A CPA pair investing in real estate from the side

Matthew MacFarland and Amanda Han are regular CPA and not full -time real estate investors.Matthew Macfarland and Amanda Han’s consent
  • CPP Amanda Han and Matthew MacFarland lost about $ 50,000 for a failed real estate deal.

  • They invested in real estate syndication by proper decent inspection.

  • This did not deter them from these transactions, which can generate passive income, but they are approaching them differently.

CPP Amanda Han and Matthew MacFarland has been working with real estate investors for many years to help them save taxes.

However, working with investors and actually investing in very different, as accountants have learned a difficult path.

The couple in California created an impressive real estate portfolio, which includes rental and syndication transactions, not their CPA day jobs. However, in early real estate career, a mistake cost them about $ 100,000 in pension savings.

“I think each of us lost as $ 50,000 in 401 (K),” MacFarland told Business Insider about a failed agreement they had invested in 2008.

“We are very common in the human industry in terms of self-directed IRA and use your retirement accounts, so it happened that we used our pension accounts to invest in a syndicated real estate agreement,” he explained. “From retrospectively, time was horrible.”

It wasn’t just a bad time. Han and MacFarland – A critical step: due diligence.

Real-Estate syndication is a way to combine your capital group and acquire one property owned by the “syndicator”. When the investor contributes to capital, their role in the transaction becomes completely passive, as the syndicator is responsible for finding a transaction, operation of the operation and, finally, the return to investors.

The nature of these transactions is a great investor with more money than time, but you are very confident in the syndicator and depending on their expertise. You invest both in the transaction and the person managing it. And while a good syndicator can turn a mediocre asset successful, bad can ruin a great opportunity – or drain your pension savings in the case of Han and MacFarland.

They met a syndicator through a colleague and “we trusted that he knew what he was doing,” MacFarland said. Looking back, they would have spent much more time for the inspection process.

Simple first step when checking syndicators are to enter their first and last name into Google along with keywords such as “fraud”, “complaints” or “sec” You can also talk to investors who have previously worked with them and ask about their experience.

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