Real Estate Investors Association of Greater Cincinnati

Search results for 'real estate': (118 articles found) - Clear Search


3 Tips for Building the Relationships that build Your Business

0
Comments

If you don’t think that real estate investing is a relationship business, you haven’t been paying attention. 

It’s your connections with other investors that bring you the local knowledge, the referrals to the right professionals, the money, the partnerships, and the deals that let you prosper now, and for years to come.   

But these relationships don’t ‘just happen’ for most people. You have to be intentional about building and maintaining them, just like you’re intentional (I hope) about building a rental portfolio, or a buyer’s list, or a marketing plan.   

Cincinnati REIA exists, in large part, to provide a platform for you to find and interact with like-minded folks who can encourage and help you be successful, but you have to do your part, too. Here are some tips for the 95% of us who aren’t just natural ‘connectors’:  

  1. Be intentional about your professional development. There’s no job you can have or business you can be
    Read More...


Financial Friends

0
Comments

 

          Way back in the mid-90s, I went to a workshop taught by the great Pete Fortunato.

          Several times during this event, he mentioned deals he’d negotiated or financed with the help of what he called “financial friends”.

          At the time, I had two thoughts about this: first, “Why does a guy who’s been in real estate for 30 years and is probably richer than Croesus need other people’s money to do deals?”.

          And second, “That’s great for him—he has decades of experience, so I bet he both knows a lot of people and is able to impress them with all the deals he’s done. I wonder how long it’ll be before some of these ‘financial friends’ find me?”

          As time has passed, and experience and observation has filled in the blanks, I’ve discovered the answers to both questions. Read More...


What You Don’t Know About Seller Psychology (that’s ruining your marketing)

0
Comments


Think back for a minute—what was your first thought the first time you saw one of those handwritten signs at the highway entrance? You know, the one that says, “Handyman Special Must Sale [sic] $87,000 555-5555”? Or the first time you saw a bandit sign that said, “I Buy Houses Close in 7 Days”?

Unless you happened to have encountered one of these messages for the first time after you’d already started studying real estate, your reaction was probably a mixture of:

  • Suspicion (“Is this for real? Who tries to buy houses by putting a sign on a telephone pole?”)
  • Confusion (“Handyman’s special WHAT? What are they trying to sale [sic] me, exactly?”)
  • Mistrust (“How can they possibly buy a house in 7 days when it took my bank 45 to close?”)
  • Cur
    Read More...


The Benefits of DSCR Loans for real estate Investors

0
Comments

 

In the world of real estate investing, finding the right financing option can be the key to success. One of the most effective loan products that has gained significant attention in recent years is the Debt Service Coverage Ratio (DSCR) loan. DSCR loans are especially popular among real estate investors due to their flexibility and streamlined approval process. These loans are tailored for investors seeking to maximize their portfolios without relying on personal income or traditional credit scores. Here’s why real estate investors should consider DSCR loans as a financing solution.

What is a DSCR Loan?

A DSCR loan is a type of financing where the lender evaluates the borrower’s ability to repay the loan based on the income generated by the property itself, rather than the borrower’s personal income or credit score. The debt service coverage ratio is a financial metric that compares the property’s net operating income (NOI) to the total debt obligations, typically the mortgage principal and interest, taxe
Read More...


The Smart Investment Strategy of real estate in a Self-Directed IRA

0
Comments

 

real estate in a self-directed IRA (SDIRA) is the number one strategy of smart investors who choose their own investments to build retirement income. You can do this, too, if you use a self-directed retirement plan. You’ll become part of a growing class of individuals who control their retirement funds and invest in alternative assets to build wealth and diversify your portfolio.

4 Ways real estate in a Self-Directed IRA Earns Income

Building tax-sheltered retirement income with real estate in a self-directed IRA opens a considerable number of doors for investors. While the most common asset is an actual piece of property, there are a myriad of other holdings the average individual might not know about.

Investors who are familiar with the ins and outs of any strategy can put their knowledge to work and invest in those assets in an SDIRA to grow wealth for retirement in a few ways.

Property Appreciation

Typically, the val
Read More...


YAFTAX

0
Comments

 

Back when I first joined my REIA, there was an experienced investor named Ralph who always wore these buttons that said YAFTAX.  After perhaps 6 months, I finally worked up the courage to ask him what that meant, and he said, “sound it out”.

After a few tries, I got it: You have to ask.

His point was, don’t walk around being confused by my button. Ask me. Don’t walk around being confused by real estate. Ask someone.

So fast forward (mumble mumble) years to yesterday, when I had a really interesting conversation with a really new investor that FINALLY made clear to me the full meaning Ralph was trying to convey.

This new investor mentioned that at some of our 'deal' meetings, she'd listen in, write down any terms she didn't understand, and google them.

The example she gave was, "I didn't initially know what it meant when people said, 'I have a
Read More...


The Importance of a Feasibility Study for real estate Investment

0
Comments

A feasibility study is a critical step in real estate investment, offering a detailed analysis of a property’s potential. It helps investors make informed decisions, mitigate risks, and align projects with market conditions, financial goals, and regulatory requirements. Including an architect in this process enhances the study’s accuracy and value by providing expert insights into design, functionality, and compliance.

Key Benefits of a Feasibility Study

  1. Risk Mitigation
    A feasibility study identifies challenges such as zoning restrictions, environmental concerns, or construction costs. With an architect involved, these challenges are addressed proactively, ensuring that risks are minimized before development begins. Architects analyze the practicality of design solutions and anticipate structural or site-related complications.
  2. Financial Viability
    The study evaluates costs, potential revenues, and ROI. An architect contributes by estimating design and construction expenses based
    Read More...


15 FAQs about a Self-Directed IRA (SDIRA) + Alternative Investments

0
Comments

Advanta IRA is one of the nation’s leading self-directed account administrators. We often encounter questions from people who want to know about self-directed investing. Below are 15 of the most frequently asked questions about how a self-directed IRA (SDIRA) works with alternative investments, including types of accounts, a list of common assets, and how to fund a new account.

Using alternative investments to build retirement wealth is a smart strategy in today’s economy—especially when combined with an erratic stock market. Alternative investments often have a low correlation with stock market performance and have the potential to produce positive returns even when the stock market is down and when inflation is high. This is why the SDIRA is becoming more popular with savvy retirement savers like you. 

Top 15 Frequently Asked Questions about a SDIRA

  1. What is an SDIRA?
    Self-directed IRAs (SDIRAs) and solo 401(k)s work like their conventional counterparts with two powerful exceptions: 
  • Self-directed plans allow alternative investments th
    Read More...


I Can’t Said the Ant. But He’s a Brainless Arthropod. What’s Your Excuse?

0
Comments

When I was 2 or 3 years old, my mother took me on trips to the library almost every week. While she checked out the latest mystery novels, I always went to the same shelf in the children’s section and pulled down the same worn, tea-colored book called “I Can’t, Said the Ant.” I must have made my mom check that book out 50 times. I had every word memorized, every illustration emblazoned on my brain, and every character befriended in my daydreams.

In case you missed out on this epic, the basic plot is that a teapot falls off the counter and breaks its spout, and if it isn’t put back up, it will die some horrible teapot death. All of the denizens of the kitchen—from the dinner bell to the pie to the pot—beg the (oddly, single) ant in the kitchen to get the teapot back to the counter and repair the broken spout.

Much rhyming ensues (“I can’t bear it, said the carrot” is one that still sticks with me), and ultimately, the ant, who initially, as you might guess from the title, doesn’t see how he can manage it, rounds up a work crew of insects and rescues the unlucky teapot from the floor.


Read More...


How to Enjoy the real estate Game

0
Comments

As you can imagine, I meet a LOT of real estate entrepreneurs every year.

And something that I’ve noticed about many of you, including newbies and old pros, is an energy you give off that I can only describe as clenched-upness.

Even folks who are excited, on the surface, about starting or expanding their real estate businesses are often simultaneously radiating a sort of anxiety about the whole thing.

Yes, I understand that what I (and your sellers and buyers and private lenders, by the way) am really feeling is your underlying fear.

Whether it’s a fear that you’re being sold a bill of goods by all the folks (like myself) who tell you that there’s unimaginable money in real estate, or a fear that it works but you can’t do it, or a fear that you WILL succeed and then be judged because you have money and your friends and family don’t, it’s definitely there—at least in most people that I meet.

But there are
Read More...