Most of you know that I'm in a graduate degree program for an MFA in creative writing. Initially I was going to do the UCLA certificate program but then decided to go for the gusto and actually get a paper degree to hang on my wall.
So, here I am. This is the first "semester" of a total of seven and I got into this major argument on the phone the other day with the administrator of the program.
Let's just say that there are 2 things that occurred:
1) I don't put up with any "professional" who, well...isn't professional -- especially when it comes to writing. (Any "writer" that can't use spell check with today's high-tech one-touch-button software or is grammatically incorrect yet is a professor at a major university will beouted by me in 3 seconds flat. And no, in case you haven't figured it out, I'm not an ass-kisser, brown-noser like all the other students are.)
2) I don't need this degree for anything. In fact, right now it's turning into a joke as far as why I'm even in this program to begin with. I wanted to challenge myself but not by rocking the boat or bucking the system due to obvious inadequacies with their program. If I wanted a fight, I'd pick up the phone and argue with the IRS about how dodgy their rules and regulations are but...I'll skip that fight for now. You have to pick your battles wisely, you know.
I think part of the problem here is that I've been in "left-brain-mode" for so long that I can't click over the the right brain where I creativity lies. Or used to lie. I've been so real estate geared lately that I forgot what the definition of fiction is anymore.
So, the administrator of the program gets me on the phone the other night and immediately says, "You'll either respect the professors in this program or I'll kick you out of the program."
Not even a fraction of a second passed by before I replied, "Go ahead and kick me out."
I could hear how stunned he was by the response due the lack of his immediate response while as dead air dominated the other end of the phone for seemingly forever.
I love calling people's bluff because what these "creative types" especially don't understand is that I've been in the business world long enough that (1) I can read people like a book, (2) I won't be threatened under any circumstance, and (3) I simply don't give a shit about much of anything these days anymore.
Put someone -- anyone -- who is in a position of having nothing to lose while, at the same time, they just don't give a damn and see what type of result you'll get...especially when you call them on the phone to start yelling at them.
Furthermore, yelling at anyone on the phone usually gets you exactly nowhere. Neither do threats. Again, this is something that someone who isn't part of the business world would never understand.
And what gives me this arrogant attitude that I have?
I'm not sure it's arrogant. Okay, maybe it's "part" arrogance due to the fact that I don't need a shitty piece of paper to hang on my wall (that I'll have to pay a total of $45,000 for by the time everything is said and done) to make a million dollars a year, which is about what I make now. I make more a year than all those professors in this graduate program combined.
The other "part" comes from having an incredibly short fuse for dealing with bullshit due to the nature of my business and what I've been through in my life to this point. Apparently this university administrator is used to people quivering in their boots at the notion of being thrown out of school. Meanwhile I'm daring him to throw me out so I can save myself at least 40 grand that I would otherwise have to shell out to complete this program.
So, right now I'm sitting on the fence as far as the program goes. By the end of the conversation, it was completely different than how it started. It went from him wanting to throw me out to him trying to convince me to stay in. (I love turning the tables on people and making them think it was their idea all along.)
I need the program just to keep me more balanced. (Remember the left-brain right-brain thing I was just talking about?) Doing something creative keeps me balanced and energized so I don't completely derail or go all gangsta on somebody, possibly committing a completely avoidable homicide. (Yes, I get that pissed off sometimes. Dangerous, I know, especially when I'm behind the wheel.) The creativity helps me balance all this anger out.
As it stands now, I didn't get kicked out of school as much as I begged him to throw me out of the graduate program. What I absolutely love is having that sense of power whereas I don't need school or a shitty degree or any university administrator controlling my destiny.
Because I control my own destiny. I always have.
And so do you.
I write my own checks in life. I make as much money as I want. And everything I do outside of my businesses is just an "elective," if you will.
The other day I was watching some crap on TV and somebody was doing an interview of this couple who lost their home, cars, and everything else because the guy lost his "secure" job and couldn't find employment elsewhere. I found myself talking to the TV saying..."There's nothing more insecure than allowing somebody else to control YOUR destiny and YOUR life. Who ever told you that working for somebody else was secure, sucker? Maybe it's time you took the bull by the horns and started writing out your OWN paychecks. Start your own business, fool. Do something for yourself instead of whining on TV like a little girl."
There were some other choice words used but...I have to start hitting the "censor" button a little more these days, as my swear jar doesn't have any more room in it.
So, maybe I'm rough around the edges, not "polished," and a little too real. But I can show you how to write that check for yourself for whatever amount you want to make. Guaranteed.
And then nobody will ever be able to run over you again because the world -- YOUR world -- will remain firmly at the palm of your hand at ALL times.
Well, I'm back in Cali from Detroit. Physically I'm in one piece. Mentally...well, that's another story altogether. Usually I crash the day after I get back but...today is my "crash day," as I feel like I was hit by a train. Right now I'd rather be at home watching TV and ordering endless amounts of crap from the wheelbarrow of catalogs I received in the mail while I was gone. (I'm a mail order junkie on both sides; what can I say?!)
But here I am today. Holding up the fort. Keeping it all together. As always.
I'm also sitting here and recollecting what happened this past weekend. I'll admit that it was the most comprehensive real estate event I've ever done and I even impressed myself, which is almost impossible to do these days.
I'd also like to mention that it was the first time I actually felt threatened due to the weirdo stalker I had at this particular event.
Remember, I've been doing this for 12 years and I've never felt physically at risk before...except for this past weekend. It was the first time I felt like maybe I'm more vulnerable than previously thought.
What happened?
Well, I had this student who will remain nameless. He came in late and seemed harmless enough until he started apologizing profusely for being late. Here I am thinking, you came in late. So what? Your loss, not mine.
Then he proceeded to tell me about 3 times that his divorce is final. Again, so f****** what? I can care less.
But then when he started asking me about my marital status...it started getting kind of weird. By now we're at lunch time on Day One. I quickly dismissed myself from the conversation stating that we'd catch up later and secretly hoping that we wouldn't.
I should mention that this guy came in looking like a scruffy lumberjack wearing a dirty baseball cap and, I believe, a plaid shirt to fit the part of dirty hillbilly. I don't judge what people look like or want to wear to my events. It's none of my business...so long as they'redressed. But what happened next seemed a little weird...
We ended Day One and had our Platinum VIP line up by the lobby door to take the "people mover" through Detroit to Greektown. We went to a Greek restaurant called The Pegasus. Lumberjack dude turned into Dapper Don with the sole intent on fooling everyone. Apparently this sicko thought it would be funny to do this. He changed into a dark suit with a red tie, completely shaved, and looked like a totally different person.
Even more strange, he was trying to infringe upon everyone's personal conversations as if he was a spy with a microphone in his suit jacket pocket. He thought he fooled me too but I knew exactly who he was; I even blew him away when I reminded him of an email I responded to of his dating about 5 years back, almost repeating what I had said back thenword-for-word.
By the time we got back to the hotel bar where I was to meet the rest of my students, I felt like I had to "post" various students around me so that Lumberjack-Turned-Dapper-Don didn't get the chance to sit next to me. I even started moving around the bar to talk to everyone as he kept following me around.
Strangely, he didn't drink anything. Not even water. And he had this icy creepy stare that would even scare Hitler.
Day Two...I was already creeped out but I, of course, had to continue speaking. Throwing the events that occurred the night before into the back of my mind, I did a killer kick-ass job on Day Two but I called in executive protection. I should also mention to that, at about lunch time, I found out that I had two students who were packing some serious heat and they were looking out. (Thank you "Silent Warrior" and "War Hero." You two arefreaking awesome...and you know who you are! I owe you, big time!)
By the close of Day Two...and onto Mario's Italian Restaurant with my Platinum VIP, we loaded onto a bus. And yes, at this point I had full on executive protection in place. (Former Detroit P.D., if you must know.) Psychopath Weirdo was trying to sit next to me on the bus. Like that was going to happen. After all, he just had "one question" that he'd been pestering me about for the past several minutes. I told Psycho that I'd talk to him at the restaurant and never actually intending to.
Again, we made sure that he couldn't sit next to me by carefully placing various students, my bodyguard and Ron Espinoza next to me. Psycho had to sit the closest proximity to our table possible, nearly sitting on the person's lap in front of me. I noticed some odd behavior coming from Psycho including wrapping some scarf around his head (looking like a Taliban terrorist) and acting out some "scene" as in a movie or something. By this time I'm about 3 drinks in but I knew that things weren't going really well.
This is when my bodyguard informed me that Psycho was carrying a knife while someone else told me that he was sleeping in his car at night. Mind you, it had been snowing and the nighttime temperatures had to be somewhere way under 20 degrees!
Between my Silent Warrior and bodyguard quickly whisking me out of the premises with Tori (my student and helper), I felt like I was some important politician like a Senator or something whose life was in danger. I had these two guys packing some major heat and racing me out of the restaurant. (Replay of a scene in The Bodyguard with Whitney Houston and Kevin Costner running through my head...)
I ended up back at the hotel then downstairs at the bar where, before I know it, Psycho is back like the nightmare that he's quickly become. My bodyguard was in very close proximity, not letting anyone (especially the weirdo) sit next to me.
Finally he was able to sit in a seat directly in front of me where I -- without warning -- asked him point-blank in front of everyone what his pertinent question was. He responded by saying..."Uh, no question really. Just wanted to say, great event!" Or something else equally non-committal.
My bodyguard noticed that Psycho's knife disappeared, sometime around when Psycho noticed that he was packing a police-issued weapon. Maybe he stuffed it up his ass. Who knows.
What bothered me about this whole thing is that it made me think: what is this world coming to? I'm a teacher and now, from this point forward, I have to hire pistol-packing executive protection for every future event that I do. And that's not a good thing.
The good thing is that I've always been obsessive about security when it comes to my personal home including a wide array of cameras, a Fort Knox security system, and the whole nine yards. People always thought I was crazy. I guess I'm not that crazy after all.
But leaving Psycho behind for good (since he's permanently blacklisted from all future events), I knocked it out of the park with this past seminar event. This was a 100% real estate related event that I can say -- with 1000% conviction -- that has NEVER included so much information about getting started in no-cash-no-credit passive income real estate.
This includes the NEW 100% Bond Funding Program where you don't even need to have good credit or cash or income verification and they're not funding deals of $1,000,000 or more (instead of over $5,000,000 like it used to be). And the loan points are rolled into the loan so you don't have to come up with that up front either.
And I talk about land trusts for the very first time and how that works. And if you're not sure how that's relevant or how land trusts is a true game changer, I guess you'll have to watch the videos of the event to see how this all works.
This deal goes through the Thanksgiving holiday then...well, the price will go up about 100% for those who drag ass and procrastinate.
If you have any questions, call my office. But I recommend you go to the site first, check it out, read through everything, and listen to my 6-minute audio seminar. Check out the testimonials.
If you missed getting any other video set on any other seminar I've done, this is NOT the one you want to miss getting. This is a real estate investing game changer like you've NEVER seen before!
I keep getting these "jump-the-gun" questions about students wanting hundreds of thousands of dollars in business credit yet their personal credit sucks.
Talk about putting the cart before the horse.
First off, get that 2003 Ray Reynolds infomercial about the falsehoods of building business credit out of your mind for a second, okay?
The reality of the situation is that, because of what happened with the recent banking debacle circa 2005 through 2008 (where the banking system was days away from collapsing), things have changed, folks! A lot!
So...if you think you're going to be strolling into a bank and signing on a BLOC (business line of credit) for $250,000 without them pulling your credit or expecting you to agree to a personal guarantee...keep dreaming. Ain't gonna happen!!
Since 9-11 happened, as you may recall, we had something called the Patriot Act put into place which is basically a legal way of violating our privacy. Because of this, all loans are required (by federal law) to pull the personal credit of the "real person entity" applying for the loan to "tie" the loan into a real person and to make sure you actually ARE a real person (and not some company, offshore corporation, facade, identity thief, etc.)
So, unfortunately, there are many people out there who will bamboozle you into believing that there are loans where they don't pull your credit and/or there is no personal guarantee. While there are some types of loans that won't require a personal guarantee, there are no loans or programs offered by any legitimate bank or lender that won't ask for your personal credit to be pulled because, as I already mentioned, it's federal law.
Glad we could square that away.
The next thing I want to clarify or get straight is this..."Monica, I have a 530 FICO and I want to get a bunch of business credit cards and BLOCs. So, what do I do?"
Answer: Start rebuilding/fixing your personal credit first before you do anything with the business credit stuff.
(Is that clear enough?)
In order to benefit by getting "a bunch" of business credit cards and BLOCs is by having a personal FICO over 700. Period. There is no other way around it.
Now, I know I hear a few disappointing sighs but...guess what? You can actually boost your personal FICO in a snap if you know what to do. I've had students boost their FICO scores in as much as 100 points in a month. I've had students boost their FICOs 200 or 300 points inside a year.
Last year around this time I sent out a series of emails showing my students exactly what they needed to do to chisel off the most amount of delinquencies and "negative marks" off their credit reports within the shortest amount of time.
I call it the "Holiday Season Credit Blitz."
How does it work?
It's a somewhat known fact that when you dispute delinquencies on your credit report right before Thanksgiving and one again (after 35 days pass) right before (or around) Christmas, you'll be able to get more stuff off your credit reports than working on it for 6 to 9 months (or longer).
Why is this?
Since it is a "somewhat known" fact, a lot of people (including credit repair services and attorneys) submit dispute letters during this time, it overwhelms the credit bureau system. To top it off, the credit bureaus are understaffed during this time because their employees are taking more time off for the holidays, not to mention the federal "shut down" days of Thanksgiving, Christmas, and New Year's Day.
So, how do you make this work?
If you've been struggling to have things removed or -- even better -- you've never disputed anything before, now is the time to start...but not quite yet. You have to wait until next week to start submitting your letters into the credit bureaus. You shouldn't submit anything this week.
Now, one of the reasons this is so successful is that you "buy days" during this "Holiday Season Credit Blitz" time frame. When you dispute something on your credit report, the credit bureaus contact the creditor or collection agency requesting proof of your debt. During this "magical" period, the creditors and collection agencies are not only short-staffed during this time but the time starts ticking at 30 days the moment the credit bureau receives your letter. Everyone must respond timely otherwise the account has to come off. This is not as easily done during this period of time.
What do you do?
If you have anything you want removed off your credit report, the weekend before Thanksgiving is when you should create your dispute letters for any account you'd like removed off your credit report. On the Monday before Thanksgiving is when you should mail your letters.
Even better, mail each letter (there are only 3 total) with a delivery confirmation so the credit bureaus can't say they never got your letter (which they like to do during this "Holiday Season Credit Blitz."
I always recommend that my students do all this themselves. Me, I'm a control freak by nature and I like doing personal stuff myself. I recommend you do this yourself.
However, I understand people either don't have time, don't have the confidence, or they don't have the know-how to do this on their own. If that's the case, I recommend you look into my Credit Rebuilding Service which, for the first time in a very long time, is now back open and accepting new enrolled students.
And what if you want to do this on your own? I'm going to give you the letters you need without you paying a dime. Click on this link and download the letters you need to start preparing the weekend before Thanksgiving (to mail out the Monday before Thanksgiving) to all 3 credit reporting bureaus: http://www.monicamain.com/dispute
In order to make this work, you'll first have to pull your credit report at www.experian.com and choose the $39.95 option. Then you'll know what to put on the letters for your disputes to the credit bureaus. (Don't dispute with the creditor or collection agency. That comes later. Just focus on the credit bureaus for now.)
If you don't want to do this yourself, for the first time I'm offering a huge discount on my Credit Rebuilding Service which I'll never offer this much of a discount again. This deal ends tomorrow at the close of business.
The other day I had an IM session with my mentorship group and had a question from one of my students. It was about getting a short-term loan for cash to purchase real estate, mostly to flip property but this can also work for a buy-and-hold deal as well.
But he didn't want to get a loan because, well...he can't. His personal credit sucks and he didn't build his business credit yet.
So, I told him (and the rest of the class who attended the IM session) about a little secret that I've been doing for years that I guess I never thought of telling my students about before. And this is a secret to getting liquid cash for a deal without having to share any equity in a property.
I told him about how I raise liquid capital using the same method I use to attract new investor partners into my "web." I'll post a deal a proposal on the Loopnet Big Board(under "Looking for Capital/Investors") the same way I do when I attract investors to a real estate deal.
Except, well...I never, ever mentioned this secret to my students. And no, it wasn't like I was trying to evade telling you guys. It just never came up until the other day that maybe my students could benefit from this little strategy that I've been using for years.
So, here's how this works:
1) Figure out how much cash you need (based on a real deal whether this is for a down payment, rehab money, etc.).
2) Write out a short "proposal" that will be posted online.
3) Create a longer proposal (up to 3 pages) on exactly what the benefits of this loan will be to the prospective investor.
Here's a sample:
Headline: We Pay 18% Interest on Short-Term Private Money
"Seeking $150,000 to finance a highly profitable real estate acquisition in Texas for a 12-month term with a 15% interest to be paid out monthly. If interested, please contact us for further details."
And it's as simple as that.
Now, here's the deal: Before you give out any specifics on the property deal (like the address), it's best to have the deal under contract. You'll then have a contract with escrow instructions (for their depositing of the funds for the deal) for them to look at.
On the Loopnet Big Board, you have to post for a solid month. You'll get about 50 to 75 different responses. About 10 of them will be legitimate. So, instead of having only ONE deal needing this kind of cash, maybe it would be a good idea to have several deals lined up of the same caliber/price that would need the same exact amount of cash so you can make the most out of your one ad that you place for a month.
Worst case, you'll get your one investor to put in $150,000. Best case, you'll have about 6 to 8 deals going on at one time. How exciting is that?!
Now you know, in a nutshell, how to do it.
Of course, there's a little more to it such as how to put the deal under contract before sending the contract and escrow instructions over to the prospective investor and how to create a short legally-binding proposal. Since it's a lot of information, I'll be presenting that in Detroit next week along with a bunch of other cutting-edge information.
Here's something else that you need to know and really should consider doing if you have a personal mid-FICO below 680. You should fix and rebuild your personal credit. Right now I am offering a ridiculously low basement-bottom price (that I've never offered before) on my credit building service. Because we're coming up on the holidays, this is the best time to have things removed off your credit reports. This is why I'm offering this special for Veteran's Day. Here's more about it: http://www.monicamain.com/credit_blow_out
You'll get a kick out of this...for a couple of reasons. You'll realize what a bonehead one of my students is and, unfortunately, you may realize that you're being the same way after you've had a good laugh at the ridiculousness.
So...one of my oldest students (not by age, mind you) brags that he's been following me since 2002/2003-ish. So...do the math. That's a dozen years. I think he's one of my "oldest" students still around (although that will probably change after he reads this email).
Yet he doesn't own his own apartment building. He manages one, though. It's 66 units to be exact. And he boasts the fact that he's single-handedly brought it up from a 29% occupancy to full.
Good job. Glad you are making someone else rich while doing all the slave work for your boss. I'm sure he's proud.
But...because he's used to "managing" (not "owning," remember) a 66 unit, it's beneath him to own any building below that amount of units. He wants something bigger, he exclaims. None of this "smaller" building nonsense that I've been teaching my students will do underany circumstances.
It's almost like working for Microsoft as an employee, wanting to start your own business but your new business has to be a Fortune 500 right off the bat or...well, you just won't do it at all.
How stupid is that mentality?!
Yet, as history seems to be unraveling for this student, it seems that wanting to own something bigger is the only obstacle for him not owning anything at all!
By the way, do you want to know the fastest way to piss me off? Introduce yourself to me at any of my seminar events like this, "I've been a student of yours for a dozen years but I haven't done shit with any of your information yet."
Trust me when I say that more than a healthy handful of my students have done this and every time it's like listening to nails on a chalkboard through a double bullhorn.
For those of you who have been following me for that long -- or even the past year -- you'll know that I personally have DRASTICALLY altered my PERSONAL investing methodology and strategy to exclusively focus on smaller buildings for the following reasons:
1) No competition with the bigger investors.
2) Properties are "mom and pop" owned allowing for all kinds of creative financing, lowered asking price, land trusts/contracts, etc.
3) Cash flows, by "volume" are actually HIGHER than in a larger building; this is due to the LOWER operating costs by percentage against the gross operating income (gross rental receipts). By "collecting" a bunch of little properties, you can see your overall operating expenses stay a steady low 40% to 45% instead of paying 65% of your gross income out in expenses (as you do with larger buildings).
4) Qualification for smaller buildings is a CINCH, especially if you are a new investor with no management resume, no portfolio of buildings, no experience, and no assets to support a multi-million-dollar loan/mortgage as with what is NOW REQUIRED for you to acquire large multi-million-dollar acquisitions. Banks/lenders do not expect to see any of the above with a small building, as you are a new investor and everyone has to start somewhere.
5) A bank will put up with a lower personal FICO score and/or minor credit deficiencies when the loan risk isn't that high.
Yes, you can invest in larger buildings...as time moves on and as you put together your initial portfolio. But the biggest MISCONCEPTION there seems to be out there is that you need a 100+ unit building to retire.
And you don't. Far from it.
In fact, in my last seminar event, I did a presentation showing how any one of my students could get 3 buildings (all less than $500,000) which would result in a cash flow of $14,000 a month...IN YOUR POCKET. And they weren't large buildings.
If you can't retire on $14,000 then we need to talk. Even MY personal monthly expenses are below $8,000 a month and I own a million-dollar house and drive 2 luxury cars. So, if $14,000 a month can't work for you then...you're delusional, don't know how to use a calculator, or you're a drug addict.
So...I guess I lost a student because he's going to still be sitting around, hard headed as hell, and waiting for another dozen years to buy a building that's "at least" 66 units because, after all, he's been making someone else rich all these years by managing a building this size. And it would be "beneath" him to own something smaller than that REGARDLESS of how kick-ass it cash flows.
You know...like Forrest Gump says..."Stupid is as stupid does."
Hopefully you're not stupid like this, waiting around for no reason.
Now, part of the problem with this student (and many others) is credit. So, let's address that right now with a "solution" that I'm posing to ANY of my students who have a mid-FICO that is 680 or below. Click on this link for an audio seminar to listen to what I have to say about that: http://www.monicamain.com/credit_blow_out
The second part is that, as you know, I'm doing a 2-day event in Detroit, Michigan...starting next Friday. If you still want to go, you can still get in (barely). I'm sold out on Platinum VIP but I have room for a few more Gold VIP (since we had to expand the room). By volume of people, this is going to be my BIGGEST EVENT EVER! This will help you get the funds/cash for your deals. Here's the link on that: http://www.monicamain.com/underground_secret_event_in_detroit
If you have questions, call my office. I've been running my staff ragged and they're all hating me right now but...oh well. Life's a bitch when you work for someone else...which is why YOU should be looking to work for yourself as a successful real estate investor.
And since I'm giving you all the tools to work with, what's the problem??
About 3 weeks ago I found myself -- yet again -- ripping my hair out over another listing agent who wouldn't call me back. And this is on a property that I was fully prepared to submit a kick-ass offer on.
I go through this phase where I think I'm being ignored because I'm a minority (a woman...in case you didn't know) and that, playing the "man's game" of commercial real estate, very often I come up with resistance. (Once I buy my "male voice disguising device" from the Johnson Smith Company, I may finally have the advantage in this business that I've been looking for. Hey, while I'm at it, maybe I can try some of my penis growth pills in the back of my warehouse...)
I had to send my bulldog in.
Who's my bulldog?
Why, Ron Espinoza, of course.
Ron Espinoza has been my commercial finance guy for...forever it seems. Since 2009 to be exact. We were married for a short time, now divorced due to the impossible distance factor between Michigan and California where we each live, but none of this has interfered with our business relationship (as hard as that may be to believe).
If any of you have met him or talked to him on the phone, he's a short little guy but he's got a very intimidating voice. He actually sounds like Anthony Robbins a bit with that overpowering raspy voice.
I had Ronnie call 3 of these listing agent fools on 3 different deals that I not only knew I wanted to buy but I already had prepared offers on all 3 of them.
So, here's how it went:
Listing Agent #1: Completely ignored Ronnie just as he had completely wrote me off by simply not returning anyone's phone call. I'm thinking (or rather hoping) that this idiot is dead in a ditch which is why he didn't have the respect to call either one of us back. (Here it is -- 3 weeks later -- and still no phone call back to either one of us!)
Listing Agent #2: Answered the phone and started arguing with Ronnie about how he needed to come in with POF (proof of funds) and a "pre-approval" for the property before he'd release any details about the numbers on the property. Ron has been a commercial broker for over 10 years and can tell anyone the reality of how commercial lending works and this is how it works: you cannot get a pre-approval on any commercial property without knowing what the numbers are. This isn't residential lending. A bank isn't giving you a pre-approval to buy any house because it's based on what you can afford. A bank for commercial mortgages has to look at (and approve) each individual property based on its cash flow because it's essentially lending on the "business" of the property generating a cash flow. No numbers = no pre-approval. Period. Needless to say, Ronnie had to "school" this fool and the conversation didn't end well.
Listing Agent #3: Called Ronnie back after he left a message and said he (1) wouldn't reveal any numbers about the property unless (2) we were putting in an all-cash offer for their "firm" asking price. Ron's argument (as well as mine) was, "What if the numbers don't support our asking price? Doesn't that mean I can get a discount of 25% or more so that I can make my numbers work AFTER you give me the income/expense sheet?" And then the comment, "You do know that the seller gets the same amount of money at closing regardless of whether it's an all-cash offer or if it's financed, right?" Moron. He told him we'd come back in 6 months from now after he gets no offers when he's ready to sing a different tune. And usually they are after this amount of time passes.
Here's a nifty set of tips for you:
1) Get yourself a Premium Loopnet.com subscription. I know, I know...you're whining that it's expensive. But, if you've already had this "conversation" with yourself about how you want to become a successful real estate investor no matter what then the upgrade on your Loopnet.com account will be well worth it.
2) Keep tabs of the properties that you want in your "Watch List" in Loopnet. Keep them there AFTER they go "off market" (because this means the listing expired). Then hit up the seller/owner after they failed in selling their property. There is a link called "Property Record Data" located right under the Bing map in the listing profile. Click on that link and you'll have access to the owner's information under the "Owner & Mortgage" tab. (If you don't have a Premium subscription, you can't access this). This is where you can contact him or her for the "offer you can't refuse" and you'll probably make out with a big discount and/or owner financing (or both) when you send out your letter.
3) Get yourself a buyer's agent. It doesn't pay to try to contact listing agents anymore because they all suck, they're rude and disrespectful, and they're all so full of themselves that I believe scum-sucking ambulance chaser lawyers are 10 cuts above these losers.
How do you get a buyer's agent?
This is sort of the hard part because you kind of have to weed through a lot of these jerk-off listing agents to find someone you have a rapport with.
And this brings me back to my story of what happened to me recently...
I have a buyer's agent. In fact, I've had one in the Michigan area for years. His name is Chris and he's with a fairly large commercial firm.
So...why did I waste my time trying to contact these listing agents directly?
For one, these properties I'm going after right now didn't seem worthy enough for my guy to work with (even though he'll negotiate on anything for me) and (the real reason), back in the day you used to be able to gain traction with a listing agent because he or she knew they'd be getting the full commission if you didn't bring in a buyer's agent.
In case you don't know what I'm talking about, if you deal with the guy (or gal) who listed the property, they don't have to share their real estate commission with another agent if you buy directly through him (or her).
But...since all these listing agents want to be assholes and jerk-offs these days (even more so than years ago), maybe their punishment needs to be that they get to split their commission with somebody else until they're able to get off their high horse.
That somebody else is your buyer's agent. Look at this person as being a heaven-sent personal assistant who gets to deal with the trials and tribulations of communicating with the jerkiest of jerk listing agents multiplied by however many deals you want to be doing at once.
And if I taught you anything so far, you should be jamming your pipeline full of at least 10 deals at a time since this business is a numbers game.
Imagine not having to deal with 10 different loser listing agents for 10 different deals you're working on. (And if you don't believe me on how tough this is, try doing it. If you live until the end of the week without jumping off a bridge to your voluntary demise, my hat's off to you!)
So, back to my guy, Chris. He's my listing agent.
And he can be yours too.
You see, for those of you coming to Detroit, you'll get to meet him. In fact, this is the first time I'm allowing my students to meet my buyer's agent. For any of you interested in investing anywhere in Michigan (and you will want to do this once you see what I present in Detroit), Chris is fully willing and prepared to be your personal buyer's agent too.
Don't you love it?! I'm giving you a buyer's agent so you don't have to get one yourself. (And they are difficult to find!)
Chris kicks ass, by the way. He's super nice and he's got a very powerful firm behind him. And when Chris was reaming my ass last week for bothering with contacting these listing agents myself, he reminded me that when he leaves messages, they ALWAYS get returned. Plus, Chris never has to battle the demands of providing POF, preapprovals, and all the other bogus crap that these listing agents demand in an effort to weed out the tire-kickers (and everyone else out there; I'm shocked that any of these listing agents actually make any money these days).
Another thing about Chris: his firm is also an in-house lender and he'll be having one of his lending guys come down to talk to my students about the latest programs including getting a 3.44% fixed rate on a commercial loan.
I have so many powerful people coming down to meet my students at my 2-day event in Detroit on November 14th and 15th that you'd have to be crazy (or have a damn good excuse) as to not make this seminar!
This week is your last chance to get the early-bird pricing before it goes way up. Way waaaayyyy up!
P.S. I have so many kick-ass people coming to this event including lenders, brokers, my personal buyer's agent, investors, and even someone who can completely rehab and manage your properties for you! Don't miss this!
I just sent off a lengthy email to an acquaintance of mine because, well...I'm a sweetheart. What can I say?! (You knew that already, though, right?)
First of all, what was this email about and why should you care?
Well, this guy is actually Ronnie's cousin who retired out from the Detroit P.D. a little more than a year ago and, after being a cop all of his life, he has exactly zero knowledge of how to start a business and he asked for my help.
So, I painstakingly put together an email detailing exactly how to start a corporation structure in the state of Michigan.
Then, after clicking the "send" button, I'm like...why not share this kick-ass information with my students who probably don't know how to set up their own corporate structure? Especially since there are a couple of things you need to know about which structure to go with and why.
So, let me break it down to you, folks. By the time you're done with this email, you'll be your own little corporate-structure-building expert.
First off, let me lay out a few different entities and why/how you select what you'll use:
1) C Corporation: most people don't know it but when they form a for-profitcorporation(which is what you'll always form unless you are going for "non-profit" which is way out of my wheelhouse of expertise) it always starts out, from birth, as a "C" corporation. Always. No exceptions. You have to actually change the designation of your corporation to an "S" through the IRS (after the "birth" of your entity). I'll show you how to do that shortly. But...what's the deal with a "C" corporation and why not just keep it that way? With a "C" corporation, you get what's called "double taxed." So, if your C corporation made a profit (after all write-offs) of, say, $1,000,000 for your designated tax year, you'll have to pay $113,900 plusan additional 34% on the profits over $335,000. And that just plain sucks. Then, you'll get what's "left over" after the IRS is done raping and pillaging you financially and then you have to pay personal taxes on what's left over. (Now do you understand why it's called "double" taxation?) Why do this at all when you can designate your corporation to an "S" and then that $1,000,000 profit (or whatever your profits are) "flow down" to you personally. Then you pay taxes on those profits at whatever your personal tax bracket is. An S corporation doesn't pay taxes; you personally pay taxes on all the profits. The only benefit of a C corporation is that you can choose the month your fiscal year ends. If you want it to end on June 30th, it ends on June 30th. You cannot do this with an S corporation or LLC (which both end on December 31st of each year).
2) S Corporation: unless you have a partner (which I don't recommend because I have personal "issues" with the idea of partners), you need to always set up an S corporation (unless it's for a piece of real estate). If you don't already have an S corporation, get one. This will act as your "umbrella" for everything else you do, can be one of your "partners" in your real estate LLCs (and you are the other "partner"), and this is used as a tool to build business credit. As explained above, you personally get taxed on the "flow down" of all the profits from your corporation through a form called a K-1 which is generated when you do your taxes. You may or may not know this but all tax filings for S corporations and LLCs are due one month before personal taxes are due; they are due March 15th. And as already explained, your tax year for an S corporation (and LLC) ends on December 31st.
3) LLC: this is the structure that's recommended for any partnership (where you actually have 2 people such as a husband-wife team, etc.) and for real estate. The IRS stopped recognizing a "single-member" LLC about 4 or 5 years ago so even though a specific state may let you form a single-member LLC, the IRS simply will not recognize "single member" status anymore. And I don't know about you but I like following the federal rules over the state rules just because the feds trump the state in most (or all) cases. I also don't know about you but I hate getting letters from the IRS that says I'm doing something wrong and need to "correct" the situation. (Been there, done that with the "single-member" thing and the IRS.)
Now, something personal: because I don't really believe in "partnerships" (because I've had 3 failed marriages), I don't believe in going in on anything with someone else UNLESSthere's a damn good reason for it. I've gotten burned on too many "partnerships" (marital and otherwise) to have a verystrongview on this. So, if you want to get involved in a partnership simply because you have a spouse, don't do it. Please. Otherwise this just complicates things.
Reasons to actually do a partnership: very simple, you need something of value from the partner in the deal whether it be cash, credit, knowledge, management, or something. This "something" better be of high value.
It pains me when couples want to be "cute" and go in on a deal together when one doesn't need the other to make the deal work (i.e. cash, credit, knowledge, management or something). Not only do you cut in half your power (especially if both have good credit), but if there are problems in the relationship later, it's a bitch trying to separate all this stuff out and you'll end up losing a lot of money. Guaranteed.
What did I mean about cutting your power in half?
Well, if a husband has a 730 FICO and the wife has a 790 FICO, you BOTH have to go on the loan if you are part of an LLC or partnership. If you are getting recourse loans (or properties requiring loans under a million in loan size), you will "hit a wall" at the same time at about 7 properties. If you would have done it the "smart" way, each of you would have gotten 7 properties ALONE and thus, a total of 14 properties between both of you before "hitting the wall."
And by getting 14 cash flowing properties, depending on what you bought and where, you'd be looking at $15,000 to $30,000 a month in cash flow (instead of HALF that because you both "hit the wall" together by being all "cute" when going on all the loans together).
If your credit sucks, or your spouse's credit sucks, start freaking fixing it already. (More on how to make that work in a couple of weeks if you haven't figured that out yet.) It's not that hard. Really, it's not!
Okay, back to our corporations...
You will need one to start which will be your umbrella corporation. This is the one that you'll be doing 2 very critical things with:
1) Building business credit
2) Using as your "partner" on your real estate property LLCs
This umbrella should be an S corporation and should be in your home state. If you don't have one, form it now. Today. While you can still get one with a 2014 year. (This is critical when building business credit for "seasoning" purposes.)
Here's how I detailed the process out for Caesar, Ronnie's cousin who, I may add, is in Michigan but I suggest you read through it, especially for the details on the EIN with the IRS which applies to EVERYONE, no matter WHERE you are forming your corporation!
Remember, your umbrella corporation should be in your home state but I just wanted to demonstrate the steps I laid out for him on how to do this.
Article I: Name that you want your corporation to be. I recommend putting an "Inc." after the name you are seeking since it's short and sweet. Other acceptable extensions can be "Ltd." or "Incorporated" spelled out or "Limited" spelled out or "Corp." or "Corporation" spelled out. You can choose your own extension but you CANNOT use "LLC" since we're not setting up this entity that way. Please note that when you choose a lengthy extension such as spelling out "Corporation," you will be stuck using that entire extension on every document you use which just makes writing it out more tedious and time-consuming.
Article II: Under purpose, you'll have to designate what you plan on doing with the corporation. No need for a lengthy paragraph. Just describe it in a few words and indicate that you'll be providing "consulting" as opposed to selling products.
Article III: When you get to the section on page 1 (in the middle) under Article III where it says number of shares, don't let this throw you. Here's what you put:
Common Shares: 100
Preferred Shares: 0 (or leave blank)
And leave the 2nd part in that same box (#2) blank for statement of relative rights.
Article IV: This is the part where it would be helpful if you had your street address from The UPS Store or somewhere that has mail boxes. Use the same address for all 3 entries and try not to use your home address, as it exposes where you live publically.
Article V: (Page 2) Put your name and then your business address on one line. Leave the rest blank. Don't add any more people.
On the 3rd page, leave the top portion blank. About 2/3 down the page, put today's date. When you print out the form for mailing, you'll sign on the first line under the date.
On the 4th page at the top, put your full name as the preparer and again as the person remitting the fees. Put your cell # as your business phone number.
At the bottom of the same page, type in $50.00 for the organizational fee. There's already a $10.00 fee under that. Then add them together for $60.00 which is what you'll be writing them a check for.
Print out the form and mail it with the $60.00 to:
Michigan Department of Licensing and Regulatory Affairs
Corporations, Securities & Commercial Licensing Bureau
Corporations Division
P.O. Box 30054
Lansing, MI 48909
DON'T FORGET TO SIGN THE BOTTOM OF PAGE 4.
Once you do all that, wait the 2 weeks to get the paperwork back. Don't waste your money on express service or anything. Michigan is pretty fast in processing paperwork. It takes me 2 weeks to get it out here in California so you'll probably get something back in a week. Keep a file for all your corporate paperwork!
The second you get the paperwork, go to this IRS link:
NOTE: PLEASE FILL THIS OUT WHEN SITTING AT A DESKTOP OR LAPTOP WITH A PRINTERATTACHED, AS YOU WILL NEED TO PRINT OUT YOUR EIN WHEN YOU THE SYSTEM KICKS IT OUT TO YOU WHICH HAPPENS THE MOMENT YOU SUBMIT YOUR ONLINE APPLICATION.
Once you complete this step, you can go to the bank with your corporate documents and open up a business bank account. I suggest using Bank of America but that's just my personal preference, as most other banks I've used really suck.
The moment you get your EIN, fill out this IRS form and then fax or mail it off the same day:
For Form 2553, this is to take you from a C corporation to an S corporation:
The first part is self explanatory. Where it gets confusing is at Part E. Put the date that is stamped on the Michigan corporation paperwork. Under F, check the FIRST box only. DO NOT check the box for G. Under H, put your name and cell number. Nobody ever calls so don't worry. Leave the rest of page 1 blank, put yourself as "CEO" as your title ALWAYS on ALL paperwork for everything from now on.
On page 2, just fill in your name, the date, put "100" for % of ownership, date corporation was formed (as per MI paperwork), your SS#, and then put 12/31 in the last box. All S corporations and LLCs end on the last day of the year. Leave the rest of page 2 blank (but make sure you SIGN pages 1 and 2 once you print them out).
On page 3, under Part O, check the first box only. Under P, check the first box for "natural" tax year. Then DO NOT FILL OUT ANYTHING ELSE ON THIS PAGE. NO MORE CHECK BOXES and IGNORE Part III. The last page doesn't apply to you but I always include it in my filings.
Mail or fax the form. I like faxing since I get a confirmation of their receipt of the document and I get to keep the original document for my file in case they claim they never got it.
You'll be receiving some letters in the mail from the IRS. They are just formalities. The first letter will be confirmation of your EIN. The second will be confirmation that they received your 2553. SAVE EVERYTHING IN A PLACE YOU CAN FIND IT. If you lose your 2553 confirmation, they can screw you later if it's not in their system that you're an S corporation due to a C corporations double-taxation standards. (This happened to me once. And I saved myself from a huge audit AND fine by having my proof from THEM that I was an S corporation so SAVE EVERYTHING.)
By the way, for those of you who want to invest in property in Michigan (which is a KILLER STATE for high cash flowing properties), here's a link for forming an LLC (for a property deal in Michigan): http://www.dleg.state.mi.us/bcsc/forms/corp/llc/700.pdf
The Michigan LLC formation has to be the simplest form I've ever seen. It's even easier to fill out than the for-profit corporation since an LLC doesn't have details for shares. Section V is where you have to specify your "partners" such as indicating the name of your umbrella corporation as the manager of the LLC.
Important: When you are filing for the LLC's EIN online, make sure you select the LLC button and then make sure that you specify that there will be 2 on the LLC. (If you don't, the IRS will immediately warn you that it will "disregard" you as an LLC since you can't be a "single member" anymore.)
And, again, the 2 entities are:
1) You
2) Your umbrella S corporation in your home state
This is also how you "borrow" your own credit (and your built business credit from your umbrella corporation) to purchase a property since both entities (you and your umbrella corporation) are on the property's LLC.
By the way, the LLC must be in the state where the property is located and not your home state (unless you are purchasing property in your home state). Furthermore, don't use your umbrella corporation to purchase the property.
So, did you get all that?
If not, just shoot me an email: mm@monicamain.com
See you at the top!
Your mentor,
Monica Main
P.S. We still have seats left for our mind-blowing power-packed event in Detroit where you can meet real lenders, brokers, and money people to get you cash for your deals. Plus, those who show up to the event get to participate in the $9,000,000 Opportunity. Click on this link for more details: http://www.monicamain.com/underground_secret_event_in_detroit
Okay, maybe I was a little hard on you guys and gals the other day when I exploded. I would say "sorry" except that I meant every word to the offenders who were guilty as charged.
To be perfectly clear, I obviously (and I was hoping you would have gotten this part)wasn't targeting those of you who are nice and respectful, which -- I might add -- accounts for significant portion of my students. But I do appreciate those of you who were sweet enough to call Rose and say that you were sorry...even though you weren't the offenders I was talking about. (Never apologize for something somebody else did! Nice gesture, though!)
So...as the week grinds on (and ends soon), I feel like I'm recessing deeper and deeper into the throes of the Twilight Zone.
For one, the government has been spraying like a mad dog in the desert skies above where I live. I notice that each time they do this, the Midwest gets a major weather ass-beating. I'm guessing that all this spraying is a weak attempt to try to control the weather while probably killing us in the meantime.
And then there are the dummies who call themselves the "upper-middle" class who all think it's July 23rd today.
Yes, you read that correctly. They think it's freaking July 23rd.
After my daughter's bullying incident with that little snot-head, Jake, I now sign in every morning and walk her to her class at school. When I signed in this morning, about 8 other parents had already signed in, copying was Dopey Parent #1 put in for today's date as being 07-23-2014. So the rest of the dummies signed in copying the same date underneath until I came in as Parent #9 writing down the REAL date of 10-23-2014.
I swear, it's unbelievable how people get through the world in this day and age because almost no one has their head screwed on...at all!
Must be all the spraying in the sky that they're doing. It's starting to diminish everyone's brain cell counts around here without them being none the wiser.
I mean 07/23/2014. Really?! Is everyone that way off? Last I remember, my daughter wasn't even school that entire month.
In the midst of dealing with all this, I got some really good news this morning. My investor-partner from Texas said he'll up his "money pot" a little bit from the $9 million. I'm trying to push him to an even $10 million but I don't know if he'll do it. So, it's just in the middle, between the $9 million and $10 million mark.
And in case you have no idea what I'm talking about, I have an investor-partner who started hitting me up for properties a short time back and I convinced him that the best route to take would be to work with my students...give them an opportunity to bring him investor-partnership deals where he will offer anywhere from a 25% to a 50% gained equity and monthly cash flow split, depending on the property and how much you have a hand in the management.
This is a great way for you to get your foot in the door if you're trying to get into the business as a passive income real estate investor with no cash and no credit.
So, how is this $9 million (and counting) dispersed?
It's to be used as down payment funds. So, if a student brings him a building that's $3 million, typically there is a 20% down payment requirement so $600,000 of the "pot" would then be used on the deal.
And this goes on and on until the $9 million + is tapped out.
All of this will be explained at the seminar event.
Again, for those of you who do not attend both days, you cannot participate in this opportunity. No exceptions this time.
Some of you remember two years ago when I brought my students the $25 million opportunity for the SFR REO property deals. A total of 19 students participated and a handful of them became multi-millionaires because of the opportunity.
This deal is a tad different because we're working with multifamily properties (and not residential homes), the properties have to have an occupancy (and cannot be abandoned/vacant buildings), and they have to be in reasonably good shape. Cosmetic rehab is okay but no "gut-to-the-studs" rehab.
This means that the $9 million will actually go a much longer way than the $25 million.
How do I figure?
Because the $9 million is a 20% down payment (not including due diligence, closing costs, or rehab funds). This means we can purchase $45 million in property with this money.
And that's even better than the $25 million deal! (I kept telling you that it's better!)
Unlike the $25 million deal where I allowed some students (from mentorship groups, etc.) to participate in this deal, the $9 million deal is for only those who attend my 2-day Detroit event on November 24th and 15th
If you didn't register yet, you can still get a kick-ass pricing deal. Pricing will go up at the close of business on Halloween next Friday. And it will go up in a major way!
It seems that I always tell you about the great things about buying and owning passive income real estate, especially the monthly cash flow that just keeps growing and getting bigger as the years drone on (due to increased cost of living).
But...what about the bad stuff that can happen? How come I never talk about that?
Well, good thing you brought that up because that's what I'm about to do now. I'm going to share with you a real life property horror story that actually happened to me a few short years ago and what I did to get out of the situation. Some things, of course, can't be circumvented at all and you can chalk that up to taking a risk in this big thing we're all participating in called "life." Most things, however, can be rectified if you think creatively enough.
Here's one such thing that couldn't be circumvented...at least for me. But I'll tell you what I ended up doing in order to distance myself from this "problem child" property as fast as I could.
Years ago I had a property in a seedy area of what I like to refer to as the ghetto because...well, that's where it was. Deep in the heart of the ghetto in a low D-class property.
By the way, not to stop the story midstream or anything but I should mention as progressive lesson here that there are "good" class D properties and "bad" class D properties. Here's my own personal invented scale as such:
Class D- = war zone, burned out buildings, and drive-by shootings every hour; this would be an area to avoid at all costs!
Class D = on the border of the war zone described above but "leaning" toward the "better" areas...still an area to avoid because the bad parts of the ghetto will bleed into this area, giving you more of a headache than it's worth.
Class D+ = obviously if you're going to do a class D property, this is what you're aiming for. These are considered high risk to other investors because they can switch to a regular (or D-) at any time but they can be incredibly profitable. These would be your "up and coming" areas where a lot of investors come in and, as a comrade effort, try to redevelop certain blocks or areas. They could, at some point, be reclassified as a class C which, of course, would greatly benefit you financially.
Class D, I should mention, is an unofficial class but any real estate broker or agent you talk to knows full well what "class D" means so...I guess it really is a "real" class if you think about it.
Anyway, this property we're speaking of was a small building of only 6 units. It was the second to the last building on a corner in a quint neighborhood fitting your "regular" class D description above but bordering on Class C which was literally one block over.
Unfortunately, after purchasing the property, doing minor rehab, and curing the vacancies in 2 of the 6 units, there was a shooting right on the corner next to where this building was situated. All 6 of the tenants in the building had vacated the property in less than 6 months after because, unfortunately, it wasn't just a shooting but someone involved in the shooting bled to death on that very corner right next to a stop sign situated there.
What an inexperienced investor would have done would have been to throw their hands up and walk away, crying in their beer at a local bar over how life is unfair (probably while the local residents were stripping out the building at the very same time).
However, being a little more experienced than that I realize that sometimes sh** happens and you have to keep moving forward, right?
I have no control over what happens and I'll be damned if I never take a risk doing anything otherwise I'd never get anywhere in life. I refused to lose on this deal.
So, I took quick, swift action to refill the building. I offered 2 fr*ee months to new tenants coming in, no credit check, income verification with 2 months worth of paycheck stubs, and a security deposit that reflected only half of one month's rent. I filled all 6 units in a week and a half.
Next, I put the property up for sale using proforma numbers (like everybody else does). I didn't throw it up for sale at some ridiculous low ball price otherwise investors get suspicious. Instead, I put it up for sale for just under double what it would normally sell for. (Take note, this is reverse psychology.) I didn't honestly think I'd sell it for that but I absolutely refused to lead anyone to ask the question, "This property is cheap so...what'swrong with it then?"
And nobody asked that question.
Within 2 months, the property was under contract. A man in Texas wanted to buy it. And holy sh**...he gave me my exact asking price. Go figure!
What was that price? $195,000! And the property (with rent-paying tenants at full occupancy) was maybe worth $100,000 tops! (By the way, I paid $73,500 for this same property. I put $20,000 into it. I actually made $101,500 in profits on this deal in a total period of 10 months. Not bad!)
What's the lesson here for you?
1) You can't not take a risk because of what may happen because you never know. This property was at a border C/D class area and these types of murders/shootings usually don't happen here. If you think about it, people can get killed in Beverly Hills or Malibu, too. Unless you have a crystal ball, you never know what can happen and where it can happen. After doing the best risk/reward ratio you can do, go for it otherwise you'll be exactly where you are now in 5 or 10 years from now. And we don't want that, do we?
2) Don't be an out-of-state investor without doing some type of due diligence on a property including (1) what did the seller pay for the property? (2) when did the seller buy the property? (3) what is the "seasoning" of the tenants (or how long have they lived on the property)? (4) what are the "comps" of recent sales in the area per unit/door? and (5) what does the recent crime report in the neighborhood look like by simply calling the local police department? It's okay to be an out-of-state investor but get to know your area really well (and you can do this by never leaving your house in your own area). Know what you should be paying per door and what you shouldn't be paying per door. Get to know how much rent is for each type of unit in a unit mix. Get to know how bad it is by getting a crime report. Find out how "gritty" of an area you can go and where it gets so bad that it becomes off limits.
3) Realize that sometimes your exit strategy may change midstream. And that's okay. You may have had plans to do the buy-and-hold plan with a property and then you realize sometime after you rehabbed it and filled up the units that, perhaps, it's gained a considerable enough equity that you'd rather resell it to get the money out for a larger property. And this is completely okay. Just don't sell the property and blow the money. Keep investing!
4) Understand that sometimes stuff will happen with a property. That's just how it goes with property ownership. But the better you do with due diligence before you purchase your property will determine how bad things will be post-escrow for you. For example, if you're too cheap to hire a property inspector for a thousand bucks or two, don't be surprised if your interior walls are ridden with black mold that has to be specially remediated, costing tens of thousands of dollars. (By the way, this would have been something you would have been able to have to seller pay for if you caught it in the due diligence period during escrow.)
As far as investments go, in comparison to everything else out there, you can't beat passive income real estate. You just can't. This is why your wealthiest of wealthy all own real estate. They're not doing it to keep up with the Jones' or to have something to talk about at cocktail parties. It's because, hands down, it's the best way to attain and retain wealth.
And if multi-millionaires are doing it, it simply means it's a viable kick-ass opportunity that is making a lot of people very wealthy. (Last time I checked, nobody was getting rich stuffing envelopes or signing up for a network marketing opportunity. I'm just saying...maybe you need to ask yourself if real multi-millionaires are getting rich doing whatever opportunity you're looking at to figure out if it's worth you doing or not!)
One thing I have to offer you is the opportunity to not only discover how to do all this (and directly from people who are successful doing it) but to offer you the opportunity to connect with the people who can fund your deals for you. Without OPM (other people's money), getting involved in real estate becomes impossible to do.
But I have those money connections for you...
Here's where: Detroit, Michigan
Here's when: November 14th & 15th
Here's more information on this event:
http://www.monicamain.com/underground_secret_event_in_detroit
If you have any questions, give us a call at (661) 295-5050.