How To Become Wealthier, Faster
Investing In Real Estate
By David Lindahl, The "Apartment
King"
Home Study Courses by Dave
Having rehabbed over 470 properties
in the last seven years and collected over 600 apartment units I’m often
asked, how can I become wealthier faster investing in real estate?
While most investors concentrate
on some aspect of single family houses, I was always interested in apartment houses
first, and then single family homes as a means of getting more apartment houses.
From the very beginning of my investing
in real estate, I liked the idea that a group of people (the tenants in a building)
would get together and pool their money to pay down the mortgage on a property,
and I liked the idea that they would also pool their money together to pay for
all of the maintenance work for a building.
I especially liked the idea that
they would give an owner so much money that the owner would have a bunch of money
left over at the end of every month that could be used to either re-invest, save
or to go out and have a good time with.
Essentially, I like the idea that
other people were willing to help make me wealthy.
The first property I purchased
was a three family apartment house. I used credit cards to fund the down payment.
When I began to purchase my third three family, I realized that there were a lot
of good deals out there and I needed a system to come up with down payments.
That’s how I developed my
“Chunker Strategy”. What I do is buy a single family house with little
or no money down (through private money or partners), flip it and use a chunk
of money to live today and use the other chunk for another apartment house.
I became an expert at flipping
single family houses. I learned to wholesale, retail, pre-foreclosure, rehab,
subject to and lease option single family houses. I became a transaction engineer
because I didn’t want to lose any potential deal that might be available
to me.
I soon came to realize that I could
also wholesale, retail, pre-foreclosure, rehab, subject to and lease option apartment
houses as well.
You see, when I throw out my marketing
dragnet for single family houses, I find that I was also attract motivated sellers
of smaller apartment houses. If for some reason I wasn’t interested in holding
an apartment house for cash flow, I could make a chunk of money flipping it using
one of the methods that I described above.
Learning how to invest in apartment
houses is like adding another tool to your tool box. You might not need it every
day, but when you get the chance to use it, it pays for itself over and over again.
Every once in a while, you come
across a great deal on an apartment house. A deal that is going to bring you in
a great monthly cash flow of eight hundred dollars a month or more. These deals
are actually more common than you think, you just haven’t trained your mind
to recognize them.
Imagine for a minute, as you are
buying and selling your single family houses, you start “collecting”
apartment houses with cash flows of at least eight hundred dollars a month (if
you are buying 3+ units, you will want at least a net positive cash flow of eight
hundred dollars a month, unless you are in a first half of a rising market, and
then and only then should you get less).
You will find these deals by dealing
with motivated sellers. These deals do not commonly come through real estate agents.
There are many good marketing courses available that teach you how to attract
motivated sellers, get one and prosper!
Let’s say that you collect
just four apartment houses a year, one every 3 months. At the end of the first
year you will have a net positive cash flow of $3,200 per month. That would equal
$38,400 per year.
Now let’s say that you continue
to flip single family houses, get chunks of cash, and when the opportunity arises
you continue your shrewd method of investing and continue to collect four apartment
houses the next year. You have just increased your monthly income to $6,400 per
month and your total yearly net positive cash flow from your apartments to $76,800.
Let’s jump forward to the
end of year four. You have now collected a total of 16 apartment houses. Your
monthly income from your apartments is $12,800 per month, your yearly net positive
cash flow from your apartments is $153,600!
That means that if want to take
all of year five off and do nothing, no flipping single family houses, no buying
more apartments, no doing nothing, you would still get $153,600 in as a net positive
cash flow from your existing apartments.
With $153, 600 you can do a whole
lot of nothing!
Now you might be thinking whoa!
What about all those tenants! I don’t want to deal with any tenants…you
don’t have to. As your purchasing your property, you factor in the cost
of a good management company. If the property still cash flows properly, buy it.
If it doesn’t…next!
Some people don’t have a
problem managing their own buildings. I did it for my first two and one half years
in business but I soon realized that dealing with my tenants took time out of
me going out and finding more deals, so I systemized the management of my buildings
and hired a girl to work in my office and manage them for me.
I haven’t talked to or taken
a call from a tenant in over four years and yet I happily deposit those cash flow
checks in my bank account every month!
When I buy properties out of state,
I hire local management companies to manage them for us. The rule of thumb is
to pay them 8 –10% of the gross collected rents for buildings with 20 units
or less and 5 – 8% for buildings with 20 units or more.
Let’s get back to the cash
flow because cash flow is the real reason you should consider buying apartment
houses while your doing your single family investing.
The cash flow gives you the freedom
to do what you want when you want, go where you want when you want, and buy what
you want when you want. This is exactly why we are in the real estate game.
What if you don’t decide
to invest in apartment houses? It’s now four years later, you’ve been
flipping a lot houses and are making some good money, heck, you’ve even
got some single family houses that your holding for long term cash flow.
Let’s look at the reality
of the situation. If you want another payday, you have to buy and sell another
house. The cash flow on your single family keepers average $300 per month, what
happens if you lose your tenant for just one month? You’ve probably lost
your profits for most of the year.
If you were collecting apartment
houses during that same four years while buying those single family houses, you
would have a pay day in the tune of $12,800 per month each and every month for
doing nothing (your net positive cash flow). The management company does all the
work! If you lose a tenant in your three family building, no problemo! The other
two tenants still pay enough to cover the expenses and also give you a little
cash flow.
Not only that, you are creating
more and more equity in those apartment buildings through the pay down of the
mortgage and the appreciation that takes place each month that goes by. Your setting
yourself up for some huge paydays further on down the road.
How do you become wealthier faster
investing in real estate? Start collecting some apartment buildings as you buy
and sell those single family homes.
David Lindahl, also known as the
“Apartment King” has been successfully investing in single family
homes and apartments for the last eight years. He is the author of four popular,
money making home study courses “Apartment House Riches”, “How
To Estimate And Renovate House For Huge Profits” “Managing For Maximum
Profits” and “The Real Estate Investors Marketing Tool Kit”.
He can be reached at dave@rementor.com and www.rementor.com.
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