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Multifamily Strategy Community

2.4k members • Free

31 contributions to Multifamily Strategy Community
Would you invest next to the biggest AI Project in US History?
Project Stargate in Abilene, Texas is a massive AI-infrastructure initiative led by OpenAI, Oracle Corporation and SoftBank Group that plans to build a multi-building campus on around 875–900 acres and draw roughly 1.2 gigawatts of power when fully operational. cities-today.com+3rdworldonline.com+3Business Insider+3 The facility is designed to house tens of thousands of the newest AI-training hardware and represents one of the largest single site investments in data-center capacity in the United States. This communication is intended solely for accredited investors as defined under Rule 501 of Regulation D of the Securities Act of 1933. The securities described herein are being offered pursuant to Rule 506(c) of Regulation D and are not registered with the U.S. Securities and Exchange
Poll
13 members have voted
0 likes • Oct 31
Okay, I’m going to date myself with this one but this is wisdom acquired through experience and truly wisdom of sages! Harken back into the tomes which few of you existed, some cared and less can say they know first hand knowledge of… a little ibm offchute called Microsoft makes their East coast bid in the banking central of Charlotte North Caroline. If you want more please ask… (yes this is hopeless pandering for attention; but I know that which you do not!
Mix Used Renovations almost done.
First image is the last retail space and what the building looked like when we bought it. The second image is our first finished retail space! Plus our totally burned our unit is 99% done!
Mix Used Renovations almost done.
0 likes • Sep 27
Hair salon or a nails parlor is the vibe I’m getting instantly
9 unit, need some guidance
I have a deal, it’s a 9 unit, strong cash flow and the owner is willing to hold 15%, how do I go about getting a bank to finance the other 75-80%? Will banks even do this? I still have to come up with 5-10% but I’ve never done this before, If you’ve done this before dm me, I have all the numbers, thanks in advance!!!!!!!!
0 likes • Sep 24
Hold on! You’ve got a deal here! Depending on the cash flow, fair credit! DSCR loans!
0 likes • Sep 27
@Conrad Greeley I haven’t fully run the numbers on this one so I don’t have a particular strategy in mind. I was responding to the notion that banks will only deal with immaculate credit. Truly, I don’t remember precisely what I had in mind when I made this comment but it was brilliant I’m sure!😂😂😂 It might have been a “queen to queens level three” type of thought process that, in the moment, made a lot of sense and which I am ill prepared to take on in this moment. In my mind though; there was a deal to be made 🧐
Underwriting Assistance
I’m looking at a 12 unit that is listed for 549k. It’s all 1/1s. Tenants pay electric, owner pays water, trash, and lawn. The gross rents are all over the place, stating the year in the 2k-3k range and ending the year in the 5k-6k range. The repairs were almost 20% of gross rents last year! Utilities were almost 15%. Obviously, the NOI is bad based on the low initial rents and high repairs. The repairs could be rehab to the existing units, which would be easy enough to verify. My question: What signs do you look for that a property is mismanaged, rather than having continuous problems? If the next owner was able to cut down on the repairs, the returns start looking really good…. But that’s IF you can cut down on that huge expense. Thanks in advance, I’m learning a lot from y’all!
1 like • Sep 24
There is a trove of hidden treasures in this conundrum! Let’s dig a bit, shall we? First off determine your cap rate…. I’m going with 5% and that means with a given value of $549,000 there would need to be $27,450 NOI. And a replacement value of $45,750/unit. If you assume your operating costs are 50% then your gross rents should be $54,900/12 =$4,575.00 per month which gives you $4575/12=$381.25 average rent! Those numbers don’t make any sense, I know. But that is your form working backwards from the asking price. It’s all made up. So, start plugging in numbers that you know. And the form will start taking shape and your values will become evident and evidence you need to make yer form make cents… babysit the cents and the dollars take care of themselves! Gross rents would be helpful. Don’t worry about your loss to lease or the repair numbers yet.
1 like • Sep 24
Numbers don’t matter if you haven’t contacted the broker. These numbers indicate there is a problem that needs to get figured out
Also hiring....
We are recruiting our regional leads the following 5 positions are coming available.... Requirements: You must've closed at least one multifamily deal mobile parks in RV parks also count. You must actually invest in the region that you are the lead for. He must've been through or are actively part of the multifamily strategy Mentorship. Regions: The 5 communities we are starting with are: 1. Northeast • States: ME, NH, VT, MA, RI, CT, NY, NJ, PA • Why: Dense urban markets (NYC, Boston, Philadelphia), older housing stock, heavy regulation, and strong rent demand. • Leader Focus: Navigating rent control, high competition, and redevelopment of older assets. ⸻ 2. Southeast • States: DE, MD, DC, VA, NC, SC, GA, FL, AL, MS, TN, KY, WV, AR, LA • Why: Rapid population growth, strong inbound migration, landlord-friendly laws, Sunbelt hotspots like Atlanta, Charlotte, Nashville, and Florida markets. • Leader Focus: Growth markets, new construction opportunities, and institutional capital flows. ⸻ 3. Midwest • States: OH, MI, IN, IL, WI, MN, IA, MO, KS, NE, ND, SD • Why: Affordable entry points, steady cash flow, lower volatility, legacy manufacturing cities seeing revitalization (Cleveland, Detroit, Kansas City). • Leader Focus: Value-add opportunities, stable workforce housing, and secondary/tertiary markets. ⸻ 4. Southwest • States: TX, OK, NM, AZ • Why: Explosive growth in Texas metros (DFW, Austin, Houston, San Antonio), energy-driven economies, landlord-friendly laws, and strong population inflows. • Leader Focus: Scaling portfolios quickly, development opportunities, and creative financing in competitive markets. ⸻ 5. West • States: WA, OR, CA, NV, CO, UT, ID, MT, WY, AK, HI • Why: Coastal powerhouses (Seattle, San Francisco, Los Angeles) mixed with high-growth inland states (Utah, Idaho, Colorado). Regulatory environments vary widely, but strong appreciation potential. • Leader Focus: Managing regulation vs. growth, high construction costs, and tech-driven housing demand.
1 like • Sep 6
I’m strong in the southeast even up to New Jersey and Philadelphia
0 likes • Sep 9
When is this to commence?
1-10 of 31
Jamie Chapman
4
71points to level up
@jamie-chapman-4381
Long time in real estate. But a long time out of it too. Starting over. I’m an active bird dog looking for deals and running numbers! Pipelines Full!

Active 39d ago
Joined Jul 31, 2025
SWFlorida
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