From Boss to Leader: Empowering Your Employees for Success

Erik Latsha is the CEO of Honest Home Solutions, a real estate investment company operating in South Central Pennsylvania and northern Maryland. In this episode, we talk about the importance of honesty, trust, and accountability in building a successful real estate business along with the biggest lessons Erik learned along the way. Listen now to learn more about Erik, how he operates Honest Home Solutions, and how your integrity can create a great impact in the industry! Quotables “One of the big things we focused on was people over profit when we really started our business, it was a huge part of advertising and marketing.” “When I’m making business decisions it’s really important for me to be an example to my staff.” “I don’t believe you’ll ever have good people until you empower them to be better than you.” Links Website: RCN Capital https://www.rcncapital.com/podcast Website: REI INK https://rei-ink.com/ Instagram: Erik Latsha https://honesthomesolutions.com/ Facebook: Erik Latsha https://www.facebook.com/ErikJLatsha/ Website: Honest Home Solutions https://honesthomesolutions.com/

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Real Estate Investors Are Losing Money on Roughly 1 in 7 Homes They Sell

Investors are selling at a loss as elevated mortgage rates curtail homebuyer demand. Roughly one of every seven (13.5%) U.S. homes sold by an investor in March sold for less than the investor bought it for, according to a new report from Redfin (redfin.com), the technology-powered real estate brokerage. That’s comparable with February’s 14.5% rate—the highest since 2016. It’s also nearly triple the share of a year earlier and compares with a record low of 2.8% in May. By comparison, 4.8% of overall U.S. homes that sold in March sold at a loss. This is according to a Redfin analysis of county records and MLS data across 40 of the most populous U.S. metropolitan areas. Redfin defines an investor as any institution or business that purchases residential real estate, including both large companies and mom-and-pop investors. While most housing investors still reaped gains, those gains have shrunk. The typical investor who sold a home in March sold it for 45.9% more ($145,714) than the price they paid, down from 55.3% ($173,458) a year earlier and a pandemic peak of 67.9% ($199,274) in June 2022. It’s important to note that gains don’t necessarily equal profits. Just because an investor sold a home for $145,000 more than they paid doesn’t mean they’re making money because they may have spent more than that on renovating the property. “Home flippers aren’t reaping the gains they used to,” said Phoenix Redfin agent Van Welborn. “I recently showed one of my buyers a three-bedroom single-family home in Glendale that was listed by an investor. My client ultimately found another house they liked better, and the investor ended up losing about $20,000. The investor bought the home for $450,000 and sold it for $480,000, but put $50,000 of work into it. The house also sold below the $550,000 list price after sitting on the market for almost four months.” Investors Are Losing Money as Mortgage Rates Rise, Homebuyer Demand Drops Investors are making less money selling homes—and losing money in some cases—because the housing market has slowed dramatically in response to rising mortgage rates. The average 30-year-fixed mortgage rate is 6.39%, down from the 20-year high of 7.08% in the fall, but up from 5.11% a year ago and a record low of 2.65% during the height of the pandemic in January 2021. Higher mortgage payments have eaten into investor profits, and sent the typical homebuyer’s monthly payment up nearly $300 from a year ago, which has slowed homebuying demand and pushed down sale prices. As a result, the share of investor-owned homes selling at a loss has increased. While many investors buy homes in cash, they’re still sensitive to high interest rates because they often take out loans to get that cash. “You might wonder why investors don’t just wait to sell until the housing market bounces back. Many long-term investors who rent their properties out are doing that, but many flippers—especially those who bought recently—can’t afford to,” said Redfin Senior Economist Sheharyar Bokhari. “Holding onto homes that aren’t producing income can be expensive because the owner is on the hook for property taxes, along with operating costs and monthly mortgage payments in some cases. Many short-term investors are also opting to sell because they know prices may have more room to fall and want to cut their losses.” Roughly one in five (20.8%) homes sold by flippers in March sold at a loss, higher than the 13.5% share for investors overall. For the purposes of this analysis, Redfin defines a flipper as an investor that bought a home and resold it within nine months. Investors who rent out their properties are also seeing their returns shrink in some areas. The median U.S. asking rent fell 0.4% year over year in March—the first annual drop in three years—and 13 major metros saw larger declines. Owners of short-term rentals are getting hit as well. The Airbnb market is oversaturated with supply, and authorities are imposing tougher restrictions on hosts, driving some to sell, Redfin agents said. Overall, investor activity has fallen significantly from the height of the pandemic, when record-low mortgage rates and soaring homebuyer demand drove up investor purchases. Redfin recently reported that investor purchases declined a record 46% year over year in the fourth quarter. Investors Are Most Likely to Sell at a Loss in Phoenix, Las Vegas In Phoenix, 30.7% of homes sold by investors in March sold at a loss—the highest share of the 40 metros Redfin analyzed and more than double the national rate. Next came Las Vegas (28%), Jacksonville, FL (20.9%), Sacramento, CA (20.2%) and Charlotte, NC (17.4%). The markets where investors are most likely to lose money are the places where home purchases—by investors and individual house hunters alike—soared during the pandemic. Many of those markets are also on the list of housing markets that are now cooling fastest. Pandemic boomtowns are seeing home prices and sales fall relatively quickly because housing costs surged to unsustainable levels during the pandemic, pricing out many house hunters, and elevated mortgage rates then added fuel to the fire. Redfin agents say that small, individual investors are often the ones offloading their properties now, while many large investment companies are waiting on the sidelines for the market to improve. “Most of the investors I see selling now are mom-and-pop investors,” said Las Vegas Redfin real estate agent Shay Stein. “They’re selling because their long-term tenants are moving out, they want to put their money elsewhere, or they just want to get out because they have heartburn from 2008. The best time to sell would’ve been late 2021 or early 2022, but many of them are thinking that the next best time is now because the economy and home prices could slow further.” While a lot of large investors are holding onto their properties, iBuyers (instant buyers) are the exception, according to Stein. Many iBuying companies, including RedfinNow, ceased or slowed operations in the last two years and have been offloading inventory. That’s likely part of

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Finding the Perfect Solution for a Particular Segment

Dallas Tanner is an experienced investor and property manager who started with Treehouse Communities and now heads Invitation Homes. Discover the importance of location, product segment, and capital structure when investing in residential real estate, as well as the shifting demographic effect on homeownership and the rise of build-to-rent communities with tailored amenities. Learn about the challenges faced by millennials in finding affordable housing and the increasing desire for choice and flexibility among renters. And don’t miss Tanner’s Money Minute for tips on building equity over time. Quotables “I don’t see demand caving. I think demand stays elevated. I think supply is our issue, which also exacerbates the demand issues.” “If you own real estate in housing, you’re probably in a really great spot if you’re properly located.” “If you’re passionate around the concept of owner. Invest in real estate, find the right ways to do it.” “When you say somebody can’t live in this neighborhood because they don’t want rentals, I actually think that’s the reverse of progress.”  “Try to be the perfect solution for a particular segment that you want to focus on.” Links Website: https://www.invitationhomes.com/  LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/dallas-tanner-94933737/ 

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The Power of Buying Back Time

Dr. David Phelps is the founder of Freedom Founders, an exclusive real estate investing community dedicated to helping people achieve financial freedom through real estate. David is a retired dentist who transitioned from his practice to real estate investing to be with his family and he has been helping others do the same for years. Listen now to learn more about David, Freedom Founders, and what it took for him to go from having his own practice to achieving financial freedom with real estate!  Quotables “You have to be cognizant of the fact that the market’s changing, it’s shifting. Is that a bad thing? No, it’s a good thing if you’re positioned for opportunities.” “It gave me what I call optionality. That’s what you want in your life and the sooner you can get that, the sooner your life can change and you can finally do what you want to do.” “If you don’t like where you are, look at your environment, who you’re hanging out with, and change that.” “Learn through other people. This is not rocket science, you don’t have to go to school to get an MBA in Finance or Commercial Real Estate. You could do this yourself, with other people, and that’s the best way to go.” Links Website: RCN Capital https://www.rcncapital.com/podcast Website: REI INK https://rei-ink.com/ Book: Inflation: The Silent Retirement Killer https://www.amazon.com/Inflation-Sile… Website: Freedom Founders https://www.freedomfounders.com/

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The Importance of Being a Lifelong Learner

Paul Wakim is a real estate photographer and investor, and the CEO and co-founder of TwnSqr, a real estate tech company that helps investors find their sellers and buyers in an off-market marketplace. Today, Paul lives a very nomadic lifestyle with his wife, traveling around the country while running their businesses fully remote. Listen to this episode to learn more about Paul, how TwnSqr is innovating the real estate investing space, and what lessons he has learned through the years! Quotables “At the time, I was like, okay a drone is cool and there’s some really interesting stuff going on there, but I didn’t really grasp what it meant to have technology under your control and coding taught me that.” “We went back to the world of wholesaling real estate investors because as people in technology or in start ups, we’re looking for the place where we can really innovate.” “The key difference between any other platform and what you can do on TwnSqr is any asset that you upload to TwnSqr, you have complete control over who has access to it and how that’s used.” “The main customer that we’re monetizing right now are the wholesalers, the real estate investors who are posting the properties and who want to take advantage of our tools, but you don’t have to.” Links Website: RCN Capital https://www.rcncapital.com/podcast Website: REI INK https://rei-ink.com/

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The Benefits of Relying on Real Estate to Fuel Your Retirement

One of the biggest misunderstood strategies for investing is investing with a Self-Directed IRA. In the United States, taxes are one of the biggest things business owners and entrepreneurs try to avoid at all cost. So how can you be smart, and invest legally but avoid taxes? On the episode we bring on John Bowens from Equity Trust Company to give us the breakdown of what Self-Directed IRA’s are and how powerful they can be to an investor. We also go over Traditional IRA’s, Roth IRA’s, Solo 401k’s and other types of investing accounts.

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