflow listeners. Today, we are going to be doing an update on what’s happening in the lending environment. Going to talk through the key factors in getting the loan debt to income credit score. Other tips for you guys picking up your primary residence or your remote rental property.

Joining me today Benson Pang.

Hey lane. How are you?

Good. It’s always a funny thing in YouTube world or podcasts world when everybody says something lame oh, I’m walking my friend Benson and that’s a code word for yeah, I just met and I barely had a two minute conversation, but here I actually know Benson.

He’s actually a pretty good friend of mine. Him and his wife run their mortgage lending company nestmade.com. So Benson and Mimi, they lend out of California, but they can lend out of multiple states, but they’re also in the family office Ohana group. You guys can learn more about that at simplepassivecastle.com/journey.

It goes in with our whole, invest and work with people, you trust. I thought it’d be Benson on who does this for a living to break down, what’s been happening with the lending environment and some of these key items to be on the lookout for, if you guys are looking out for your next real estate loan.

Generally, before we dive into some of the numbers how is lending today? I know during the pandemic things were pretty crazy for you guys with refinance, right?

Yeah. Back in March to July there was so much uncertainty last year and a lot of lenders pulled out of lending completely.

We see debt to income ratio, like being pushed lower and lower. There’s margin compression. There’s all kinds of things going on in the lending world. I think the biggest thing is the non QM stuff, like people who have less than perfect tax return, they went like they got nowhere to go because they’re all gone.

Until most recently they all trickle back. We have the last couple of months, we signed up with a lot of new lenders that are doing a lot of the non QM stuff that jumble loans and non QM are back basically.

So we’re going to be going through, the kind of a chart of what are the things that you guys need to do to qualify for the best rate, but to outline this for you guys, listening in podcast form we’re going to be talking about two things here, right?

Owner occupied properties, your primary residence, dream houses for a lot of you guys and the non-owner occupied properties. The biggest one that people look at first is to qualify as debt to income ratio. Maybe explain what that is and what is the percentage.

There’s a lot of talks about what the debt to income ratio needs to be. Before we get into that, debt to income ratio is debt divided by your total gross income before tax, right? So your debt could be your PITI, principal, interest tax and insurance, HOA mortgage insurance all added together plus any of your credit card payments, not balances payments, your student loan payments, and also your car payment all bunch up together.

Let’s say it’s $5,000 and you and your spouse make a $10,000. That’s 50% debt to income ratio. Okay. Right now, if you have a great credit score, like 740 or higher you should be able to qualify at 50% debt to income ratio. In some cases where the credit score is lowered or your LTV or loan to value ratio is higher.

Meaning you put 5- 10% down that might get pushed down to 45% or even 43% to get a DU approve eligible.

Now a lot of people listening are engineers. You are an ex engineer yourself too. Do you see any like mistakes that the weekend spreadsheet junkie that makes their own debt to income calculations, and then you guys run it.

Are there any kind of common mistakes you see the folks at home banking and they’re calculating this stuff and then you get all upset when you’re there like I’m 51%, right? How’d you get 47%?

Especially the ones who already own one or two investment property. A lot of people think that they can just use a gross rental income. A lot of times it’s really if you own a property for a year or two, we actually go off of your schedule E and there’s a very specific calculation. It’s really not that hard. It’s your net income, you add back your taxes, insurance and mortgage interest.

And that’s your total gross income. And then you subtract your actual expenses. So super easy, but people, it’s actually, even on the Fannie Mae website guidelines, they’ll teach you how to do it. If not, you guys can reach out to me, I’ll let you know how to make that work.

And the second thing is a lot of people think that a student loans, just because it’s zero payment, a lot of people are on deferment or forbearance on their student loan. We still have to assume a number, cause eventually you’re gonna have to start paying again. So Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, they each have their own calculation.

One is half a percent and one is 1%. Personally, I like to use the 1% to be more conservative.

You need to be able to show what bank statements or W2 statements to show this.

So for W2 employees, we asked for one year W2 just to show the history. So you need two years of working history. Now with that same company and student, you working as a student counts too. So if you graduated from college and now you got a $200,000 engineering job, we can use that $200,000 right away.

And what about like you’re a business owner, you don’t have those clean.

So if you’re a business owner, typically we asked for two years of self-employed history and we look at two years of tax returns. There are times we only ask for one year of tax return when you have the business for five years or more.

And then just, say your debt to income is all right. Again, what are the kind of the credit score ranges that you’re looking for?

So when you’re looking at credit score, a credit score is going to do two things for you. One is if you’re eligible for that program or not. So some programs have a minimum of 660 credit score, 620 credit score it depends on what you’re trying to qualify for. Number two is it’s credit score affects the risk of your loan and the higher the risk the higher the interest rate or pricing for that loan. In fact, a lot of people, a lot of us get conventional loans, so if you were to Google, Fannie Mae, LLP loan level price adjustments. That’s actually where you see all the price adjustments. So if you have a 740 credit score, will typically give you the best interest rate 720, 700 and then 680 so it goes up and down and 20 points increment.

Maybe if you can help demystify this, I still am confused when you get your rate sheet, right? Like you might have a lower rate, that’s competitive with other folks, but you also have to look at the fees. That’s how lenders make money on loans and that’s how they keep in business, right?

Yeah, absolutely. Man, who doesn’t want a 1.8, 7, 5, 15 year fakes, no point no fee, right? It’s all over the billboard. But you’re driving 60 miles down the freeway and you’re looking at the billboard and actually the fine prints are so small. There’s no way you can see the fine print.

But basically you gotta look at your situation is, and then you needed to have someone to help you break it down where the points of the loan, the lender fees, and also do they have other junk fees or appraisal fees?

You gotta be put it side by side, a lot of borrowers that when they come up to me, they’re like, oh, what’s your APR? Like personally, I’m not getting a credit card. So I don’t really look at the APR, I actually looked down into all the nitty gritty numbers and put it side by side and match it up.

But it makes it hard, you go on LinkedIn, you typed in the word lender and there’s like instilling in mom-and-pop daisy chain lenders, that may originate one or two loans a year, one for themself, one for their bop, their fees are all over the place.

I think that’s in every field, right? Not just in lending and real estate, there are real estate agents good, bad, and engineers, there are good engineers, bad engineering. So I think in lending you really want to be aligned with let’s think about it for a second here.

You’re going into contract you, your lender and your real estate agent, and then you three against a listing agent, the title officer, the escrow officer and the seller they’re all picked by the seller. You need to be aligned with the best of the best. You need a really good real estate agent to represent you. You need a really good lender to be protecting you as well.

It’s the intangibles, right? Can you close or are they going to say what they’re going to do? Or are they just going to bait and switch on.

Exactly. There are lenders out there. I’m not gonna say who, but you just gotta be careful who you’re aligned yourself with and you want to be aligned with someone who has a track record and have your best interests in heart.

Is it similar a lot of people do the infinite banking? In the beginning, you don’t know what kind of like rates and fees you’re going to get like you gotta unfortunately get that, have that nurse come to your house and you get your physical first. Is it the same thing with the lending? They’ve got to run your profile for a couple of weeks and then you get to that point where you see the whole picture?

The good part about lending is there’s no blood draw or lab work to run your credit to run your interest rate, we really only need four or five items, right?

Your credit score, what you think your credit score is and obviously if you’re saying you’re 740, we run it at 720, that would be different in interest rate or pricing. So your credit score, how much down payment and then are you buying a single family or condo?

Is it owner occupied or not and your zip code? Like those few things will basically give me enough information to run a quote for you. And that quote should be able to stick with the whole transaction throughout.

Let’s get to some of the problems you’re seeing through transactions. Maybe we’ll break it down on owner occupied and non-owner occupied too. But like the first one is when I was buying a lot of these rental properties, of course I was using my own money. My parents never give me anything and nobody gives me gifts. But some people when they’re buying their primary residence, shoot, what kind of 20 something year old kid can afford $200,000- $300,000 down payment.

All these guys are getting it from their parents. What’s the best practice is there to work that in?

A lot of people when they come to me obviously there’s some gifts involved. But for gift letters for the most part, conventional loans are pretty easy. They make it really easy for us lenders and also the borrowers. I typically suggest there are two ways of sending money into escrow. You can have the donor write a check and deposit in the borrower’s account, but you would need a lot of documentation showing how the money is deposited.

We’ll ask for a canceled check or check image and the transaction history, sometimes it takes now three or four days for it to clear. So depends on where you are in the contract. You might not have that luxury. The cleanest way, I always tell people is to have the donor and wired directly into the escrow’s account.

So this way, there is a receipt and there’s no way that money is going wrong anywhere. But for FHA loans do know that, we will ask for the sourcing of the donors funds. So meaning I will ask for two months of bank statements from the donor.

I’m trying to sharp shoot this. If I get a random check from my friend or my parents two and a half months prior to when I throw this money into escrow does that nobody checks. Or there’s nothing I need to write that this was my money?

In the real estate industry, and I hear a lot of real estate agents would say oh, you need to have two months of bank statements, clean bank statements or seasoned funds.

Really that’s a myth. But it really depends on what the deposit is for. We call them large deposits. So large deposits definition is basically any deposit. That’s more than 50% of the total gross income use on the loan application. So let’s say if you and your wife combined $10,000 gross rent knowing gross income on the loan application.

So anything higher than $5,000 deposit into your account. We just have to know what it is and why is it deposited? We just want to make sure it’s not, you’re not loaning a $5,000 to go buy this house and now you have to pay it back and we need to add it to your debt to income.

Or it being a gift or cannot be a gift?

And we just need a documented, source and explain.

I just got it from my block 5 man.

Or crypto deposited from Coinbase. We can use crypto as down payment.

I’ve got this other, like one guy it wasn’t he wasn’t annoying, but the bank was being really annoying. They’re like, oh, we see her in these private placements a nd to make sure like LPs don’t co-sign on the debt, they’re passive investors. But they’re asking all these questions. Any thoughts on that other than finding a new lender?

He can explain all you want but if met with an underwriter that won’t let go sometimes it’s just easier for you to change lenders, to someone who can get that scenario ran by their underwriter. And if you get the, okay, then resubmit that application over there. That’s what we do as brokers.

Sometimes we run into cases like that and lender aid doesn’t work out. So we quickly, we have your application. We it’s so easy for us to go. Go to the second lender, go to the next lender. I can get this done ASAP.

For you guys, this is how the industry is made, right? Like you have lending brokers and you have the people on the, kind of the sales side interacting with you, but there’s a person in the back office.

Maybe it’s an open-ended different company. Whereas the underwriter, now this is where you need to have a good broker or front office person to take your story to them. Now, if you have just some bureaucratic idiot on both ends, you’re going to run into all these types of problems, but you need to have somebody to sell your story to the right way. See, even if you do have a bureaucratic idiot as the underwriter, you can pass all these barriers.

I always tell my clients to give me the full story. I don’t want to have any surprises while we’re in escrow. It’s oh, so you own a house with your parents and you forgot to tell us and we always ask for the full story upfront, then we can know how to what’s going to come our way and how we can prepare you when we submit your file to the underwriter.

And Benson’s a license loan officer so he has no comment on this, but I’ve had clients where they’ve changed jobs the last second and they let it slip on their on email and their lending broker kind of kibosh is the loan. I had to tell my guys as well, if anything like that happens, use the phone.

Yeah. We’ve had loans where we call so a lot of people there are a couple of times where they submitted their pay stubs. We got into escrow, got loan approval and they quit.

They told me that I can quit my job and my wife can quit her job so we can get real soon professional status or some other random tax scheme.

Yeah, I know. We actually do a final, verbal verification of employment three days before you close, meaning you sign documents. A lot of lenders, they wait until that last minute, because if you think about it, Hawaii or California, we close escrow in 21 days, 30 days. It’s very typical, but when we’re in the Midwest, other states they might take 60 or 90 days to close an escrow. Heck their appraisal process is probably two months right now.

There’s appraisals shortage right now. So like in two months, who knows if you’re still going to be employed so they always do a verbal verification of employment right before you close. Sometimes Fannie Mae picked about 10% of loans to audit. So sometimes they will call after the loan is closed to see if you still work there.

It’s okay. If you don’t work there, you just don’t want to make sure they want to make sure that there’s no loan fraud, right?

I think they’re just in the back office, they’re drinking Johnny Walker, red label and trying to screw people over at the very last sec.

We’re talking a lot about like primary owner occupied houses. How does this change for you if you’re buying a rental property?

Non-owner occupied. First of all, if you’re talking about conventional owner, non owner occupied no gift is allowed. No gift is allowed.

At least in the last two months, right?

Yeah. We look at your bank statements and and there shouldn’t be any gifts in the past two months. And if you’re looking to do some DSCR loans and for those who don’t know, DSCR, it’s a debt service coverage ratio.

It’s a terminology that’s often used in the part mint and loan world. So they have it for one to four unit for people who don’t want to show their tax returns. And we base it off of the income of the property that you’re buying to qualify you. And a lot of those programs will allow a gift letter or will allow gifts.

So what is the debt service coverage ratio, the magic number they’re looking for?

One, the magic number is one you can do less than one. You just need to take a higher rate.

That’s actually not hard to hit. Like for the larger apartments. It’s usually like 1.25.

Yeah. So commercial loans Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac the multifamily home loans, they asked for 1.25, and the 1- 4 is private investors so they really only ask for one, or even less than one, depending on the LTV.

And, you’re talking about shopping it to different lenders. Does the Fannie Mae Freddie Mac FHA loans always the best?

Oh always. I would say, I like to look at FHA as a band-aid loan. So if you have some sort of history credit history in the past bankruptcy or your low credit score, FHA is going to be more forgiven because they are backed by the government.

And there’s a huge insurance costs upfront and every month. And then and then people typically who are in an FHA loan, they’re only in there for maybe five years or so. And they’re going to refinance out of it into a conventional loan. That’s what we typically see. And conventional loan has slightly higher interest rates just because I think she has a huge mortgage insurance to hedge against the risk.

Conventional still have a very low interest rate, not as low as FHA. And then after conventional, then it’s going to be your DSCR your non QM loans. So people who can’t prove tax returns, income.

And we’ll get to that non QM loan here in a feature gets you on a future podcast to talk more about that cause that’s something I said selfishly and interested because I don’t make too much money on my taxes. So little screwed for getting loans.

Yeah and there are multiple ways to do it. Yeah. Let’s we should get together again.

So you wanted to talk about the second time home buyer tactics, because I think a lot of your clients are California guys. They see a lot of equity, they got a lot of debt equity and they run up, put it into anotherasset.

Yeah, I think the first question when someone come up to me and say, Hey, I want to buy my next house, my next primary home. Okay, cool. What are you going to do with your first primary home? Are you planning to sell? What are you planning to do? And because of, forums and whatnot, how’s hacking, that next big thing. A lot of people want to rent out their first primary home and buy the second house.

I love giving our guys a hard time, right? Like you already got a house and you want to go buy another one. It’s oh, you already got you two Moderna shots or Pfizer shots and you want to get booster shot. Most of the grill, it hasn’t gotten any, but I don’t know. I just give them a hard time. Just to be fun with them cause they get it.

We have a housing shortage, let’s just sell your first house. I get it. There’s some sentimental value, you want to stay in, you want to rent out your first house is fine. But the question is now a lot of people, they’re like, oh, I don’t want to pay interest so they keep dumping money on their first house, the first mortgage so they can have low interest so you paid in low interest on the low interest rate.

Which is not what you financially want to be doing folks.

Yeah. That would be another podcast. We’re in a super low rate environment. Typically I ask people to just make the minimum payment, whatever your PNI is and tuck away the rest of the money and invest it somewhere else that’s growing faster than 2.8, seven, 5%.

So people who are looking to tap into their equity to buy their next house, because they want to buy their next house next year. I like to tell them to plan ahead. Don’t do a cash out refi right before you’re trying to buy your next primary home because when you sign your loan documents, next time when you sign your loan documents, when you’re signing the deed of trust, look at item number six, I think it’s six.

It’s basically telling you that you’re going to move in that house for a whole year, within the next 60 days and move in that house for a whole year and, Fannie Mae is going to catch you. If you’re not careful and that you’re not staying in that house and have you buy back the loan.

So if you’re planning to do that, do it today, take the cash out, put it in the bank and so next year you’re not violating any rules. You can use that cash to go buy your next primary home.

It’s similar to if you get an owner occupied house with some people. Technically, this is fraud, I believe because you can’t get an owner occupied mortgage then move out right away with the intention of doing that, right? If your employer fires you change jobs involuntarily. I think that’s another thing, you said 12 or something like that, like 12, like you’re signing up for this more occupied government like I’m signing off.

Yeah, because your loan is going to be sold to other investors that think this is your owner occupied house, and with a lower risk, give you a better rate. And now, they’re not buying the investors, not buying what they thought they were buying. They want you to buy it back, buy back that investment, which is your loan.

And, a lot of people. Have success sneaking by but with technology today, you never know, right? They have QC department, they’ll check your Facebook, your LinkedIn, just to make sure you’re staying in that house. They, when you listed on the MLS for rental they see it right away.

They have an alert that says 1, 2, 3, main street is up for lease and they’re like, wait a minute. Buy this house as an owner occupied.

People think that there’s privacy and like they hide behind their Wyoming, like LLCs for supposedly. The government knows everything. Even all you guys are signing on like deals as LLC, as passive investors, the government has your social security numbers on there. They haven’t figured out how to use artificial intelligence very well. If you’ve heard about this offensive, but like they audited like pizza chains, like the small mom and paws who are like, those guys typically stuff, they make a dollar, but in the cash register, put the other in their pocket, do that type of stuff.

But they audited like the number of pizza boxes that the chain was buying. And then they look for discrepancies.

You can’t outsmart these guys. In, in our area, Sam Wu is a really big a Cantonese food joint and he got caught there’s another one in Mama Lou’s just recently got caught at the dumpling house.

They can sit out there and count people walking in yeah. Gallons of canola oil or something like that. I don’t know what they use.

So this next one house hacking. You and I are not, we’re a little older these days but at one time we were both broke engineers. And when we would do stuff like this, but now, married, kids. It’s just not cool to have somebody live in your duplex house, but a lot of you, some of you guys, I dunno, I listened to my podcasts. You guys don’t have money, but you might want to buy a duplex.

Stripe books are called live in one side. Maybe you’re weird like that. Maybe talk us through some of your clients doing this and how that works.

Actually I can talk to you like back when I first started in mortgage or even when I was a poor engineer the goal is always to buy a three unit or four unit as my first house.

I was single back then. I didn’t live in a garage. But like your first house was always the, oh, you get it by the two duplex, a three unit, four unit, and then you can live in one and rent out the other three. But in California, it’s just so hard right now. Do three and a half percent down FHA loan lived there for a couple of years.

And until you save enough to buy your second primary house, which is at that point would be an upgrade because you might be going to a duplex or condo. But you gotta keep in mind when you’re doing house hacked is like, what is your motivation to move from house A to house B? And does it make sense, right?

If you already live in a million dollar house and now you want to go buy a $350,000 house to move into. Just doesn’t make sense unless you are in a retirement age and you’re ready to downsize. Your kids went to college and emptiness or you want to buy a smaller house.

Sure. I think that’s when you go downsized, but for people at uni who are just have kids, if you own a $1 million house, you might be buying a one and a half million dollar housing. House hack it that way. So proving of your motivations, always like the number one thing.

You moving closer to your employer. If your employer is set in San Francisco, why are you buying in Los Angeles? So in that case if your employer allows you to work from home, you might need a letter to say, they allow you to work from home, and now you can buy a house near your parents in LA.

I would probably argue, if you’re under a quarter million, half a million dollars net worth will remote buy properties at cashflow. The house hacking, especially in California, primary market, gambling on appreciation. It would probably go up it’s real estate. All the data’s showing, all the historic. How how long are these primary residence loans taking, compared to the non owner occupied these days?

How long is the application to close? The closing period that, if you’re putting in a low offer on a property, which should you account for these days.

I think we’re averaging about 13 days between application to signing loan documents on all primary home or non-owner occupied.

I got a little this question is why I have a friend. So I have a friend that buys a rental property and there is a repair such as HVAC is broken, or there may need to be repaired the roof, right? Say call it 10 grand of repairs on a $80,000 house. Would it be smart or could he work a deal with the seller for the seller to do that improvement? Fix the roof, improve HVAC and increase the price and that way the buyer can lump all those costs into a loan. Instead of dumping another 10 grand Cash is king. Is this something that you can do legitimately in your loan and close your closing or does it need to be off on the side?

You can definitely do it within the closing inside the contract, if you’re planning to just add it to the purchase price, you should be okay. Just make sure your appraisal comps are going to be. It’s comparable, this house 80,000, going to $90,000 is going to be comparable to other homes being sold that’s $90,000.

What we cannot do is add it to the loan. So if your loan is already $50,000, you want to add 10 grand to it that might not work just because the LTV might be too high for the loan.

But if your appraisals or you got some cushion in your appraisals, You can fix a lot of stuff in, yeah. And as an investor or, people who are listening to this podcast is probably smart enough not to do that. Added to the house and now it’s, the praise value’s too high and you have to come up with the difference anyway.

Just to close out this summary. Primary residences, remote rentals or other, not owner, occupied properties anything think that can you’ve seen clients get hung up on in the closing process that just have people be aware.

Yeah. I think one thing that I would suggest is like taxes. A lot of people they ran out the other unit of their property and not report that tax. I’d say go ahead and report it. I don’t think it’s going to do too much of a difference on as far as how much more income tax you have to pay.

When it comes to applying for a loan it’s going to help you in a long way in the long run.

You want to get your contact information out there if anybody’s looking to get along?

Yeah. Man, you caught me by surprise. I would just go on Yelp and type in NestMade Mortgage and you’ll be able to see us on top.

NestMade.com, thanks Benson for joining us and we’ll see you next time on what I got my personal question for those business owners who can’t qualify for home loans and fit in the box. All right, I’ll talk to you soon.

AHP’s New Fund With Jorge Newbery

https://youtu.be/tJ35PBYyIfo

Today, we’re going to be talking to George Newbury, get the latest on his newest AHP fund. The guests that come on, or I would say in any podcasts that you listened to, a lot of people will just go on podcasts, track record and verification, isn’t there like how it is with George, I’m actually investor with him. I’ve been investing in his fund for the past three, four years Monthly dividends like clockwork but just be aware of that.

We bring in people that I trust I think a lot of people listen to a lot of podcasts. You jot down some names and numbers and you feel like not some random person off the street, but in actuality, you are totally investing some off the street that happens to be able to email the podcast calls, to get an opportunity to pitch an audience out there.

So if you’re one of those persons, don’t do that, guys, you will probably win the financial Darwinism award b y doing this, it is not smart. Build the right people around you, organic relationships with other accredited investors. Unfortunately, a lot of these people, they’re not at the local area.

They’re not on the free forms some Facebook groups are not the places to find other pure passive accredited investors, but they are out there. If you guys are looking to join our inner circle, join the family office Ohana mastermind. Go to simple passive cashflow.com/journey.

Thanks for all you guys. Who’ve been reaching out to me. The daughter is about four months old now. Very happy and healthy. We’re very glad of that. For some of you guys who are not parents yet . Oh boy, boy’s life going to change for your guys.

Something that I’ve been thinking about lately is I’m actually deathly afraid of passing down the wealth to the next generation. 90% of wealth leaves families in two to three generations, most likely because I don’t know what it’s, because either there’s no motivation to do anything or.

There is no need to do a thing to get off the ground and moving. But that is why I surround myself with my family office, Ohana mastermind as we source the best practices for not only finding deals, who to stay away from taxes, legal, infinite banking, but more of the soft stuff, right? Like how do you teach your kids?

You give them an allowance, how you teach them about money investing, et cetera, and what actually works. A lot of that stuff just isn’t written out there. And I also feel like a lot of the events that we put together you bring the kids, they see other people different age ranges. I never listened to my parents and I don’t really think that, if you have a voice to your kids who consider yourself lucky, but maybe if you have somebody else in your inner circle that can help translate, investment financial literacy, I think that’s going to be your best shot.

So you guys want more of these legacy building ideas, go to simple passive cashflow.com/legacy. And thanks for those of you guys who showed up to our Saturday cram school to learn about syndication. We posted the video at simplepassivecashflow.com/syndication and enjoy the show.

 

Hey simple passive cashflow listeners today, we are going to be talking to George Newbury, CEO of Pre REO, or as you guys know, it also as AHP.

We’re gonna be talking about pre REO one of the new opportunities and then the next fund that George is going to be taking you guys keep asking why does the name keep changing?

A lot of these funds there’s just a sunset date on them in terms of sec can only raise money for a certain amount of time. But I guess George maybe take us up to the top. Cause I think a lot of people have been investing in AHP from back in the day, what, 2017-18, and then the names get confusing.

Yeah. So they’re different , I appreciate that lane so yes each fund is a different fund, a completely distinct separate company, and that we raised money for. And you’re right, the sec allows you to raise money for two years or allows us or anyone to raise money for up to two years, if it’s a regulation A-plus offering.

So each of these are raised in the regulation A+ over two year period, then we have to close the fund. And typically we make the funds a total of five years from the date of the original investment. So our target has always been, Hey, if you invest today, we’ll get your money back in approximately five years.

And that’s been our goal and we did for 5 0 6 C funds, which are accredited investors only, although all those investors have been paid back and then we Now we’re working on we have to close funds that are active. One is AHP 2015 A+ and one is AHP servicing.

And now we’re just launched recently launched the pre REO fund and they will have one more coming up. That’s actually should be going Very soon, which is AHP title. Right now today, as we speak, there’s two close funds that are still have investor money in 2015 A+ and AHP servicing and then investors can today invest in pre REO and AHP title.

Yeah. So some of you guys are aware of the A-plus offering. It’s unlike the 506 B and 506 C and you guys probably scratch your head. Why are they talking about deals on an openly advertising podcast ? It’s because the A-plus offering allows you to do it.

And the second reason why we’re talking about is I’ve invested in the first fund myself. I trust George and that’s why I’m willing to have him on the podcast. And I know you guys listen to a lot of podcasts and a lot of these podcasts, they just get whoever your Brony to come up on the podcast and try and sell whatever random fun.

But not bananas in Guatemala or whatever in some other random country. If you guys are going on podcasts, trying to look for your next investment, dude that is not what you want to be doing. You want to be building relationships with real accredited investors instead of trolling up podcast land, because there is little due diligence.

And by honestly, don’t do that guys. You guys will win the financial Darwinism award by doing it and the funny thing is when you don’t know anybody, you got nobody to tell that the deal went south and you got your money stolen from you. And then you feel, you want like one of these people with, no peer group and we’ll just complain on Biggerpockets or something like that.

But anyway, I trust George and this is why we’ve brought him. Several times and I’ve invested my own money with them. And I put enough to initially you guys paid my car loan for quite some time, but getting a new car, maybe I got to put more money into the next fund to make that car payment.

Let’s talk about pre REO crowdfunding.

Sure. Let me backtrack real quick to give people an update. Cause I know a lot of investors have invested in AHP 2015 A+ and AHP servicing

Actually that’s me I’m interested. So exact money in that one in 2017-18.

Exactly and the market everyone knows it’s not news to anybody that the market is just red hot right now and that includes for mortgages. We have millions of dollars in modified mortgages. These are families who we’ve modified their loans for that we are now selling and we’re selling them at a at 90- 92 cents of unpaid principal balance, which historically we would sell these in the sixties and seventies.

So it’s just a dramatic uptick. So we are selling everything we can we have enough money right now to catch up on all the redemptions from the COVID era. So it will be completely up to date with the redemptions. We expect to the next few weeks to announce to investors that we’re going to start redeeming all the first investors in both funds.

And we expect to redeem on an accelerated schedule over the next several months. And my goal is to, and we expect to do it is in 2022 that both the existing funds, 2015 A+ and AHP servicing will be all those investors will be fully paid off. My concern in the market right now is it is very hot, but that won’t last forever.

And I don’t want to be looking, a year from now. It could be looking back and say, oh, if only we had dispose of our loans in the first quarter of 2022 or the fourth quarter 2021. We could’ve made this and today we’re going to have to settle for this. So I’m trying to avoid that.

I may be getting out a little bit early, but we do have an opportunity to take advantage of the market that it exists today and repay all the investors. And that is our goal over the next late fourth quarter, 2021 through 2022. So that’s an update. So people should expect their money back early, earlier than the five years in most cases.

The good news is we have pre REO and another fund upcoming AHP title, which they can invest, roll that money into if they so choose.

 

We talked about this on the last time you’re on the podcast, but to the financial audit, you took us to the audit and then you, at that time, I think that might’ve been half a year ago.

And I think that the climate is still the same in a way, right? You are talking about selling off assets to take advantage. So it’s not much change there, but for the pro tip for folks as if you’re in the fund that it’s going to be exiting soon. It makes sense if you want to stay within the AHP family is to get it out now before George is forced to give it back to you in the fund closes and perhaps get it into the next fund that’s coming.

And the good news is the two new funds we just opened up. They’re open for two years. So whether you’re out in two months or in six months when you get redeemed, it you’ll still get your arm. You’ll still have the ability if you choose to roll them into one of the two new funds.

Your team just sent me an email saying, Hey man, like if you want us to put the dividends and roll the dividends over into the new one that’s another idea.

Yeah, absolutely. This is one which we didn’t do before. We can just now do it, is that if you aren’t a best from 2015 A+ or AHP servicing, then you can’t reinvest those dividends any more because the funds are closed.

However, you can direct us to reinvest into pre REO or AHP title, if you choose. So you can, have the option of making that selection. If you don’t choose either, then you continue to get them in cash.

And at one time it was difficult to do it, because people had to resigned docs every single time. It wasn’t that hard but now

It’s a one-time yes. They go in and sign the new investment docs one time and then we’ll continue to do that until they tell us that an investor chooses not to do it anymore. Okay so let’s talk about pre REO, I think is an interesting, probably to your audience for two reasons.

One is as a crowdfunding investment opportunity, and two is as an investment opportunity just to buy pre Oreos, which we now have people who have bought. And I know we’ve talked about this before. You were actually one of the first to share the news about pre REO, but we now have a lot of repeat investors.

We’re getting a lot of sellers on there and we have some investors who have made, because many times they bought, in the last year and some have exited already. Some of them are doing extremely well with pre REO. So I’ll share how this works, how pre REO works and then talk about how people can participate, whether it’s crowdfunding or directly in pre REO.

I’m sharing some slides that often do to you too. I utilize to introduce pre REO and a brief history. Many of you know this, but in 2008 I founded American homeowner preservation, which was a 5 0 1 C3 nonprofit, which had a mission of keeping families at risk of foreclosure in their homes.

Now we had thousands of families come to us. We were only able to help a modest percentage. And what we did is we found that many banks, mortgage holders, servicers were not receptive to solutions that really made a lot of sense. So we changed our approach and we started buying the faulted mortgages at discounts, and then sharing those discounts with families typically in the form of favorable modifications.

Is where the investment opportunity began. Hey, we can we money to buy these mortgages and we need investors. And 2013, we started crowdfunding. But one asset typically performed the worst out of these pools that we bought. And these were first mortgages secured by vacant properties that were in judicial foreclosure states.

Now we could connect with the homeowner and pay them cash for Edina loo. We could do well Coleman or was PA had passed away or there was no one we couldn’t reach the homeowner, then we’d have to go through foreclosure. And the problem with a first mortgage secured by a vacant property is that we would need to maintain the home.

We can’t, the homeowner’s gone. So the city looks to us or whoever the mortgage holder is to maintain the home. And this is as simple as cutting the grass or shoveling the snow. But also if the property is broken into or falls out of compliance, the city can actually require us to bring the property up to code.

And sometimes we were doing all the work to these properties and making them essentially rent ready. And then they’d sit there for six months a year, sometimes two years a while it went through the foreclosure process. And typically some states that are non-judicial like Texas or California, Arizona, the foreclosures move pretty fast.

You can get them done in six months, but in other states where you have to go through the court system, which is like New York, New Jersey, Florida where I am Illinois, Ohio, and states like. It can take a year and sometimes in, and the extremes will be New York and Hawaii which can take 2, 3, 4 years to complete a foreclosure.

Right now my latest research I saw Hawaiian Yorker kind of neck and neck is the longest foreclosure states to the longest and most expensive states to complete a foreclosure in so this property. think about that. We’ve now the city has ordered us to bring a vacant home, into compliance, make it essentially rent, ready, a home that we don’t own.

We just own the mortgage. So we came up with the idea of, Hey What about if we appointed a local real estate agent as a receiver and they could get a court order, which allows them to do any repairs that are still needed and rent the property during the foreclosure term. And if we could do that, then the rent that’s collected will help offset the costs of any maintenance taxes, insurance go be applied to the loan.

To the extent there was excess. And most importantly it’s a lot easier to maintain an occupied than a vacant one is much less susceptible to vandalism and things like that. And also the the insurance is cheaper, just so many benefits that we can get it occupied. So we started doing that and we had some success with it.

But one challenge we had or one concern was because we’re in Chicago and these properties, mortgages and properties are scattered across the country. We would sometimes think we weren’t sure if we were getting the best prices on, contractors, sometimes they take advantage. We felt like they were taking advantage of us a little bit because we were, a thousand miles away.

So in my mind, I thought, Hey, the ideal solution here is to have a local partner. Somebody who knows the market knows contractors and can help and can have a financial interest in the outcome of this, and they could be our partner on these mortgages. And that was the vision that created pre REO in 2020.

And the goal was to get first mortgages secured by vacant homes, into the hands of local investors during the foreclosure process, instead of waiting till it becomes REO, they could actually get control of the property during foreclosure and that was the original vision.

We’ve talked about this in the past and just to connect the dots for people like the large institutions, they bought a whole bunch of little rental properties back in 2010, and now they’re doing a lot of this build for rent things.

And in my opinion, they’ll probably go through a lot of groaning cranes because large institutions just they’re not good at operating stuff there. People don’t care. They’re just people in suits in Chicago and New York just clicking buttons. And they barely want to go to a lot of these flyover states and we’ll buy a lot of these properties from insurance companies or these kind of more institutional sellers.

Because they don’t have too much skin in the game from a management perspective. So this is exactly like George and his company is like an institution right. They get great deals than the mom and pop investor can’t get access to. And that’s their competitive advantage. If you’re, if somebody’s buying 1, 2, 5, 20 notes, you’re just buying junk from some other guy or with George passed up years, dozens of hand handles and Daisy chain deals over.

But the problem that the institutional guys have is they don’t have foot soldiers. And that’s the kind of the bridge that as an entrepreneur, that’s the segment that you’re trying to cross that gap.

Absolutely. We’re trying to get the institutional seller, provide them a vehicle so that they can connect them with with a local investor. That’s what we’ve done. Right now it’s actually working. We have an institutional seller so originally it was mostly AHP assets on the platform. But right now we have some of the biggest funds that are backed by some of the biggest names on wall street that are posting assets on pre REO. Now the majority of the assets come from third parties from institutional funds rather than from AHP.

So we seeded it to get it going, but now it’s going, which is great. We’re the marketplace and in the middle collecting a fee on each transaction and more we had a one of the keys I’ll get to it as financing and that’s where the crowdfunding comes in. But let’s talk about pre REO the marketplace.

So this is actually, people ask what is pre REO? Pre REO is an online marketplace that connects local real estate investors with lenders. And these are, again, typically institutionals institutions that are looking to sell them. When it first mortgages and REO properties, and these are all over the country.

We’ve had a bunch of Hawaii. We’ve had there we’ve had some million dollar homes. We have some homes that are worth, under $10,000- $20,000 and everything in between across the country. I think we’ve offered in more than 40 states. Originally I envisioned mostly lower value.

But today we just listed to a $4 million homes in in New York, on long island. And there again they’re the first mortgage that’s secured by the formulate our home on long island. So we’re seeing some, and we have some in Brooklyn that are million dollars and all over the country.

Once in a while, you’ll see these million dollar homes. Now pre REO has evolved, that original vision that I shared, it was a first mortgage secured by a vacant property. But now it’s evolved. Now it’s first mortgages that are delinquent secured by vacant properties or occupied properties.

There’s you know, as we talk to more and more institutions, they’re saying, Hey the mortgage is backed by vacant properties. That’s maybe 15% of our portfolio. There’s a whole nother 85% of our portfolio. That’s occupied by owners or tenants. Can you list those? And we started listing those and those were bid on just as aggressively as the vacant ones.

So it’s become a marketplace, right? For simply delinquent first mortgages. And now we actually, next month, we’re listing a, we’re entering a new marketing agreement with a a group that does small balance commercial loans. So these are like strip malls, small office buildings retail, stuff like that.

Tons of defaults in that arena right now. And so that we’ll start seeing creeping up. There’s some hotels, I think, in the first batch that are going to creep into the onto the platform shortly as well.

So here are all the problems that we’re trying to solve with pre REO institutional sellers. They often realize that by selling to the local real estate investor, who would bought, who really would be comfortable owning the property that buyer is most likely the best buyer for the mortgage. But as we talk to sellers, the vision was, Hey if I get to sell my mortgages to a hundred different buyers, then that means we have to do know your customer checks on a hundred different buyers.

The big institutions usually have to do backgrounds on each of their of their buyers. That’s a hundred different KYC checks. It’s a hundred different contracts and they thought there’s no way it’s whatever gain we get by maybe selling for an extra 5 cents or 5%. We’re going to get back with, going back and forth on all these different contracts.

Not worth it. We’re not going to do it. So we came up with a solution and the solution was to put all the loans that are transacted on pre REO into our trust and the trustees U.S.Bank. And so now going to the sellers, okay. The buyer is only one buyer for all these loans. And it’s a trust and it’s U.S. Bank as the trustee.

So they know your customer checks. It’s fine. It’s only one contract. And then we sell a participation interest to each of the local ambassadors, and it’s a participation interest in a specific asset that’s held in the trust. And so that was really the key component that has made this really buyable.

And the other problem that the trust has solved is that about half the states in the union require that you have a license to hold or enforce a mortgage. So I’m in Illinois. If you want to start foreclosure on a mortgage here. You need to have a debt collectors license. And if you don’t, you can’t foreclose.

Now, if you did foreclose , then that could be used as a defense by the consumer to delay or stop the foreclosure and also potentially regulators could find or otherwise provide come after you. I haven’t heard of that happening in Illinois, but I have heard in Pennsylvania, there’s been a number of smaller investors who bought defaulted mortgage loans in Pennsylvania, and they’ve ended up getting fine sometimes substantial.

$50,000 and orders to divest themselves of these mortgages. Some servicers have some smaller servicers and mortgage buyers just aren’t buying in Pennsylvania. Georgia is also enforced this. Massachusetts has enforced this other states. Don’t enforce it proactively, but it is still a big risk.

But the great news is if a loan is held, a mortgage is held in a trust and there’s a national bank trustee. Just like how we have it set up then that compliance, you don’t need a license that complies with all states for the licensor requirements. So it checked that box as well by holding them in a trust.

So now an investor who buys just one loan can be compliant in by holding it in our trust. That’s the other problem that we’ve solved. The other big one is that Difficult historically, to borrow money, to buy mortgages or to against a mortgage. So think about if you like all the properties that you buy Lane, multi-family properties, you oftentimes are getting a mortgage and they record a mortgage when you sell the property or refinance.

The mortgage is recorded there, you gotta pay it. But if you want to get a loan against the mortgage, that has been historically difficult. You’re trying to collateralize a mortgage. By using the trust, now we actually take title to the property, provide the participation interest to the local investor, and that allows us to finance.

And if they were to default, there’s a rapid 30 day forfeiture action that we can take. We basically send a notice to the investor. Hey, you’re in default, you have 30 days to bring the default current or to cure the default. If they don’t do it, then they forfeit their participation interest.

It’s something where we don’t get bogged down in a longterm foreclosure or some other type of court action like that. And all these investors are putting down 25%. So the likelihood, especially in today’s market, if anyone defaulting is very modest. The final problem that we solved as local investors.

Today, our star for deals the REOs with the foreclosure merge moratoriums and all the competition in the market. It has been very difficult to have a steady flow of real estate opportunities if they’re buying the properties, but if we move them up the food chain and start buying defaults and mortgages, there are a lot of opportunities and at significant discounts, the average note on our platform is sold right around 75% of the value of the underlying property. So if a property is worth $200,000 that’s probably being offered at $150,000 to buy the mortgage.

So basically our pre REO is providing the opportunities. So you can go identify mortgages that you want to buy you. We also provide you the capital? We provide resources like a service or a law firm. A trustee that can all help throughout the process and a compliant holding vehicle for all the investors.

So it’s really solved a small mortgage investors even a smaller funds, their challenges at finding opportunities, finding money and finding a vehicle to hold the asset. We right now both on the buyer and seller side, we’re seeing a lot of interest next month. We expect to list over a thousand properties in one month on the platform, which is a huge infusion for us this month in October, we should list several hundred next month to be first time we go over a thousand and That is just in time for year end, where we think there’ll be a motivation for funds to sell these at attractive prices. So we do see a big opportunity in the next time and the next 60 to 75 days where for the year end, there’ll be some great deals for investors.

This is where if you people have been watching my monthly updates like Adam came up with some data that saying those people who are house flippers their return on investment is almost like a 10 year low, because so much competition in the market.

So if you’re looking for a different faucet for deal flow, this is where to get it. Granted most, you guys, my audience George, most of ’em are high income earners, passive investors. So they’re more looking for the fun.

Absolutely.

The appeal to the other guys that are more passive investors is maybe it might be a great way that you can find something in your backyard, that something to tinker around and get to get real estate professional status, some kind of thing to screw around with to get that 750 hour.

So you use the passive losses to possibly lower ordinary income, or maybe I buy a house one day here in Hawaii, but I want to get a good deal on it. That’s where maybe it might come down. Like one of these days. Although that one a Millani on there has been on there for, I don’t want to live in there. It’s too close to my parents.

It’s odd. I wouldn’t have suspected. Hawaii has as many assets as we see. We see a lot in Hawaii which historically is not a place that we see a lot of non-performing mortgages, but there’s been a lot especially condos but also some houses.

I want that house that’s $6 million that was worth 10 million that the bank foreclosed on.

You never know. We had two, $4 million assets that weren’t in Hawaii today. But there are some multi-million dollar assets that have been listed on the platform. I’ll tell you there’s one gentlemen, one pre REO buyer who said the best deal he ever did in his life.

And he’s been doing this for a living for years, was on pre REO. He bought the first mortgage secured by a a home in singer island, Florida last year. And I think he bought it for. Under $2 million, just under $2 million. He thought it was worth 2.5 to $3 million and six months later he completed the foreclosure, the tenant.

He paid the tenant $25,000 to vacate the home and he got excited. He called me a few months before it was foreclosed on and said, Hey, the broker says I can probably sell this for three. And then right when he got the tenant out the broker said, Hey, list is a 3.5.

He ended up listing at 3.8. He ended up listing a 3.5 and getting multiple offers and taking off at 3.8, made over a million dollars on one single pre REO asset, which is just insane. And that’s the record deals that I’m aware of so far. You should have got an equity on that line. Cause he essentially, you guys just play as the 12% note we get.

Today we get $2,000 of 2% of the acquisition price. Plus we get the 12% then he put on 25%. So in this case it was a half a million dollars on that he put down. So he put down it’s a big amount of money. He was the risk position. That’s, I think what’s attractive, especially going into a potential, uncertain market of the future, where there’s an investor putting down 25%.

There’s a discount of 25% off the current value of the property. Then the local investor puts up 25%. So the money that we’re putting up is in a pretty secure position, even as this market starts getting on, getting a little shaky in the next year. Which is likely to happen.

I think we’ll be in a very protected position and hopefully everyone does really well, but ultimately there’s going to be a downturn. And I think that 25% discount plus a 25% down payment will keep us in a very protected position and still generate a good return for our investors.

Be good for folks like myself, have trouble qualifying for mortgages or car loans because of our business owners, you guys, it says nice. You don’t have to Dick around with a bank. You guys are just the private lender.

Exactly. We do some very basic qualifications but if you have decent credit and if you’re an investor, the things that may.

Yeah, too many properties or whatnot that may bar you typically, that’s not going to be impediment with us. We’re making common sense logical decisions and in our underwriting, and basically we feel very comfortable the 25% down payment on something that’s already discounted and something that we could forfeit within 30 days of you ended up defaulting. So it does have a a lot of protections for the lender.

Can you take me through maybe not that particular Asur, maybe it is, but like, how does that note trickle? Like where does it originate from what was it in like a lot of 500 to bot.

No. Initially some, most of the ones came from AHP, so they were in like a big pool that we bought and maybe they were vacant initially were all vacant.

So we take the vacant ones that were in long-term foreclosure states and put them on the site, with anticipating people would use the receivership actions. Now from third-party funds, some of them are laid in the foreclosure process. Many of them are occupied. So receivership doesn’t apply on those, but people are just buying them.

And so they may I think for the sellers in their minds, they can pick up more and more or less 5% more than they could buy simply selling it in a big pool to a national investor because that national investor is going to say, okay, if I foreclose on this, I’ve got to pay a commission. I got to do this, that and discounted a little bit for a local REO ambassador here.

We’re selling it to the local REO investor in many cases. So they are comfortable with, paying a little bit more, but now they’re buying the mortgage which they otherwise couldn’t do. The sellers that we work with, none of them would be selling these individually. It’s always going to be in pools of, a hundred or even 500 or more.

And now they’re selling them, effectively one by one, and they’re get taking bids one by one. But the key is the process is that when we close these, we’re typically closing multiple ones at a time and we do one or two closings a month with each fund and so we grouped their assets together. So for them it’s not burdensome to have too many contracts or anything like that.

So I’m just going walk to the steps. It’s hard to follow for myself. So like I go to the website, I look for a property that I’m like, Hey George, I like this one. It’s a million dollar property.

I think it might be worth maybe a little bit more, hopefully a million and a half. But I put down 25%. And I, which is 250 and I pay your guys’ listing fee of two grand, right? So 250, 252,000.

Actually it just changed. So now we got 2000 or 2%, whichever is higher. So in that case you actually played 20 grand. I we’re seeing traction. It makes sense. It’s still a great deal.

I give you about 250 for that property. I take ownership over it is somebody still take ownership for them? To be clear, you’re buying the mortgage. So you take ownership or participation interest in the mortgage. And as part of the cap, the participation interests, you have delegated authority.

So you make all the decisions. Do we proceed with foreclosure? Do we take a modification if the homeowner asks for that? Do we, what do we set if it goes to foreclosure sale? Bidding, where do you set the bid at? Okay. Now it’s foreclosed on, do we sell it as is? Or do you want to do repairs to the property?

These are all decisions that you get to make on the loan. So you’d work with AHP servicing. The servicer will be in constant contact with you in terms of, what. What’s needed, for you to approve, because you’re basically controlling the destiny of this particular mortgage, but yet that’s what you own.

You own a participation interest in the mortgage and after we’ll get the 12% Everything else goes to you. So you get all the upside. So that guy that made a million bucks, we got 12% on our money. He made, a million plus bucks and that is, he gets to keep the upside and that’s, just like when you buy a house or a multi-family building, the lender gets a predetermined return and then the owner takes the risk.

They can make a lot of money, they can make a little money, they could lose a little, lose a lot. That’s what the owner gets, but ultimately the mortgage holder or the debt provider gets a predetermined return. And in this market, that’s where. That’s the way to go in and out in uncertain times, that’s the position that we want to be in the investor that takes it over.

What are most people doing? They can’t do the heartless fraud and. AHB serving. We want about, Nope. I want to make deals. What are the percentage of where people are doing? Yeah. Good percentage. We’re just going to go through the process and go to foreclosure. They’re already, almost all of them are already in foreclosure.

However, I’d say there’s going to be 25 to 30. At some point, want to do some kind of deal like a mod. And my messaging is if a homeowner says they want a mod and they qualify for one we’ll present it to the investor and I encourage them to take it. Or if it doesn’t make if it’s not quite rich enough financially, they can counter it.

But. Reject it. And here’s why, because if a homeowner really wants to stay and the investor really wants to get them out and get the home there’s a reasonable likelihood that Comodo will get an attorney and fight the foreclosure, which could add months or years to the foreclosure. And in those, in that period, the homeowners.

Tourney not paying you. The lender is the investor will then be paying the attorney as well. It will not be a happy outcome. So my, my purse, what I share with most investors is that if you do five of these, you probably get REO on maybe three of them. There’ll be two where you do a mod or some other, maybe a deed in lieu or short sales, something like that.

And that is you have to account for that and be prepared for that. And that really is the right thing to do. And the other part is the investor will say wait, I don’t want a mod because I need to be collecting payments for the next 20 years. I want to get in and out of things, make my money and do it again.

And I say, okay, wait, look at it a little bit differently because today, if you do a modification about on a loan, which you just bought it, let’s say 75. And the homeowner gives you a down payment. Maybe they may give you a lump sum of five grand. Then they paid monthly payments for six months on time.

Maybe you’re getting a grand a month when that started. They made six payments on time. You can sell that loan at probably 90% today. We’re selling our performing loans at 90, 92%. And that will so you’ll make a profit. So you’re starting to make money now. Quite so much as if you actually got titled to the property where you’re going to make a good return.

So do these on an ongoing basis. You get some RTOs, you’ll get some mods, but in all cases there’s opportunities to make money in HBS servicing. We’ll do. We sell it alone. Okay. Actually, I wasn’t aware of that exit strategy, so yeah. And this is an odd one and that came out of pre REO.

So the institutional buyers, when it’s a non-performing loan, the best buyer is the local investor. But when the, when a low, a smaller seller is trying to sell a re-performing loan. Selling them one by one. You’ll probably get the worst price. The best price will be if you can aggregate a large pool of them.

So what we’re doing now is some of the premier investors have agreed to modifications on their loans. And now the people have paid several months on time. We’re putting them in large pools that we offer, which are, they’re not as large as I’d like, but maybe they’re $10 million. And it’s a combination of HP owned assets plus pre REO investors, even some other smaller investors.

And then we offer them to large institutions to. To buy. And when they buy when they make a bid, we’ll come back to the investor and say, Hey, do you accept this? They accept it. And we close. Then we get a 2% fee. And that has worked out well because we’re selling these things at say 92 cents. If they sold them directly on their own a, the institution wouldn’t buy it.

They’d probably be selling. 10 10% less than that. If not even less than that. And I, to give you an example, the last couple of wires we’ve gotten where it came from, Goldman Sachs. These are funds that are backed by Goldman Sachs or other large wall street banks that are buying these these re-performing assets.

And and so that’s. Ultimately pre REO is making money, when they’re non-performing and being sold. And also when they’re re-performing and being coming from institutions and going back into institutions so we see opportunities from both sides. And we educate the investors that this is, you need to be prepared for any of these outcomes and and act accordingly.

But if you do so you can make a there’s the opportunity to make money, regardless of the. Yeah. Cause I, I know you, you have a soft heart, right? Like you want get these things, but you’ve already tried. So it’s Mr and Mrs. Late payments, we want to work with you, but if not, we have to ship you off to our pre REO sharks.

And they’re not, and again, as people, some people will not reach out or respond to. The outreach until there’s Hey, there’s a foreclosure sale next week. And now they want a mod after six months or a year, but that’s what happens sometimes. And again, I still, I encourage investors if we can make it financially viable on both sides to go ahead and seriously consider taking that model.

Yeah. Yeah. Most real estate investors, not in our community. But you know which one I’m talking about. The people that it’s like, they don’t like, they like to be their own landlord. Cause they don’t want the property manager 8%. That’s the scarcity, mind people, typically real estate investors are always the ones that, oh, can I get a discount?

Can I get a discount? Like they’re the ones that the shark. Looking to foreclose these people, as soon as they take over the asset, because time is money and velocity of money, but you guys you keep it honorable, right? Yeah. Yeah. Absolutely. If you do the right thing in the annual do better in aggregate, you may not make quite as much as you could on an individual asset basis, but on the, in an aggregate you’re going to do better.

And as an entrepreneur, George, you’ve done it again. You’ve made little points here and there and that’s an, and you feeling filling the void. So what the needs in the marketplace for the flyers and south and collecting a fee here and there and collecting a spread on the money? It is I actually pre REO.

We see a big. We see a potential for a lot of growth. To the point where right now people are saying, Hey, I bought, I’m buying this loan from some other fund. They didn’t get it off pre REO. Can you provide the financing? And we’re saying, sure, we’ll do the financing. So we’re right now we finance on an off platform deals.

And And, the majority of people are buying on pre REO, it’s not to say every loan is, has to transact on pre REO. They could they may have a relationship at a fund and they want to buy something, but they need the financing. Even a small pools were financing. But again, that there’s a huge need for financing for smaller buyers in this market.

And the buyer doesn’t have to be tiny, even for some buying a few million bucks, they may need financing. So we see it as a big opportunity. If something comes up, man in Hawaii, let me know. And I’ll I’ll do it. I’ll be a Guinea pig for everybody. Absolutely. Go on pre reo.com. I know there’s so I know we’ve had it Hawaii assets.

I’m pretty comfortable. I’m pretty confident that there’s some there right now. I don’t want a three about a week ago. I just don’t want to buy anything on the east side. I don’t know. Hawaiian. Yeah. Yeah. I’m not going anywhere on that side, but So there’s, we, you go through this, the lender, HP financing is the lender, and this is maybe a good transition into the fund. Is that the fund that’s getting these loans? Is that hard for the last year? Yeah, so sure. HP servicing has been funding pre REO loans for the last year. That’s all transitioning right now. They’re all being funded with pre-op by pre REO.

With this new crowd funding offering. So think about that in the past, HP servicing was a 10% fun. So we have money coming in at temper, our repeat behind crowdfunding investors, 10%. And we loaning out a 12%, pretty skinny but it worked right now with the lower interest rate environment we pay crowdfund investors 7%, whereas loaning it out of 12%.

So there’s a five point spread in the middle. And are you guys still doing that? You had that pre REO e-course at one time. Yeah. And we’re doing a new one that is still live at dot com. There is an e-course there’s another one we’re going to do a live one in in December. We record it and share it with make it available.

In perpetuity on online. But yeah, that one, there’s a new one coming up in December. A lot of things have changed since last November when we did that one. So we’re wanna include all the updates in the new one, in the new opportunity. In the new e-course yeah, something I’m thinking of this.

I’m not a big fan of retirement funds, but if you guys got them, the bad thing about note investing is you don’t get the passive losses at the least. But this would be something idea that you would do with in a retirement account, especially when there’s a high potential for explosive gains.

If you were to sell the property. Yeah. Yeah. People have bought P people have bought pre REO with their IRA account. There’s nothing, no problem. Doing.

And let me I got to share about the crowdfunding part of it. And here it is. So this is just so everyone understands on the crowd funding opportunity. It pays out 7% just as all the HP funds, in the past we distribute every month, it’s open. This is key. It’s open to accredited.

And non-accredited investors. That’s a big for regulation. A plus that’s a big benefit that almost anyone can invest. There’s some limits in terms of what, how much a non-accredited investor can can cannabis. But you’ll see that, they’ll see that on the site, the minimum investment, only 100 bucks and that is, we want to make it as accessible as possible to everybody.

And this offering is qualified by the sec to raise up to 75 million through regulation. A-plus. What is that like the BDN or average investor? 7,000 bucks is our average investment. Ooh, wow. Oh and then I guess the other question I had with this prod funding method. Like liquidity, right?

Like when, if the people need their money back, how is that? Sure. This has been a, so historically HP has offered this, I think since 2016, that if an investor needs their money back, we will undertake our best efforts to return it within 30 days and pre COVID. We were consistently able to do it. COVID hit.

We were unable to do it. We just caught up on the COVID air redemptions and the going forward, we don’t expect another situation like that. So we do expect that we’ll be back to returning money within 30 days upon request the or at least undertaking our best efforts to do that. Now, key caveats, all that is if the investment is redeemed in the first.

Year then the return goes from 7% to 5%. If it’s redeemed in the second year, it goes from 7% to 6%. If the investor keeps the the investment outstanding for at least two years, they can request redemption at any time and they’d be able to keep the full 7%. And I think this is for investors.

I think they just need to get a little more sure what this, like these investments, the reason why you’re not making 0% is that there is some liquidity. Like you can’t just assume that you’re going to get the money right back. I still think what you guys do for investors is, pretty amazing.

If you can even there’s even a possibility of redemption. You guys are using in liquid investments at the end of the day. Yeah, investors can’t really expect to get money back and forth and use it like an ATM. Although I know investors have used in the past and they got comfortable with that.

And then when COVID hit, it became difficult to get the money out. That’s something that luckily, the market’s gone the way it has. It’s now gotten returning to the point where, we expect to be returning money early on those two legacy funds.

And I think in the two new funds, I, a pre REO and the soon to be launched HB title, and those you’ll be able to Yeah, I think we’ll be back on track in terms of getting money back within 30 days when needed. Yeah. And everybody asks that question that comes up a lot of times in HP and pro is always in there.

Part of the solution is oh, what do I do with my short-term liquidity before I look up from our longer term or asymmetric type of risk deals? Are those more. And I tell everybody that’s where you guys have to join the mastermind group and stuff’s going around and doing it all on your own, just suckers, like seriously, like you’re not going to find out if it’s different for everybody, finding opportunities is through your network and it’s different for everybody. And everybody’s trying to do this all by themselves. These should be crowdsourcing, best practices for other people. I’m just, I’m not going to tell you guys what to do out there because you, then you guys will get mad at me.

Just like how you got mad at George, because you can’t redeem your $7,000, the first one, right? You guys, these are the tools you guys need to put these tools into the right border and the right name to say and understand what you’re working with. Those pros and cons to everything. I still invest with.

But I have it within my holistic liquidity opportunity fund. I think you guys can still get that article at simplepassivecashflow.com/poolfunds. But as part of the education process, I guess a lot of people alternative investing or private funds are still new to a lot of people agreed.

It’s a new experience and lots of times when things are going well, it’s like today with the real estate market where everything’s going so strong, people forget that, Hey, at some point it won’t be so strong and property values will go down right now. They’ve been going up like you forget people, forget that in 2008 it was really tough to sell properties.

Property values are going down each month and, that went from 08, 09, 10, 11, 12 up into maybe even 13 where things were a lot different than it is today. Remember, all these things are cyclical and that will prepare for the worst, but prepare for the best, but be prepared for the worst as well.

So call to action guys, if you guys want to learn more about this, we’ll stick it in the infoPage at simplepassacastle.com/AHP. We’ve got several other webinars we’ve done on this in the past. And if you’re interested in getting involved in that pre REO thing, us go to simplepassivecashflow.com/preREO and drop a comment into our Facebook group.

I’d be curious. I’d like to find somebody who’s doing and not just, staying to themselves and keeping it to themselves. I’m interested in this type of stuff.

There’s Hawaii on there there’s opportunities in your backyard probably, or maybe your parents backyard.

It’s astounding how many especially when we get the hundreds and the thousand next month, I think they’re going to be all over us. There should be opportunities in the majority of the markets.

But all right, guys. Thanks for joining us. Thank you, George. And we’ll see everybody next time.

Dumping your 401k, Helocs, 529s, IBC, Spouse Help Accredited Investor Coaching Call

https://youtu.be/Acn5oHx-DRc

Hey, simple passive cashflow listeners. Today, we are going to be doing a coaching call where the topics are going to be withdrawing money from your 401k. Should you do a 5 29 plan for college savings? If not, what should you do? And a little bit review on infinite banking. I know a lot of you guys have been asking about that.

If you’re like, what the heck is infinite banking? And if you guys want to hang out with more of the folks, just myself and the person you’re going to hear on this next coaching call. Join us in Hawaii in January.

Go to simple passive cashflow.com/ 2022 retreat. And we’ll see you there.

 

 

Hey folks.

He just went to this syndication e-course. Why don’t you give people a little context before we get going through some of your questions?

Sure. I’m just looking to understand the syndication laddering. I jumped in there’s a little bit of a lag before I start cash flowing. And I’m dealing with spouse support, so she’s in this wait and see game. I am also looking at my 401k, I’m 41 years old. I’m pretty heavy in my 401k accounts. So what I’ve been looking at is what’s the option as far as borrowing and paying myself interest.

And I wanted to see if that’s what relates to this infinite baking concept that you’ve mentioned before and some of your content. And one of my other questions which I put these together about a week ago. You posted something about 5 29 plans and infinite banking. I have two toddlers and I’m trying to go after I’m thinking capture this time. This time my kids are four years old trying to do like a 50% discount on college so I am heavy in my 529s.

How about we come back to the college 529 savings after? Just a quick teasers. The 5 29 plans are like 401ks. 401ks are like investing for the clueless, 5 29 is they’re essentially the same.

Everything we’re gonna talk about 401ks carries over to the 5 29 plans. I don’t know why anybody does it quite honestly. Just because something’s labeled a retirement plan or education plan, doesn’t mean that’s what necessarily you should use it. If you just want to do what everybody else does, it gets killed and has a bunch of garbage options go with a 5 29 plan or 401k.

First things first, like taking money out of the 401k retirement plan. Let’s kinda talk about that first because it’s a very common thing. Most people don’t have too much in their checking savings account. Why would you, that’s just not good use of your money.

But then they started investing and then now they have to go. They start to realize that this alternative investing is real and now they start to go look for low-hanging fruit. So the order of operations is money in your checking and savings, your liquidity, your home equity, and you can get a Heloc or a cash out refinance.

And then in conjunction somewhere in there it might be tied in order of operations. But your retirement fund possibly getting a loan or just similar to like HELOC in that you can put it back, should all this not work. But most people start to get to this stage and they’re like, yeah, screw that 401ks stuff.

Because the issue that I have it is it’s retail investments. It’s all the stuff they want you to invest in so they hit you with these high fees, carried interest. Vanguard, I used to be in that stuff a long time ago and I thought, whoa, it was these are low expense ratios, right?

That’s nonsense! Like you don’t see all the hidden fees behind it, the marketing the salaries, expense, accounts and that’s the problem with the 401ks you’re trapped with that stuff.

I do have a HELOC and it’s untapped. Between the HELOC and the 401k loan. I figured the 401k loan I think now the maximum borrow is 50% or a hundred grand, whatever is, lower, I believe.

Most people take it all at up to 80 to a hundred percent actually, but you must have what’s your house worth now? And what do you owe on it?

My house is worth about 1.8, live in the bay area and I just refiled pulled cash out. I owe about 1 million.

Okay. So you have a pretty good equity position, which is actually not good in our world. Because we’ve got to get that moving. There’s a lot of people in the family office group that are running around trying to find the best HELOC banks.

Usually it’s just a community. They usually can be in like the 3, 4% range easily at 80% on the value so you have some shopping there to do, to go find that community bank.

Yeah, I went with my local credit union and I got a 3.2.

You could probably do better. It should be a lot lower rate for 50% of the value should be able to take it up to 80. But for now you’re good. You’re not going to blow through 500 grand a million dollars. But put this on the docket to be your next three to six month project is to go find that next HELOC . That’s going to get you 80% and that’ll keep it rolling for another six months to a year maybe two, depending how much you want to deploy.

Got it! And so I just figured though that the 401k borrow would be better for me because I’m paying myself interest.

That’s what people say in theory. You’re paying yourself such a small percentage that doesn’t really matter and you’re prepared to pitch yourself repair. You just throw it down the drain in my opinion. Again, follow the numbers. All of this stuff is just, what other people say. If your coworker saying this type of stuff, you need to stop it, question it.

You’re paying back yourself the interest, but then what you got to really think about is the sunk costs or the opportunity loss of keeping it in there. All this money is not making anything right especially the format. I dunno, you can make an argument either way, right?

What’s going to go off the stocks or the house. Both of them is a kind of a crap shoot to me. But most people they go on raid the home equity first because most people were really skiddish about taking money out of their retirement. They say it like that because you’ll get really freaked out when you start to do that type of stuff.

But if it were me, I would feel a lot more skiddish with money in my retirement plan right now, because that all that stuff is just pumped with money. Equity in your home I feel like there’s a little bit more secure, not just because in 2008 real estate, what the hell? That was a real estate crisis. That’s what triggered the recession in 2008. But typically it’s like most times it’s a crash the stock market with home equity values.

Yeah, I agree. I think that a hedge on the 401k with the market would be the way to go as far as pulling money out of that.

 

Before we move off the house, are you guys going to stay, you got a younger family, you guys going to stay in the house for the next five, 10 years or at least 15?

Yeah. All I gotta say is most people in my community. They say, screw the house. Let me go get like a little bit smaller, like rental or apartment that has a really sweet luxury pool. And let me spend my time instead of screwing around in the yard where somebody else cleans my pool for me but just saying right because you can unlock a lot of equity that way.

Shoot with a million dollars of equity right now, you could put into something AHP. I would have put all my money in there. That’s for sure. But that could give you a hundred grand passive income a year . That pays for 1, 2, 3, 4 kids college today. I’ll be four college kids in the future. There you go! That’s your 529 done. But they’ll choose to just keep it locked up in our home equity, Jack.

Doing the home equity loan, pulling money out that way and not moving.

For the time being that’s a great plan. I think you’re fine with that for the next couple of years. But if I ask that question and some people have that hint of Hey, I want to move in to a bigger house or a smaller house.

Then I say move out now and just dump the equity up now. But if you’re going to stay there long, What I would say is just refinance the whole damn thing right now and suck out all the equity, do a cash out refinance, suck it all out as much as you can. But of course, I think you’re still in the beginning stages, right?

So that’s where you want to use the HELOC a little bit longer just to make yourself a little comfortable. But at some point, you drain the equity because the HELOC can only get you so far. It can only get you to 70, 80% of the value in most cases.

Yeah. I will shop that. I’ll look into that and I’ll even ask my credit union, the next month or so rates are really good right now, too.

What do you think about the syndication in the laddering with the development at county line?

Developments I would personally go to more of a stabilized cash flowing asset, especially if you’re new to this type of world. You think of in deals in terms of risk adjusted returns, right?

Stabilized assets is like buying an existing lemonade stand with existing profit and loss statements. You can see what it runs or a development is just a shot in the dark in a way. Technically, if you could build it there’s more margin room for error but you have to wait a lot longer to see the egg hatch.

The way I did it and the way I preach general wealth building to people is start off with singles and basics. And in the syndication, that is more stabilized assets that give cashflow quickly and have lighter value add or in the rental property world for people under half a million dollars net worth just go buy rental properties one by one like how I did.

Yeah, I think in my situation though, I need to be a little bit more passive. I’m not going to go out and buy individual properties. That’s what makes your multi-family deals attractive to me because I can be passive.

I just have to say it because something Dawn, who is a young, kid’s going to listen to this podcast and then think they’re going to go into an apartment deal and they have no money.

And so I have to say that. But yeah, if you’re an accredited investor, in my opinion, people joke about this all the time in my groups. Can you really tell me any good reason to own a rental property, debt in your name, the headache, the fact that you’re getting abused as a robot rental? Let’s not get started with all this BRRR stuff, right?

I think that general strategy is going into intermittent deals, spacing it out and just dollar cost averaging, same technique they taught you with stock market investing.

My biggest challenge now is just negotiating it with my spouse because the conventional way to invest is just through the 401ks and all these other vessels to invest. I’ve got to convince her that this is going to pay off and be able to produce some passive income but the current deal is two years lagged.

You screwed yourself. You shouldn’t have done that, man!

I know I screwed myself but I think that county line projects going to be fun to watch and be a part of. This is why I’m going back to the 401k, because I think it’s a good strategy with Harton negotiating with her that it’s, if I wanna retire early let’s, use some of my retirement and not really hit the fan.

Which is just an emotional thing, right? Whether it’s retirement or money on your wallet, it’s all the money at the end of the day. I think where people get gummed up, they emotionally feel like 401k, Roth IRA, that’s your retirement. And I even have like sophisticated investors earmarking things in their own mind that way too. So I get it. They think one is more, long-term. One is more short term, but to me, it’s all the same.

You figure out what your asset allocation or time horizons are and money is money.

Yeah, that’s where my current head is at in as far as the syndication deals, you have the one presentation coming up today. I think it’s a Rora.

Do you see the fluctuation or the opportunities to tailing off or increasing? What do you see as far as the market conditions?

Right now, it’s getting’s good, right? Because the residential market has gotten really overheated in my opinion, because of low supply. I think demand has even gone in lower, but because supply has dropped so much, that’s what dictates the prices, which is very emotional driven.

That’s why I don’t like residential properties. But in the commercial world, we haven’t had that big run-up yet. But you’ve seen rents rise the first half of 2021. It’s all completely obvious what’s happening and cap rates are dropping. You’re having cap rate compression.

But it’s not to a p lace where, your average internet investors like jumping into commercial properties quite yet. Right? Maybe this time next year, for sure. There always be deals because what makes for investment? The banks lend money at X and the cap rates are Y and there’s always a difference between X minus Y.

There will always be a differential or always be a difference and when you apply leverage and that’s how you make yield. The cap rates will always be making yielding more than interest rates in a world where gravity works. I’m sure it could go backwards for a little bit.

I don’t think it ever has, but that’s what makes the world run right. I think what you’re getting to is Hey, what if I wait? If you wait, the best time to do anything was yesterday. They always change, like for example, infinite banking they always change the rules.

Best time to get it was yesterday, the best time another one was yesterday. It’s just constantly going to be that, you guys are just like making it tough for your guys doing this. Just be prudent, stoic, and just constantly dollar cost averaging into stuff that makes sense.

And it’s difficult now because you’re getting started. But to me, that’s the outlook that you have, you don’t need to be like me and have a hundred percent of my stuff in alternative investments. That’s for sure. I totally respect if you want 20 to 50% into paper assets.

That’s fine! But over time, the kind of the percentage definitely goes to alternative asset size. You look at I seen as a tiger 21, it’s all $10 million dollar families and above all paper assets. They don’t own like mutual funds and stuff like that.

I do think that we’ll always try to be conventional in some manner from our perspective. But I have a job to do and just convince my spouse that this is legit and try to jump into one of these like more conventional deals with you.

Let’s talk about that a little bit. Your spouse do they work too, or what did they do? You guys single income?

She works. She makes more than me and she’s in tech.

Good for you, man!

She’s really involved in our finances and that’s good I have to say.

Did I send you those videos from our bubble event where we had like a spouse’s panel? I can send. Shoot me an email later and I guess everybody listening, you guys want this spousal tips and webinars. Shoot me an email with the subject line spouse, and then we can send it off to you guys too.

The takeaway is everybody does it differently. It’s just like sick parent. You never tell another person that wants to do cause they always just turn around to get their own way. And you shouldn’t talk about it. But we talk about in our group and we acknowledged the fact that everybody has different marriage structures, different ways of dealing some your spouses, involve, which I think is good.

Some don’t care but tell you absolutely you can’t do anything that’s the most frustrating thing. So I guess be grateful that’s not the case. Sometimes, you have to make deals, right? Like marriages and negotiation. Did your spouse out of your family and their family which have more money growing up?

It was about the same but our backgrounds are completely different. I’m coming from a farm. She comes from the bay area. We have similar backgrounds.

Whenever you’re working with differences and people, it’s always cool to understand the backgrounds of the people then you understand more. Some things I noticed a lot of times is when like the spouse, if they didn’t come from money then they’re really gonna like in the scarce mindset kind of way. Again, not a bad thing. That’s just how they are. They want to cling onto the house so that home equity thing is a big thing.

Which doesn’t seem like the case here. I think that’s the cool thing with people who had money, lower middle class, we’re not talking like low, low end. But they know that there’ll be okay. So they’re okay with you doing things like, taking money out of your HELOC and refinancing or renting. Not owning, you don’t need to own, right? But in this case, there might have an issue with the retirement fund.

I don’t know if you’ve ever had that discussion. Okay, if I were to do one of them take a couple of hundred thousand, which is a very small minority of the whole net worth out of retirements or our home equity. Which one would you prefer? That’s a good starting point. And why?

Yeah, and I do think it’s going to towards the 401k because it affects me and my potential retiring early. And it may be more like palatable to her to accept that.

Something I’ve picked up from Chris Voss seminar he’s said, never split the difference. Funny! He puts you in a high stakes like hostage negotiation. One of the tactics in the book you can pay attention is like, when you negotiate and you’re in a negotiation in this case. Get you label the other side. So then you asked the question, it’s that doesn’t mean that you rather have the security in your house is what I’m hearing.

You labeled them so you get the conversation going, right? No, I’m not. I just think that, and then the retirement stuff is more your longterm thing and you’re, you would retire and that type of stuff, and that’s what our family wants. And then you draw out the information, as opposed to each side stonewall.

But it sounds like you have it sounds like a totally functioning relationship to me. Just got to figure out, you’re not going to go balls to the wall in the first year or two, for sure. But which of the two is the lesser and in this case, it’s the maybe leaving the home equity alone a little bit and going after retirement.

I think that’s what I’m going to do.

Good segue! We’ve talked about the home equity. So what’s your plan of attack is probably the whole the retirement fund. Like you said, you can take a loan on it. I don’t buy the whole thing about paying yourself interest. It’s just like a HELOC that the interest paid as a wash anyway. Next investment you’re just gonna take a loan, the retirement or something like that. Is that the plan?

Yeah, I guess my options would be withdrawal penalty with a penalty or take the loan and then I have my current employer’s account and then I have my own self-directed IRA so those are really like the options I’m playing with.

Okay. You have some IRA, 401k money that has with a previous employer that you haven’t gone over yet? I think one, one rule is you never really want to roll it over. You just want to keep it how it is, because once you roll it off through the existing employer, now it’s probably stuck there.

Actually what I did was I rolled it over into my own self-directed IRA so none of my previous employers have my 401ks.

What’s your plan and that’s talk about it with what the tax implications are?

Currently, my plan would be to take the loan out of my current employer. There’s very little risk that I’m gonna, I’ll work there at least five to 10 years. I had to have to pay the loan back either a time of when I’m terminated or terminate the employment over the life of the loan. I think it’s like a 10 year term.

Again, we’re talking about loans, right? We’re not talking about withdrawals. Okay. So for the folks listening your loans, you’re not taking it out, right?

It’s the withdrawals that now triggers the taxable event shows up as income. What we’re doing here is we’re dancing around it and which is fine for now. If you were more gung ho about this stuff, I would say just take it out. And in this case if we were, let’s just play that scenario out.

What approximately is your adjusted gross income?

Mine’s about 250, individually.

What about combined? Married.

Okay. Sorry. You guys are screwed. You guys are in a tough spot because ideally what you want to do is married filed jointly right now. We try and keep people under 330 cause that’s when you really start to get hammered with taxes. And again, you guys are listening to this in the future, these things, the tax brackets dance around a little bit, but the same idea of poppy ship prevail.

You want it to leak money out of your 401k slowly as withdrawals so you don’t go into that next higher tax bracket. it is whatever, if that’s your plan, but ideally you’d like to stay under there. If you guys made $200,000 a year, married filed jointly, you could take 130 out theory and not be too bad. That probably be a good bet because you’re probably paying less tax brackets today than in the future more than likely.

So I need to encourage her to take a pay cut or change jobs and take a pay cut.

Yeah. Both of you guys make high salaries and for those you guys, in that situation, it might make sense to just suck it up and just work, for burning the candle on both ends a little bit longer.

As opposed to some of our plants that have like disproportionate incomes like doctors and stay at home spouses, that’s the ideal strategy right now. They can do real estate professional status strategy, use the passive losses to offset income. Of course, there’s a lot of hoops to jump through with that rep status strategy.

And we’re not going to get into that now, they have a little bit of options where you guys. Good news. You’re gonna make a lot of money. As far as tax is options there isn’t too many, right? And I think now you start to look at less desirable options or exotic options such as like land conservation easements.

Are you on the lookout on these next solar credits? Coming out with the next infrastructure bill who knows what happens with that. But that’s where I would be looking out to next. Or, if one of you guys are burnt out, our time, right? Like I said, you guys have enough dry powder pretty, you should just be able to make a hundred thousand dollars a year.

The fact that you guys are not is on you guys. That’s just a choice that you guys are making, but you should have that much income coming in that I think that will sustain life for you guys. Most people in our group are pretty frugal. I don’t know why you guys are going to work tomorrow, but you are.

But that just takes a time to understand how this all works because right now, this is what frustrates me. Everybody’s stuck in these 401k, 529 garbage investments and that’s why you all are still working right now.

Make more. And then you try to defer your salary to no, yeah.

Paying at our tax bracket in the future. That’s exactly what the government wants. I don’t think they meant to do that cause I don’t think the government is that smart, but in a way they have a pretty much blank check on all your money right now, the retirement on the 5 29 and not 5 29, because technically you can use it for education expenses.

They can’t touch it. But your 401k, you got to pay taxes on that eventually in your IRA.

And who knows what that is at the moment, we won’t know until I retire.

But I’m betting, that’s going to be higher than what you are now. But the game is what we’re going to try and take it out or withdraw at some opportune time from now to the next few decades, when the opportunity to jailbreak it out, the word tax needs is there.

Again, it’s good right now for you guys. You don’t have very many, right now. But what we do know is like the money is in there now. It’s not making Jack it’s just retail investments, but the idea is to take it out slowly to get it into good stuff, which is still trying to land on your feet a little bit so I get that, but just do it in a tax smart way.

Some people are like, screw this is messed up I’m gonna take all my money out of that stuff, right? Whoa. I don’t know if you can invest that quickly and you just want to be a little smart about this, that’s just going to balloon your adjusted gross income.

You’re going to pay a boatload of taxes on that. Just fly under the radar, stay under a certain threshold, leak it out slowly as the idea. But, for now you’re just going to do alone. And that’s fine. You don’t really trigger taxes at that point. Another hangup people get emotionally is they’re like have to pay to make these loan payments right.

To myself, that’s just an emotional thing for me. If it really bothers, you just set aside a certain amount to extra, to pay.

Yeah, that doesn’t really bother me. It’s just, it’s moving money around in different pockets, right?

Yeah and I think that’s the hard thing , first of all they get emotionally tied that this is a retirement plan. You’re taking money out of your retirement and make no mistake. We’re not doing that. We’re not going and buying like fun vacations with that money for long-term savings in retirement. But it’s not going to be an account with a government for your future.

In regards to the loan, do you know, and there’s certain requirements that I need to abide by to take the loan, right? Or can I just take the loan freely?

I’m not sure on that, but usually they want you to have some kind of hardship thing or you’re buying a house, which should not. So I would think the only thing you guys have is the hardship. I think at this point, it’s going to be hard for you guys. Good luck you can get the loan! All roads just take the thing out.

Yeah we’ll see if we can get it. If not, I guess we’ll do withdraw.

I’m pretty sure you can take a long where your guys at there’s no there’s opportunities for that type of stuff. I’ve seen people like lie, say we’re using it for our home equity because something broke the kitchen bathroom bottle and then turn around and use the money for something else.

I don’t know how legal that is, but whatever I guess. You’re probably not gonna lie. You’re probably come back alright loan is eliminated as sort of option. So you gotta either choose it, withdraw money from your retirement or take a loan from your HELOC. So when you come back to your boss, which is your wife, what do you think?

I’ll be optimistic. She was gung ho for the county line and I think she’ll go for it.

For the loan, HELOC? Yeah. And I would recommend doing that.

I think what I’ll do is I’ll just lay it out, then I’ll try to sacrifice my 401k temporarily, and then that probably won’t work out and then I’ll land into the HELOC.

Yeah, loosening her in a way.

I just can’t share this with her.

Yeah, don’t worry. We’ll probably released this months later so you’ve got a lot of time.

I’ll just look, to hopefully, I can draw on that HELOC that I already set up now any time and when I see a good deal, come by, I’m probably going to jump in.

Yeah and what you have right now, I’m sure it will get you going for the next six months to a year. But you got a lot of equity there so , I would shop around. There’s a lot of disparity between rates and all the values. But what you’re looking for is like 80% on the value, the same rate or better for the most part.

And I think there’s another emotional thing people are like, oh my goodness, this guy’s got 3.2%. I want three, I want to get that. I don’t want to get 4%. It doesn’t matter. Playing a different ball game than most people, because you’re using the money for something else to make more money. I think that will probably get you bonded for a couple of years.

And I think once we get into the first deal and we get that first check, I think it’s going to help me with my negotiations with the boss.

Yeah. I hope so. I really hope so. Yeah. So are we’re good on that subject?

I think the next thing on your list was yeah college savings. So you’re a new father father I’ve taken a conventional road and with the 529 plans and you recently posted about that, right?

Yeah, 529 plans they’re just like 401ks, right? The jacked up thing about them is they keep you within a set of options that they want you to take because they’re high fees. They’re crap. And that’s my only beef with it. If you can self-direct you can self-directed retirement funds. That’s fine. I still don’t recommend doing that. I think you can self-direct your 5 29 self, it’s very limited. If anything, the Coverdell is better. Coverdell is like a self-directed 5 29, there’s more options that you can invest in.

But if you’re investing in real estate pros, tax free anyway, I think that’s why you do real estate. So the gates, all the reason for using this stuff, that’s my opinion. I just think if you invest in cash, you can pay so much less taxes. If you’re smart, because you get the passive to be losses that it negates any of these types of traditional, conventional things.

If you haven’t been tipped off yet, you guys that’s when you get slaughtered with the cows, it’s not a good plan to go conventional in my opinion, but what I would do for education is I would do like an infinite banking policy and just have that as your mark money, especially the kids are a little bit older, just put it in there for safe keeping. But now your kids are younger and my kids like the youngest thing yet for the most part now is the time where you want to be more aggressive, right?

Yeah. So unfortunately I did get aggressive with 529 so at this point, I don’t know how I could get out of the 529 without taking a penalty.

What do you got in there?

I’ve got two kids about 80 grand each.

It is what it is. You can just leave it in there. Start to do, what’s going to do. Not everybody needs to be a 100% like alternative investments. If you want some stocks, there’s your stocks right there. I think that the risk adjusted return isn’t that great. But if you’re trying to satisfy some diversification in terms of different asset classes, there you go.

I would say, maybe stop doing it. You could take it out too, but you already have money to invest, so just leave it where it’s at for now. Just, I wouldn’t put more to it. Does that sound like?

That’s pretty much where I’m at now and I do just designated as like diversification against alternative.

I got some flack for that post, cause like people are like, you’re such a a-hole dare you get rid of your kid’s education fund. Like dude, chill out, man. I have my other retirement and I’ve got all these like money elsewhere just because I don’t call it a 529 plan that you know, it’s not a 5 29 plan.

It doesn’t mean I don’t have a kid’s college, like I’m not heartless other people I don’t know anything about kids. Yeah. So you never want to give parenting advice, but people are like it’s so like it’s very true. Yeah. Very true. Yeah. So for the record folks, I do have a college saving’s plan.

I just don’t put it in that 5 29 plan and I’m sorry if I offend you guys for saying that stuff is nonsense, but it is. You’re putting it in exactly the stuff that they want you to put in with all these big brokerages and their cafeteria garbage options. I’m okay with the 5 29 idea in general, but I’m not okay with the options they gave you to invest.

Very limited!

Yeah, but even with that said, I don’t like the 5 29, because what if your kid doesn’t go to college too? Yeah, to worry about it just make a boatload of money. Something I got really frustrated the other day. A lot of people, especially here in Hawaii. Have a million dollars equity in their houses that are grandparents.

Their goal in life is to pay off their mortgage a million dollars, put it into something I always use AHP. They sponsor the show too, but there’s just an example of a very lazy type of investment fund where you can get 8% I think now when you speak 10%, you speak 12% actually.

Long time ago, if you have a million dollars equity at 10%, that’s a hundred grand a year. That pays for college for three kids today, at private and I forget how much school costs. But I’m like, why don’t you like grandma, grandpa why don’t you get a whole home equity loan and get your money working.

They’re just don’t know about this stuff too but to me is a little selfish because it’s like they’re putting their security higher than they could be paying for their kid’s college today or that could be growing just so much more 18 years from now.

It’s probably bad that I call it selfish. It’s just they’re ignorant to the fact that you can do this type of stuff and if we’re all brainwashed to do exactly what they’re doing right, but I just got frustrated the other day, this is very prevalent,

Very true. Just taking advantage of that gift. You know the gifting.

It comes down to being good stewards with wealth, right? Some people have wealth and they don’t do anything with it. They just squander it for the rest of their life. Other people you know , they understand the risks and prudent debt and they able to have it grow or stay where it’s at.

90% of people or 90% of wealthy family and two or three generations for reason. Alright, good point. . If I were you I know you got other investible funds. I’ll just leave it where it’s at. It is what it is 160 grand in 10, 20 years. Isn’t going to be enough.

They say Stanford and 18 years will be $450,000.

Apparently the side doors closed no, I watched that Netflix special. A bad joke though. The one where all these, like the rich parents were paying for their kids to get in to the colleges. You got to go in the back door and that’s really expensive. It is what it is, with the college stuff for you.

Yeah, I just I’ll look into if I ever need to what’s your on 10% penalty, it’s some money, but it’s not a whole lot.

It’s very similar to some people like have really bad life insurance policies, right? The whole life policies that were just configured the wrong way, their long lost college, high school friends that they never taught. Yeah, it takes them off the lunch, puts them into this really bad policy. Most cases, you can just 10 35 into a new infinite banking, more friendly policy. But in some cases it’s just better just to throw the baby out with the bath water.

Another bad joke too, to just get rid of the life insurance. So the same thought process with the 529. Keep going with it. It is what it is as opposed to withdrawing and starting over again. Yeah. Like the infinite banking comes in because, especially if you have a skeptic spouse, at least that gets your money working 4 or 5% tax-free.

You can sell them on the idea that it’s off the table, litigators, who doesn’t like that and it’s not like you’re putting the money out to an investment where there is perceived risk on, investing in some dishonest person to infinite banking stays. It’s way more I probably shouldn’t say this, but it’s way more secure than any bank or any mutual fund.

It’s a life insurance it’s backed by some of the most like credit rated companies that’s been around since the civil war. If you want anything more secure, let me go to a life insurance company, the good ones, right? The top rated ones, not one of these.

That can be a way, like for somebody in your shoes who has a lot of dry powder. That you’re going to responsibly deploy over the next several years, at least, you’re probably antsy to get it done, but your spouse probably wants to pump the brakes. But as a compromise, maybe just do 50 grand- 100 grand a year into one of these infinite banking policies and invest out of it.

But at least your money is working in that and it’s building up that cash value over time. Everybody over a dollars net worth should have one of these things. It’s a no-brainer. And again, we’re talking to you non- accredited investor who has no money. Don’t do infinite banking.

Don’t get caught up in all the podcasts, marketing hype. It’s not for you yet. There are some fees associated, of course, but in the long run, it makes more sense than that.

Yeah. Cause you’re new to this stuff and share all these ideas. We want to get moving, but yeah, got the ball and chain in a way. The infinite banking is a very logical idea. I think that is very prudent and safe.

Do you have any content on that as far as the background of infinite banking

Yes simplepassivecashflow.com/banking is the place where I through all the webinars and stuff like that. But if people want more in-depth we’ve recorded some FAQ’s, and then if people need like referrals to folks, they can shoot me an email just put IBC in the subject line and I can send that to you.

Yeah, it’s a rabbit hole though. First, like when people come into the mastermind group, is trying to get them to get educated on syndication deals, right? Because the syndication deals is, first of all, you don’t want to invest in a bad deal, with somebody who’s going to steal your money.

So that’s the first thing we try and mitigate. So that’s always like a third of the pop curriculum. Like your first few months are focused on that and then taxes. Especially for somebody in your kind of, income level tax is a big thing, but infinite banking is at the end of the first year, Pete more, most times people who like to lone Wolf and do all this stuff themselves, which I think is dumb because good buck, I’ve took me so long and mistakes and wasted money to learn on my own in my whole, that’s why we have the family office group. Fold your hand and kind of teach you exactly what to do. And then we set you up with people within the group. Who’ve done it already. So you can both build a relationship and a process with that person that you can carry on forever.

Talk, whatever investing or deals do you want to talk about, or, and more importantly, the soft subjects, right? How do you pass this off to your kids? Without them becoming nincompoops.

But then, you talk with them, the pros and cons, how they did their infinite banking policy, why they did $75,000 instead of 25,000. But why did they do $250,000 a year, for example. And then you come up with your own idea, you formulate it, and then we send you off to all the tax legal guys after you’ve already had your plan, because in most cases, if you go off to a professional.

They’re just going to sell you what they’re trying to sell you. There’s so there’s so many things in this financial world, that’s just a bunch of products. You really need somebody who’s going to architect it and that’s going to be you. You gotta be educated in power to talk intelligently and to know what you don’t want.

But yeah, the infinite banking is at the tail end of it. It’s a huge rabbit hole for sure. Huge in terms of burning it. No most people who’ve done it. Say, there’s sort of stuff on it, but just get it then. And don’t complicate it. Just get get like a policy. Like my ch my golden rule is start off with a third of your annual net.

So you guys, I don’t know how much you guys net at the end of the year, but maybe you guys net $120,000 to savings. You could put that to me. Four houses a year. If you want it to, if you want it, if you didn’t value your time and energy, you could buy four axles with that. But my general infinite banking and start off with Elisa third of your debt every year.

And then that way you learn how the infinite banking works. You take loans from that. You invest it, then you have more money. You put it back in there and you learn how it works. And so it’s always good to start off with a little bit of a test investment first and then then go bigger.

My, my first one that I did for myself was $50,000 a year. And then I did bigger after that, after I got the hang of it. But yeah, if you guys net one 20,000 after income minus expenses for a year, do 40 grand every year, but because you have. Like liquidity in a way I think based on the little bit, I’ve refreshed myself in this last, 30 minutes hour talking, I think you should, you guys should probably do 50 to a hundred thousand dollars a year, right?

Because you have all that fullback equity not to check, which you want to do is take that and put it into here for now. You can take it right back with the next day as opponent. That’s the whole point. That’s what you’re trying to do in banking. Yeah. So in fact, I would probably do a hundred grand just shooting from the hip or at least 40 grand a year for five to six years.

I always like to do the shorter period personally. The insurance salesman is always going to try and get you the longer ones. So they get requisitions. They don’t have to deal with you less, every 10 years instead of every six years, but that’s yeah. That’s just my take on it, but we’ve got a lot of content on it.

I’ll just shoot me an email, the subject line, and then I can give you the videos and then I’ll connect you once. You’ve studied up. Okay. Yeah. That sounds good. Yeah, you do something right? Because it’s fun. Stuff is fun. It’s different. And it’s, but it’s totally different. Like we talked about this stuff, cookie. Yeah. I’ve, haven’t heard of it until now. So yeah. It’s interesting stuff. Yeah. And that frustrates frustrating is like everything in mainstream financial advice. If you look up Dave Ramsey, he absolutely heres this whole life thing, afar, he says it’s a total scam. And I’m like dude, you’re not even we’re not even configuring it the way you’re talking about.

And we’re using it for something totally. He says, we’ll get it. If it’s for, if it don’t get whole life, get term life, that’s that’s, what’s like it transformed, but it’s dude, we’re doing it for a totally different way. The wealthy use things very differently. They’re doing this as a way to put money in it.

Suck it right back out as a law firm, ourselves and taking money off the table litigators. That’s all we’re doing. And the fact that it’s like insurance that’s because we can keep it under this what’s called back level. We don’t have to pay taxes. So it’s texting people is what it is.

It’s a text loophole that the Congress people and progress Spain that were just falling if we’re not done. So it makes you wonder who Ramsey’s representing to to poop, right? He’s not representing any. I think he, I think he does a good job. Am and sees the army. A lot of these people, they just cater towards majority of people, the conventional, traditional people, the conventional traditional people are horrible with their finances.

They just can’t seem to save more money than they make. And, or they just don’t make more than $50,000 a year. And I’m sorry, if that’s you, I went to college and I was lucky enough to go. And I’m in the situation where I am. And I think some people in this world are in the same situation, but they play by a different set of paradigms than the people who are still at financial one-on-one level and all that.

So I think Dave Ramsey, I think their heart is in the right place, but it’s totally guided towards other people. Argument about buying a house, not buying house. Like I, I personally believe that you shouldn’t buy a house unless your net worth is two times, three times greater than what the health support.

So if you, if your house is $2 million, you should buy a house to your net worth of 6 million. That’s very unconventional thought. Yeah. House is a Dre. You need to be investing, bring your money. And so sinking in at a house. Not too much just going with the pace of inflation, but for the Dave Ramsey, Susie Orman, and people on the world, a house as a forced savings account, it’s something that they put, a thousand, $2,000 a month to, if not, they’d spend it like little kids. There’s just, there’s paradigms in the world. You need to figure out which side of the paradox.

Yeah, that’s a good point. Yeah. But just do the math. The math, the other day, the math to tell you what to do. Just need to go in with a very different lines. So yes. Bring that paradigm a concept up when I’m negotiating with the boss. Yeah. I do it to myself all the time.

Like I think the biggest thing that I see successful people have is an open mind and they look at something very, without any emotion or prejudices attach, like something that happened to me lately. Like I’m doing this for fun, like this exotic car hacking force. It’s kinda, it’s really cool.

But like the whole idea of leasing a car for some reason, I thought that was a good idea. And that’s too long ago and at least a car a year or two ago, I thought it made sense to me, especially because I was using it for business and I was able to write it off, but what they show me, it was like they showed the numbers, they show how wrong that thinking was.

And the whole premise of all our hacking is there’s a depreciation schedule and it closed and then you want to buy it, but it’s low and that maybe when it comes up or it doesn’t just bleed depreciation as heavily, that’s essentially a hacking at all. But yeah, I was really gung ho about thinking that he says, we’re good now I see the light and I’m sure my ideas would change in the future.

So I reserve the right to change my night. Fine. This is not financial advice. Yeah. But but yeah, anything else? Yeah. The family office mastermind I’ve looked into that. I’m considering it. I don’t think I’m ready yet, but I will probably eventually I don’t think they never ready for it.

I think you just need to do that now. In fact, now’s the time to be doing like you’re starting from square one. Yeah. It’s like shooting arrow. Now’s the time to figure it out, get something with a shooting in the right cow .

I’ll let you know when I am ready and hopefully it’s sooner.

When you got five hours a month to dedicate to something that’s when you know. We have over 75, 80 people in there. It’s not for everybody. Do you want to just keep doing it on your own? That’s cool too.

For me, it’s just deploying my capital. First I got to get through the boss and then I got to put some numbers together, how that investment would return in our household.

I think we have like at least a two X, maybe three X guarantee that you get that first year back.

Cool. Appreciate it! We’ll stick this in the archives with the other coaching calls and then if you guys want to learn more about that family office group go to simple passive cashflow.com/journey and I’ll see you guys next time.

 

Coaching Call with a Million Dollar Investor (Chris)

https://youtu.be/mj51m79IOzQ

On today’s podcast we’re going to be doing a coaching call but a little bit of announcements. We’re going to be unveiling the new Infinite Banking e-course. I put this together to get all our questions on infinite banking. I think a lot of you guys listen to this stuff on a podcast and you hear all the benefits of it.

A lot of benefits, a lot of high net worth investors do it. I think every investor over a million dollars network should definitely have some sort of Infinite Banking policy but it’s not all sunshine and rainbows as you guys know. I do it! At the end of the day, I think the benefits outweigh the cons, but get yourself educated.

Check out our infoPage@simplepassivecashflow.com /banking to learn more there, get free access to that e-course. Probably tell you guys about a couple hours to get through, but again, that’s free. Check that out there. We’re also going to be doing a bootcamp one of these weekends.

Make sure you guys sign up there, get on the email list by going to simple passive cashflow.com/club, to get the invite to that free a weekend boot camp. And some other things that I’m following other than the Delta spike in COVID cases.

Peter Thiel, he screwed it up for everybody. If you guys don’t know the story, but Peter Thiel basically stuffed his Roth IRA with a whole bunch of severely undervalued stocks B shares, whatever you call it, but basically that he pissed off the government.

And now the government is tightening a lot of these self-directed IRA. And pretty much screwing everybody’s even doing the regular Roth and regular IRA. We’ll see what happens. Who knows they might put a capital in the Roths. A one thing I’m looking for is they might be putting like a appraisal requirement on all your assets in there where they make you get. a $5,000 appraisal fee

Which would pretty much Kubosh the whole point. You’re going to have to base so much in fees, but I’m looking for this in the next RISE Act. Something that was put on the faults when Trump was in office, but is coming back up. Of course it’s going to be sold as I forget what RISE stands for, but it’s Hey, let’s help Americans save money.

By changing a bunch of the ways that the self-directed IRAs, etcetera work. But I think it’s gonna screw a lot of you more sophisticated investors up. I don’t do any retirement accounts. I don’t know why anybody really does it. If you invest in real estate. If you guys do crypto, I’d probably do it on crypto, but, check out my long list of reasons why at simplepassivecashflow.com /QRP. But, beyond the lookout for that infrastructure bill, I’m actually pretty bullish overall. There was the recession is over the world’s shortest recession of what, like two months or something like that is over. And looks like rents are coming back up.

I think the rent more terms, how they stay how they are, always offers stability I feel bad for the small landlords. It’s the small landlords who are put in a hard space once all these moratorium are up and things start to open up. Whereas, on the larger apartments, the commercial property managers have a lot more tools at our disposal to adequate the protect ourselves, the landlords.

I’ll be on the lookout for the rise act, the secure act whatever, they’re going to call the infrastructure bill.

And then some of you smart investors out there that utilize the whole buying something under market in your IRA, swapping it over to Roth. That little chikaru you guys like to do that I think is a little risky. I think might be definitely going away as they might put in some kind of nasty language in the RISE act where they’re saying you cannot buy things under fair market value.

Which makes no sense if you’re a real estate investor, you’re always buying under a fair market value. But anyway, we’ll try and be on the lookout together. If you guys want some more insider tips, join our family office. Ohana mastermind, go to simplepassivecashflow.com/journey and enjoy the show.

 

We are going to be doing a coaching call with a million dollar. We’ll just call it that! Call it a million dollar net worth investor. Chris, he’s been part of the HUI pipeline club for quite a while.

About 2016.

I always remember when we have calls and I remember we were talking when I was at my past day job.

Back when you used to live here?

Yeah. Why don’t you give us a little context on yourself. You’re up there in Washington, where I used to be.

I live in the Northwest. It’s like you said, I work in the power industry as a technician there electrical task 📍 guy.

We have two kids, my wife works and we own a business also. Started chugging along on real estate when I started talking to you back in 2016 had done a lot of actual like futures trading and other types, like stock investing, hoping that would set me free, and learned a lot.

Then my neighbor’s house came up for sale and I started looking seriously into what it would take to have rental properties and dove into bigger pockets and your website at the time of your podcast and just tons of podcasts and got fired up on it. And looking at the slower moving animal that is real estate investing.

What made you finally get rid of like the stocks and options and all that type of stuff?

I don’t do it anymore. It was definitely time consuming and it’s just seems so unpredictable. Just trying to check on, I was doing an option selling and try to do that monthly income model. It was so volatile and just not a lot of fun trying to sleep in doing that thing.

I just ended up really, the fire got lit by this house that was right by me or which I did not buy, but it got the fire lit and I just started digging. And ended up, I got into the turnkey if you want to chat about that for me.

Why did you not end up buying that rental nearby?

The whole bigger pockets land and the financial calculators that you get the 1% rule is really why I did it. Honestly, it would’ve been a good deal for us just because of speculation and the houses have gone crazy around us. But you don’t know and so that’s the very first thing you learn, you don’t go for cashflow.

It would have been a break, even deal for us. As far as the rent, barely making it and no cashflow, but it would have been a great speculation as far as appreciation you don’t know that and no one tells you to do that.

People invest that way, right? Buy low, sell high, go on appreciation. And if you’re bleeding cash a little bit every month, most people that’s how they invest.

I guess I got talked out of it just because I’ve done the speculation thing with the stock trading and stuff. And so I wasn’t really interested in speculating anymore.

I was interested in cash flow and so I ended up not pulling the trigger on that deal and then really did a ton of podcasts on turnkey investing and retail turnkey thing. I ended up all over looking at tons of different stuff and really I just pulled the trigger on ensemble.

And after awhile I was like, I’m just going to do this. It seemed like a huge deal at the time. Now in hindsight, if you haven’t get operator, even though you’re paying retail, it still works. It still makes money every month. I’ve been in that for four years now.

And it’s just been chugging along for better or worse there’s been nothing to do. That’s where I’m at. I was not tempted to buy anymore. There was a fire lit buy pretty quickly by thinking about multi-family and mobile home parks in particular. And I went down that path and that’s been a two year journey of being involved in that.

Let’s get people up and where we are in the scorecard here. Cause this is what evolved really matters is what your net worth is. Your net worth is just shy under a million dollars, just call it that on a good day.

You’ve been pretty good with your money, right? Like most people in our group compiled a bunch of assets, have your liabilities in order. Now let’s take a snapshot of like your monthly velocity. You make a pretty good salary on 9,000 a month. You’ve got some real estate income. The important thing here is in net cash flow 3,600 a month. You’re able to put away and save maybe 40 grand a year. Is that about right?

Yeah, I would say, that would probably be about right. That’d be probably max right now, depending on. This has nothing to do with the business that we own right now, what you’re seeing here. I would say 40 is a good number right now.

That’s awesome! You’re not making a huge salary, like some of these other guys, but you’re definitely in the average of where people are saved. Most guys are between 30 to $50,000 a year. And at that point, you’re moving at a pretty good clip.

You’re not buying a syndication or two every year or two syndications or more, or three houses every year, but you’re steady making progress. And at this rate, you’d probably be a lot different financial situation. I don’t know if you’re gonna be financially free at five years, but you’ve got to definitely getting there probably going to be there and like under 10.

It all matters on your living expenses. And I know the picture here. I can just guess from seeing so many financial profiles like this, I’m sure you can tighten the belt a little bit, but you’re just seeing the light at the end of the tunnel and you’re gonna coasted there.

You don’t need to live in ramen noodles. We don’t. We have some perspective on that for sure. You’re going to live a little bit, and it’s like just there, right? As you lay out the plan, the tightening maker may not. When we talked a long time ago, you were doing the turnkey stuff. I think that’s what connected us in the universe. And then you went off the simple passive cashflow registrar. You became more of a do it yourselfer kind of guy. Tell us how that little experiment went. What did you go off by? What did you do?

I wandered out, I got very interested in the mobile home park thing.

And it’s why I got interested in it because when you look at mobile home parks, what’s interesting about them is that they can be passive in some respects. If the mobile home park is all tenant on homes that is a really cool model where the person that lives there owns her own home, they just climb you rent the dirt to them and you just maintain the property.

That’s not the part that we bought. We definitely saw the lure of the higher rents from owning homes so we bought a park and I have a partner on it. It was just two of us. We bought a park that that has 25-ish tenant and our I’m sorry, we own 25 of the home. It’s a lot of work.

As far as just keeping people in. It’s a low-income housing community is what it is. I’ve learned a ton about it. I definitely get that the tenants own their own homes or I don’t even know their names barely. Actually I say that it’s like, they’re really super easy they just do the thing and take care of their house.

They pay me rent every month. You run into problems in a mobile home park when you’re hunting people to collect rent and they don’t own the house and they trash it. You may have said this before, but it’s like pig pen or something. It gets, they go crazy.

And so you get to rehab or, do a rent to own handyman special kind of stuff, doing a lot of that stuff every year. Pretty much every couple of months with turnover. But the other thing I’ve learned is that, low-income housing is high demand and we never have an issue with vacancy.

You’ll have vacancy just because you’re turning one over, just cleaning it up, but really it is pretty incredible. I’ve seen the whole thing and I do realize that I’d prefer to be more of a passive investor at this point in my life. It’s something you’re always thinking about when it’s yours and you’re the operator you’re everything, and you’re communicating with the manager and doing all that.

That’s the story. The partner you went into was he more sophisticated operator experience with this stuff. Nope. We were both just interested in doing it. Had done like the kind of a Academy mobile home park bootcamp stuff. Exactly. Just pretty much just fired up newbies and dove in.

And the person we bought it from was super helpful. And that was probably the easy part honestly, we had that person helping us and they had tons of properties in that area, they just held our hand on it. And we got go on that way. And yeah, that was the story.

I will say like that the mobile home park education out there. There’s only one group that does it, but they actually do a pretty good job of actually teaching it to you. It’s a shame that there’s a plethora of multifamily crews teaching it but they only teach out how to buy the properties.

None of them actually teach you how to operate it because a lot of them have been operated them thing or own rental or own multifamily in reality. But I think Frank and Dave do a pretty good job. Yeah, you get a lot of operation stuff and they’re available to you, and it’s it was good.

I felt like he showed up with stuff. He just, I, yeah, it was like maternity thing. It was like once it was super scary and then we did it with the mobile home park too, it was like now we’re in it. However many thousands of miles away doing it. Both of you guys are remote?

It’s remote and he spent a lot of time on the phone. The business exists inside my phone? Did you guys know each other or you just happened to meet up randomly? Yeah, meet up randomly! That’s crazy! It’s just powered out and have been so two years in now over two years of doing it and we’re thankful for our manager.

Be cause it’s been a crazy year what really no desire to travel there right now. It’s just spend letting a check along that’s as we can given everything going on and still demand as far as that goes.

How many times did you visit that property?

Once I’ve only ever been there once. The weekend I bought it and I can say that crazy. We got a good manager. She managed a ton of the properties of, or three or four of the guys properties that we bought it from a regular human. We learned our lesson actually right off the bat.

Hiring somebody that was living there in the park. That was one of the low-income tenants. It was a lot of drama that we pretty quickly realized was a mistake. That’s what’s hard with mobile home parks because there’s not that infrastructure, there’s not a plethora of different third party property managers in that asset class.

The two you guys would have had the gun around and interview specific people have trained up on a day, which is hard. Exactly! We’re lured in by the money and doing it. It seemed great and it’s been fine.

It’s a learning experience but it’s pretty time consuming. And for where I’m at in my life, it’s just not the right time. Like I say, it is for sale we’re trying to move on from that and do some other stuff passively. Okay. How much money do you guys have tied up in it and get leverage?

I have about 225 tied up into it for me and I’m hoping to chat with you about deploying that.

You didn’t really make money on this? This is just got your original, down payment back out. We’re not, it’s under contract to sell. We’ll see how, in the end we should make some money, when it’s all done, I’m not going to say what that is until it’s all done.

We need to speculate on it now we’re talking taxes. We need to know. It’s 50 grand or something like that? Oh, it’d be more like about 70 grand. Okay. Here’s what it would be, but I can work with that. Not much. And then maybe you took some depreciation too throughout the couple of years.

I don’t know, maybe 80 grand capital gain plus depreciation recapture. You’re thinking. I think so. You’d have to speculate on that a little bit. I’d have to look back to read that. Okay. A lot of syndications, they’re going to get 50 to 70% of what you put in as passive losses to offset that right away. We can talk about that in a little bit. Like the turnkey in Memphis, how’s that guy going? It’s just smooth. It’s funny. And a super smooth we had the glitch this year with COVID itself.

The person lost her job. It was like a half payment one month and then I got, everything back the next month. It’s been super smooth. Far I’ve had a couple of patients it’s been. It’s a big operator. I’ve been tempted to sell, but I’m like, I don’t know why I would deal with it.

Just selling it. I don’t know. I guess I couldn’t do it a sec. I’ve only had it for four years, so I’ve just been paying interest or it’s the wrong end of the amortization table. I wouldn’t sell them until you’re tapped out on deployable capital and then look to sell it.

It’s not going to be a lot of money there. Yeah. And if it’s work, if you’ve got a good tenant, that’s gold, right? The good tenant is a big thing, but the search to get there is above the cost of the road to get there. Let’s put that on this tab right here, there’s like a deployment plan.

You can put on here what you’re going to sell to get funds and how you’re going to deploy it. That’s how to use this tab. Okay. But I would say. If you have any other liquid cash that you want to invest, or as we start to transition more into what’s the deployment plan now. The deployment plan is going to be the funds for the mobile home park right now.

I have cash sitting around that I’m wondering if I shaded this 45,000- ish cash that comes back in that’s really just the money coming back in from my investments. I could sit on that or not. I’m trying to decide if I should put that like in AHP type deal and I just don’t know how liquid they are.

You’re get the money back out a couple of months to two months. The other thing is there’s always the loan from my 401k, you can always do the 50,000 from that pretty quickly too. Probably faster than getting that money at AHP too. You are running a little fat here on liquidity definitely. I don’t think you need that much, maybe 20 or 30 grand, but yeah, I think that’s where a lot of conventional financial advice is, you need X amount of expenses.

You don’t really need that. If you are able to get it from a credit card line or take it out from your Roth IRA or IRA. You know that we’ve got to get your good to get your money in the game. You’re not $2 million stimulant dollars a year. No, I can flame it. Yeah. I’d like to get it moving. Oh, actually a question I had though for you, and I think as far as deployment, I was thinking about selling the note that there’s two notes up there, just up the page a little bit.

One of those is a, is it a self-directed IRA? It’s fine, but the $30,000 note originally, now it’s 25,000. In my name coming back to me, it seems like it might be better off deploying that into a syndication or something, instead of just income.

That’s taxed, like regular income. It seems like a better option to move it out of there. Sell that and move on and put it into a syndication. Yeah. If you’re only making 9%, age does everything for you and both of my ordinary income. Not saying you would go down one specifically.

I would say, correct me if I’m wrong here, but invest the mobile home park money 200,000 there. And then either the note or you’re gonna touch any of this, the stock stuff, or are you going to keep that where it’s at? Right now, I’ll probably leave that word is other than I may I have the ability to pull that $50,000 loan off my 401k.

Where seemingly unrelated question. But this ties in, what is your adjusted gross income around as a household? A 125. Okay. You guys don’t pay too much taxes. Now, you guys are under the 300 threshold.

This year will be quite a bit different more. We bought a business last year that has got quite a bit of income. We’re trying to get all of our books handled right now. I can’t give you an exact number, it won’t be a crazy high. It might still be under 200.

Next year, will the business do the same thing? We’re going to try to make sure it does. We have plenty of things that you can buy. We’ll keep it down. We’re pouring money into infrastructure right now. We’re we have enough expenses. I think that okay then to zero.

Yeah, the zero that income out. And that’s the goal of the business, right? On taxes. Okay. I’ll leave this alone. You can incorporate in as you feel comfortable with. I would think since you’re not in a high tax bracket, even with the business to take it out slowly would be the thing to do.

If you’ve heard me multiple times, I don’t like these types of retirement plans because you’d rather pay to taxes now. Taxes growing up. Your tax bracket is lower now and then you don’t get the passive losses that play that game from this stuff but if you take the character. Oh yeah.

Okay. You don’t have to decide now, but I would say, maybe think about just leaking out 20 to 50 or a hundred grand every year. Through like a 72 T thing? Or how would you say doing that? No just cash it out. Yeah. Okay. But I’ll just let that stew for you right now.

We’ll see. Exactly. Yeah. That’d be like a chat with the tax guy. No, it’s not tax for the tax guy. It’s a little right here. You don’t have to talk. No tax guy tell you about. It’s which way do you want us to stir the ship man? Yeah. The tax guys down in the engine room.

I’m telling you what happens if you do it. I’m telling you what’s going to happen. We all know. Just don’t worry. Your tax bracket is basically, and how much you’re going to take. And then just wait out from there is what you’re saying. But that’s more of a strategy thing, right?

You need to do the math on. All right. If you take it out and you start investing in cash, what will the implications be? Will you be making more money there? What kind of losses will you be getting? Will there be cost segregations done? That’s what you need. That’s your job.

That is not the job of your CPA tax person. Big thing. It’s your number one expense in life. Got to know what that is. That’s not the job of your tax guy. That’s unfair for them to know. I’ve definitely heard you say that before. It’s getting up to speed on that stuff is really a goal this year, just to be dialed in.

Good questions ask. Yeah, it’s pretty simple. I would say come to the bubble or get around the other people in our tribe. You’re not going to get it if you want to pay somebody to tell you how to do it. I think that’s costly. You guys can’t afford having office consultant under $5 million net worth.

But you’re gonna have to get this from your peer group of other high net worth accredited investors what they’re doing. I would highly recommend that and just getting around other high net worth people is a big thing and yeah not on the bigger pockets. That’s for sure. So I would think about that maybe taking out maybe 50 or a hundred every year and put it to investments, but you got a backlog, you got the mobile home park things first.

Ideally with the mobile home park thing, the way it’s going to work is sell it in the beginning of the year so you have the entire year that builds up your passive losses. Follow up, do you know how much passive losses do you currently have just built up? I don’t know, go look at your form. I think it’s 48 25.

No, it’s not. I don’t know. It’s 48 something. Okay. But if it is a form that has all your passive losses on it, your federal depreciation schedules. Okay. I would ask your CPA for that but they don’t give it to you or they screw around with you. They’re playing games, cause this is a big game that CPA’s played.

They don’t like to give it to you because now they know you’re shopping for a new CPA and that form has a lot of built in formulas and calculations in the spreadsheet. You might have 20 or $30,000 of built up losses, suspended, passive losses to offset that mobile home park sale. Again, I think you said you’re looking at maybe an $80,000 capital gain plus depreciation recapture.

So if you already had $30,000 to spend in losses, now we’re only looking at 50,000. Okay. Different. Okay. Yeah. Okay. So if you went into a normal syndication that does 70%, 80% leverage and does it cost sake and 50 cents of every dollar is, Put back as bonus appreciation. You’re one, you’d knock that out with a hundred thousand dollars investment.

Okay. But, so that’s how you that would probably knock out your, what you’re going to get on that mobile home park. Things move super slowly, right? As you’ve seen the mobile home park, it’s probably going to be quarter two when you actually sell it. But then you have to go in into another deal before the end of 2021 to kind of book that, to offset it.

Yeah. And in your opinion, given where I’m at, would you deploy do that in multiple chunks at a different deals? If they’re available, a hundred thousand electric 5% rule, right? I don’t want you to put more than $150,000 into anyone deal. You. You didn’t follow that role on the mobile home park?

No, I did not. You at 20% of all in it, probably back then your net worth wasn’t as high. So yeah, that was a, that was breaking a Cardinal sin, my friend, but Hey, it’s real estate. It works out well, most of the time. Yeah, it’s true. It’s a forgiving asset class. Slow moving and forgiving.

Yes. Deploying into multiple things this year, that would be hopefully if everything, hopefully deals are available and able to get that deployed. It’s just like when I sold my in 2018 or 17, I sold seven or eight rentals for our capital game of $200,000, but I had gotten two deals and I had several hundred thousand dollars of passive losses built up.

Have you sat the offset, so that essentially doing the same thing here for you,

Get that done. Then worry about the retirement funds, that’s okay. That’s definitely what I’m thinking. I don’t want to freeze stuff up. And like I say, I have the cares act distribution, which isn’t a huge cause you can chop that up into three pieces.

That’s not going to add much. To our bottom line this year, I tell it to you now, because you got to decide in the next few months, whether you’re going to really do this crazy idea that Lane’s talking about. you’re going to take out 30 to 50 grand every year, 30 to a hundred grand every year for the next three to five years.

It’s a slow thing. This note that’s not in your retirement funds? I would unload that as you can, just in the same style is unloading the turnkey. Like maybe just throw the turnkey on Roofstock they allow you to list it with a tenant in place.

Okay. Okay. You’re not obliged to sell it. You’re still making cash flow on it. And then same thing. Like this note, you can sell it while you’re collecting payments at the right price. What I would recommend. You don’t want to really sell this in the next few months, but just put it up anyway.

Just put it up at a, make me move price and see what happens. Yeah. The turnkey or the a note. You mean both of them. Okay. I’ll have to look into that. And then. Yeah, they squeeze down the liquidity. I don’t think you need as much. Yeah, I can definitely deploy that. Yeah. I don’t know if you want a little bit of a cashflow stream.

Maybe you thought 20 grand and HP or something like that before they, their current fund goes away. Pretty straight forward, I think. Yeah. There’s not a ton of moving parts right now. Yeah. It’s just, yeah. We’re waiting on kind of a load of capital to come in and then nothing crazy to do right now.

I don’t think unless I get that. We’ll move forward that your highest and best uses at your day job don’t get fired. I don’t know what all the business is, but it’s the business of a capital intensive business. You need money to do marketing or. Not at all. Nope. It’s a local service business.

And we bought it, it was already cash flowing. An owner finance deal. There’s not a lot to it. It’s not capital intensive at all. We make money. If anything is just time, it’s time, that’s all it is. Yep. It’s learning.

We’re going to build it up to turn it into an asset to try to possibly. Sell that to you at some point here. We’re learning the ropes of that business now, too. I guess we’re glad for it. Mobile home park now, service business, just learning. Yeah. That’s, you guys are in a good spot.

You got a day job. That’s probably low stress makes pretty good money. Yeah, recognize that you can not put your heart and soul into it and put it somewhere else and make money there. And that’s your, all your highest and best use to put your overflow time into the business? I think the only thing for you guys is maybe this is maybe years down the road, but I don’t own that service-based business.

You can turn it into some kind of passive cashflow stream as opposed to right now it’s ordinary, right? It’s a business. Yeah, but maybe you, when you reposition it, you stabilize it, you sell it off to somebody, but you retained investor rights. You find some young whipper snapper who wants to trade his time for money and you just, you maybe you’re still working on it.

Don’t get me wrong. But you change your compensation from, An ordinary income business to more of a K one passive stream. So that’s a conversation you could have with your CPA, but, follow me here. Yeah, you’re the one having steering this conversation. They’re not going to tell you, Oh, Chris, we should turn this into passive income so we can take your passive losses that you have a glut of and offset that they’re not going to come up with that stuff.

Yeah. That’s not their job. Their job is not to transform your life

okay. Yeah. I definitely, I need to get more education around that and, just to know what the right question to ask my dad at this point that’s certainly a goal this year. I don’t know if that’s possible in your business, we have some Doctors, they own a medical clinic and that’s how they do it.

So they changed the color of money from ordinary the passive. So now they’re able to use the passive losses to offset their ankle and they don’t need to be real estate professionals to do that. Okay. Yeah. That’s, the goal is to, is you nailed it yet, finding that young whippersnapper and all that to get them, it would be a good,

it’s not a high tech job. And who cares if you’re getting paid top dollar, I don’t know what your salary from that, but like maybe you were making a hundred grand a year from that business who cares if it’s 50 or 60,000 young worker stuff, it doesn’t get the game. It doesn’t get the perfect picture you’re getting paid and the passive income color, which you can drive down to zero.

What’s your other stuff going on? Yep. That’s the goal. We’re just building it right now. It’s slightly more time consuming. Does your where your guys’ AGI is getting real, super professional status, I don’t think is a big deal. You don’t really need it.

That’s more for the guys above 300,000 a year. Does your spouse work? She runs the business. She’s the sole owner. Okay. We could make, use the owner and free her up if you made a lot more money at your day job, if some people are listening, that would be a move that we look into, but for where you’re at, the way you guys are doing it is optimal.

I think. Okay. It’s just where we are now. We’re, it’s a, it’s learning as we go and seeing what works best for us. And this is, best right now. It sounds like you might need a new CPA,

we’re in the hunt for that right now, actually. There’s a section in the e-course currently that has how do you interview a new CPA? Okay. But I would ask them in your situation Hey, I have this business. Can you tell me about, changing this money from ordinary income to passive income and how that would happen?

What if I were able to do this, how would the passive loss would I be able to use my passive loss to offset my passive income for my business? That’s the main point of doing that is to offset the passive losses from your investments. Is that what you’re saying? You want to ask him that at least that’s my style.

How you ask him not a stump, the chump question. Oh, tell me about non conservation easements, right? But you want to have a dialogue with them and just feel them and see if they, you can work with them. if I have a lot of passive losses, how can I use them?

They’re like, no, you can’t do that. That’s a business. You can’t do that. Then, you’re not working. It’s somebody who’s open-minded who’s creative. Maybe they just don’t have the experience. Okay. I think that’s one way you can ask, that’s the least of my style in our mastermind.

We have people do it different ways to vet the CPA, but that’s my style. It’s I go in there, how can I use the passive losses to offset this cup right here? They’re like, Oh, you can’t do it. That’s not someone who you want to work with.

We want somebody who’s Oh, okay. So this is ordinary income and you can’t offset it with passive income service professional. If we were able to change it from ordinary to passive, right? Like your notes, for example, that’s yeah. Yeah. So to have that intellectual conversation with your CPA is unfortunate.

That’s maybe you have to get up to that level of yourself too. I definitely need to get there, but it’s I feel like I can have a conversation with them. I think that’s what’s hard for a lot of CPAs. Most of their people coming through the door or totally blew this up and stuff.

They’re like, Oh my goodness. Another sucker. You’re only going to have to do 401ks or self related Roths. Sorry buddy that’s all you got. They know you don’t have anything else cooking, just like the average American out there. Right! Yeah. I’ve been on the hunt really for somebody for a while.

At least gonna ask me good questions too. And I’m willing to pay for it for a while for sure. We’re gonna figure that out this year. Cool, Chris, I appreciate you doing this. I think a lot of people, follow the little journey out to mobile home park.

Yeah. Glad to chat with anybody about that. Yeah. There’s a lot of stories. If you guys haven’t please check out the website and join our clubs simplepassivecashflow.com/club and we’ll see you guys next time.

Guardian has Index Participation Feature

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uzx-1-AfbqI

That question about the index participation, I guess that kind of makes it almost half an IUL. Is that right?

Are you talking about Guardian Index Participation on the actual IVC. So if you selected that, that makes it like a hybrid IUL is there right. It’s still whole life so that you have less risks on there. But so for those of you. That aren’t aware of what Mary’s saying is it’s Guardian has Index Participation feature on it, where instead of receiving the stated dividend rate, which is currently 5.65%, you would be able to get index rate based off the S and P 500. There is a company caps of 11% and 4%, and then they charge you 2% to get it. So right now, the max you could get is 9% and the law of 2% as your dividend rate instead of the 5.65. So it’s not in addition to the 5.65 it’s instead of the 5.65. And what it’s doing is it’s indexing the S and P 500. So on your policy anniversary date, it’ll look at what the S and P 500 was at last year and then what it is at this year. And then that percentage rate is what you’ll receive.

But the trade-off, what is the trade-off when you click that box?

It’s a free thing. It cost there’s zero cost for it to be a rider on your policy. So it’s there, but if you use it, if you allocate any money to it, then they charge you a 2% on the return.

You can choose anywhere between zero and a hundred percent participation. It’s nice where you don’t have to allocate all of your funds to it. For me personally, the reason why I chose those whole life is for kind of the stability. You know what you’re going to get. I already have some exposure to the stock market, through retirement accounts and other things. That’s just me personally. I may use that feature when there’s a major stock or a market correction. It tanks a portion of the funds to receive that potential higher dividend, but the risk is more unknown. It’s based on your policy anniversary date so everyone’s returned maybe slightly different and basically it just index annually.

And that kind of, we’re not going to get into this topic, but that kind of transitions into what you had at a certain point. In my opinion, people who, if the whole life kind of banking to the IUL or some people call this a philosophy banking where it’s got stock exposure. And to me, that’s the end game, right?

If your net worth is four or $5 million or more, you’re in cruise control and you’re not going into individual deals or investments or rentals, you know, you just want like a no-hassle single-digit greater return. That’s what that product is for. And I think at this point I’m not getting it personally, but I think one of you guys would probably push me at some point to make more content around it. We’ll create more videos and information about that product here in the future. But for now, you know, the infinite banking is for folks who are million dollars to five, $6 million net worth who are taking, putting the money in there. We’re getting a little nice rate of return, tax-free off the table, creditors and litigators, but to take the money right back out and invested in deals or whatever you’d like to do with it.

250k Net Worth Chemical Engineer Coaching Call

https://youtu.be/FcnzpGSAEXk

What’s up investors we’re going to be doing one of those coaching calls that you guys like to buy curiosity learn from other people’s mistakes. Check out all the past coaching calls on the passive investor members I think we’ve got over a couple of dozen of these calls and it’s also found in the YouTube in the coaching call section, but in the members section, which you guys can get access to by joining the club@civilpassivecashflow.com slash club, it’s free.

I arranged everybody by accredited and then crazy accredited section on. So you guys can find where you are. The guy we’re interviewing today, his net worth around $250,000. But, just like a lot of the younger guys in our group, which we have a wide range of investors here from, in Europe, 20 years old, all the way up to 60, 70 years old, Richard here, he’s not making big money yet, but he’s a chemical engineer.

Those chemical engineers, I swear are the smartest engineers. AutoCall no offense to your computer science guys, his net worth wrong. Quarter of a million. Soon, this guy is going to be making some bank, cause he’s only been working for maybe a few years thus far. But he’s doing everything right.

And this is how a lot of you guys are the guys who max out your 401ks, very diligent savers. Maybe you don’t have the whole family and children thing quite yet. It’s something I’ve learning about personally these days. But you’re setting up the framework to get yourself on the path to financial freedom.

Most people come into our group and they’re already in their forties and fifties. And, but luckily they’ve, have time on their side and they’ve amassed a million, $2 billion of net worth. But this guy right here that we’re going to be interviewing today and doing the coaching call. This guy will be availing dollars network easily, late twenties, maybe early thirties.

It’s amazing. And it’s cool to see people get off the straight path. It’s subsequent around doing things like, being achievable. You guys can check all the crazy stuff I would do to save money, which I’m not super proud of, but Hey, that’s what I used to do. And I live very frugally.

Again, a lot of those cheapo tactics are@simplepassivecastle.com slash sheeple. And you know why I’m on the subject, one of the things that got me to the next level from a letter rentals to announcing a few thousand plus was joining different masterminds, actually spending money to get her on the people that took me to the next level.

That’s what the family office on a mastermind is all about. We just bought the pricing a little while ago. We continue to bump the pricing, every couple of quarters to increase the caliber of that group. We have about 70 people in there. And if you guys want to learn more about the group, because you’re tired of hanging out with broke guys or people that are investing in their 401ks and all that nonsense check us out@simplepassivecashflow.com slash journey.

And during the show.

 

Hey, simple passive cashflow today. We are going to be talking to a non accredited chemical engineer. We’re going to be doing a coaching call and guiding him on his way. But yeah. Thanks for doing this, Richard. No, thanks for having me late. I really appreciate you taking the time. Yeah. So let’s give some folks some contexts.

How old are you are? When did you graduate? Bring us back today. And then all of these financial profiles everybody’s situation is different, but I’ll be honest. Nobody’s really a special snowflake. Everybody follows the same five to 10 categories, but tell us a little bit about yourself.

I graduated in may of 2017 with a degree in chemical engineering and I moved to Houston shortly thereafter, where I’ve been working as at a chemical plant the last three and a half years. So I’m 27. Just about to turn 22. And I was introduced to financial independence about two years ago, two and a half years ago by my friend, Jared.

And then I went down the rabbit hole and decided real estate was the way I was going to go. So I’m currently living in a house act, which is a duplex in Houston. I have the one side printed out and then I have a room for rent in my unit, but I currently do not have one. And then I recently in July just purchased those second real estate property.

And I did a successful Burr and basically only left in the financing charges with that property. And so that one’s a pretty successful first hard money loan as well as a refinance. Richard’s a example of a younger guy. His net worth is under a runner on a quarter million bucks. But I would say your in fact, it’s just that you’re pretty connected.

The right people, your buddy, Jared knows another guy that knew me and all you guys are all like each financial independence retire early and type of guys. Sure. You guys get your stuff together. You guys will be on your way in 10 years, for sure. For those of you guys don’t know what chemical engineers are, probably the smartest engineers of the bunch, your salary hasn’t really taken off yet.

You’re still in that first scrappy job, is that I switched companies a year and a half ago, and so I got a bump up to what I would say was the market value for chemical engineers here in Houston. That’s probably about the average for a non oil and gas. But that doesn’t include a bonus this year.

We didn’t get it with the whole markets and the company being a, not the best financial spot. I’m eligible for up to a 20% bonus. When that kicks in, like that could be a significant bump to my salary. Where do you think your ceiling is five years? Five years at this company. I don’t think it would be too much higher.

I could probably see it again. Closer to a hundred at that point without making us promotion up. But it’s a pretty small company. The one benefit I really is it has a good work-life balance compared to a lot of other . Got it. And that’s probably, you got that from your buddies, right on all three trio is you guys are all about quality of life instead of just making a whole bunch of money and spending it for briskly.

Yes. And and right now I’m able to actually work from home. So that’s been saving me a significant amount of money on gas and just all around time. Yeah. So sometimes I look at this in a different order , if you guys are checking out the podcast, go to my YouTube channel, we have the personal financial sheet, but in the upper right-hand quadrant, you have the net worth.

That’s where I take a peak at first, again, about a quarter million dollars net worth. And then we look at how he’s making money on a month to month basis, about $7,000 of salary coming in. But in if he had a bonus, that’d probably be up a little bit. But then I look at use as a cash, which is his expenses.

And there’s a whole bunch of you guys out of the bay area. Who you are that make over 200, $300,000 shit. You’re only able to save about the same of as it’s a rigid here. The thing that we don’t really care about is this net cash flow. That’s all your income minus all your expenses.

And he said, he’s probably able to save maybe 30 to 40 grand per year. That’s pretty good, man. Keep doing that maybe four or five, four years. That’ll definitely start climbing up over 50,000. If you keep buying assets, that would be income.

 

If you’re a guy making over 200 grand a year and you’re not saving 40 grand, at least you got to take the belt somewhere. There’s something going on. I was just talking to a guy yesterday. I made up laugh because it’s I got five kids. It’s okay, that makes sense.

I will say I do have the benefit. I’m unmarried and I do not have any children at this time, so yeah. So you’ve owned some real estate before. Talk to us about how you picked that up. One of these is a house hat the first one that I inquired back in March of 2019 was a house hack.

It’s a duplex townhouse connected units. And the one side’s been rented out from the day I purchased it within an older lady and her son lives there. And that basically covers all of my HOA fees, the taxes and insurance on the property. And so then if I don’t have a roommate, then I’m basically just paying a mortgage and interest in principle, which would be cheaper than, and rent for the size of property that I’ve got.

I’ve had a little bit of difficulty getting roommates. The area’s a little farther than the energy corridor, which is where I was hoping to get younger. College-aged students who wanted to intern or take work duties there, but I haven’t seen as much interest it’s a little bit farther, but.

To hang out with. Yeah, exactly. I did have a roommate for roughly six months of the first year. And then I had one that moved in March of this past year and immediately lost her job afterwards. And so she left and I haven’t been able to fill it since COVID hit. Yeah, that’s cool, man.

But I would say at five, 10 years, you probably don’t want to do that type of stuff. Are you looking to move out or what’s the next month or so about another single family home to here. Yeah, so this one was a, I would say a home run for me. I bought it in July from a wholesaler, used hard money on the deal.

Basically bought it at one 15, put $39,000 into it. And it praised at 2 25. And so I was able to refund it. At a 30, 70% loan to value with a 3.625 interest rate. So it’ll cashflow roughly what like 130 bucks a month. And it ends up being I’m trying to remember the number. It was like a 12% return on equity, plus a, like a F I ended up with you include the debt.

Capital appreciation or the forced equity. I ended up with a 413% return on my investment. So we look at it in terms of that’s all nice and find a Debby after the smoke clears. But what is the, I don’t really pay attention to, oh, it’s cash flow. It seems counterintuitive because we’re all about simple passive cash flow, but I’m assuming your cash flowing on it.

But we look at the net equity here, how much debt equity is sitting in there. And it’s not too much. You could probably pull some of that out or re leverage, but I think this is a good foundation to keep building more and more. And you’ll see in the next two, three years, this will definitely peak over a hundred, this particular property, but. What’s the plan with the house hack. The plan is I eventually want to move out. And so I’m currently looking for another property that I could house back. So I’m looking for a one that’s closer to the center of the city and one that I could live in, like an ADU or a garage apartment, and then get a single family loan on.

Yeah, it’s just a rambling man making money as he moves around town. That’s awesome. Do it now while you’re younger. Yeah, exactly. One thing I would say if you had a little bit of equity in there, like it’d be 60 or grand or more, or maybe you’re there. See, before you move out, maybe try and be leverage the property, squeeze all that out.

As an owner, occupied property, the freight before you moved. Yeah, just a squeeze that lemon right before you lose that opportunity. But right now it may not be worth it, the payload origination fees or that probably not. And honestly, the neighborhood’s a little rougher than I thought it was going to be when I bought it.

And so I’m not sure how long I intend to hold this property. If I can move out and potentially sell this one, I would look, I would probably look to do that before refinancing it. Yeah. What is your thoughts on this whole birth thing? Is it just, are you going to keep doing that in a few years or something you’re going to grow up?

Oh, when your network gets over a certain point? I think I would probably after a while, I’d want to get into more of a passive side, but it’s just at where I’m at to shell out 50,000 in cash. It takes me a very long time to save up for that. And so then I’m doing a deal every year and a half at the, really the earliest.

Yeah. Right now it’s taking you what about 12 to 15 months to save up 50 grand right now. And then that would be a significant portion of my network into one deal that I’m just handed off the money to. But talk to your buddies a lot. Yeah, exactly. So this was my first one doing like a major rehab.

And so I actually didn’t mind the rehab process. I found a really good contractor. He’s really honest. And like he found some things he did not charge me or he finished in the timeline. So with the current job that I have in the flexible hours it’s not that big of a deal. If I need to take an afternoon off and go look at it.

The property or go out there and do my checks on all the repairs. So for me in the time being it’s actually probably the best use is to try and use the burn method to generate equity. Cause it’s, once you have the equity, it’s easier to find cashflow than to take the cashflow and create equity. Yeah. You got to start a fire right now.

You’re just trying to get a spark boy with the burgers. But I would say. Richard’s different than the average person. He’s got a couple things going on for him. Number one, he’s local to the area. So he’s able to do it. He’s not some guy out at California, Hawaii for a property in Kansas city for goodness sake.

And secondly, Richard’s a smart dude. He’s a freaking chemical engineer. He’s in like the contractor, the builder, kind of role. It’s not just some it guy that is trying to manage remote work. So that’s another reason why I’m successful at doing this. Yeah, I definitely would’ve said it would’ve been, it would’ve been very challenging to do that project if I wasn’t in the area and being able to drive out there and check on things and just do the proper due diligence, I would have had to put a lot of trust in them.

If I wasn’t doing it locally. And also one thing with the Houston market is there’s a wider variance in the prices. You can find some pretty inexpensive houses and then you can find some really expensive houses. And so it really benefits the bird because you can generate a significant amount of equity, but it’s harder to cashflow, I would say in Houston, single family houses, but you’re doing what you can work with, right?

Like you’re you just happen to live in Houston and move around. What’s your geographic blends? I definitely like the warmer area, but I’m not D definitely tied to Houston area. I’d be open to other markets or other areas I used to, I grew up in Illinois, so I’m from the Midwest. So we’re going to look at your deposit, your sick, your security deposit, or your savings deposit, checking account.

You’ve got it scattered around. We don’t really talk about this type of stuff, but what’s with chase bank, man, I get into a credit union. No, so the, I just had the chase bank from when I went to college. And so I had a couple of those accounts open and so I just opened a second one when I started saving for my rental property, but look into there’s some savings accounts.

That gives you like two to 3%. They’re called a rewards checking accounts. And I did this for years. Like you have to do like an annoying 12 debit transactions per month, then log in and do these statements. And I would do this for years where I would go to the gas station and call my stupid debit card 12 times.

Oh really? He was incredible waste of time. Back then the interest rates are a little bit higher. Three to 6%. Okay. Jess, I was doing that for 10 years and I just decided like a few months ago I was going to stop doing that stupid stuff. But for you, every little bit counts. Yeah.

I was getting 2% on the discover account. That’s where I had most of my money before I bought the bird property. But I had issues with the payment system. They didn’t, they stopped letting me use Zelle. And then also with that, the interest rate dropped from two and a quarter down to 0.6. Yeah. You gotta play around with it.

Cause like you can also do like little 1 cent PayPal transaction. Yeah. Or another novel is doing a Venmo sometimes fill out about info to debit transactions, but it all, it’s all over the place. You just have to do it 12 times and see if they give you the higher interest rate, but nothing, the old going to the gas station, pumping gas for 36 cents every single time.

But you can’t do that more than three or four times in a roll, if not on the phone, call on your cell phone and say that. That’s happening. So I don’t know, man, I am telling you to waste a lot of time, but I feel like you liked that type of stuff. So whatever floats your boat or there’s commodity direct is another bank account that gives you 1% or 0.6%.

That one you don’t have to play stupid games. Okay. Co-morbidity Comenity and there’s new folks. Is BlueVine is what I’ve been using for business checking accounts. And now it gives you a Dick 1% and that one, you don’t have to do any stupid 12 transactions per month. Okay. So try those two.

But chase is nice because you can wire stuff. Yeah, don’t do that. The Wells Fargo one, like I’d signed up because they gave like a $400 sign on bonus if you hooked up a direct deposit and stuff like that. Yeah. I know. It’s all the time wasters.

Yeah. Okay. You got some term-life it’s this pretty small. Yeah, that was one. My parents took out on me when I was a infant. Yeah.

You’re screwing around with Bitcoin and ground floor is like the startup. Yeah. So the, so it’s like hard money loans. They let you do a very small dollar amount. So with that, like three, just under four grand, I’m invested in roughly 300 different loans. So it’s pretty diversified. And I’ve been getting a 10.8.

Interest on my money. Is that pretty secure or what’s your thoughts on that? So far so good. I haven’t had there’s I’ve I think we’ve lost money on three of the loans that I’ve done so far. And so I started out and basically what I do is that every time I get paid, I put 50 bucks into it.

And then I’m just rolling any money that I’ve made. So I’ve made roughly like 300 bucks over the last like year or so. Okay. I’m looking at the website now. So like they, they diversify it for you over a whole bunch of people. No. So you invest in the individual loans, but they have a very low minimum investment.

So you can invest in a loan as a little as $10. What do you, what’s your increments? How do you break it up? So I just do $10 on all the loans. And now I’m starting to get the point where I. I’ve been putting it in every loan that they basically have. And then I’m starting to get to the point where I’m putting $20 in.

Are you, if I move, sorry, go ahead. Are you cherry picking like the better paper because they grade on a, B and C, so I tend to start with the, and that’s how they also do the interest rates. So I typically am just putting it in mostly the C and D, which is 11%. Normally or higher. But but when I first started, I was just putting them in everything.

And I had just as many loans that like were in category a default as I did in category D. So I figured I’d go with a slightly higher interest rate. Yeah. It looks cool. If I were to do this, I would go to more than a and B type of graded paper. What’s the rate for what’s the rate for AP. So the lowest they’ll go is like 6.4, but like they’ll have A’s that go up to seven and a half.

And then BS will be from like seven and a half to nine. And then CS there’ll be anywhere from nine and a half to 11. And then anything higher than 11 D yeah. Occasionally you’ll see a year and a half, but that they get up to 17, but that’s the highest I’ve seen. That’s cool. I, what I don’t like about these crowdfunding websites is like the broker dealer, the guy administrating, all this stuff is making a huge cut, like huge.

So they’re taking a lot of of the profits on these types of deals. So like for example, if a B class node is giving you 6%, it really should be paying out 8%. A quarter of the profits, but yeah, if you can diversify at school and it’s probably fun too. I bet it’s why you’re doing it to this.

Yeah. I started doing this when I, when I first got into financial independence, like I was like all gung ho. I made an offer on a property and it, I didn’t end up getting it. And so I didn’t have anything and I had to, re-sign a lease for another 12 months. And so at that point I was like I’m not going to be able to buy a house anytime soon.

And so I started doing this as a way to earn some extra money and I’ve just kept going it over the last couple of years. Yeah.

They do have an IRA form. So if you wanted to invest through an IRA, you’re able to do that as well. The downside interest is all ordinary income, right? It’s yeah. It’s interest income. Yeah. But you’re doing also HP, which gives the 10%. What, why do you do grout for, is it just for diversification or you want a better rate or what’s the motivation?

It was just I’d started ground four before I was able to invest in HP. So I wasn’t able to, Jared told me about the 2015 fund, but it was already closed. And so then I waited until they did the 2018, the HP servicing one. But HP probably gives you a better rate than there be glass paper. Yes. Why are you still thinking Ron Flor out of curiosity?

It was just more habit. And also I hadn’t seen the returns realistically from HP. It’s all one company. So I didn’t, it was just more of one partnership if something goes wrong. Yeah, no that’s yeah, that’s good. Yeah. Should I just say diversification, even though it’s a lower rate.

Yeah. Way we do it. I would say the only thing is just as your life gets more complicated and your net worth goes up some better to simplify it. But yeah, you’re learning a lot during doing all these little things. That’s all I did it. I did a whole bunch of stuff that I wasted my time. And Laura, on the topic of wasting time.

What about trade lines is going around with that? I have not. I looked into it a little bit, but I was. A little risky. I don’t know. It seems a little different. I don’t want to get a car consoled. I swear by it, man. You’re making a lot, like you got 11 grand and this type of random stuff that’s comes out to a thousand dollars a year.

Give me a break, man. If you have a credit card, you can make that in yeah. You could probably make that in a year, which just has one credit card with okay. I do have a decent amount of roughly 50,000 in credit card. You need to have the car older than a couple of years.

The longer, the better that’s the jail. I think I’ll be coming up on two years coming up, January timeframe for several of my cards. Yeah. So if you guys want to make, I made tea, I make 10 grand a year during that silly hobby trade nights. If you guys are listening, check out the I-Corps simple, passive cashflow.com/trade lines.

There’s a way to be safe about doing it. But yeah, just, I would say, just learn about it, but that’d be a great way that you could make another five to 10 right there. And that’s big for you, right? Because every year you’re making 30 grand that augments your savings 20%. Yes. And then you got some, your deferred comp TRPs here.

Are you contributing any more money to your retirement 401ks? So not to the 401k or the IRA, the Roth IRA. I’ve only, I still contribute a little bit to the HSA every single year. And I also get a company match, so I come January, I’ll get a thousand dollar bonus just for have an HSA. And then my, the current pension is I have no control over that.

The 5% interest rate on the current balance is what I do. Yeah. Awesome man. Got it. You’re on the right people that think the stuff is garbage. One thing that’s nice about the fidelity, the 401k, they were at my firm, my older, my old company. So I have access to all those funds if I needed to. So in the back of my head, I keep that as a true emergency.

If I lost my job and I needed to keep things running, that’s what I keep that in there. Cool. Cool, great strategy. Most people are there listening. I would say 80% of them are still on the fence. So withdrawing from their 401k because we’ve all been brainwashed. Yeah. Maybe if there’s any kind of words of encouragement there or epiphany that you saw that ultimately made you, I know you had the right people around you that kind of took the poach.

You bought the truck. Yeah. It’s definitely hard turning down the match and what I really stopped was when I switched companies and I just didn’t sign up for the next one. And that was how I jumped off. But it’s definitely not easy. Like I really had to commit to the real estate at that point.

So what is your current company’s match now? So they will do one-to-one up to 600. And my previous one would do a 6% on the first eight. So they would do one-to-one on the first floor and then half on the next floor. Yeah, I was talking to that guy yesterday. Boeing does one, one for one up to 8%, but I was still like do the math man.

It doesn’t make sense. You’ll cross over probably a few years ahead. If you just asked the money, I grew up pasture yourself. And it just depends on what you’re limited on. Yeah. And I’m okay. Like doing the match too, but once you moved jobs, get it out. But that’s another problem. People stay at their jobs a long time, which is pretty rare these days.

Yeah. Cause that was one of the things I did look at doing if they offered in-service rollovers, but both companies I had didn’t offer. Okay. Are you guys, a lot of the younger guys that you guys hop around jobs so much that yeah. Just put it in, get vested and then pull it right back. And we changed companies.

Yeah. And that’s part of the reason too. That was an easier decision at my new company. You don’t, you’re not fully vested on the match for five years. So I was like, I don’t even know if I’ll be here for five years. And so to me putting it in and possibly getting 20% of the match, wasn’t worth it. What are you?

So you said, great idea. If you guys haven’t picked up on that is he’s using this money as its emergency savings account, but what are you, what do you have this stuff sitting in? Oh, index once. Okay. Like a Greek Vanguard 500 type of thing. Yeah. Different mix of whichever one they offer. So yeah. Why not do a money market?

What was your thought process? Or like a, something way more conservative or semi-conservative.

I still it’s. I just left it in. Cause when I first started getting into financial independence, the first things you find are index funds. And so I just haven’t really looked at it since, and in my opinion, it’s not a significant dollar amount in terms of if the market dropped 50%. Yeah, I’d lose 10 grand or 15 grand.

It’s not like I’m sitting there with hundreds of thousands that I would lose a ton of money on. Yeah. It’s keep it on red mentality. Just let it ride. Yeah. Significance. No, that makes sense. Makes sense. And also these are all logical and with my mindset too, I’m not going to ever run my bank.

Zero, like really low to invest at a deal. And so I’m always going to keep some cash available and this is being a little bit more aggressive and the cash is a little bit more conservative. Yeah. And all this stuff for you. Like I’m getting really nitpicky because you’re not working with too much.

But this is the foundation for when you get over a half a million, then you won’t really care about all this stuff, at the year to tweak this, maybe think about it. Taking the Roth out because you’ve already paid your contributions into it and just taking it out cash to invest it.

We talk about this a lot. Why do you not want retirement accounts? Number one, you’re going to be retired well before you’re 50, on the way to your semi to get it. Number two, your tax bracket is probably a lot lower today. So you want to pay your taxes on it today, Dave, in the future, number three, where this country is going, taxes are going to be going way up.

Okay. What a lot of people don’t realize is number four, get when you invest in a retirement account, you don’t get the passive losses from your investments. So that is you need the passive losses, especially from the syndications to get of the simple, passive cashflow gravy train, which is all about lowering your W2 activity, come and paying little to no taxes.

And you don’t get that opportunity to do that. Yeah. You’ve got to get real estate professional status at 750 hours, but you don’t get to do that until. You get those passive losses. So that’s the fourth reason why you don’t do retirement accounts, but something to think about, like Richard, like just maybe take out the broth, cause you already paid a tax on it.

So it’s not really that big of a deal. And at least take out the contributions not the gains. Cause you take out the contributions. You don’t need to pay the penalty on that 10% penalty. Oh, okay. So drain that out. But at the same time, you want that magic number. I don’t know what that is in your head, like 20 to 30 grand of emergency savings.

Yeah. But if you have to increase it, we’ll then put money into your 401k via the match. Let’s work backwards. How much of emergency savings do you want to have? You have 37 grand right now, realistically. So the pension is like illiquid, so I wouldn’t be able to get that.

So I have roughly 30,000 in there. I would want at least probably 20,000, because that would give me roughly nine months of if I lost my job and I had just made an investment. Okay, cool. And that number everybody’s different. You’re basically picking that number out of the sky, but let’s go with that. You want about 20 grand in there?

What I would do, I’m sure. More than half of this is contributions. I’ll take that out now. And then maybe in the next six months you replenish, maybe even before the end of the year, you do a catch up a deposit into your 401k and get that match to replenish that, whatever you take out of here and put back in here.

Okay. And then this. I would just get rid of it. Just cash it out. Cause it’s trying to simplify things too, right? At the same time. Yeah, no. So I had actually used, so I had opened that one when I was co-oping to start investing when I was still in college and I actually pulled out the original contribution for the down payment on the first property.

So all of that money is gains, have zero basis. Yeah, I would just get rid of it. It’s just, you don’t need another stupid letter showing up in your mailbox every month, every quarter, simplify life. Of course, I’m telling you to do this because you’ve already shown proof of concept for what you’re doing.

Most guys are still at stage one, but you’ve I feel a little bit more comfortable pushing you in closer to the edge, but you got to decide what you want to do, but that’s a good point. And then student loans. Lucky you don’t have too much of it, but tell us a little bit, like where you started off with Ben and your strategy to get to this point.

Yeah. So a little bit goes back. So I did a co-op program, so I, it was a work study. I did five work sessions over five years. And so I graduated with about 18 months of experience and they actually paid me. Extremely well, I was getting probably close to what a full engineer was making my final year. And they were also paying for my housing in Chicago, which was tax-free.

So that ended up putting me in a position when I graduated college with a roughly 20,000 in cash. And 30,000 in student loans. And so I started rapidly paying down the student loans and then for the first eight months of my working career, and then I kinda got the bug of, I wanted a new car and I’d always told myself once I paid off my student loans that I’d get a new car, but I ended up Deciding that I wanted the car sooner.

And so that’s when I took out a more expensive car loan for me. And so I, at that point I reduced my student loans to the minimum payment and then it had been paying down my car loan. Yeah, man, like what’s life without a nice car,

a guy getting the financial independence. So yeah. So I actually just refinanced it from the. So I extended the paydown a little bit. So we reduced it from 6 55 down to 4 52. And so I’m going to just going to make the minimum payment on all of these loans was my plan and then take the extra cash and invest it.

Yeah. I never liked the cars. So you get a nice car. I would say, are you a car guy or is it, it was just, I didn’t want to always have the crappy car. And so I yeah. A bunch of my friends got nicer cars and that I wanted to keep up with the Joneses and it was a mistake, but I honestly think it was good because it prevented me from buying too much house on the first property.

Cause I could have gone to the bank and said, Hey, I just have a student loan payment of 150 bucks. And they would’ve given me a loan for, I don’t know how much, if you’re a car guy. Lease is what I say. Cause he be getting a new car next year probably, or this year. Another reason why not all people talk about it, but the reason I do that is write it off to the whole thing, these payments, as opposed to doing this silly 50 cents.

So yeah, I don’t do the mileage personally because I don’t drive that much. So it’s 50 cents a mile. It’s like worth it to me. Cause I don’t drive anywhere. I don’t sit on traffic, but you might, but know when you get, if you’re a car guy lease. Okay. Yeah. I’m definitely not a car guy. This is more of a, I wanted to keep up with the Joneses.

So that was my one main mistake. Not stay single the rest of your life kind of guy. Yeah. So I, my, my plan is to just keep the car cause it’s a decent car and yeah. Run it until the wheels fall off. So yeah. Yeah. But these student loans, they’re so low to, you said you paid off some of the higher ones and it’s such a small amount in a logically.

You just keep paying it off. But at some point, just knocking it ahead just to simplify your life too. Yeah. There’s a lot of this. It’s just finding a balance to pitcher your highest and best uses. This stuff. Yeah. Not screwing around with acorns or doing full transactions on your debit card. Exactly. And I realized that too, with that property, it was a little bit scary going through and taking out the roughly 13% interest rate loan to do all the work. But once it worked out, like it was oh, that was all it was. And I’m just looking for the next. Yeah. And that’s where trade line comes in.

Right? Two trade lines is like five, 10 grand a year. For a little effort, I think that’s going to be a big thing for you to help them speed this up. That definitely can get you up to probably about a house every nine months to that. So this is how I see your started progressing. You just keep buying a few more of these, add a few more properties on citizens, real estate or.

Spreadsheet. And then probably that I’ll take you out a few years and then maybe you dabble in some syndications or maybe you really like this stuff. But I’m suspecting, you’re probably going to be a lot more busy at your job somewhere on your five and 10 in your career. They expect you to take management roles.

Which you may, I don’t know. What’s your thoughts on that? Are you going to take that progression tracker? Yeah. I’m planning on being out of there by that point. So yeah. It’s not your gig. Yeah. I think I’d want to go find something else to do by the time. So five years I’d be 32. That’s what I’m trying to figure out a way to do it by then.

Yeah. That’s a, you just have to find a balance in life, right? I’m sure you’ll make a little bit more than seven grand a month and that’s all you really need. You can keep driving to all these, but if you want like event later, you’re going to have to level up. Yeah.

But is plenty getting into their net worth of 200, 200 grand is the hardest part. I feel like it’s just now you’re on the track. Probably net worthwhile, just you’ll see a half a million probably in the next three years. Again. Yeah. And if I could do a one or two more burrs, like I would easily be there at that point.

Yeah. Then maybe two to three to get up to a million. And then you’re off to the races after that point. Yeah. And for example, I would say about a hundred thousand of that was within the last four months, just between my salary and then completing the Burr. I generated $70,000 in equity on the Burr alone.

So I basically made my year’s worth of salary. By doing that one project. Yeah. Why would you want to take a manager role, that deal. Exactly. Rather do some straight lights. Yeah, I guess I got to check out your course a little bit more, but yeah. Any other questions or anything you want to talk about?

At what point would you say I should start thinking about syndications, like investing in those. So for most people I would say get up to half a million at least, but you’re already so connected. That’s how you got into this stuff in the first place. Like you have the great ability to invest via proxy.

You got people around, you already investing in syndications testing the water, so by the time you’re ready, which you could probably do it now. You just jumped right on in, into the lake. No, this is this kind of what I call like investor proxy. If you have a couple of guys here, your buddies I’ve already invested in, they found that they’d found a good operator.

Then just jump in, how bad can it be? It’s the ones where a lot of investors are like really dumb these days and they just want to sound cool. So they say, oh yeah, some really good. And you come to find out that they didn’t even invest their money in it. They just, I don’t know what the heck they’re going off of.

A referral is great, but it’s not as good as like a real referral where somebody is actually investing money with. I got hurt a couple of times where investing with that silver level referral. The empty referral, what I call it, it’s just like when people are trying to find property managers.

Oh, ABC property managers. Good. Do you have any houses with them? Where did you just hear? Because they happened to be the sponsor of their local Rio or whatever. Yeah, no, and actually one of my, my, the person I use as an accountability partner, he referred me to a property manager and so he’s 30 and he has 30 properties of his own and he manages now 50 properties all with his own company.

And so that’s who I’m using. So I treat him as a pseudo mentor as well with how he viewed the bird. But that’s, I think, you’re different than most guys, your ability to do these burgers. Number one, you’re a smart engineer. It’s not, I think that’s not most people and you’re local too.

So at some, it’s probably a grind for you to do this. And so at that point, it’s to get your friends to stop doing this at some point you’re the one who’s going to dictate. But maybe, I don’t know. I don’t get the sense of that. Like you, this doesn’t really get your blood going. It’s not fun.

I don’t see you doing this for a super long time. Yeah, no, I can see. And I tend to find myself I get really focused on a certain area for a couple years and then I’ll get bored with it and then want to move onto the next. Yeah. So let me ask you this. If it’s not your career, And it’s not flipping a lot of houses to inflate your ego.

What do you want to do in five to 10, 10 years when you’re financially free and you have $6,000 of passive income rolling in every year? Yes. I definitely want to figure out a way to fix the education system. So I, cause I would have been a teacher if I didn’t do engineering or teaching paid would engineering paid, but I definitely think our school systems could use an overhaul and figuring out a way and doing a proof of concept.

The being financially independent would give me the time freedom and the resources to figure out how to do that. Teach financial financial education or just some other subject or, other subject, but it would have it would definitely be more of a life. Stuff, not so starting a business entrepreneurs, like using the science, using the math in real world situations, just not a math problem to figure out how to do it.

So I’m not, I don’t have it quite lined out exactly what I want to do or how it would work. But I definitely would, I think our school system severely limits. The growth of a lot of people and you have to do a lot of unlearning once you graduate. Yeah. Fortunately the people teaching it are products of the system.

And yeah, and I’m not blaming the teachers. They’re like, they’re doing their best and they sacrifice a lot. And so I just, it’s hard to teach what you don’t know. So yeah. I’ve tried to go back to some of the local high schools here at my old high school and let’s see if they will.

Somebody to teach this stuff, but they just look at me dumbfounded thing. Are they thinking I’m trying to sell life insurance or something like that. But I’ll let you know how that goes, but I’m not having very much luck on my side, even though I’d like to, I’d like to write the right, the wrong in the world, just like yourself.

But I don’t know. It’s frustrating. And people need it yet. People are. Open-minded to it. And I’m getting to a point where I’m just tired of it all. Just like whatever guys, numbers, speak for themselves. And that’s what that net worth line is not to get sound egotistic, but it’s that’s the score, right?

Who’s figured it out. Who has the best ideas on how do you build a career, how to use the money to grow your network. That’s not everything. That’s just not how the system works. You’ve got to go to school. You got to go get an education degree. That’s what they want. That’s the sound system still.

Yeah. So now that, and then it’s just helping other people. So giving back, whether it’s supporting people in disaster situations or being able to do things that you couldn’t like, that’s what, financial freedom would give me the ability to do that, where it’s more difficult at the time.

Yeah, it’s just going to have to make more money. And so the, money opens doors, I think, if you can brand yourself with the right authority, which you have to pay for, it can open up those doors where you get the authority to help out people in that manner to get past the gatekeepers.

Yeah. I’ll let you know, man, trying to figure it out.

All right. Appreciate it, Richard. If you guys want to do these and participate out there into the free world join our investor clubs, it’s simple. Passive cashflow.com/club. , we’ll see you guys next time. Thank you.

 

Overcome What Others Do In Real Estate

Now, another trick that folks like did you in this business inflating other income or non rental revenue, such as trash filet, additional storage fees, reserved parking or covered parking in Texas. That’s a big one for those late hailstorms money for vending machines, money from laundry machines or any type of service that may or may not be tested by the current clientele.

This has been a way to sneak deals past even the most astute, passive investors. We have understanding of underwriting, just put stuff into other income category because most people don’t look there. .

Coaching Call w/ Accredited Engineer & Hui OG

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RvMIlR6ADa0&ab_channel=LaneKawaoka

Hey guys Lane here. Normally I don’t like to brag at all. But yeah, I just want to highlight a few of these recent closings that we had. We sold off a lot of these class C properties that were a little bit of a headache to deal with some of the properties didn’t cash flow initially, which is pretty common with class C collections up and down.

But. Yes, total 114 unit in Atlanta. We a hundred percent return investors’ capital two and a half years. Crazy on another one in Huntsville, we still have 70 unit there, again, another class C for 108% return. And to be years, cut back early on another class C where we 26% returning two years.

And then in addition to a Chattanooga property class C almost a hundred percent there three years now, to say that it was a lot of hard work and dedication, but, quite frankly, we didn’t rehab all the units. We didn’t take it the full business plan yet. We felt like it was prudent to cut bait and with these great returns already.

And investors pumped to the next deal. And keep the good times. Rolling. But yeah, a lot of good things are happening, I think, especially in Huntsville. It’s one of its deepest tertiary market out there, emerging markets. If you watch my monthly reports, and just did a report of top of which in markets and it’s on there.

So a lot of the first investors we have one today, we have a coaching call. This client has been with me for quite a while. We’re going to call him the wi OJI investor, Mike. But yeah, starting to see the successes come through and people’s lives are changing through this stuff. It’s not only the deals, but it’s the holistic tax and legal asset protection.

And how do you move money around, and also lifestyle changes such as not buying your house to live in, renting for a lot of us. Makes sense. Granted though, those people aren’t listening to this podcast don’t really have interests in personal finances and financial freedom. They should go probably go by their house because it’s a forced savings account, but you guys are different, right?

So hopefully you guys enjoy this podcast with a current investor of ours and yeah, you guys want to build a relationship with us. Go to simple passive cashflow.com/club.

Hey, simple passive castle listeners. Today. We have a, another exciting coaching call with an OJI of the who pipeline club. Mike here we’ll call him like, cause that’s how people know him as, but yeah, accredited investor in several deals. We’ll talk about that, but I think today’s call is not.

Really on the basics. But where do we go from here now that we have proof of concept? But Mike wants you to give people a quick overview on yourself. What do you do for work? Just so people can get a little context. Sure. Currently I’m a construction manager with the city of Seattle. I have a civil engineering background.

Did the consulting thing for a little while but have been working as a government project manager for about six years now. It’s been doing real estate investing since 2017, started with two turn key rentals in the Birmingham area. And then along the way they come up to six or seven syndications with lane.

And yeah, just trying to see what the next steps are here for me. Yeah. So I think when you came in at 2017, your original goal was to buy some rental properties. What was your net worth? Like 600 or something or 500? I don’t know around there, I’d say, yeah. Yeah. In what, under four years you almost two X that, yeah.

Okay. Okay. So I’m just looking million-dollar net worth in terms of salary and income, you’re another frugal guy, so you’re able to put away 40 grand or so to investments every year. So just giving some people some context here. Again, if you guys are listening to this and podcasts for me, you guys can go to the YouTube channel where we have this displayed.

Also club members get access to all of these investor calls or investor coaching calls. Sign up for the club@simplepassivecashflow.com slash club. And you can watch all these. And I arrange all these coaching calls based on net worth. So you guys can quickly fall in to where you’re at super watchable.

It’s perfect. But help us out Mike, for the new guys because you’ve went through the whole entire Genesis where you started with turnkeys. Take us back to that point, some of the takeaways, but a few years after that, Yeah. To be honest, that it really mirrored your journey, I definitely piggybacked on all the training that you took, all those networking opportunities that you did, jumping on with the turnkey providers that you found in the Birmingham area made it really easy cause he hadn’t been there before.

And just decided. I couldn’t keep doing the same thing and expecting the same result and also had my son in 2016. So that was kinda my Han solo moment, as you say find a way to increase my income, to get more time to spend with him. So along the way just with the two turnkeys, and then seeing these syndications starting to pan out.

My wife’s been able to leave her job and spend her time with our son because he’s about to start kindergarten. Yeah. It worked. Huh? Good.

So you jumped on a few of these deals where a couple of these yeah. Two of them cashed out for you. Money. So that probably makes indices very happy. Yeah. It was nice to see that 40 15, I’m trying to capital come back and looking forward to what to do with the distribution. Oh, how did you guys manage your guys’ finances prior?

Like she gave you some sort of like allowance or allocation to do this crazy stuff with in the beginning. And she said changed her. I do most of the finances in my family. I think it was a real as you said, we’re very frugal. It’s very tough for us to spend a dollar. It’s not essential.

But I guess along the way just showing the math of, what we’re putting in and what we’re getting out on a month by month basis has been helpful. Using a lot of the graphics that you show in that Sankey diagram that kind of unlocked everything that really broke the dam and getting us able to be comfortable with doing the syndications slowly, building them up and just increasing that, that extra cash buffer and savings.

And then as has it progressed throughout the years, you got more and more. Investible capital that you can touch. Yeah. Yeah. It, a lot of it is from my day job that is where I get the bulk of my savings from. I’m a little conservative with the rental properties. I don’t really pull much in terms of profit.

I just keep building up that stash in case something goes wrong with them. But yeah, at least with the multi-families I feel like that’s been able to start compounding here. So one thing I know you guys did, if you guys, you can help out people, is the whole, do you rent or do you buy I’m a big proponent for renting.

I rent you had to talk to your spouse since we’re doing this crazy idea of not buying, but maybe. Help out the poor souls that need to do that thing too. I think for you, it was harder because it’s not like you didn’t have investible funds, but when we sat down and outlined it, it makes so much sense.

Site’s there. Yeah. I was lucky enough to ride the appreciation wave from 2011 to my wife and I owned a condo. In North Seattle and we sold it for more than double than what we paid for it. So that was pretty much our equity that we used to invest in first, the turn keys, and then the first batch of syndications.

So we’re most small spouses would probably chop your head off if you took that money and buy a house, a bigger house to live in, that’s the status quo. Yeah. That’s exactly what the traditional plan was. So it, really was a long road to get to, renting and then using money from the sale of a property that equity to start investing.

And it’s starting to really. Come home to roost right now. Yeah. Yeah. Cause you sold that and you got what, 300 grand that stuff after all the closing costs and whatnot we cleared about two 50. And did you invest all that two 50 or what was the deal within the household that you could invest?

I think along the way we have been. Wanting to get a primary residence again. But I asked her, let’s rent for a little while. We’re, we’re not tied to anything. And just give me a little bit of time and let’s see how this goes. And at any point, if it doesn’t seem like it works, we’ll sell these turnkeys, I’ll stop investing in these multi-families.

We’ve been able to see proof of concept. And this’ll be our fourth year renting now. And so there still is the itch to buy a primary residence. But at the same time, we haven’t completely shut the door on renting. Yeah. But I’m looking here I’m, you’re still able to put away 40 plus grand a year to investments.

The syndications are starting to cash out. You’re going to have more investible funds. Now the, again comes into play, right? You’re you’ve got to make a new deal. Or are you thinking about getting a new home to live in? Because I’m a little bit more yeah, if you, maybe if you want to, you could at this stage, cause you, you put in the three, four years of delayed gratification and. At what point? I know personally, I probably will never I don’t want to say never, but I liked renting and it’s a lot cheaper than buying a yeah. Yeah. I dunno if we’re just trading one thing for another, but there’s always the thought in the back of our head, whatever it landlord’s plans change year to year.

Now that we have our son, we’ve got a lot of stuff in the closet that I’m not really looking forward to moving. And I really want to get him into a good school district. So that’s the main thing. It’s just the stability is what we’re looking for now. And I know I don’t have to be a homeowner forever, but for me, it’s the stability for the family and the the school district.

And I know I talked to people, I know the people who’ve moved multiple times in their life and their parents have come back late and said, Oh my God, I’m so sorry. I moved from this town to that town, moved me from this school to that school and know the other kids are grown up. They’re like, I didn’t even know that was just used to that.

But just for me, my own wanting to be what I feel like is a good parent. That’s I guess my number one. Yeah. If you could keep moving at this space in 15 years, you can buy your kid up Dodge Viper. Doesn’t all will be forgiven before. It’s 21. That was my, that was what my mom was trying to get me to do this day at UHC.

And since you can buy whatever car you want, and then, so I actually just move myself too recently. And the mover is costing me a thousand bucks, but I boxed up everything and I was like, my God, that’s the last time I’m ever going to do that. But our other buddy is a mover and he said, yeah, you just tell them to come to your house and pack up all your stuff for you.

Yeah. You probably want to take your wife’s underwear with you separately, but they’ll do it for two or three points. So No, it’s just money. And you’re saving so much money every month anyway, growing your money so much before. And hopefully that helps. It’s just think of it as a few grant that you just to Chuck up to move it costs.

Yeah. I think honestly, we understand the math. I think it’s more of a feeling now than it is. Whether it makes sense, monetarily. Yeah. But we had talked about some other options, maybe outline it for folks like a bigger house or location-wise. So what are you currently thinking about now for the housing?

We’re still pretty narrow. And where we’re looking we floated the idea of moving out of the general area, but I know we seem to really like where we live. And so we’re going to. Try that at first, who knows, I don’t know, or at least as good for another few months, but we’ll see if the time comes that we have to move.

If we really have to do something. Yeah. The key is like finding a landlord that is also an unsophisticated landlord that loves a very stable tenant. And if you can bamboozle them into a longer lease, that’d be ideal for both of you and down. Yeah. I did contact the property manager recently and in the area that I wanted to live and I was like maybe we’ll just try out when you’re at first, but I really am looking for a place I want to stay long-term and she was like, Oh yeah this investor, she had a house for 25 years sold that, bought this one.

And that’s what she’s planning on doing for the next one. I’m like, Oh, that’d be, yeah, that would be perfect. But it’s. We’ll see what comes up to buy and what comes up to sell. And, trying to look for the right place to be at least for the next six years. Yeah. Yeah, because currently you pay how much per month for 2,700, which is a great deal.

Cause we got one of those landlords, this is a house they bought for their son to move into. Once he moves back to the area and we’ve been waiting for the son to move back for two years now. So who knows, maybe we even stay here another year. I don’t know. It’s probably one of those or for bearing that more, it’s probably why the son doesn’t want to go anywhere near them.

They live like five minutes away, so yeah, maybe it’s a little too close for the other guy to come back. But so when you’re looking for that next rental, what is your budget? 30 to 50. I think I’m keeping that budget the same for a house payment versus the rental. Do Jack it up to four grand.

Trust me at the end of the day, you pay four grand for a rental and you invest and it just keeps you on this path of renting that much longer. It’s going to be better. And, but just for kicks. See what you’re getting when you pressed up the Ford brand. Yeah. It’s, you’re already getting so much of a better deal when you compare what.

Rent is for that by costs. So yeah, it’d be like heads and shoulders above. Fine. Yeah. And now that you’ve been doing this for a few years, now, you can take some of these profits, the investible funds and start living with it. And that’s the way you start to do it because I know people like in your shoes, what you’re probably to keep doing is keep continuing to live in a.

Kind of like a dingier house rental for 2,700 a month for the rest of eternity, right? Yeah. But yeah. Try and consciously increase your means, which goes against everything in the personal finance world. That’s the whole point of doing this investing stuff, that’s why we’re doing it.

Is that what we’re doing at.

Yeah, I think that’s why some people do it. But I thought it was just a rack up money in your bank account. So I look at it when you’re not doing anything, but yeah, it’d be take it off the foreground. Yeah. And I’m curious what the missus says at that point. Once you start to tour those places or show pictures of it.

I mean it honestly they don’t care the, just the fact that she’ll have to tell her friends that she’s living in a place that costs four grand a month. She should, she won’t do it based on that principle.

Yeah. I know what you’re saying. The friends will probably think that she’s crazy and your likes and ADL, but. I tell my wife. Yeah, look, don’t think about what other people think about you. Life’s too short. Yeah, I know. It’s hard. Yeah.

I know. But that is a big thing. Cause people don’t understand it and they’re like, what are you doing? You’re just throwing money down the two crazy.

Okay, so let’s talk about this stuff. What do you got going on here? Why do you have so much? So that’s the thing it’s that was also part of the agreement. Oh, it’s like the COVID reserves right? Where the bank makes it, this is the life reserve that’s my escrow account.

Okay. So the deal was, if I recall you had to keep liquidity in the bank to be able to put down on a primary residence. Yeah. And so that money right there is our emergency fund, plus our future down payment. And that’s a lot of money to just be sitting at escrow. You got to ask the bank, they’re like a little bit, it’s been it’s been working really well with this arrangement.

And so I don’t know if I’m trying to. Break that arrangement at this point would be a wise decisions. Okay. So here’s some options, right? What about other than obviously investing at all? Surely you’ve seen some positive effects of this stuff starting to work and it’s real, but maybe put a portion of it as equity, right on the top of the capital stack, getting dirt.

10, 12% every month. Yeah, like an HP. Gotcha. I know a lot, what a lot of guys did was , they got to refinance their loan on their house. So he lock and they took a portion of that too. And then put it in for the equity to pay their key lock on their entire thing as arbitrage.

That’s the first option. The second option is what do you think of block five? Yeah, it’s putting money into, I can’t understand any of those terms. I’ve been, I’ve been working, trying to understand it with some of those folks in that Facebook group, maybe I just need to dedicate more time to it, but Yeah. So our mastermind is going to be doing a deep dive into this next month, but. What I’m advocating for is not really investing in block five or any cryptos in terms of Bitcoin or Ethereum. Have you heard of stable coins? Yes. After reading about it. Yeah.

Yeah. So for you guys don’t know what this is, that’s my understanding. And I don’t understand this entirely. So go do your own research, but stable coins are, as the term suggests it’s stable. But to me, like from what I hear from people who do this for what it’s worth, like most of the crypto, especially at theory and Bitcoin, now institutions are involved in this stuff and it won’t go 10 X and a couple of years anymore, but.

At least to me, I think that’s the point where I’m getting more interested in the stuff. Now, big institutions are backing it and they believe in it too, which just makes it more stable., but like the stable coins is another level beyond that of stableness. So what you’re doing, you’re loading money into this website.

You don’t have to deal with all that annoying. USB things. Some people will think that’s more security because you own it, but it’s no different than you going to, each trade or whatever stock investing thing where they app digital. But you mean like block five and I’ve done my research.

They’re, US-based, they’re insure supposedly they’re property capitalized. There are a bunch of others, but if I were to recommend one over the other, that one, just as a starting point to court research. But for if you put your money in, I think it’s G USD and block fi you’re able to make 8.6% on it.

Now, if block five goes on, there don’t come complainant. Maybe, I don’t know if, what, I don’t know, see what, like throwing 50 grand into something. That see us, like God lean more towards doing private equity versus the books, I think. Yeah. Yeah. Or maybe, go a hundred grand in pref equity and the salon and the next salon.

But in the meantime, when you wedding for the next one, just have 50 grand that block fire or something like that, or diversify over different coin basis. Coinbase Gemini. Yeah, yeah, you got to get that move in then it’s a big drag. Yeah, I know it’s a big drag or, okay, so here’s the other one.

Are you doing internet banking at this point? No, I’m not. I just didn’t feel like I had the right kind of net worth to be doing. Your net worth is higher than half a million. So it is a thing for you. Again, if we’re talking to the guy who is, has no money, don’t do and banking, right?

Put your ear my son, go focus on making more money or investing in a rental property for now. If you guys get shiny object syndrome so much, you gotta be like Mike and do this for few years. And then you can think about these things, but this is even if you’re a lower net worth, I would still recommend the jury because you have so much debt equity, you might as well just stick it into insurance product, which is probably the most stable things out there. And just let it grow at 5%, at least. So that’s the third option I have for you. Okay, it’s just load this into there. And then next question is how much do you do? What I’m looking at here is you’re able to put away maybe 40 grand a year, but you have so much built up in this escrow crowd and you have, you got to get it deployed.

So you have to build a plan that’s six years or five years, and you have to stick to a Mount. Obviously I wouldn’t go more than 40, 50 grand per year because that’s all your liquidity. Sometimes I have a general rule of thumb of one third of your net, which is in your case one third of 40 grand, so 10 to 15 a year.

Okay. But maybe I might bump that up because you have so much luck in the beginning. So maybe, we can connect you with the life insurance guys, but. Maybe I would go in with how does 20 a year for six years now? That’s the cashflow that includes the fees too. That is what you’d loaded in. The fees is probably gonna, you’re going to take the haircut that first year for sure.

But your money is not doing anything anyway. So it might as well loaded in there for now. Like you should be able to intellectually talk about this decision to your spouse who is controlling this escrow account for you, because I would make the argument that the life insurance is more secure than any of these things.

Okay.

Shouldn’t have more than a hundred grand in here anyway. FDI FEIC. Yeah. You load it in there. And another thing that we’re tinkering on in the mastermind is instead of taking loans from Penn mutual, the insurance company or whoever insurance company you’re using, we’re using a third-party bank to get an even lower interest rate.

So if we borrow from Penn mutual at 5%, There’s another third party bank that will do give us a collaterized loan on the life insurance. You sign the, like the bank and they’re giving us like 3.5% for prime, minus half a point or something like that. So it’s I think that’s better than a hilar.

Yeah. Yeah, crazy stuff right up there. So I would try and do 20. You know what if this is not going to go down, I would load it up with 40, 50 grand in the first year and try and backdate the first payment. So you can load a hundred grand in the first year. Okay. Does that makes sense?

Yeah, it does.

And then. Year two year three, you’re going to have to fund it know for 40, but if you only funded up to five or 10 grand, it’s not the end of the world. It’s going to take a lot for it to not cave in. If you understand that kind of, that concept. Kevin, what do you mean? Yeah. So caving in is just like non-technical term that I’ve created where it’s no, you have to commit to a certain amount, right?

Every year, where, if not the dividends I think the fees start to pay and cannibalize itself, the policy. Okay. And I’m not an expert, right? This is why we work with experts to originate these things. But I know from a high level to, amounts to put in.

But how it’s designed, just like in taxes, I know how taxes work and you should know how taxes work. But you don’t know what forms to do, right? That’s their job. In fact, that’s their only job. Their job is not strategy. That’s yours. It’s like how we’re doing here. Your job is to figure out how much you’re going to put anywhere.

And before I have the conversation with the salesman, because the salesman is obviously not really aligned with what you want, they’re going to probably try and load you up in the longest policy for the biggest amount, because that’s what lines their pockets with commissions. Okay. But. Yeah. I would just throw in a hundred grand right off the bat, and then you have a 150 grand.

So it gets you that in the next few years, and you’ll probably be making more money and hopefully the investments keep going well. But at the end of the day, or if the worst case scenario, you bring back how much you put in. Yeah. It’s not the end of the world. Initially when I did my infinite banking policy, I did 50 grand and I did, I actually the same thing.

I backdated the first payment to put in a hundred grand in the first month, one after it. Boom, boom. So then I was supposed to do a 50, 50, 50, 50, and then when I was first starting the syndication journey, , I. Spend all my money and invest it all. So I didn’t have much money. And I was like, Oh crap. So I had to go down to the minimum where it wouldn’t keep in.

And I think it was somewhere between on $50,000 commitment. I could put at least like five or 10 or something like that. You can do that. Or if not take a loan from yourself and paid the premium. So the backdating is like a year, zero. Contribution. Yeah. I talked to your agent on how to do that.

Okay. But that’s for your case, right? Because you have so much dead liquidity right now. I’m not doing anything. Whereas most people, they don’t have that much. Most people have a hundred grand or less, but they might have a higher net where you’re able to put away 40 grand per year.

A lot of other people, they might be higher. 50 to a hundred. But that’s how I would play this. And as you see, it’s a art form. But should you lower this amount that you have to keep in here as cash reserves? Because the boss says, do you know that strategy obviously changes a little bit too, but.

Those are the three in that order that I would allocate that stuff. Okay. But as far as investments, you’re just on the one or two a year plan, is that yeah, that’s what I’ve been able to do. Once I get enough to put into something, it goes right in. Yeah. This is not too important, but I know you got kids.

The term life insurance. Is this through your work or is this additional? The standard insurance is through my work and the mutual is my own policy. Okay. If you start doing an infinite banking policy with the whole life, you probably should just, this has been done, then I would get, just get rid of that.

That’ll save you 500 bucks a year. Yeah. But yeah, I mean it’s, so if you died a million, $2 million is good thing. Yeah.

But you still have, is this company like TSP or four Oh three B 401k stuff. So I did the 401k. I closed that out last year. And I have about. $20,000 in my Roth that I can take out as straight contributions without paying any penalty. And the other, the lower amounts are my spouse’s plans and that’s her money.

So I haven’t pressed her on pulling that. Yeah. But so this is not 133, it’s 20 now. And then. It’s like I could take out 20 of that without the pain. Oh, okay. Okay. Yeah. So it’s like what? Vanguard? 500 or something like that. Yeah, exactly. Yeah. That’s cool. You want some stocks and is that, I don’t need it.

It’s more like it’s there and I prefer not to touch it cause I don’t want to pay the fees, but I’m open to eventually taking that all out. did it with my 401k last year. I’ll pay the taxes on that. Yeah. And luckily, because the wife doesn’t work, you’re not in a high tax bracket, so you can make maneuvers like that.

I personally don’t have any paper assets, but I always just ask you guys and where your head is. That’s fine. I’ve already taken out a good. Chunk of my Groth contributions along the way over the past four years too. Is this all Roth or? Yeah, it’s all wrong. Okay. But only 20 grand has contributions, I think.

Yeah. That’s all that’s left that other contributions, but it’s not a self-directed. No it’s a wrong, yeah.

I might have up. Something for you later,

but yeah. Any other questions or, what level of tax professional should I be seeing? Cause my buddy who used to do it he took a real job, so he’s done taking clients and then I’ve always been wanting to sing that I needed an estate plan and a will like, cause the Anderson folks. Who should be talking to, is that, too much for me?

I think they’re, I think they’re cheap for what they do. We definitely don’t need, like one of the white glove services that are gonna charge you 10 30 grand to do your taxes, but the trust, the state stuff, I think that’s separate. But yeah, I can connect you with a couple people on that side.

But, yeah. That’s so that’s next on your list of deep to do items. Yeah. So if you guys are listening, if you guys have a you guys don’t want that sucks. It’s going to go through probate, start do that. You guys need to trust, especially if you have kids.

Yeah. Yeah. We’ll play around with more that strategies like irrevocable trusts. Once the network gets a little higher, but. Can get the trust set up because the trust is just essentially instructions to avoid probate. So the state city, I don’t know who gets their hands over the place, but it’s just a way of taxing and running away.

But yeah, that’s a good goal. A lot of people in the bubble that was something that they need to get done. It’s something that people that lay. But yeah, as far as the taxes, you don’t have moving off the rental property, so things are getting easier just to have a bunch of Caitlin’s.

Yeah. I still don’t think you should do it in triple tax, but it didn’t take a genius to do it. And you’re educating yourself and you should be able to spot check what they want. Anybody does. Yeah. The situation is not super complicated, but. And you should be able to supervise them too.

It shouldn’t be that different from the last three years. Yeah. I’m curious how much passive losses you have on your 80 to 85 forum? Have we asked your buddy for that? Oh, I was looking at that the other day. Yes. So you guys, this is super important. If you guys don’t have over 85, 82 form, you need to get it.

And we’ll CPA. Typically they withhold that because they don’t want you to run off to another CPA. So the way they keep them keeping you under their collect checks. But but yeah, that, this is what is on your suspended, passive loss. Buckets these investments, rental properties, especially passive private placements in syndication gives you a lot of passive losses the first year that you may not use soft passive income.

So it goes on this 80 to 85 form taxes

of you guys are writing that number down, going to go home control F over taxes. But it is pretty neat to see those passive losses, that, those big numbers, how much do you have? Is it I think I’m like at 130 and that was at the end of 2019. Oh yeah. So who knows? Maybe two 50, 300 now. Yeah.

Yeah. You’re seeing, that is at this point, it’s don’t really need the pay taxes if you don’t choose to. But before we go, let’s talk quickly about real estate professional status. Cause your spouse doesn’t work. She’s working her ass off should help too much with your kids. Not that I’m working from home.

I really see how much work it is. Yeah. What about, so we had talked about this, you’re trying to get real estate professional status to use the passive losses to potentially offset your ordinary income. Income and capital gains on the sales of the rental properties. Yeah. One thing, your guys’ tax bracket is in that pie, right?

Because you took, you opted for their quality of life instead of you kicking more, but at work, getting paid more and for working. So you’re not in a huge tax bracket and I, and if you guys are under. No $330,000 AGI. I wouldn’t really freak out too much about getting that roasted professional status, Texas, but you still have you kinda given up on that, is it not make sense to you now?

Yeah, it doesn’t really make sense. Just trying to get the sheer number of hours to I don’t know. I wouldn’t, I would’ve had her like cold calling people that stuff that we hate to get. Yeah. If you are a doctor, and if only you are a doctor, then it makes sense, but you probably wouldn’t care.

You probably, and I probably wouldn’t be friends, probably wouldn’t care about this stuff, but cool. Anything else or any other stuff for the folks? No, I think it’s just interesting to see, cause we ran through this. Back when I was starting, I put together my little manifesto of what I was going to do, and we had a plan then, things change along the way, but it’s generally going along with what we thought it would be back in 2017.

Yeah. And another person who gets over the one, the two comma club. Yay. I’ll drink a beer tonight. Yeah. Yeah. You like expensive beers. That’s what the movers aren’t taking. I’m taking my boxes of beer in my own car. But but yeah, congratulations moving into the world of a credit status and I think you can agree that it doesn’t feel much different.

It really doesn’t, but happy to make it. Yeah. Now we’ve got to get you to four and a half million. Yeah. Yeah. That’s like graduating high school. So you go to your nephew’s high school graduation and you’re like, yeah, man, that’s nothing like, maybe I might come to your college graduation or when they actually do something in life.

But yeah. That’s getting to accredited. Status is all about that’s true. That is true. But yeah. Thanks for listening guys. If you guys liked this sign up for the investor clubs, we’ll pass the cashflow.com/club. Stuff really works. Real and yeah. Thanks for listening. Like.

Coaching Call w/ W2 & Business Franchise Owner

https://youtu.be/WAbXXPmgumY

Hello, simple passive cashflow listeners. Today, we are going to be doing a coaching call with Ahmed. Who’s going to show us all about him building his portfolio, how you’ve been buying some rentals with some buddies of his and where he is going financially as he is right on the verge of financial independence.

But, thanks for joining us. Amen. Once you, give us a quick context on yourself. Thank you Elaine for having me. it’s a dream come true. I’ve been watching your podcast for a number of years now. my story is, I think it’s just a typical American story. I came here to go to school, an immigrant, now taking the next step of financial independence.

the funny thing is that, I, Came here in 89, graduated in 94, with accounting and moved away from accounting, from working in that industry for a year and a half. And ever since, I’m an it professional. met my wife, in Mankato, where I went to school, we just celebrated our 28 years of a partnership.

Being a father of a twin daughters. I spent my entire time, in Minnesota, I think as the saying goes, wherever the immigrant lens being, they tend to stick around. so the story that I like to tell is this to first and foremost, how I have embraced frugality, personal responsibilities in finance, as well as how I see real estate as an important vehicle to get to the next level.

Yeah, I definitely got a lot of first-generation wealth people listening to the podcast. what, first generation is, secondary industry generation. You’re born with it. but yeah, first-generation doesn’t necessarily mean immigrant, but it’s just the first generation where your net worth is over a million.

Yeah. I’m thinking, a lot of people, they get college degrees, but they’d never hit that threshold but, Yeah, a lot, very, financially minded frugal folks they pay for value. So you’re fitting right that moment. Like when did we first connect when a couple of years ago or something like that, I’ve done that, so I first bought my first rental property with a partner in 2015.

and I started listening to simple passive cashflow, About 2017 or so. And the reason you hit a chord with me is that because, I had some ideas, did not know what the concepts of fires and all of these things behind me, but at the same time though, just being a numbers guy, it never attached to me till you started, speaking about, passive income, what does that mean?

it’s not necessarily, that, I call self retirement too, that, you know what, just remove the dependency on paycheck. But at the same time though, it just does not happen. You have to work for it. And that’s something that I took up from your podcast and from your teaching.

Oh. So just to give people a quick rundown of the stats, you make a route 120 grand a year to day job, which is pretty typical for our listener base. Mostly six figures and above. let’s say accounting things. That’s a side hustle that I’m doing right now, late, and, not to digress, but, Graduating the County moved away.

my day job is it I’m a software quality assurance manager for a consultant company. I have had many different types of roles in it I’ve implemented large scale systems, mostly CRM set financials. And now I quote unquote, find bugs for a living.

But accounting is, when I started investing in real estate, one thing that I bring to my partnership is that, I say, for example, the bookkeeping, the accounting, skipping the numbers, dealing with the CPAs, stay ahead of that, the tax laws, and then, I started doing it a little bit commercially too, because, I was asked even know, so my business partner, who’s, one of my business partner, he’s a broker and he desperately needed some help with his books.

So now I do side hustles of some real estate bookkeeping, not to, limit myself, but not to stress myself also. Yeah, of course. You’d do a side hustle. That’s. I mean it’s either that or a what? Six grand a year buy a couple more rentals, At 3000 a piece, I’m sure you set to the nice thing about the side hustle is you can stuff different, deductions or expenses through there.

what kind of things do you buy and shelter under that thing? Mostly office expenses right now, so remember the chair that I’m sitting on needs to be replaced, mostly, the office expenses, I actually started out with, say for example, some of those, software programs that, I thought that, it’s going to help me grow.

and that’s what I started. And then I thought that, you know what, and then, the time that I spent for my partnerships to, because we pay for two of my partners, should we self-managed and we pay our partners to manage our properties. And that the same thing goes for me, I’m spending an inordinate amount of time, keeping the books, making sure that, our financials are up-to-date and our partners have at the true 360 degree view of it.

So I charged back to the partnership. But, the question that you’re asking me is that, what are the, some of the benefits right now? Mostly I will call it like, the, the soft expenses, which is in office supplies, softwares, conferences, by the way, just attended a real estate conferences or charging that on my side hustle.

We’ve got to get that to $6,000 a year down to zero. That’s the goal.

So the savings rate of 15%, I know this is coming from cause you’re coming. You’re like a refugee from the personal finance blogs, fear. They fixate on this 15%, which to me means nothing because I got guys making 600 grand a year, a million dollars a year fit a percentage. Isn’t that big. Tell me, how much money are you able to save either in stocks, mutual funds, real estate, anything every year, like what’s your net get is question.

You make a buck, 30 grand, you spend some money on vacation, some I-phones and some fun stuff. And then your daily expenses, how much do you have on a monthly basis or annual basis? Would you figure. if I look at the watermark, whether it changes or not. So say for example, that cash number that I’m showing you about 38,000, whether it’s staying static, because you have quote unquote, then that’s saving experience.

What you’re talking about is that, maybe, our savings doesn’t have to go into the cash. It’s always, should go back into investments. So yeah, include that. Include that. I got guys , still putting money in the 401k. I say, keep that, even though I say don’t do that. But just want to know what this is the question, what’s your velocity currently, right?

If are you able to save 30 grand a year or you have to save a hundred grand a year? I definitely can say that I’m saving between 25 to $30,000 a year. Okay. Okay. So where your income level is. I would have expected it to be a little bit higher. and I know you’re cheap.

I just know that about you.

Yeah. most of the guys is in my group or like at least 30 grand a year. And that includes some guys make it under, 80, 90,000 a year. Granted, there are single dudes, but you got a family, but. I would say people in your kind of, you’re more established. You’re not making big purchases.

They’re around 50 grand a year. you don’t have to answer it now, but maybe think there’s something that you’re spending your money on every year maybe private school education, or I dunno, there’s something going on, man. There’s a hole in your pocket. We’re at 10, 10 or 20 grand is going.

maybe your spouse is. Run it off to Nordstrom. You gonna send them the Macy’s but think, jot that one down as anything does the mine. And lane it’s a happy medium. if you remember, coming from the David and sees a piece of the world, which I’m going to cover a little bit later on too, I think that’s a phenomenal, kind of dementia , that I had embraced, but, being a free spirit and a nerd, obviously you can see, everybody can see that, being the nerd of the family and then the free spirit of, an artist wife, I think that’s a happy medium you’re right though.

my wife is. it’s weird, she is, financial frugal, what you call that wild spirit, so you’re right. Just being the families. We could do a lot better with the savings rate, but , it’s one of the inspiration that came from her is that, you know what, we can draw a happy medium.

We don’t go overboard on anything, but, quote unquote, let’s not go super cheap either, but it’s easy to say that, but. Yeah. My philosophy on the whole quality of life and spending is, get a few years, four to six years of years where you’re saving 30 to 50 grand in there.

But once you peak or that 50 grand, you have the ability to free spirit at that point and buy some nice stuff. And that’s what I’m cool with it at the end, but only if. The investments, the castles and investments is paying for crap like that. Got it. I feel like where you’re at maybe.

we’ll get going into that, but maybe it might happen. Tighten the belt for a couple years, get bumped that up, but then reap the rewards later. But, while you’re mentioning your spouse, what did they think of the whole? you’ve got a portfolio of over a dozen units.

What did they think of that stuff? What’s their overall. One of the conscious thing that I have tried to do, because this is real estate being, the saving grace for many families, but at the same time, the most litigation, industries. So I consciously, created a firewall for my families, not to be exposed to the real estate that much.

In fact, so remember I’m talking about, creating state, trust States and what have you trying to create those firewalls as much and not to have those decision-makings, the spouses might hear this complaint that, yeah, you guys are doing all of these things, but anytime, things go South.

we have to hear that, and that’s one of the complaint that my wife had to that, when things started going sour, then you start coming in and, the venting, they, my wife did not like the venting part, so I consciously, kept her away from this, we are all aligned on the end goals, but how we get there, she left it on me.

Does that make sense? I get it. just do it. I do. I never say any of the bad stuff that happens. Bring it upon yourself. If that, say that jokingly, maybe the problem is if they don’t see you putting in, you’re currently putting in 30 grand a year buying one unit a year, but what if they see.

You buying one and a half units or two units every year that saving an extra $30,000. So it gets you up to 50, 60,000 a year. What does that do to your bottom line that bumps your cashflow up 5,000, $6,000 a year, right? Do you think that they’re making that equation or that cost. Yeah, they’re not you’re right.

So keeping them encapsulated, of the problem. And the biggest thing that I started doing the financial piece of diversity a while back, and then I can move away from it is because, the conversation that should happen within a week, at least. with your spouse, especially having, stay at home, spouse that I have, because we have to, because of our daughters twins, we didn’t have any support structures around us.

So my wife actually had to stay at home, to raise our daughters, so that, but having that conversation, I think that tremendously helped once we got into a philosophy that, you know what, yeah, this is what we going to do and try to do a data verse, try to stay within our means, follow the envelope system and what have you.

Yeah. you’re driving the ship, but she got her in the bottom, like shoving coal into the furnace, just doing stuff. He doesn’t know. What does she care if you save an extra 15, 20 grand a year to buy a rental, I don’t see it, but that doesn’t mean that they need to be involved.

I just see it different. I see so many different arrangements of how people do things, but I don’t know if you want a different effect, right? You want to save a little bit more money to buy more rentals. You definitely have to do a different action. If not, you’re insane. It says Einstein.

One thing that I want to bring your attention to is that, based on, the circle that you, you associate with, that distribution number that I’m showing 8,400, that’s the first time I’ve taken a distribution this year, and my goal is, and I’ll cover that, that’s my financial goal is that, I want to see in a consistent distribution, out of all of my partnership on all of my assets.

What’s your thoughts on that? Yeah. I think that’s your problem. you segregate all this stuff and this distribution is where did you pull this? 8,400 bucks. It’s just what you felt comfortable with. No, it should be whatever that thing makes or doesn’t make.

That’s what comes into your personal life count every month, if you’re having this type of problem, right? You supposed to, I didn’t care do it however you want. But another framework I would recommend for you, and we’re not going to get too much into this, but. I would pick up the book profit first by Mike

He has this framework, about he has got these charts on here. Let me copy this over and I’ll put it into your thing right here. Do you have your mom on your podcast? Yeah, I think I did. But I just put it into the chart here. So it says okay, based on a certain revenue range, let’s just stick you in this column.

A this is how much you should be spending on profit owners, pay taxes, operations. what is your top line income about, let’s just say let’s backwards engineer it. So let’s say you’re making a hundred grand, right? You just save 15% for taxes, but the real estate is different.

You don’t pay taxes, but I always say do that first, but the whole premise is like the profit and owner’s pay. You need to be paying yourself these amounts and not just some random, Oh, I felt like paying myself 8,400 look, honey, we made 8,400. This is a way of forcing you. To take some profits off the table, because that’s the saddest thing in life.

These entrepreneurs, they build these businesses and put it, always put it back into research and development and operating expenses or marketing stuff. never take it out and their family just gets disenchanted by this whole thing, because this is black pit. So just take the look at these percentages and it’s not gospel, but

try and understand why the percentages are working that way. So owners pay that might be you putting into a bank account and eventually taking it out as 8,400 or whatever at the end of the year. But profit is something that’s consistent. Profit is something that they can see in their bank account and get on the team.

Who cares if you get another rental is what they say, who cares? What’s in it for me? you get 5%, right? Or imagine if you gave your kids one 10th of this right now, everybody’s on the team. Now. I’m not a big fan of this. Everybody, screaming up and seeing kumbaya, but this might work for you guys.

So just something I think about. but it might be another thing too, right? Like I know you went to Dave Ramsey, he brainwashed you guys with the whole debt stuff. How’s that going? you’ve got a lot of debt on these properties, as you can see, I documented that I actually moved away from his teaching.

Is that because, buying cash for property simply does not work, and so without that, and, say for example, leverage works. and I think he’s teaching, where I differed is that, quote unquote. let’s set aside, they ran this out. As soon as the origins of the world at the end of the day, don’t do stupid things.

I think that’s what they teach. But at the same time , in terms of, growing well, though, I feel like that, first teachers of how to be responsible and then, take on, leverage debt that makes sense, don’t buy, things that doesn’t, generate any income or they appreciate,

and I moved away from his teaching, but I still follow some of the principles, we still do, all the involved systems, trying to stay within. And the budgets, I try to make my disposable income as low as possible, and that’s something though. I know you have our strong feelings about it, and I’m seeing, the other way around too lane, just to digress, how moving money away from financial markets to, other avenues real estate is definitely one. So I have seen my network, switching from financial markets to real estate.

I think I have for the first time, but I think this year I went below 50% of my net worth. That’s more into real estate than, financial market. Yeah. And that was something else I caught on here. you’ve got a lot of money in the 401k and on these paper assets, that’s the trend, right?

Like you’re moving the needle more to real assets, which just happens over time. It took me a long time too, but that’s natural. but like your spouse, , it seems like they’re not entirely on board, but how did that whole discussion about that come around?

debt. Oh, concept. She was absolutely on board with me. In fact, my spouse was , wasn’t very happy when I, put that primary house for a mortgage, so I have a line of credit, hilar that I use it as a, to find that some of my investments, and then I thought that he didn’t want, why not, just lock the rate, because the rates are so low now, lock the rate, take a lower rates and let you know, but still, aggressively pay that off.

so she wasn’t, at all happy about that. the dad Evers lifestyle, she enjoys it. She doesn’t mind that at all because it does provide that financial peace. Okay. Cool. And then, as I said, I have consciously encapsulated her because if you see the numbers that you’re showing, lane for the real estate, over $4 million off, a real estate under ownership, the number that I’m not showing is the debt.

It’s about three plus millions, that we have, I think 2.8 is probably what the debt that we have. So as I am as a, as an investor, I’m personally guaranteeing that loan by the way, but we know that it’s coming, against the real estate.

So that’s one of the other reasons too, that, I am not preaching, that, In order for that, you should not, take on debts. if you don’t have to, I still say that, but I do see that, that could be utilized, judiciously, as long as you build that skill.

I agree. I agree. I get frustrated sometimes like that Dave Ramsey they affiliate really closely with the whole Jesus Christ and Bible stuff. Yeah. So they don’t follow it themselves. I have to tell you that, lane, at the end of the day, you have you own properties in the Southern part of the, the state.

it’s a lot better than I do. But, I live in the twin cities of Minnesota, you cannot buy a property cash. That’s just simply does not happen. It does not happen. And you don’t have to be real sick about it. I think one of the biggest, newer points is did these days is inflation is going to be coming.

not like in the next few years, but it’s coming without a doubt. The pale for Ella stimulus. this is the way to. So to lock in this great debt and just wait this out, because in the end, savers are going to be the people who get killed. People who put money under their bed or not doing anything with it right now and playing the waiting game.

They’re the ones who are going to be losing. but yeah, you got this nice little portfolio peer. I have the spreadsheet. and if you guys check these out on the YouTube channel, it’s, you kids can actually see the numbers, but. Talk us through how you started acquiring these properties up in Minnesota and North Carolina.

Because I think when we first chatted your artists set on buying properties near your local area, but how did this all come about, help the new guy getting started. Take us back to 2015, 16 when you picked up these first few. That’s perfect. I am the perfect story for why people should invest into real estate because I am that person in 2011 at the heart of the downturn, we have sold our property for a loss because I did not want to be a landlord, from that person, to in 2015 buying my first rental, property.

And the reason, I made that switch is because first and foremost, Lane. I think, I believe in , not believe people blindly, build a relationship. relationship has its ups and downs, so my business partner, then from that point onwards, my realtor, who had helped us, the property that we live in right now, It’s a rainbow that we rehabbed.

and we moved here because of the school district, and that, from that point onwards, he has almost become like a family members, but at the same time, he helped me acquire a property. We own it together for, that was the first property I bought.

And that’s the message that I wanted to get across that, what. all of us, we think that, if you don’t think that you have a shortcoming, you’re misjudging yourself, but at the same time, I also feel like that, we always undersell ourselves in terms of our skills, but I know what I’m capable of, what my strengths are.

So I have started equating relationship to partnership. So this entire, portfolio that you’re seeing, it’s built out of three partnerships. the first one is a real estate broker that, I had known for many years, he acquires the properties, she’s helped manage the properties, and the partnership pays for that.

and then I bring in different sets of skills. I keep the numbers and then, with this partnership, we are doing something very interesting, lane, being a realtor, as most of the time, the realtor’s mindset is that, keep that property and exit tree.

so we have spent a lot of money, as you said, put the money back into the business , to keep access, all of our properties, have , all of those things, are done. So it’s almost like owner’s exit ready. so the trend line for me is that, 2015 one property is 2016 two, but on average I’ve been acquiring two properties, every single year, even during the COVID I think we have, three acquisitions this year.

So on this first partnership, maybe walk us through each partnership. Do you guys put up the money separately? Who does the sweat equity? And then how did, how do you guys split the payouts is a the cap half, or how does, how do you work these deals? So what had happened is that, for the partnership based in Minnesota, and then I will also answer the question that, why did I end up, spread out, but for the partnership in Minnesota, what happens is that, yeah, it’s 50 50 partnership, but, I would say higher percentage of investment came from myself and my partner,

yeah, he does the sweat equity. and what happens is that, we can pull in a loan payback to me, we decide what’s a fair, loan paid back to me and we are carrying that. And then, we are working towards that, so essentially what happens is that even if we end up selling a property, which we have done, and we are converting from, single families to, we can moving into a town home, for us, less maintainers, but that’s a different story.

And we also can running our commercial loans to 30 or, papers to, that’s how the story. But, with this partnership, the way we build this up is that, majority of the, investment is coming from myself, my partner also put up cash, wherever it needed to, in fact, he floats all of our invoices for Tampax.

So what we ended up doing is that, we look at the cash contributions of each property, and then if you’re selling it first, what we do we take out is that, let’s pay back that capital off each partners. And then we split the appreciation. Okay. And so who’s putting in the debts. So like on the second property, actually, let me first mention this.

I like what you did than the first one. Like you just bought it yourself, Because you don’t know what you don’t know. So before you start jumping into bed with people you don’t know, or you sorta know it’s good to just do it at yourself. So you know that, Oh, the cap ex floating, that’s a pain in the butt or not a big deal.

And you know how much it’s worth. So I think that was a good move on your part. but yeah, so the first school around in the partnership, with the realtor who supposedly, I think he does more of the sweat equity, operation, and especially on the deal finding side on the large syndication deals, the way we break it down is like, One third is who brought the money.

One third is who found the deal. One third is operation, there’s all these small intangibles like on this deal whose debt this is a Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac loan. And who’s that name is it’s actually, all of these are LC back loans, so both the partners are liable for the loans.

Okay. why did you not go with putting all the loans in your name and getting a little bit better interest rate as a Fannie Mae Freddie Mac? What was the, you had to do that late when we first started, because, we did not have that, this, the story of, LCC and not having an income.

We had to do that. I think out of this portfolio, there are two loans that are our personal names. We actually have now started doing that. What you just said, which is that you’re putting the properties, taking out of the commercial loans for the 20 year amortization. Getting out of that and putting it into the cheaper money we started doing that.

That’s what I would do. And, just compensate yourself a little bit, admit that might be like worth five or 10% of the general partnership here. You’re saying that you are a hundred percent, So out of this entire portfolio. especially the ones in Minnesota, I think there are two properties still under the commercial loan, interest rate is decent, but as you said, with the 20 year MBA is just killing yourself.

Yeah, but you don’t really sucks about that commercial loan. what’s the term length, what’s the term on the loan? five years. Five years. Yeah. Yeah, dude, that sucks. get out of that. that’s a dangerous loan go. No less than seven years. Yeah, we are. You are right though. We are right on the cusp of, twos.

That’s going to probably readjust, but, we will, as I said, this year we are doing two things, at least on the properties in Minnesota, we are getting away from single families. We are looking at a little bit higher value, added, townhomes where the rents are actually higher, lane.

So we are converting our single families to townhomes and a second part, even with the HOA. By the way, with the HOA. And the second part is that we are taking the 20 year notes to a 30 year notes. Okay. I would say get those commercial notes down to get the term lengths up, just do Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, and put it in one of your guys’ names and work it out.

Maybe you get one, maybe he gets one, you split it that way. So you’re not splitting hairs and 55% here, 45% to that guy, right? yeah, I get all those commercial loans. and whatever you don’t talk to Lenny brokers. Those guys are. Stupid. they’re gonna want you to do it all in one loan or like cross-collateralized and put multiple of these in one.

Don’t do that. that’s what they love that because it’s a large loan and they can pick up their origination fees. But the problem with that is , if you wanted to get rid of one of the properties, you can’t, you block the whole loan. So you’re right. Chris driving crazy. You’re trolling all over the place and Facebook groups and whatnot.

Don’t mind. I want to take this chance to answer one of your questions that you had asked me earlier, which is that, Y move away from the local market to outside markets, lane. So for me, the biggest, driving force was entry points. What I was noticing is that, how much more can my money buy?

And that’s what I was seeing, especially with small multiplexes. I remember I went through the life cycles of, I think you probably have talked about at knowledge, see about, the real estate investors starting out visiting your family’s portfolios and get into small multiplexes and then, midsize multiplexes and then, obviously larger multi-plex.

So I’m on that small multiplexes right now. Multi-families. And what I saw is that, my money was not buying enough in the twin cities market. So that’s why he started branching now. Yeah. So I would probably not recommend doing what you’re doing. I think you’re okay.

Cause you know how to do this, but most people do not have the ability to do what you’re doing. Correct. I would not recommend if you’re listening, doing this, because now when you’re going over five units, you’re getting crappy commercial loans. You’re not getting Fannie Mae Freddie Mac it’d be course debt.

would you have to go to million dollar loan sizes or more? You’re not getting the economies of scales that you are with a hundred unit where you get a property manager who sits at your building and a guy driving around in a golf cart, fixing out work orders. All this stuff is still third party.

Really super expensive repairs. and then the biggest issue is now you’re going to different places, you got different partners and you just a Russian roulette in a way which of those guys are going to screw you over. this stuff works when it works. I would say whatever you do either got to stay safe, small with the four units and under, or just go LP syndication and go big.

But you’re obviously picking this road, you’re the bunker, right? Which I think it’s fine. you’re an outlier again. If you guys want to read more into this, go to simple passive castle.com/syndication, which is this indication guide and , it’s a huge article, go command F or whatever, and search for mom and pop investor.

And there’s a myriad of reasons why you don’t want to do it. Almond is doing right here. But, but yeah, what’s next? where are you going? Are you going to keep doing this or is this worth it like the reason I need to, See this thing through a little bit longer is, this model, because, by the way, I’m also investing into syndication, I was just going to amplify what they, you said, the learning curve to get this thing to manage and then, develop this partnerships across state lines, it’s not for everyone. In fact, 90% of the investors probably should not be doing that. It’s only because I think, either you or somebody else said that. It’s all about, even if it’s indication, it’s all about relationship, you should know the syndicator that you’re trusting with.

And then, most of the time I think there are, people, repeatedly invest with the same set of indicators because they believe they build that relationship. one thing that I wanted to point out is that, lane, just to answer your questions is I’m just using a very simple formula that, each of my units needs to provide me at least a hundred dollars a month.

so if my, goal is to reach that $5,500, how do I get there fast? So now I’m super concentrating on that North Carolina partnership because we are buying, smaller multi-families, but you are right though. You pointed out a few things, which is that, just by doing this, Kind of a small scale.

We are never getting the economics of scale. I think that’s so important. And that’s one of the areas that I’m looking into that, what are the things that we can do at that small volume? We probably would never be able to do that, but it’s one of five points that you brought up that, as a mom and pop investors, if we think small like this, we would never get the small, economic social scale.

And then also. let me dig a little bit and get people confused a little bit. So how did you find that North Carolina operator, the person that worked what was your due diligence process and why did you work with them? family members, , so this is a partnership that I built in each of the trial areas.

So it’s been a family member, who’s a partner and then, he brought in two other people that I did not know a single thing about them. You’re right. Yeah. it’s, again, it’s a crapshoot, right? It’s almost like a throwing a dirt, obviously worked out because now, second years of existence, we went from one to 10 units and it’s working out and in terms of, everything, we match, but it was pure luck though.

You’re a hundred percent. I think the way he did it was good. that’s better than going on bigger pockets or working with a fortune builder partner education and another, an expert. Next question here. How did you guys structure it? Did you guys have some kind of partnership document written out, outline few things that could go wrong and how you would remediate that?

And is it within an LLC or something it’s with an LLC is an operating document. But I think what you pointed out it’s something that our sec lawyer has been asking for as well, what is the succession plan? we don’t have that and we need to work on that.

no, it’s fine. I think it’s fine. Here’s my thought process. Like you don’t really need, even if you have really good documents, it doesn’t matter if people aren’t on the up and up. Yeah. You could. As long as the people they act in good faith and they’re good business people, if you don’t really need any documents, technically in my opinion.

But, another reason why, I don’t like doing this stuff is, I don’t know, like working with people who have a net worth of under 2 million, because, what’s, these properties worth 40, 50, a hundred grand. if a $10,000 repair goes around and somebody has a tough time, they can just steal 10 grand.

Cause that’s a lot of money to them. But if a guy is worth $2 million net worth. They’re not gonna screw people over 10 grand, not even a question. Yeah. It wouldn’t have been on my register. but I don’t know that may not be a good, ask your partner how much your net worth is because you never know, but that’s just a thought process I have.

That’s why I’ll never do a private money lending to a house flipper who drives around a truck. I’m not saying that’s bad, but Hey, not with my money. Look, I’m going to be very discriminatory with my money and kind of create rules around certain things like that. It’s my money. I’m the investor. I call the shots.

But, okay. I think you have fun with us, and that’s why I think. Keep doing it personally for you. So you weren’t able to scale up I’m hoping to pick your brain on a few of the topics, lane. I never did what you did, right? Like I never went to the five to 50 unit.

I saw the issues and complications at. But I never went to the depth you did. I never really did it. It was all intellectual and thought process for me. Oh, I don’t want to do that. I’m just going to go to the bigger stuff. No, but you are right though, because you constantly have talked about your turnkeys, in, in Birmingham.

And you said that, one camp X will wipe off all of the games I’ve seen that, and one of the things that I put down on my observations that most of the real estate investors do not understand that they are not making money. Yeah. I’m with you on that one, that, lane, the biggest challenge for most of the real estate investors is that, they are so much into the weeds because, they have to be in the weeds because, they are trying to sell of the properties, the market is not there.

They did not buy the property smart. So I taught you, people should take a big long at heart. real estate is a fantastic, vehicle to get you to a promise land, if you do not pay attention, if you’re not aware, it’s very easy to get derailed.

And this is where I open arms, welcome you to syndications because now, the ups and downs and real estate. And. And you’re totally encapsulated. Yeah. Yeah. can’t tell you how many accredited investors who don’t have a freaking clue. I never owned a rectal ask. why did distributions get delayed?

it’s we had a pandemic grow, people weren’t moving out people because this claimant as much as you want to, but still people will have that certain expectations. Yeah. I dunno part of it is education part of it. people’s true colors. When it come out.

And we’re a relationship business, and that’s how use 50 get yourself removed from the investor list, but you get it right. I think that’s why it’s nice working with folks like yourself because you want a reasonable excuse or justification for things and everything is reasonable.

we’re not making this stuff up. And you understand it. You understand how it feels. And what was the bottom line every month? That’s what I look at. What was the bottom line? Oh, we only made $15,000 this month. Normally we should be around 30 to 40, okay, bad month.

Let’s try the next month. And you as a rental property owner know that shoot HVAC might not five grand. Now I’m down for that. Is this.

I deal with numbers late. What you’re saying is the music into my ears is exactly right. That majority of the times I looked at the curve at the end of the five-year Mark in my partnerships in Minneapolis, I looked at, how much money we have made. Versus how much money we actually had to put back, it’s not easy.

so the question that I have for you was that, laying, you are probably, you made that journey, remember now, you have moved away from your full-time job, but do you have an accountability partner? I have used them in the past, but it’s far to find people who is willing to.

Kind of jump on a call with you on a routine basis. the mere fact that you’re asking this question is probably telling me that you’re the, probably the one who, gets ghosted by us accountability partner. That’s the hardest thing. And I think the, also we used to do this in the investor club where I would connect people with accountability partners.

I don’t know if you remember this, but these guys, we do it in January and we’ll probably do it again at this next mastermind coming up the bubble one. we’ll sign accountability partners for those who are willing. But then one mistake I saw was like, people are like, Oh, we’re gonna, we’re in.

Do a call every two weeks. dude, man, that’s just going to blow up in your face and that’s not sustainable. Maybe make it on like once every quarter, every three months, like that’s just my recommendation from best practices. but I pay for. A coach. they not really, not too much about business.

They’re just an accountability partner. that’s something I’ve heard from a lot of people in my sphere. It’s yeah, man, I just pay a few thousand dollars to have somebody call me up. It might be us. Right when I’m just sitting here in my chair, not really making any progress. I’m just talking about doing the things and then the accountability partner or not the partner, they’re not partners.

They’re our accountability coach that you paid money to. They’re the ones being like, Hey Ahmed, you’ve been doing the same thing, but less six times we’ve talked. I try to talk to them two to three weeks. Try not make it too. I got one for my wife too. But I think her coaches taking for a ride there, they’re like doing a call every week.

I’m like, I guess got to pay for it, but the way I see it, it might be a waste of money, but I don’t know. It’s well worth it. I think, a few thousand dollars for a year for that type of stuff. I think that’s nothing. I looked at your investment sense. You always talk about that, the investment that has, before, that allows you actually to get to the next level, that how much you have spent on your education and mentorship.

I think that’s an eye-opener for me, especially. Yeah, the money, I think, if you just want accountability, just go get a coach. That’s cheap. That’s like under five grand for the year. Okay. But you pay the money for the connections that you would not have otherwise.

one of the common questions that you always ask on your podcast is that, you know what, of any guesses that, where are the ad in terms of how much passive income they’re generating. So this BNC is together lane. I just wanted your thoughts how do I make sure that, I can retire.

I have a soft goal of doing this at age 55, which is three and a half years from now. How can I make sure that, I’m on a solid path, my friendship, final salary that I am, but I just don’t feel it. And the second part is that, you are living that life now that, you do not have a W2 jobs.

what are some of the thoughts that you had? how to handle that? Yeah. that’s you got this nice spreadsheets, but the one thing that doesn’t tell me is the bottom line. The goal is cashflow. How much are these things freaking making, man, like you get all this other stuff for now numbers.

I haven’t, right now it’s at 3,500 3,500. Yeah. And you’ve got about when I calculated your equity based on your partnership share you have six, a little 610,000. So if you’re telling me you make 3,500 a month. So let’s just call it 40 grand a year 40 grand divided by 605 equity is 6.6%, bro.

Yeah, it’s not that great. I’m looking@thisblockfi.com thing, and you can put your money in stable coin and get 8%. that’s just kicking it. But yeah. Granted, you don’t get the tax benefits, but you’re spending a lot of time and energy on this stuff and that’s correct.

That’s exactly correct. You’re not putting , an amount of time and energy and then, the depression lets you go. Yeah. So here’s I think where you have to think, you have to like, do the mat, add that other extra line on your spreadsheet with return on equity percentage and your equity and how much you’re making.

And then also, going back to your original, your side gig, right? Like at the end of the day, you have to ask yourself, what is your highest and best use, Maybe it’s, I don’t know. I get the feeling that you’re at a dead end job already. And you’re like, whatever, but maybe you can expand this thing, right?

Maybe you can five X that in the next couple of years, do your accounting side gig and that’s likely where your highest and best use instead of screwing around with these little North Carolina properties and just go passive. I think that’s, I don’t know your situation entirely, but I’m guessing that’s probably the highest and best use for your time.

Just like a dentist or doctors, just going back to work. Sorry, buddy. You may not like it, but that’s just, it’s Tom Brady to skull spin the football. That’s all. You’re good at man. Just keep doing that while you still can. You’re echoing my, one of my business partners to comments, the same conversation that I had with him.

Yeah. He actually said the same thing that, when you have to look at, what’s the highest ROI in terms of your time. Yeah. And I know what, which way this direction is going. I would start to put these. Properties on Roofstock if you want to my guy, I can connect, give you a warm connection, but I would play some on Roofstock while they have of tenants in place.

So you don’t ruin the income stream. And I would say start the conversation with your partners on being like, all right. Let’s force straight a little bit. Maybe you would like to own these properties outright. Perfect. You get to hone down and this is where you can be strategic and be like, all right, maybe you can dump the capital gain on them where they own it.

And they just give you cash. Now. I don’t know if that’s kosher tax-wise but. we’ve been doing a part a little bit of that already, because you know that, the partnership in twin cities, we have, we used to have 10 units. We are down to eight. We are going to get down to seven.

The way we did it we each took one property, remember it comes with all the other things, the County gizmos, the property distributions and what have you. But yeah, we are doing a little bit part of that, lane. and you said that, that conversation was only forced because, my partner, he was overstretched.

And he said that, he wanted his, kind of portfolio to be a lot more. So it’s almost, the same conversation gets held by multiple people. Yeah, most people want these properties paid off and most people want properties that are, they can feel it, touch it in a local area. So I’m sure you can find another sucker to take these off your hands or maybe bring them in as a partner first and then giving them the taxable gain.

But at the same time though, what you’re saying is that you want, Le B blot lens, the OSHA B, is that a lot more, less hands-on and that look at more, through the passive, syndication opportunities, right? Yeah. And this is going to take a long time, right? Like I had 11 rental properties and I sold.

it’s seven of them in 2018, two of them in 2019. And it got still two of these things that I’ve been trying to sell for over a year. that’s, it just takes a while, your destiny is shaped in your decisions, but I think you’ve made the decision. I don’t know if you made the decision. I know you definitely made the decision that to sell some of these, but overall, I think you need to make that decision.

Are you going to go all in on this accounting thing? are you, maybe we’ll get to this last question. Are you there? Are you at escape velocity? How can I tell that? I asked you your net worth, right? Yeah. I think you we figured it was somewhere around 1.4, 1.5.

Correct. which shouldn’t be the case. She should know that’s the score and we should know what the score is at all times. I think the problem is you got all this like money. That’s like not doing anything right now. It’s in stocks, checkbook, IRA, all this type of stuff. self-managed texts.

this is all I don’t like these checkbook IRA or self-directed Roth IRA is at all. you want the tax benefits today? Get it out of that stuff. Invested cash. Especially if you’re younger, which you are, I think that’s classic limiting belief, right? Oh, I’m too old. That’s playing that’s for old people.

what are you like? 41. Kidding me, man. not old. Yeah. I think what is retirement age? 65 or something? It is. I think only if you’re ordering 65, then the self-managed tax event accounts makes sense Roth and all that stuff. Or you make a whole boat load of money. You don’t know where to put it, but every situation is different, but, yeah, you gotta pull the Goldie man.

You gotta get the stuff working, either buy more rentals or syndications, or this is the problem. You’re fighting with one arm tied behind your back. You got 500 K of equity working, but you got another 500 K just sitting here doing nothing.

So now let’s see, I like to use is you’re trying to fight a war here. You get half of your soldiers back at the barracks, smoking weed and taking naps.

you got half on the million dollars fighting on the front lines and freaking Minnesota, North Carolina, Nebraska. Doing kamikaze runs for you. You got Bobby A. Little bit more than a half? Not doing Jack, not doing anything. So I’m not saying that these guys need to go on the front lines, buying some properties and winsome Salem’s James toddler, but get ’em get on making something.

Not saying you have to put it in a syndication, but like maybe, I dunno, throw him an HB or throw them in like infinite banking, get them going, get five or 10% of this stuff. That’s, what’s hurting you, but once you get, let’s say you only have half a million dollars in the game right now.

And even at best half a million dollars at 10% cash flow. That’s. 50 grand a year. That’s nothing. You got to get these guys in the game. So at 10% you can be at a hundred grand a year. And at that point you’re at zero gravity, you’ve got that escape philosophy and you’re at critical mass. So you’re there.

I think you just have to move things around , but then it comes down to your goals. At your current spend level, is this what you want that you, I think you narrowed my problems. They’ve been very well because that’s what it is that my current spend level can I achieve? what I’m saying that I should be achieving in 55.

Yeah. And this is where your means might expand to you have to go at this harder or at their current. Are you going to be able to send your kids to college or is that a thing with you guys or. Do you have a thing with us? we have, which account is applied 29 plans, but, I stopped investing into it.

our goal is, to make sure that, they have enough money for the first two weeks. Yeah. Okay. Are you on track to hit those goals? Yeah. Okay. cool. yeah, if you’re at your current spend level, you’ve got that passive passively. But you don’t, you got to get the other stuff working a little bit, but you’re there essentially.

the reason I asked that question is have you have the, for some people listening, they may like, Oh shoot, I don’t have that money as fat save. okay buddy, you’re going to have to go with some North Carolina, whatever, like I have to do more stuff. But it seems like you’re there.

If that’s truly the case, of course you should probably sit and ponder or how you’re going to piece this together, but for you at a million dollars in passive stuff, making 10%, and maybe it grows a little bit better than that. Yeah. You’re there. You just have to, I think your problem is you got to pull the GoLean and get these guys work in a little bit harder.

Not harder. Yeah. Yeah. You said you had a five 29. how much you got in that part of that testing advantage? So I have about right now, 58 between two daughters. Yeah. Get rid of that stuff, man. That’s five 20 nines are like college savings pants for the clueless investor cash. You’re better. You can run it a hundred percent and the person, because there’s no guarantee that my daughters, even though we want them to go to colleges, that they would do that.

Yeah. put it into if in a banking and invested for them.

yeah, that’s, I think a longer topics, I have to follow up on what you’re teaching about infinite banking. I have looked at the numbers, so I need to look at that a little bit more closely. Yeah, but it’s eat, you pay a lot in fees in the beginning, but you got money, not doing anything right here.

This is not doing anything. And that’s the thing. They take you to a breakeven and the infinite banking, because what, when I calculated it, I saw them that the breakeven is about five years. Yeah, we’re on there right now. But like it’s for people in your shoes for the better kind of hemming and hawing.

And for a few years, with over half a million dollars, not doing anything.

the inefficient liquidity people that you are. Inefficient you’re right. but, I did some of the stuff that you have been, preaching on, lane and thank you for opening my eyes, because this is the first year I’ve taken that Kobe distribution, so started pulling money out of, that I thought that was never, untouchable or not, but you’re right.

You just have to. be intentional about it, So did COVID distributions, moving, money from, 401k loans, they remember that they, Ramsey principles, you never do that, but I’ve done that and it’s working out fairly well for me, So those things, have opened up, you were able to help me open my eyes up. I’m just giving, entertainment here. you get it. Take these ideas, but I guess my goal is to dispel all the dogma and what people normally do because when people normally do get you what they get, but to put you in a group of other people that are doing the same thing, that are taking their 401ks out, at least makes you make a logical decision, Without prejudices in there. Okay, let me ask him this. And he’s been inspecting your time. I wanted to ask this question that I did not document here, but, I know the answer, but I’m hoping that, just by use, answering it, other people would learn, which is that, what do you recommend for, how do you choose, which vindication group you want to invest with?

What are the things that you decide before you invest with the syndication group? I’m a little bit, I can underwrite the deals so I can decode the code. So I just pull the rack rolls and P and L’s, and I run it through my analyzer and I see what it would pencil out as a, what I’m trying to look for is what kind of assumptions are these guys use?

Are they using like a zero? what is the reversion cap rate it, is it the same as their insurance? Cause that’s, I think that’s irresponsible. what is their rent increase per years at 3%? Like you said, that’s way too high. most newbie investors are looking at silly things like what is the GPLP split or where the acquisition fees.

That’s not the way to look at it guys. but assuming that most people don’t know how to do that. That’s again, where you look at, it’s good to invest in good areas path to progress in case the syndicator falls down that at least the, it was in a good area. but then again, it’s mostly just investing with, via proxy that you have people that you trust that are pure passive investors, that they can vouch that they invest with somebody and you might as well try it out yourself.

It’s like the whole, like you’re at an intersection, this car is making a left turn. I don’t look, I just make my right turn if they’re going right. If they get T-boned well, at least I won’t get the brunt of it, but I’m assuming that they’re checking. So if I have a built a relationship with another pure passive investor, not just, I had one beer with him, or I talked to him on the phone for 10, 20 minutes, but you build rapport over time.

You have a reciprocal relationship. And now you share what deals you’re going into, they’re going into what deals aren’t working, what deal is, and you can build that type of relationship where if they’re going to make that left turn, you’re going to follow them in a way that takes a long time to develop.

I never had that when I first started, but that’s really the gold standard. Just like how I asked you. Going back to, Oh, how did you find that guy in, Minnesota, right? The agent? I was listening for that, so I was like you said, I knew this guy for a couple of years, right? Like you had built up that relationship and rapport and you guys, you knew this wasn’t just a one guy dropped into the local Rio or put a few posts in bigger pockets or something random like that.

this guy was there. maybe you probably check for social proof on other people who’ve worked with him in the past. you did your due diligence, not like a bone head and most people. Do you do this, that really wrong way. And I think that’s shown why you’re able to navigate the successes really.

and the other part is being accountable to have accountability plan, accountability partners, but most people are not able to do that. Most people are unable to build relationships with people. the next generation, the gen Z or whatever, they’re going to be horrible right at this stuff.

Absolutely horrible. I tell you I’m losing the battle. , I do not see any interest on my daughters. I keep on trying to put them to just menial tasks or attack these, they’ll understand that it’s not, I don’t want them to grow up to be a trust fund babies, but they are pretty much growing up to be like that.

Yeah. that’s something I’ve tried to build on the curriculum. I don’t have kids, but I know on the upcoming mastermind, I asked people. Do they have older kids, younger kids, they don’t have kids. And then we’re going to split up people in different breakout rooms based on that topic and give them speaking sheets.

So you can speak to people that have younger kids like yourself. But my only take on that from my perspective is if you’re getting them menial tasks, that sucks. Why would I want to do menial tasks? give me. Show me the rewards, right? Just like the profit first thing, show me the, give me the, my 5%, even if it’s super small, I want some, give me some skin in the game.

Just like your spouse, middle skin in the game, you take some arbitrary, random $8,400 distribution. That means nothing to them. So you gotta figure out a way to get skin in the game or, but I don’t know how it works. some people swear by the game cashflow for kids. That might be a good one and then bribe them to play, whoever wins gets 10 bucks.

I don’t know.

Yeah. any last things or you think you’re good for now? I’m going for an hour. the other things that I’m going to follow up on the website I think you have talked about this a little bit, that, as you have moved into syndications and how you have learn how to operationalize, designate, how does the asset management work, but those are a lot deeper conversations that I just need to really read up on the materials that you have on your website.

Yeah. So by the time this goes out, I’m sure we’ll have the syndication eCourse done. Okay. let me check that out. Simple Pasa castle.com/courses. it’s done and it’s pretty good. Good. but yeah. thanks for doing this. And people will want to, you guys want to volunteer and put yourself out there.

Ahmed was like, yeah. Transparency. Put yourself up there. let me know, and we can do one of these for you, but hopefully, it was helpful for everybody. And thanks it for volunteering. You’re more than welcome. Thank you for having me on.