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Firefighters contain blaze at Hungary’s main oil refinery

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Firefighters contain blaze at Hungary’s main oil refinery [deltaMinutes] mins ago Now

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China Decries Trump’s US Over Latest Visa Move

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The State Department tightened the US visa rules back in September, in a move targeting China’s influence.

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Map Shows Nuclear Weapons Sites That Could Be Hit By Major Furlough

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The NNSA began furloughing approximately 80 percent of its civilian workforce on Monday as the government shutdown continues.

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Murder accused texted girlfriend ‘they’re trying to put me in the mix’ after skeletal remains found

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Niall Long (33) and Luke Taylor (27) are on trial at a sitting of the Central Criminal Court in Cork, charged with his murder.

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Donegal man (70s) to stand trial charged with 28 indecent assault charges

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When arrested, the accused replied: ‘I don’t recognise any of those allegations.’

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‘Abandoned’ Cat Enters Stranger’s Home, Demands Pets for Over 1 Hour

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“He is neutered, but his fur is all messed up, so I think he was abandoned,” the poster shared.

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‘Child Predator’ Caught by ICE After Living Illegally in US for 17 Years

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DHS said that Nuralys Jose Umanzor Molina was identified as a suspect during a HSI operation targeting child sex trafficking.

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Part-time real estate investors explain how they used creative financing to scale to 24 units in less than a year

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swofford lauw
Childhood friends Connor Swofford and Pieter Louw started investing in real estate together in 2024.

  • Part-time real estate investors Connor Swofford and Pieter Louw own 24 rental units.
  • They used the “BRRRR method” and hard money loans to scale quickly without much savings.
  • Their strategy involves buying multi-family properties in Buffalo.

Connor Swofford and Pieter Louw closed their first property together in October 2024. Nearly a year later, they own 24 rental units across nine properties.

The childhood friends, who met in seventh grade, invest in Buffalo, where Louw lives and works as a real estate agent. He has a construction background, while Swofford, a startup consultant based in Charleston, contributes business experience.

“Early on, as we started things together, I kept questioning why he wanted to do this with me, when all I thought I brought to the table was my ability to split a down payment 50/50,” Swofford told Business Insider. “Pieter’s repeated response was, ‘There’s not much better than having fun, making money, and doing it all with your best friend.'”

Swofford and Louw, who both turn 32 in March, share the strategies they used to buy nine investment properties in 12 months without using much of their own savings.

Connor Swofford and Pieter Louw
Swofford and Louw have known each other since middle school.

From 0 to 9 properties: Scaling with the BRRRR method and financing with hard money

Their first deal was a three-unit property — a duplex with a carriage house — that needed a minor rehab.

“The front two units were pretty much ready to go, and one was already rented. The carriage house needed some work, but nothing crazy,” said Louw. “So, it was a good intro to doing a construction project that wasn’t a complete gut job, and where we could still cash flow from the beginning.”

It was also an intro to the BRRRR — short for buy, rehab, rent, refinance, repeat — method, which would allow them to scale quickly by recycling their initial capital, rather than coming up with new capital for each deal.

When buying an investment property, “you’re really looking at at least 20% down,” explained Louw. “Even with a $300,000 or $400,000 property, with closing costs, you have to come up with 60 to 80 grand, which is not very scalable.”

He and Swofford put about $40,000 worth of work into their first property and built about $90,000 in equity by the time they refinanced.

“We were pretty much able to pull out all the money that we invested into it and take that money for the next one,” said Louw. “That really kick-started us.”

As for financing, they’ve done each of their deals with hard money. They can secure money faster this way than going through a traditional lender, and, now that they have a solid track record to show their lenders, they said they’re also able to lock in better rates.

However, going through a hard money lender can be risky, Swofford noted: “It’s a big balloon payment, you have to personal guarantee the loan, and there’s a bit more paperwork and harder compliance hurdles to clear.”

Thanks to Louw’s construction background, they can confidently predict their rehab costs and timeline, which is critical.

“The two biggest things are making sure that your construction budget is reasonably accurate, because that would be one thing that could get you in trouble, and knowing your purchase price and what the value would be afterward — the ARV,” said Louw.

“Because if you buy a place for $200,000, put $100,000 into it, and then it’s only worth $300,000, once you refinance, you can only pull 75% of that out, so you’d still have a lot of money in it. At that point, you might as well have just bought a $300,000 place with the normal investment loan — 25% down — rather than go through those headaches.”

If you don’t build equity with the rehab, “you’re really just slowing yourself down for the future,” he said.

Another key to their success has been buying multi-families — they prefer three- to 10-unit properties — that don’t need a full rehab and have at least one livable unit.

“Almost every property of ours has had a tenant still living in it, and that tenant is basically able to pay the interest expense as we are rehabbing the property,” explained Swofford. “So, we basically get to semi-rehab it for free in a way.”

It also helps that their rental portfolio remains a side hustle. Any money they earn from it goes toward vacations, their nest egg, or their kids’ future educations, but they’re not relying on it to make ends meet.

“We’re at a point where we don’t need to make any emotional investments. We don’t need a property at any specific point,” said Louw. “And if it doesn’t work out, if we lose to another investor or anything, it’s like, ‘Okay, well, the numbers didn’t make sense for us. Let’s move on to the next one.'”

Read the original article on Business Insider

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AI chatbots give ‘unreliable and biased’ advice to voters, says Dutch watchdog

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Data protection authority warns against using AI as a voting aid tool days before national elections in the Netherlands

AI chatbots are “unreliable and clearly biased” when offering voting advice, the Dutch data protection authority (AP) has said, warning of a threat to democracy eight days before national elections.

The four chatbots tested by the AP “often end up with the same two parties, regardless of the user’s question or command”, the authority said in a report ahead of the 29 October election.

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The guardsmen get the nod | Latest US politics news from The Economist

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The latest news in US politics, with coverage of Donald Trump’s second term.

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