Real Estate Investing as a Lucrative Hobby and Tax Shelter
Your Guide to Success in Generating Consistent Rental Income
by
Book Details
About the Book
While working full-time for major biotechnology companies, Daryl Deliman became a multi-millionaire by investing in Southern California real estate. By using tax advantages for sheltering income, he was able to leverage more seed money to buy additional properties. Specifically, he was tax-exempt throughout most of his career due to depreciation and other real estate passive losses. In this publication, he offers pragmatic steps for selecting ideal properties, screening prospective tenants, upgrading properties, and expanding a real estate portfolio while maintaining positive cash flow. His plan is low risk but requires patience and persistence—and you’ll also need seed money and/or excess income and good credit. You’ll also want to formulate a plan to respond to inevitable downturns in the real estate market. With more than thirty years of experience investing in one of the county’s hottest real estate markets and having gone through two recessions, a depression, an IRS audit, and all the headaches that come with being a landlord, you’ll reap loads of benefits from the author’s expertise.
About the Author
Daryl and his wife, Jacqueline, currently reside in San Clemente, California, in a home with a panoramic view of the Pacific Ocean. Daryl has recently retired from a major American company selling scientific lab equipment, while Jacqueline continues to serve the community as a teacher. Daryl’s hobbies include guitar, tennis, skiing, snorkeling, windsurfing, bicycling, and research in chemistry and history. He and Jacqueline enjoy traveling the world, with Antarctica planned for later this year. Their two grown sons reside locally. Daryl spent the first two years of his education as a midshipman at the US Naval Academy, Annapolis. Initially a confirmed “science geek,” he completed a BS in chemistry at the University of Miami, then a MS in chemical oceanography at the University of Washington. Many years later, as more business savvy was needed, he studied for the MBA at California State University Fullerton.