Help Me Evaluate My First Purchases Please!

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I'm purchasing my first investment properties and could use the advice of some of you expert investors out there. I'm buying four properties that have a total of fourteen units. Gross annual rental income is about $110,000, operating expenses are a little under $33,000. I am purchasing the four units for $518,000 and have a broker lined up that has a lender which will provide a loan for 100% LTV for all four properties. Also, the sellers are providing me with assistance to the tune of $23,000 which I hope will cover the majority of my closing costs (the seller assistance is in the form of promissory notes since the lender frowned upon any assistance over 2%). The debt service will cost me about $42,000 per year so my noi = is about $30,000 after a 5% vacancy rate. How do those numbers look?

Comments(7)

  • MikeWood6th January, 2004

    The final numbers look great and retirement looks even better. Would like more of a breakdown on the numbers though, just to make sure that everything seems to be inline. I would like to know how you found a lender that would allow you to buy all of those properties at the same time!!

  • geovest6th January, 2004

    I don't know who the lender is yet, I'm working through a broker. However she said that this lender will allow up to 10 purchases at 100% LTV to a maximum of $1 million. Of course I still need to get through closing to make sure that her statement is correct. The loan is a 2/28 ARM that starts at 7% and is tied to the LIBOR. I have to pay 2 points for the loan.

    What info do you need regarding the numbers? The numbers quoted are my pure income and known expenses without adding in any reserve for maintenance (although I did factor in a 5% vacancy).

    Thanks for you reply and help!

    P.S. I don't think retirement looks good yet - I just want to get to the point where I can do this full time - maybe 5 years!?

  • ELOCK6th January, 2004

    Would'nt mind divulging contact info on your broker would you sounds like someone I may be in need of in the very near future.

    Thanks

    ED

  • DaveT6th January, 2004

    A 33% operating expense factor seems OK if you are managing the properties yourself. If you are planning to hire professional property management, then I would raise the operating expense to something closer to 45% of scheduled rental income.

    Once you add in a maintenance reserve, a replacement reserve, get your own quotes for hazard and liability insurance, and allow for a property tax increase, you may find that your NOI is somewhere between $15K and $20K.

    Remember that all "scheduled" rents (not just collected rents) prorated to your date of settlement become a seller credit on your side of the HUD-1. If you can settle on the 3rd of the month, then you should get a rent credit of about $8250 (lower if the units are not 100% occupied).

    When you add in a credit for the security deposits (I am guessing about $9K if security deposit is equal to montly rent), you are seeing a seller credit of about $17000 to go along with the $23K seller assistance.

    With nearly $31K from the seller (not counting the security deposits), I would hope that you could put more down and get a lower loan rate. With the LIBOR index at historic lows, perhaps you could lock a 5% rate with a downpayment.

    Additionally, you want to confirm that the loans are amortized for 30 years, otherwise your annual debt service goes to $55K.

  • nlsecor6th January, 2004

    Nice points Dave. Closing date and confirmation of deposits are key. Don't overlook those 2 points.

  • geovest7th January, 2004

    Thanks for everyone's help. The comments and tips are very re-assuring!

  • hibby768th January, 2004

    Your expenses are exactly 35%. Make sure that you KNOW what the expenses will be for the property. Estimates are fine at first, but verify everything as you go into it.

    Cap of 13.8%. That's a high cap rate. Is there a lot of defered maintance? bad area? That's high enough that I'd be suspicious.

    Yearly CF is $31k or so.

    Looks like a good deal, as long as you're not missing anything.

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