BiggerPockets Real Estate Podcast - 618: Seeing Greene: Is My Property Manager Skimming Off the Top?

Episode Date: June 5, 2022

Property management is a crucial part of your real estate investing business. They make repairs, take tenant calls, and most importantly, collect rent. But what happens when your property manager stop...s contacting you, forgets to send signed leases, and doesn’t send you your rent checks? When is it time to start worrying and how do you go about asking a property manager for your money back? Welcome back to Seeing Greene, where your expert investor, agent, lender, and podcast host, David Greene, answers some of the most commonly asked real estate investing questions. In this episode, we take both video and written submissions and throw them at Dave to get his time-tested take. You’ll hear questions like, whether to pursue a business or buy rental properties, when to sell an investment property to reinvest profits, how to look for joint venture partners, and what to do when you’re concerned about your property manager’s performance.  Want to ask David a question? If so, submit your question here so David can answer it on the next episode of Seeing Greene. Hop on the BiggerPockets forums and ask other investors their take, or follow David on Instagram to see when he’s going live so you can hop on a live Q&A and get your question answered on the spot!  In This Episode We Cover: When to start a business or buy a rental property (and how to do both) Why ROE (return on equity) beats ROI (return on investment) in 2022 What to ask a potential partner to see if they’re a good fit for a joint venture deal How to score lower interest rates on mortgages as a self-employed investor  When and which rental property repairs to prioritize after a home inspection  What to do when you suspect a property manager may be skimming off the top And So Much More! Links from the Show BiggerPockets Youtube Channel BiggerPockets Forums BiggerPockets Pro Membership BiggerPockets Bookstore BiggerPockets Bootcamps BiggerPockets Podcast David’s YouTube Channel Ask David Your Real Estate Investing Question Listen to All Your Favorite BiggerPockets Podcasts in One Place Get Your Tickets to BPCon2022 Stay Tuned for Our Upcoming Episode with Ed Mylett Attend a David Greene Meetup 5 Red Flags to Watch For When Hiring a Property Manager David’s Instagram David’s BiggerPockets Profile Book Mentioned in the Show Long-Distance Real Estate Investing by David Greene Click here to check the full show notes: https://www.biggerpockets.com/blog/real-estate-618 Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

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Starting point is 00:00:00 This is the Bigger Pockets podcast show 618. So how can you do both? Well, you can start off by house hacking, put 3.5% down, 5% down on a single family home that puts the seed in the ground for at least one property. And you can do that every single year. You can then put a lot of your time, attention, energy into growing the business and taking the money that comes from that business and reinvesting it until you don't need to reinvest the money anymore, where you can then take it and reinvest it into real estate.
Starting point is 00:00:30 State. What's up, everyone? My name is David Green and I'm your host of the Bigger Pockets Real Estate podcast. If you're ever wondering why we say things like this and show, it's because Josh Dorkin, the founder of Bigger Pockets, started doing the podcast like that, and I just can't help myself but do it because I listen to Josh for so long. Josh, shout out to you. If you happen to be listening to this, hope you're doing great out there. In Hawaii, you're getting plenty of sun and things are going well for you. If this is your first time listening to the podcast, we at Bigger Pockets are here to bring you as information as we can about how you can build wealth through real estate. Today's show is a slightly
Starting point is 00:01:04 different format than what we normally do. It's called seeing green. That's why the light behind me is green. In today's format, people like you submit questions about their real estate career, specific problems that they're having, areas they're getting stuck, or just overall wisdom that they feel like would help them in their journey, and I do my best to answer them. If you guys would like to be featured on the show, I'd love that. Please go to biggerpockets.com slash David and ask her question there for me to answer. And if you're not listening to this on YouTube, I'm not paid by YouTube to say this, but I will say I just got the YouTube premium thing where it plays in the background when you close the app. Game changer. Absolutely love it. No regrets about I think the $15 I have to
Starting point is 00:01:43 pay every month. So consider doing that because you can leave comments about our show as well as subscribe and get notified when Bigger Pockets has new shows coming out. In today's show, we cover topics like how much of a property you should be fixing up or how much money you should be dumping into a property where the return starts to become marginalized. We talk about how to prioritize owning a business and building your real estate portfolio. Which one should you be putting your money and your time into? We also get into how to evaluate the return on equity of a property. So at what point is your property not earning you enough cash flow for how much equity it has and how you should move that money around and more. If you guys listen all the way to the end of the show, you're going to hear
Starting point is 00:02:25 the debate about if I should be wearing t-shirts or if I should be wearing collar shirts when I do these. So please chime in on that as well. Today's quick tip is listen to episode 620. It's going to be coming at two episodes after this where I interview Ed Milette. We talk about this concept of collective psychology, which is a tendency that human beings have to want to follow the crowd and do what everybody else is doing. But the best investors and the best best business people do the opposite. They zig when others zag. In this market with interest rates going up, with the Russia-Ukraine situation happening, with all these fears of inflation, many people make bad decisions out of fear and there's a lot of fear going around. Inflation, in my opinion, is a reason
Starting point is 00:03:08 that you should be buying real estate. But as people are seeing inflation happening, many of them are thinking they want to get out of the market for some reason. You're having a hard time finding deals, I'm sure there's not as much inventory out there. We all joke that rentals are passive, but if you're spending nights matching receipts or guessing what a property earned last month, that's not passive at all. Baselaine fixes that part of landlording, the financial chaos. Their banking and AI bookkeeping system automatically tags every transaction, updates cash flow insights in real time, and builds the reports you need for tax season.
Starting point is 00:03:37 You can even automate transfers and move money around without paying wire fees. It's just cleaner. Sign up at baselane.com slash BP and get a $100 bonus. Base lane is a financial technology company and not a bank. Banking services provided by Threadbank, member FDIC. Thinking about wholesaling or flipping your first property, but not sure where to start. The truth is, deals don't just fall into your lap anymore. You need to go out and create opportunities.
Starting point is 00:03:57 That's where PropStream comes in. With PropStream, you get instant access to over 160 million properties nationwide. Use 20 pre-built lead lists such as pre-foreclosures, tax delinquencies, and vacant homes to find motivated sellers fast. And now PropStream has integrated batch leads and batch dialer to provide you with a complete all-in-one solution. That means you can not only find motivated sellers, but you can also reach out right away. Skip trace phone numbers free on select plans,
Starting point is 00:04:24 then send postcards, emails, or call sellers directly. Don't worry if you're new. PropStream also gives you AI-powered insights and comps that are over 99% accurate, so you know you're making smart offers. Plus, you'll have access to PropStream Academy to guide you step by step. Start your seven-day free trial and get 50 free leads at Propstream.com slash BP. That's P-R-O-P-S-T-R-E-A-M.com slash BP. Don't just dream about real estate.
Starting point is 00:04:50 Make it happen with PropStream. Managing properties can feel like a full-on circus. You're juggling vendors, tracking payments, chasing approvals across multiple properties, and maybe a few HOAs, all while trying to keep tenants happy and owners confident. One delay can throw everything off, and suddenly your day is all clean up, no progress. That's why hundreds of. of property managers rely on bill to streamline their finances. Bill for property management lets you add all your properties,
Starting point is 00:05:20 assign permissions, pay bills, and receive payments quickly and efficiently, without the usual bottlenecks. It syncs with platforms like QuickBooks, Zero, NetSuite, and Sage intact, so your accounting stays aligned. You can automate bulk payments across properties and HOAs, choose flexible payment methods like Same Day ACH, international wires, card or check,
Starting point is 00:05:41 and set custom roles in approval policies. There's even a dedicated bill inbox for each property to keep everything organized. Ready to simplify your workflow, book your free demo at bill.com slash bigger pockets and get a $100 Amazon gift card. That's bill.com slash bigger pockets. So right now is a time to look for sellers who are getting scared, who are nervous, or who are following the collective psychology of the group that says you should sell because we don't know what to do.
Starting point is 00:06:10 you might be able to find yourself a great deal by focusing on the emotional state of the seller, not just the asset itself as you see it online. Hopefully that works out for somebody. If you're able to pick something up in this market that you think is a great deal, I want to know about it. Tell me in the comments what you got and how so everybody else can learn. All right, without any further ado, let's get to today's show. Hey, David, I'm looking to begin investing with the goal of having enough wealth and cash flow built up
Starting point is 00:06:37 to be able to support running other business. Specifically, I want to start a farming business sooner rather than later. I'm concerned that I won't have enough capital to scale both my real estate and the farming business simultaneously, and I'm afraid that picking one business over the other would delay the other one significantly. As somebody with multiple businesses and enterprises and looking to start more, I'm wondering how you decide where to dedicate your resources, your time, energy, and capital next going forward. And specifically, wondering if you have any advice about how I specifically can build my bridges
Starting point is 00:07:25 effectively and efficiently. Thanks. Hey, Shane, wow, that was a very good question. And I could probably spend the entire episode just answering that. So I'm going to have to try to keep this short. You're telling me that you want to invest in real estate, but you also want to invest in a business, and you don't think you have enough capital to do both, and you want to make sure that you don't delay either one. Here's a few things to think about. Businesses tend to generate more cash flow, and they tend to have more risk, as well as more time and energy put into them, meaning they're less passive. Real estate tends to generate wealth passively or more passively than a business does, but it doesn't
Starting point is 00:08:04 always do it from a cash flow perspective. And when I say that, I mean the money that that asset is putting into your bank account every single month is what we're going to call cash flow. It's typical when you're first getting started to buy a single family home, a small multi-family to make a couple hundred bucks a month of cash flow, which is frankly not very much money at all if what you're looking to do is try to fund a lifestyle or a business. Now, real estate does very well over the long term when it appreciates and you pay down the loan. Cash flow. in my opinion is best used to make sure you don't lose a property. It's a defensive metric. You're meant to use the cash flow to make sure you can make the payment. And then holding it for a
Starting point is 00:08:43 long time is what builds wealth. If you understand the strengths of both asset classes, real estate is very good. Long term, business is going to be better short term. So if you're looking to create a business, you're going to want to have to go out there and generate some revenue, put some contracts together, find some way for that business to make money. Then you're going to hire people. You're going to train them. You're going to manage them. You're going to oversee your clientele. You're going to have to learn how to keep the books. You're going to do a lot of work, but if you do it well, it should produce more income. Then real estate is going to be building you wealth sort of slowly and on the side. Think of it like planting a tree. You put the seed in the
Starting point is 00:09:18 ground and it slowly starts growing and you don't have to spend a lot of time worrying about that tree. In the very beginning, when it first starts growing, you got to pay a lot of attention to it, make sure that nothing goes wrong just like with real estate. But once it's established, for the most part, you're not thinking about it. And business is more like crop. You're putting a lot of effort into tilling the soil. You're planting lots of seeds knowing that many of them aren't going to grow. You're going to have to take weeds away and stop predators from coming in and ruining your crop. You're going to have to make sure it gets fertilized.
Starting point is 00:09:48 What I'm getting is there's a lot of work that goes into planting and harvesting a crop. It's not passive income. So how can you do both? Well, you can start off by house hacking, put 3.5% down, 5% down on a single family home that puts the seed in the ground for at least one property. and you can do that every single year. You can then put a lot of your time, attention, energy into growing the business and taking the money that comes from that business and reinvesting it until you don't need to reinvest the money anymore, where you can then take it and reinvest it into real estate. That's really how my whole situation works.
Starting point is 00:10:23 I have businesses that I run because I don't want to depend on real estate to generate the cash flow to buy more real estate. It doesn't work great for that. Does it generate cash flow? Sure. But I can set up a portfolio that might generate $40,000, $60,000 a month in cash flow, or I can set up a business that generates that month with way less effort, way, way less effort. So I like to look at the strengths and weaknesses of both, and that's what I think that you should be doing, especially if your business is somehow connected to real estate. You mentioned farming. Can you figure out a way to buy a property that has a structure and improvement on it that you can use a 30-year fixed rate to get that house and it comes with a lot of land that you can then work your business with. Now you've got synergy between the two things and there's a lot less effort. If you can't do that, you still want to look at growing your business to set off a lot of cash flow, saving that cash flow, reinvesting it into real estate. As time passes, that real estate will appreciate in value. You can sell it or you can do a cash out refinance to pull money out of it to either buy more real estate or invest back into the
Starting point is 00:11:29 business. And you want to just kind of create this system of going back and forth between the two. Hope that helps best of luck to you and make sure that you let us know how it goes. All right. Next question comes from Josh Hebe in Columbus, Indiana. With the appreciation we have seen in real estate, return on equity has dropped significantly on a lot of properties. At what point does it make sense to consider selling and redeploying that capital? What other factors should an investor consider other than thoughts on return on equity? Josh, love the question. This is how smart business people think you're on the right path. For those that have never heard of this idea of return on equity, it's very similar to return on investment.
Starting point is 00:12:05 So when you're calculating your ROI or your return on investment, you're basically saying how much money is this asset going to generate? And then I divide that by how much money I have to put into the deal to make it work. So you have income divided by your expenses like down payment and maybe any other cost, closing cost, improvement, stuff like that, your rehab. And you get a number. That number that you come up with tells you what percentage of your initial investment you're going to get back every year.
Starting point is 00:12:33 So a 10% return on investment just means that every year I get back 10% of what I put into the deal. Now, what Josh is referring to here is when a property appreciates very quickly, it can look like your ROI is going up because every year you're making more money than you were making the year before. So you had a 10% return, then a 12% return, then a 14% return because your rents have steadily been going up every single year. But it's very easy to assume that the money that you put into the deal is still how you should be looking at your investment. It's not anymore. If you put $50,000 down on this house you
Starting point is 00:13:07 bought, but it's appreciated to now you have $300,000 of equity, it doesn't make sense to look at the money that you put in the $50,000 five years ago or 10 years ago. Now you have to say this asset is worth $300,000 or I have that much equity in it. So if you take what the cash flow of that property is and you divide it by $300,000, you're going to get a way smaller number than if you just divide it by your initial investment. So what I recommend people do when they have an asset that's appreciating is to look at how much cash flow am I getting for the equity that I have in the house, not for the initial investment that I made in the beginning. And Josh, when you're asking me, at what point does it make sense to redeploy the capital that you initially put into that property? It's when you want more cash flow or
Starting point is 00:13:52 you want to make sure your equity is working harder. So let me give you an example. If you had $50,000 you put into this property and you're getting a 10% return on that money that's $5,000 a year at a 10% ROI. If that has gone to 300,000 like I mentioned, okay, you have six times as much money as the 50,000 that you put in. But if you're still only making $5,000 a year, you could be making six times that if you could get a 10% return on the 300,000 that you've invested, which would be $30,000 a year instead of $5,000. So that's when I think people should start looking. When you have significant equity in a property, you need to be asking yourself,
Starting point is 00:14:36 is this actually working hard for me or is my return on equity very low? A few other factors to consider because it's not only about cash flow. If you own an asset in an area that's appreciating very rapidly and you believe it's going to continue appreciating, yes, you could sell it and redeploy it to get a higher ROI somewhere else and you could make more cash flow, but you might lose money over the long term because you could be investing into a market with less appreciation. So one thing to consider is, do I think I can get the same appreciation or better if I move this equity from this property into a different one or from this market into a different one?
Starting point is 00:15:10 I like to look for that. I'm okay to sell a property that's appreciating to get more cash flow if where I'm going is going to be appreciating at the same rate or better. That's one of the awesome parts about long distance is investing, is you can find the market that you think is going to do better and you can buy assets there while selling them in markets that have sort of cooled off. You can sort of ride the train. Oh, there's not as much people moving to this area. Let me take it out, put it over here, and ride the next level up. Another thing to consider is the headache factor? If you sell this property and you move the equity somewhere else,
Starting point is 00:15:40 is that new property going to cause you a lot more time and energy to manage than the one that you had? And the last thing I would say to consider is closing costs. Selling a property is not free. There's going to be closing costs that are involved with the property. So when that's the case, if you think, hey, I'd like to move the money or I'd like to get out the equity, but I want to keep the house to consider a cash out refinance. That's where you would take money out of the property by getting a new loan on it, take that equity, go put it in a new market. That's exactly what I just did. I had my first four California properties that I ever bought when I first started investing. They've appreciated a ton. My return on equity has become very, very small. But I don't want to
Starting point is 00:16:16 sell them because I believe that the area they're in is going to continue to appreciate in both value and in rents. So instead I did a cash out refinance, pulled out about a million bucks from those properties and then put that into two new properties in areas that I also think are going to grow where there's a value add. If I thought that those California properties were not going to continue appreciating, I'd have sold them instead of refinancing. Thank you for that question. Let me know if there's anything else I can answer by leaving something in the comments, and I'll see if there's anything that I didn't address that I can get to. Hey, you doing. My name is DJ Dubuno, and I am from the upstate New York market in the capital region,
Starting point is 00:16:49 and my partner and I just founded our first LLC for real estate investing. My question is, what is the best way to find potential J.B. partners? And what are some good screening questions to ask to kind of filter through those JV partners? Thank you for that, DJ. All right, this is a very subjective question so different people can give you different advice when it comes to picking a partner. The first thing I'll say is ask yourself what your motives are. Do I want a partner because it brings emotional security or do I want a partner because it makes business sense? In general, I tend to shy away from partnering with somebody for the emotional security that it brings. It always sounds good in the beginning, it always gets complicated later as two people or two groups of people or maybe several
Starting point is 00:17:28 groups of people are all moving in different directions and it becomes very difficult to keep everybody happy with each other and meeting expectations. So if I'm looking for a partner, I'm looking someone for a complementary skill set to my own, something they're bringing that I don't have. So that could be a brain that works differently than my brain works. It could be resources they have access to that I don't, that I can use. It could be they have a team in place and I can use a team they already have. It could be connections that they have. It could be access to deal flow. There's a lot of different things that somebody can bring to the table, but they're typically going to be an experienced investor if that's the case. So to answer your question of what question should I be asking,
Starting point is 00:18:04 if you're looking for someone that has a complementary skill set like I'm recommending, you should be asking how many deals they've already done. And this is the rub. The people who want a partner are typically doing it because they're afraid to do it on their own, meaning they haven't already been doing it. They don't have as much to offer because they're new. The people you want to be partnering with are someone who are bringing something to the table, but they're not emotionally scared because they've been doing it. And that's why I say don't do it for the emotional reasons. You end up getting a partner who doesn't have a track record, isn't bringing anything to the table, doesn't have resources that you can use that would make your enterprise more successful. Instead, I really recommend that you focus on
Starting point is 00:18:43 what do they have that would make this business better? And then you ask yourself the same question. and what are you bringing to the table that would make it better for them? And look for a situation that's a win-win for each of you from a practical perspective, not an emotional one. All right, we've had some great questions so far. I love the people that are, you guys are spending better and better questions every single time we do one of these. If you'd like to submit a question of your own, I'd love you to. Please go to biggerpockets.com slash David, where you can do just that.
Starting point is 00:19:12 At this segment of the show, we answer comments from YouTube that people have left on previous shows. Sometimes they're funny, sometimes they're insightful. Sometimes they point out something that I didn't even realize that I missed. So I like to share those with you guys. And I want to highly encourage you if you're listening to this right now, go to the YouTube and leave a comment for me about what you liked, what you didn't like, what you thought was funny, what you wish I would have asked, whatever we can do to make the show better. The first question comes from Jenny Lee. Hey, David, I love this show and format. Every morning that I'm able, I watch an episode on YouTube and feel my real estate brain getting smarter.
Starting point is 00:19:43 I appreciate the content and how you talk through your thought process. side note thank you jenny that is actually something i intentionally tried to do on the shows i could just give people the answer when they say something like earlier in this show somebody said what do you look for in a partner or should i buy real estate or should i buy a business and i could just give you the answer but if i don't explain the thought process then you guys won't know how i came to the conclusion you won't be able to trust it and you won't be able to solve problems on your own so i appreciate you noticing that i'm currently reading your book long distance real estate investing and it's a well-written game changer all caps thank you the collared shirt looked nice
Starting point is 00:20:16 today. T-shirts are awesome too, though. That's because I've asked questions on previous episodes of how you guys think I should dress. I'm a Bay Area local, and I know that East Bay's weather's about to get real dry, windy, and hot, so it's a good thing you can totally get away with dressing California casual. One of my favorite parts about this podcast is how you always keep it real. It was awesome. You even solicited feedback about your fit. My vote is that you keep on slang in whatever you're most comfortable wearing. Thank you, Jenny. You said a lot of nice things and a pretty LinkedIn response, but you avoided answering the question of if you think that T-shirts are better or colored shirts. So the debate remains. Do you guys think that I should be doing these dressed
Starting point is 00:20:53 in a more professional manner or a more laid-back manner? What do you think is better for the podcast and what makes it easier for you to trust the advice? Jenny, thank you. You're a Bay Area Local. Make sure you reach out to me. I'm on Instagram and everywhere else at David Green 24. I want to get you connected to anyone else who is interested in attending a meetup or who lives in California can go to David Greenmeetups.com and register to be notified there. Next, comment comes from Sondra. T-shirt, David, with a smiley face. I really dig the question from Nicole.
Starting point is 00:21:22 I'm also interested in the loan side of real estate, learning policy, and fine print and regulations to set up efficient systems is my jam. Thank you, BP. All right, so check one off for the T-shirt column. And from Cynthia Ibarra. Hi, David, I loved your show. You guys are the best. I would like to see more about second home mortgages.
Starting point is 00:21:40 Thank you. Well, if you guys would like more information about loans, about mortgages, I'm happy to talk about it. I own the one brokerage, and so I've learned a lot about it with my partner, Christian, submit us questions asking us how this industry works, what happens with loans, what affects interest rates, what you should be looking for. I may bring Christian on the podcast in the future to talk about kind of some of the stuff that he buys, that we buy together, and how the loan game works. So if that's what you're interested in, let us know in the comments and leave me a question
Starting point is 00:22:08 about it at biggerpockets.com slash David. Hi, David. Thanks for taking my question. I'm a new investor. I joined Bigger Pockets at the beginning of October 2021 and took the 90-day challenge. I closed on my first rental just before New Year's. Besides getting over my own issues as a first-time investor, a quick shout out to my rock star agent, Nick Harris at Fire Team Realty. You can find them on Bigger Pockets. I found financing to be my next biggest hurdle. I'm self-employed in the I, IT field and I make good money for my area, but on paper it looks like a different story. Because of that, my loan terms were less than favorable. So my question is, should I put more
Starting point is 00:22:51 focus on improving my financeability? And yes, that is a word. I checked. And if so, what are the things, some of the things that I should look at doing? Or should I simply factor having to pay a higher rate and deal with less favorable terms into my underwriting? Thanks, David. I really like the direction of the channel and I love seeing all of the new content. Thank you for that, Michael. I've got a couple different ways I'm going to address your question because I think it's very good. First off, it sounds like what you're describing is because you're self-employed, you can't use the income that you're making the same as a W-2 person would. So the very best loans that a person can possibly get, which are typically Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, what we call conventional financing in the mortgage world are not available to you. If you had a W-2 job, they would be.
Starting point is 00:23:39 So you're saying you're getting less favorable financing terms. It's important to know it is less favorable than the best terms anybody could ever get. But in our world, that tends to be where we set our baseline, is these Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac government subsidized loans, which are the best that anyone could do becomes what we expect. And anything higher interest rate than that or more closing costs automatically is like, oh, that stings. I'm not able to do what I wanted to or I'm not able to get the rate other people would get.
Starting point is 00:24:05 you're probably being offered debt service loans or other loans that use your income that is being claimed on your taxes after several years to get qualified. And you can't get qualified. You can still get 30-year fixed-rate loans. You're just usually taking a hit on your interest rate because they're a little less safe for the lender who's giving you the loan. The thought with the lender is that, hey, this person in a self-employed position is more likely to lose their job or not make the same income. They're not getting the same security that comes from an employer. It's not like they're trying to to punish people because they don't have a W2 job. Just a W2 job is considered in that industry with all the data and the metrics they
Starting point is 00:24:42 have of who's most likely to default to be the safest bet. It's the same reason that when your credit score starts to get worse, your interest rate starts to go a little bit higher. It makes you slightly higher risk to the lender. And because the lender doesn't know you personally and they can't know everybody personally that ever applies for the loan, they have to come up with metrics like this to make decisions. Here's something I think about if I was you.
Starting point is 00:25:02 If you're only looking at how to get a better rate, you're going to change your entire life to fit that goal. And I've said this before. I've never heard a successful investor at the end of their career say, you know, I made all my money by getting the very best interest rates. It just isn't as big of a thing when it comes to overall wealth building as it feels in the moment when we're competitive and we're trying to get the best rate that we possibly can. But you have to use your higher rate so instead it's only going to be $300 a month for you.
Starting point is 00:25:29 Will that $100 a month improve your quality of life more than keeping a job? job where you're self-employed? Would you be happier to stop being self-employed? Go work for somebody else, have to live under their rules, their regulations, on their timetable, conform to company policy, all the reasons you don't want to work in that industry because you like being self-employed? Would that $100 a month mean more to you than the freedom that you have and the job that you're at? Because I think we have to remember, the goal of investing in real estate is not to build up as much passive income as we can on a spreadsheet so we can tell everybody that we make more than they do. The goal of real estate investing is not to get your net worth as high as you
Starting point is 00:26:09 possibly can get it so you can tell people that you're better than them. The goal of real estate investing is to fuel the life you want to live. And if the life that you want to live is one where you are self-employed, you own business, you can build your own business, you can run your own company, keep doing that and just lose the $100 a month on the property when you buy it. Inflation's going to make rents go up and that's not even going to be a thing you think about in the future. Another thing you're probably not considering. What if you just put more effort into the business you have so that you made more money? You probably have a lot more influence over making money at your job or at the business that you own than you do in real estate where you're dependent on rents to go up. So I want to challenge
Starting point is 00:26:51 you to look into what if you hired someone new and leveraged off some of what you're doing and you went did more lead generating to get more business in your business that made you more money. You could get a much higher return on your time than just fighting over an interest rate that might be a percent higher. Keep in mind, real estate investing is meant to fuel the life that we want to have, not just our egos. And interest rates are typically something that our egos care about the most. Now, I can also understand sometimes the deal doesn't work if the interest rate is a little bit higher. But honestly, if the deal is that tight, that a point higher on the interest rate makes it not work at all, probably not a deal you should buy. Realistically, it probably just means you cash
Starting point is 00:27:30 a little bit less in year one or in year two, but in year 10, it's not going to matter. Thank you very much for the question. I hope my answer gives you a little bit of insight into your situation. Appreciate you. When I bought my first rental, I thought collecting rent would be the hard part. Nope. The admin crushed me.
Starting point is 00:27:46 Every night was receipts, tax forms, and checking who was late on rent. I kept thinking, if this is one unit, how do people run 10? Base lane changed that. It's Bigger Pockets official banking platform that handles expense tracking, financial reporting, rent collection, and even tenant screening all in one place. It's the system I wish I had from day one. Sign up today at baseline.com slash bigger pockets and get a $100 bonus. Baseline is a financial technology company and is not an FDIC insured bank.
Starting point is 00:28:09 Bank banking services provided by Threadbank, member FDIC. Thinking about wholesaling or flipping your first property, but not sure where to start. The truth is, deals don't just fall into your lap anymore. You need to go out and create opportunities. That's where PropStream comes in. With PropStream, you get instant access to over 160 million properties nationwide. Use 20 pre-built lead lists such as pre-foreclosures, tax delinquencies, and vacant homes to find motivated sellers fast. And now PropStream has integrated batch leads and batch dialer to provide you with a complete all-in-one solution.
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Starting point is 00:29:11 Don't just dream about real estate. Make it happen with PropStream. You just realized your business needed to hire someone yesterday. How can you find amazing candidates fast? Easy. Just use Indeed. When it comes to hiring, Indeed is all you need. That means you can stop struggling to get your job notice on other job sites.
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Starting point is 00:29:55 wide. There's no need to wait any longer. Speed up your hiring right now with Indeed. And listeners of the show will get a $75 sponsored job credit to get your jobs more visibility at Indeed.com slash rookie. Just go to Indeed.com slash rookie right now and support our show by saying you heard about Indeed on this podcast. That's indeed.com slash rookie. Terms and conditions apply. Hiring Indeed is all you need. If you think property management is expensive, try mismanaging a vacancy or an eviction or a maintenance issue that turns into a five-figure problem because no one caught it early. That's expensive. A good property manager isn't overhead. Their protection against small mistakes turning into big losses. And that matters more than ever in this economy. That's why I like Mind. Unlike other property managers,
Starting point is 00:30:48 Mind manages your property like an investment. They obsessively measure the things that matter for your bottom line. Things like occupancy, delinquency, and net promoter score, and they have the results to prove it. Go to mine.com slash show me to see how mine performs and get your first month free, which is much cheaper than learning the hard way. Next question comes from Arthur in Raleigh, North Carolina. Dear David, thank you for sharing your expertise. I'm an investor from Raleigh, I have concerns that my property manager in South Carolina is possibly receiving rental income and not sending it to me. I own a triplex in a small town there, which has been owned for some time, a second triplex, which was purchased recently in Charleston.
Starting point is 00:31:27 For the months of December and January, I received nothing from either property. On February 1st, I received a check, which appears to be only from the Charleston triplex, and I am guessing is for the month of January. As of mid-February, I have not received anything. South Carolina law seems to require that a property manager send copies of leases, yet have not received any lease for either. Since these are rental properties owned at a long distance, what could be done to verify that the rent income sent is correct and not understand.
Starting point is 00:31:53 stated. Also, how could I verify that a repair bill is not being inflated or entirely made up? Thank you. All right, Arthur, let's dive into this. The first thing, just from the vibe I'm getting from your message here, is you may be non-confrontational and you don't want to talk to your property manager about it. And the reason I'm saying that is nothing was included in your message that says, I talked to the property manager and they said this. So what you're going to have to do is get them on the phone and say, why am I not getting rent checks? What's going on? There have to have some kind of answer. Now, I have to give you some hypothetical scenarios about what it could be other than they're just stealing from you, which may end up being the case as well. Maybe they're
Starting point is 00:32:33 going to tell you that they haven't collected rent from the tenants. If that's the case, there's nothing to give you. That's probably what the answer is going to be. And the only way I can think of that you could verify that the tenants haven't collected rent would be if you actually ask the tenants yourself, have you paid rent. Now, if the tenants have not been paying rent, you're probably property manager should be starting the process of an eviction. Every state has different laws, but there's typically like a three-day notice or a 30-day notice that rent was not paid, and that's something that they're legally required to do. They usually post that on the door. They tell the tenant, hey, if you don't pay in full by this amount, you're going to have
Starting point is 00:33:11 the eviction process started. That should be going on if they're not collecting rent. So you should be getting updates from them of what they're doing to start that process and continue that process on your behalf. As far as getting copies of leases, yeah, you definitely should have that. Did they give you an answer as to why they're not giving them? That's another thing that you need to tell them, I want copies of leases. If this is a company that doesn't have leases or isn't sending them to you and they're just not even giving, they're not responding to you and telling you like why the tenant is not paying their rent, you need to do a little bit of research on this company and find out how reputable they are. Do they have other people whose properties they manage? Is this
Starting point is 00:33:50 a real estate agent who is using their license to manage properties and has no idea what they're doing, is this a person they got super busy in life and just stop paying attention and they're just avoiding you? Something's fishy here. A reputable company would not, they wouldn't be operating this way because their reputation is going to take a huge hit and no one would use them. So we're going to have to figure out, can you get them on the phone? Can you talk to them and find out what is happening here? And then after that, you need to be sending emails to them so you have something documented in case you have to take a lawsuit to them for mismanaging your property and breaking their fiduciary duty to you. You have some kind of like something evidence a judge can look at. This is really good advice
Starting point is 00:34:27 for everybody out there. When you're dealing with something and you have a conversation with someone on the phone, I have to tell my real estate agencies all the time is they will tell a client on the phone, this is the case with the property. They'll disclose something, but then there's no email. And they'll come to me later and say, hey, so-and-so's upset. And I told them this was the case. and I'll say, well, if you don't have a paper trail or an electronic paper trail, you didn't tell them anything. It doesn't matter what you said. And text messages are okay, but those are still not as good as like something that's written
Starting point is 00:34:56 down or something that's emailed. So send your concerns to them in an email. And if they reply to it, that's even better for you because it's evidence that you can show that they saw what you sent. If they just completely ghost you and you're not hearing anything, you do need to reach out to a lawyer and share with them, this is what I've done. here's the agreement that I set up. Here's what I signed with this company.
Starting point is 00:35:18 Maybe you wired them some money in the beginning or transferred it to them. And you're going to have to start the legal process yourself. But I would advise you, don't try to figure out what is going on with them if you haven't just asked them. Be straight up, ask them what's going on. And they're likely to tell you why you haven't been getting those rent checks and then give us an update on what you found out. That would be great if you could leave that in the comments.
Starting point is 00:35:39 Thank you very much for this. Hey, David. My name is Garrett. Love your show. I am an investor in the Chicagoland area. I have one triplex under my belt. And my question for you is how you go about picking which repairs are the most important and finding which ones that you want to fix right away versus maybe holding off for a little while
Starting point is 00:36:01 or, you know, just completely putting aside and not worrying about. I'm finding myself having a lot of the bills rack up because I want to fix everything. you know the roof needs repair the water's leaking so I'm getting it water or the basement's leaking so I'm getting it waterproofed a lot of the windows aren't sealed or they're cracked and warped so new windows and all this stuff is starting to rack up and I'm not sure if I really need to fix all of it so before I get myself investing too much of my own money into this property how do you go about picking those ones and knowing what's going to pay you back later down the line when you decide to sell? Thank you. Garrett, good question here. Man, you gave me some juicy
Starting point is 00:36:56 stuff to get into. I'm going to like this. I'm going to start off with a practical response to your question and then I'm going to get into some deeper, more emotional stuff. So let's talk about, from a practical perspective, you kind of ended your, your question by saying, what's going to give me the highest return on my money back? This might be controversial. I'm just going to say, in my experience, in general, no repairs get you money back. It's more like if you want to sell your house, the buyer is going to expect certain things to be done, and if they're not done, they're going to ask you for a credit to get it fixed. But I've never seen the credit that a buyer gets on a house to be more than what it would cost if you had done
Starting point is 00:37:33 the repairs. It's almost always better if you give a credit instead of making it. repairs that don't have to be done. Now we're not talking about backed up plumbing foundation issues. What I'm really getting at here is that every single house that you've ever seen driving in your car, walked inside of Benin, owned someone else owned, every property that exists has something wrong with it. There is an inspector that can find not just one thing, but many things wrong with every single property. And the mindset that I need to go in there and make it perfect, isn't actually practical. Many of these problems have existed,
Starting point is 00:38:13 and I'm calling them problems because they're pointed out in a report, for 25, 30, 50 years, and things have been okay. I want to just reframe this question. I want you to ask you, if you were driving, if you owned a car,
Starting point is 00:38:25 things start to break in the car, okay? The vents that control the airflow sometimes become kind of wobbly and they fall down, they don't stay up. In my car, you have the little center console
Starting point is 00:38:36 has a little piece that you can like pull up to put something in and then push back down to rest your hand on. Well, sometimes it doesn't click in place when I put it down and I got to jiggle with a little bit to get in there, right? Does it affect my experience driving the car? Hardly nothing. However, if someone inspected my car, they would point that out and many other things and if I thought it is my job to repair everything on that report, I'd be dumping tons of money into a car that isn't giving me a better experience. Real estate can work the same way. Do you need to replace the windows? Well, that depends. Is the dry rot so bad that the windows aren't working or it's becoming like a safety thing or a draft is coming in? Probably yes. Is it just like a seal that's broken in the window? Because I see that a lot. Like anytime you notice that home windows are fogged up, typically that's because it's a dual pane window and in between the two panes, they put a gas that helps to keep. It's like an insulation. Well, if one of the seals breaks on those two panes, the gas can leak out and condensate.
Starting point is 00:39:36 gets in and that's what makes windows foggy. Does it mean that they don't insulate as well as they were originally designed? Yes. Does it mean that you need to spend $40,000 to replace every single window in the entire house? No, it just means it's a little less energy efficient than it was before. Now, that's different than when the framing of the window has been completely corrupted by dry rot and it's falling apart. That's what I'm really trying to get at here.
Starting point is 00:40:00 Don't look at it like I need to fix everything. Ask yourself, well, what's the purpose of fixing it? electrical issues that are safety hazards, a leaking roof, absolutely at some point you're going to have to fix those things, especially if it's a safety issue. So please hear me saying, I'm not referring to that. I'm referring to the fact that if you get a roof inspection, there's a guarantee they will find a broken tile, a piece of wood that could be replaced, like something that they're going to say this could be a little bit better. That does not mean those things actually have to be replaced. Now, that's the practical answer that I
Starting point is 00:40:35 I'm going to give you. I want to dive deeper into this and ask you, is the reason you think you have to fix everything because there's a comfort you get from having a blank slate? Are you one of those people that likes to make a checklist and have every single thing done on it? Do you like to be at what we call email inbox zero where you don't have any emails that are unread? Are you that person that if you have one notification on your phone, that little red dot, you have to clear it because it feels wrong? If that's the case, this is probably why your feelings are telling you that you need to do every single thing in the inspection report and fix the house. You don't have to live like that. What would be better is if you ask yourself why you're thinking that way, there's probably some form of safety that you think you get when you make everything perfect.
Starting point is 00:41:21 And that's not how the world works. So if you can come and kind of reconcile with why you feel like you need to have every single thing done, your experience with real estate investing in ownership will get a lot better. because a lot of the anxiety you're feeling is what you're putting on yourself thinking you have to fix everything. So I'll sum this up by saying safety, health and safety issues, hazards like that, absolutely need to be fixed. If it's something where someone could be hurt or injured, yes, that needs to be done. If it's something that just shows up on an inspection report, okay, I've seen lots of stuff. You have a five burner stove and one of the burners isn't working. Well, how many tenants are needing to use all four burners at exactly the same time?
Starting point is 00:42:01 okay like there are things that you say hey at some point i might want to replace that or fix that but it doesn't have to be done right now and know that when you do fix it you're probably not getting any of that money back it's just coming right out of your cash flow and you're not going to be improving the value of the property by fixing the small appliance in fact you're not to fix it again because that's what happens is things like this break so grout issues and tile you're going to see like sometimes base boards you get a report that says that they could be fixed or repaired. I like to pay a lot of attention to anything that's near water. So stuff near a shower I want to repair because if I don't, water can get in between sealants that have become loose and then
Starting point is 00:42:43 the floor boards underneath can start to get rot from water. That can be really expensive. But that's different than just like a faucet somewhere that's not working super great or a light bulb that could be changed. So look at the nature of what is being asked of you. And if you can look at the practical reason of why it would need to be fixed. I think you'll get some clarity. All right. Our next question comes from Derek Rankin. Hey David, I'm registered for BPCon 22 and I have a couple important questions. Number one, will there be open mats for rolling? That's a jiu-jitsu question. And should I bring my ghee with me? Also a jiu-jitsu question. I'm a newbie to Brazilian jiu-jitsu and love to learn new techniques. I look forward to seeing
Starting point is 00:43:24 you there. Well, Derek, I don't know that Bigger Pock's is going to have a jiu-jitsu area. set up because quite frankly that sounds like an absolute legal nightmare with tons of people wanting to jump in there and throw themselves into the ring and getting hurt and then potentially suing bigger pockets. So I wouldn't be holding my breath for that. In general, jujitsu is something that you definitely want to do in a supervised manner with instructors in an environment that is being controlled. So at the gym that I go to or it's called an academy, they don't even let you spar with somebody until you've got your first stripe, which typically comes after like three to six months or so of going to class learning techniques and learning
Starting point is 00:44:02 how to not hurt people. If anybody lives near me geographically and you'd like to come train where I do, reach out to me, let me know. I will be happy to get you set up. And if you don't live near me geographically, go get your tickets to Bigger Pockets Conference. 2020. It's going to be in San Diego, one of the best places around as far as weather amenities and beauty. We're going to have a great time. Every year, bigger pockets gets better and better with putting this conference together and I don't see how anyone could possibly regret it. So if you don't live near me, get your tickets. I'd love to see you there, but please don't come tackle me or start a fight or do anything crazy like that. Let's keep it all reasonably healthy. And then if you would like to get
Starting point is 00:44:40 into that, go through the appropriate channels. The next question comes from Preston Garcia in Rochester, New York. Hey, David, I'm looking to get several buy and hold rentals in Cleveland. My agent is investor friendly and send me deals daily. I want to use private lenders for the down payments of the properties and in exchange pay them back with interest. However, not many people want to lend out that money for three to seven years depending on the market to receive their money back. In other words, not many people want to private lend for long term. It seems like the best option going that route is if there's already a decent amount of equity I could refinance after the six-month seasonal phase. These are for debt service loans and I'm mainly looking at the only other
Starting point is 00:45:15 alternative that I can think of is to have them become equity partners. Should I keep looking around for private lenders that are okay with lending for three to seven years and use them as equity partners or something else. Okay, you've made a great observation here, Preston. Nobody wants to lend out money for three to seven years unless the interest rate is higher than you're going to want to pay. And this is one of the reasons that homeownership is made possible for most Americans because the government is giving you a 30-year period of time to pay things back and they're doing everything they can to keep interest rates low. Now, I know that the Fed has been raising rates, so rates have been going higher, but they would be much higher than whatever they are if this was open market
Starting point is 00:45:57 capitalism. I just want you to think about that. If you had to lend your money to someone else for 30 years, would you do it for a 3 or 4% interest rate? Would you even do it for a 5% or 6% interest rate? There's no way that I would. The only reason this happens is because our financing is subsidized by the government in this country. So you're probably making the mistake of looking to private people with an expectation similar to what you'd get from a lending institution that's going to sell this as a mortgage-backed security once the loan is originated. And you've already answered your own question. Your best bet if you want someone's money for that long is to give them equity in the deal. They're probably not just going to want interest.
Starting point is 00:46:37 And the interest you'd have to pay them would make it so the deal isn't going to cash flow for you. So giving away equity would be a much better bet. Now, you're not going to do this for your whole career. You're just going to do it until you get your own money and you don't have to borrow it. if you buy a couple properties, if you do it wisely, if you hang on to them, they're going to grow in equity at a certain point. You can sell them, get the other person their money back, plus whatever their share of the equity was. But now you've got capital that you can now use to get into the game without having to borrow money from somebody else. So you're absolutely right. I would like at giving away equity in the deal and then I would refinance it when I could to get your money back or to
Starting point is 00:47:10 get your capital to get started and get them their money back. All right. That's what we have for today. what a cool collection of questions that people were asking me. We had a little bit of everything there from sort of should I do a business or should I buy real estate to how should I borrow money when it comes to real estate investing to how can I get the best loan possible. I really appreciate your attention and the time that you've been able to spend with me and the fact that you are loyal to bigger pockets and me to get your real estate investing information because I know there's a ton of stuff out there.
Starting point is 00:47:43 I also want to let you guys know this show is only possible. if you actually submit questions that I can answer. So all of you that want to DM me on Instagram to ask a specific question about real estate, probably not the best bet. I'm not going to get to it there. But if you go to biggerpockets.com slash David and ask your question, you are much more likely to get the answer that you'd like. If you guys would like to follow me on social media,
Starting point is 00:48:06 see what I'm up to, communicate with me that way. You could find me at David Green 24 on Instagram, LinkedIn, Facebook, Twitter, pretty much everything on Snapchat. I am official David Green, and there's an E at the end of green. And then you can follow my YouTube. It's David Green Real Estate. So YouTube.com slash David Green Real Estate. I'm making content over there as well.
Starting point is 00:48:29 Thank you guys. Make sure that you subscribe, like, and share this episode on YouTube. If you're not watching over there, it's cool because you get to see me. I do little things with my hand. You see the light that's behind my head. It's a different color when we're doing seeing green than when we're doing the regular podcast. And you can also see the people that are asking questions and see what they look like.
Starting point is 00:48:48 It's just more of an immersive experience so you feel like you're involved in the conversation, not just listening from the outside. And why is that important? Because you're only going to build wealth in this world if you can take action. You got to go do something. Learning about weightlifting doesn't get you stronger. Learning about jujitsu doesn't get you better. And learning about real estate doesn't make you money.
Starting point is 00:49:07 It's taking what you learn and doing something with it. So with that being said, check out another one of our episodes or go to biggerpockets.com. and kind of cruise around. Check out the forums, check out the blog. Go to biggerpockes.com slash store and see some of the books that we have for you there to get more information that you can put into action. Love you guys.
Starting point is 00:49:25 I will see you on the next one. Thank you all for listening to the Bigger Pockets Real Estate podcast. Make sure you get all our new episodes by subscribing on YouTube, Apple, Spotify, or any other podcast platform. Our new episodes come out Monday, Wednesday, and Friday. I'm the host and executive producer of the show, Dave Meyer. The show is produced by Ian K. copywriting is by Calico content, and editing is by Exodus Media.
Starting point is 00:50:07 If you'd like to learn more about real estate investing or to sign up for our free newsletter, please visit www.w.w.w.com. The content of this podcast is for informational purposes only. All host and participant opinions are their own. Investment in any asset, real estate included involves risk. So use your best judgment and consult with qualified advisors before investing. You should only risk capital you can afford to lose. And remember, past performance is not indicative of future results. Bigger Pocket's LLC disclaims all liability for direct, indirect, consequential, or other damages arising from a reliance on information presented in this podcast.
Starting point is 00:50:32 Thank you.

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