[Dec/2022-Archive-Feb/2022 | RE] Flip Your Future – Ryan Pineda

Chap1

  • DONE

Chap2

  • DONE

Chap3

  • DONE

Chap4 Choosing a market

  • Market
    • Population > 500K, should not invest in market < 100K pop
      • Small pop hard to flip
    • DOM
      • Ideal DOM < 90 day, sell faster
    • Inventory level
      • Active inventory / amount house sold in last 30 days
      • 1~3 month inventory is ideal (seller’s market), 4~5 inventory is neutral (middle), 6 month+ inventory is buyer’s market
    • Stay local is better

Chap5 Dream Team

  • Find realtor who’s willing to low-ball
  • Contractor
    • Vetting
      • Ask before/ask pictures
      • Prev client referral
    • Sourcing
      • Home Depot Early
      • Referral – difficult
      • Google/Yelp/Craigslist
      • Dumpster Driving
  • Lender
    • Professional vs. Private
    • Private lender – profit sharing / interest payment
  • Escrow officer
    • Title Company – in Nevada you just need title company with no attorney needed
      • Comment: this is more efficient actually – bigger infra instead of relying on attorney / their assistant
      • Title insurance / Title company protects your ass
      • Always choose nationwide title company, not a fan of small title company, is small title company out of business, then don’t have title insurance anymore
    • How to vet title company + escrow officer
      • Qualities to look for:
        • 1 – Are they going to mess up the deal? I.e. too slow when seller in foreclosure 
        • 2 – How responsive are they? Want someone who goes above & beyond
          • i.e. : Some escrow officer never answer the phone (朝九晚五心态) only email
        • 3 – Investor discount and not “Junk Fees”
          • Investor discount – Maybe need bulk purchase, cheaper if purchase more
          • Junk fee – Doc Prep Fee / Overnight Fee / Endorsement Fee / Notary Fee etc. – some might be standard in industry, but if you have high volume, you should be able to negotiate it
      • Vetting questions:
        • Do you work with house flippers?
        • Investor discount?
        • Quickest close a deal?
        • Can I contact you outside work hours?
        • How can you improve my business? (Test how creative they can be)
    • Sourcing
      • Google / Yelp / REIA / referral / Facebook
      • Ask REA / lender

Chap6 Deal Eval

  • ARV 
    • Sold
      • +/- 20% in sqft, same story, similar years built (within +/- 10), close to property – ideally same block
      • Across main street can be very different! 
    • Contingent
      • Never use contingent as sole justification for ARV – but nice to add support to ARV
      • Potentially upside
    • Active
      • Competition pool
      • If lot of active properties like yours, yours will take long to sell
      • Help determine holding costs
    • Other factors 
      • Finish – only renovated homes for ARV
      • Beds/bath/garage config
    • CMA example
    • Price / sqft is not recommended
  • Repair costs – per sqft formula
    • Clean-up rehab – $5~10/sqft
    • Lipstick rehab – $15/sqft
      • Paint / Tile / Laminate floor / Granite counter / Kitchen cabinet refinish / small bathroom remodel / slight landscaping
    • Full interior rehab – $20/sqft – replacing the above
    • Full rehab – $25/sqft
      • Plus one big-ticket item (AC/Roof/Pool)
      • Add two $30 / sqft
      • Three $35 / sqft
  • Money costs
    • Depends on DOM (only how long under contract) + doesn’t tell the closing time taken
  • Realtor costs
    • 6%
    • Buyer’s agent fee, standard is 3%, if 1% not show the property, never use less than 3%. 
      • Even using 3.5-4% for property taking a long time to sell.Pushing buyers to buy it.
  • Holding cost
    • Property Tax, Insurance, Utility
    • Closing cost – 2~3% ARV
  • Min profit 
    • Not less than 10% ARV (not burned in big deals)
    • Not less than $20K 

Chap7 Free Leads

  • MLS
    • P/Sqft method for each zipcode for SFH, fifth in the list (fifth cheapest)
      • Setup auto search
      • Could customize more in block-by-block structure
    • Keyword Method
      • Fixer, Fixer Upper, Needs Work, TLC, Investor, Short Sale Approved, Handyman, Motivated, Distressed.
    • DOM method
      • I recommend searches of 45, 60, 75, 90, 105, and 120 DOM.
    • Vacant Cash Method
    • Foreclosure Method
  • Wholesalers
    • Ways to find wholesalers
      • From their Bandit sign
      • Billboard
      • Craigslist
        • Search “Wholesale”/”Wholesaler”
      • REI events
      • FB Groups
      • Google Search (i.e. “we buy houses”)
  • RE Agent
    • Pocket listings
    • MLS deals
  • Door knocking
  • D4D
  • Social Media

Chap8 Paid Leads

  • Website and SEO – costly
  • Google / Social Media Ads
  • Direct Mail – costly
  • Cold Call – Ryan’s claimed favorite
    • Caller need training (how to correctly respond to sellers)
  • Bandit Signs
  • Billboard

Chap9 Make Offer

  • Direct-to-seller
    • Find out what their problem is & find a way to solve it
    • Good Question: how much money do seller need to walk-away with (more focused on result rather than price)
    • Good Question: is that the best you can do?
    • Smaller Contract

Chap10 Construction

  • What work to do – copy the comps
    • Same color schemes
  • Choose contractor
    • At least get three contractor bids
  • Payments
  • Change Orders
    • Be clear at beginning not paying change orders unless approved

Chap11 Sale

  • Pictures – hire professional, $100~300
  • Realtor
  • List Price
  • On Market
    • Multiple scenarios
      • Best Case
        • Multiple offers
        • Accept/Counter/Request Highest&Best
      • Normal Case
        • 3-4 weeks / get offer
      • Worst Case
        • Don’t have offer in a month
        • Potential reasons:
          • Overpriced
          • Wrong with house
          • Listing correct?
  • Accept the offer

Chap12

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