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Category : Real Estate

improve your house flipping via tv shows

You are probably reading this blog to find out just how ridiculous it’s going to be.  If you are a rehabber, real estate agent, home stager, or involved in marketing real estate in any way, you might want to read on!

When my family began real estate investing, we were completely dependent upon a Realtor that we hired to find us good deals.  Do you know what that meant?

MINISCULE PROFITS!

We found out very quickly that finding a house to fix & flip through the open market (MLS) was difficult if you wanted to make a decent profit.  Well, we did want to make a decent profit!  After watching hours and hours of “Flip That House”, I was trained to expect big profits.

Without any marketing tools in our hands, we became very dependent on the MLS to acquire houses to rehab.  Here is what kept us afloat:

Watching TV

… More specifically, we watched HGTV and any home decorator shows.  The revelation that I received and that became one of our greatest assets is this:  The lifestyle trends of what people like in their home begins with the TV!  Don’t think it crazy.  Where do the popular hair-do’s come from?  Where are people getting the latest wardrobe fashion trends from?  You got it, TV!

By watching and studying home shows and what their designers are pushing, you can learn what the public is going to gravitate towards.  From the color combinations on walls to the texture of carpet to the style of toilet, the information that can be gleaned about what is in style is all right there.  You can also learn about the style or age of different houses and the best way to effectively design the remodel.

We learned many things that helped us “press the comps” when we marketed them for sale.  For example, we never sell a house with a screen door blocking the front door.  We always remove the screens from the windows.  By just removing these two items (store them in the garage for the buyer though), we dramatically improve the curb appeal.

One of the best shows to watch as a fix & flip investor is “House Hunters”, where an agent would walk retail buyers through 3 houses before they picked one.  You would get to hear their positive and negative feedback on each home.  Absorbing all of this information found itself very useful when we would rehab.  The end result is that you create an end product that most people are attracted to.  Why are they attracted to it?  They saw it on TV!

If you want to get every penny out of your rehab, go watch & observe & learn from the ones that are setting the standard for YOUR BUYERS!  If your rehab looks like it is out of HGTV, you will maximize the potential of that house.

So, you can blame me when your family calls you a couch potato.  Just tell them,

NO MORE MINISCULE PROFITS!

Image(s): FreeDigitalPhotos.net: Ambro

This Article is Copyright © 2004-2012 BiggerPockets, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

Increase Your Rehabbing Profits by Watching TV, Really!




Real Estate Investing For Real | A BiggerPockets Investment Property Blog

planning your real estate investments for retirement

The concept of planning is used and abused, especially when it comes to real estate investing for retirement. I know, cuz I’ve seen me do it. The hardest, most expensive lessons I’ve learned came from planning instead of PLANNING. Investors whose end game is retirement income, simply can’t afford to rely on planning. It’s not that they won’t accomplish their goal(s), as many will. It’s just that their goals were originally set using the limited options menu provided by planning vs the much thicker menu available to those who PLAN.

The Analogy

Knew a guy in high school who was gonna become a big time bodybuilder if it killed him. He was 15 and worked out at home in a room next to the furnace room, which was adjacent to the garage. His dad had bought him a used bodybuilding set. It had everything including the rickety bench press setup.  He worked his butt off for the entire summer. The results were fairly impressive. All the appropriate muscles had grown in size and strength. In fact, when he visited family at Thanksgiving, everyone made a big deal of his ‘new muscles’.  He was proud of what his months of hard work had wrought.

Then one day a buddy told him about the gym that was close to his home. Bike close. His friend added that the gym’s owner was also a world champ. Boom! The next day after school, he was there, talking with the owner. Long story short, he went home, talked his dad into paying the $ 10 monthly fee, and began working out under the one on one coaching of the owner.

‘Bout 3½ years later he was a finalist in Mr. Teenage Southern California.

The difference? He trained with a pro. A real world champ, who’d shown him the menu he’d never even known existed. See, he’d been bodybuilding, when all along he shoulda been BODYBUILDING.

He never would of gotten himself within sniffin’ distance of being on stage at that competition in a million years if he’d continued his home workouts. It simply wasn’t possible, for multiple reasons.

That analogy works well for real estate investors who’re grimly determined to retire WELL vs retiring well.

Those who PLAN are working from a much larger options menu, and therefore have the potential for retiring WELL. The smaller menus don’t allow for Strategic Synergism, and without that option, the investor is anchored to the lone strategy of buying the best property(s) they can find in the best regions their comfort zones will allow. Furthermore, their ability to benefit from capital growth will be limited to the vagaries of the market. That’s code for,

How’d you like your retirement to be largely reliant on appreciation and the long term increase in rents?

You can lift weights in your basement for the next 30 years, but you’ll never come close to the body worthy of competing on stage. Yet, by puttin’ yourself in a professionally equipped gym with a trainer who’s been there and lived that, you’ll create the body able to just exactly that — if it’s what you want.

Retiring WELL is no different, so let’s summarize.

 If You PLAN you’ll be using the OPTIONS MENU most real estate investors never see.

Choosing to execute that PLAN will result in retiring WELL.

PLANNING beats planning every time out. Only the PLANNING MENU has the option of Strategic Synergism.

BODYBUILDING is no more about ‘lifting weights’ than real estate investing for RETIREMENT is about ‘buying low and selling high’.

The investors with the most OPTIONS won’t just win.

They’ll WIN.

Photo: nerissa’s ring

This Article is Copyright © 2004-2012 BiggerPockets, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

When Investing In Real Estate – There’s Planning and There’s PLANNING




Real Estate Investing For Real | A BiggerPockets Investment Property Blog

IS IT JUST ME or are institutional investors also raiding your city? Here I loosely define ‘institutional investors’ as ‘organized money’,  something backed by a well oiled capital machinery.  Because it sure don’t look like cash from under their pillow.

My emotional progression about all of this (not in the least, random):

  • Damn, those guys are smart.
  • Since when did institutional money become this nimble?
  • Aren’t they supposed to be at least a year and a half behind than the rest of us ‘smart, flexible, daily-market-statistics-in-the-field-guys?’
  • Crap, they’re getting the best deals in the courthouse steps.
  • Wait, are all three of these men colluding in this auction?
  • Son of a gun… Won’t even answer a simple question.  I knew it!
  • This insane demand could actually help my market reach a bottom.
  • Note to self: Act like this is going to continue. Compete. I need to find money now. Get cash-flow producing properties.  I can’t afford to wait for them to be right and allow them to slurp up all the good deals (They’re not going to stop.  They’re obviously unafraid of the dreaded shadow inventory).

I wasn’t planning on seriously investing ’til winter. I can understand why some of you are thinking that I’m just being emotionally competitive (and I am) swayed by a random, big wave that might not even be there tomorrow.  And that I should stick to the plan.

You may be right. If it was 2009.

But folks, this is our fifth year in  real estate market decline.  If you count when the charts officially fell over the cliff, we are in year seven (July 2005).  The eighth year since builder stocks started losing it’s mojo.

Yes I have a sense of urgency; and I would, oh, would I have loved to have this eureka internally instead of being shoved in my face (our months supply of inventory is now counted by days. Days!).

It’s hardly a Reno thing…

Investors Aim to Buy Homes by the Thousands

“..the company, which has bought about 1,200 homes since 2008 — and is now buying five to seven a day…”

“..large investors are salivating at the opportunity to buy perhaps thousands of homes at deep discounts and fill them with tenants…”

“..This year, Waypoint signed a $ 400 million deal with GI Partners, a private equity firm in Silicon Valley. Gary Beasley, Waypoint’s managing director, says the company plans to buy 10,000 to 15,000 more homes by the end of next year..”

 

Here’s…. the motive:

“But the new investors believe the rental income can deliver returns well above those offered by Treasury securities or stock dividends..”

I don’t have a heart warming ending to this, no David slaying Goliath feel good quote.  But this I know:  We have at hand a foreign but extremely competent competition.  Something that I haven’t seen the last ten years.  We need not abandon our fight plan, but we sure need to adjust to this behemoth in front of us.

This Article is Copyright © 2004-2011 BiggerPockets, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

Why does it feel like Goldman Sachs is Slurping our Homes




Real Estate Investing For Real | A BiggerPockets Investment Property Blog

We have been talking about direct mail campaigns in the last couple of articles. Today I am writing the first part of a two part article. We will be going over setting up your database so that it is user friendly.

There are different systems that you can use as far as databases go, but the one that was recommended to me and the one is use is ACT by Sage. I have been using this particular database for quite a while now. It is not specifically for real estate investors, but it works great for me, and as I mentioned previously, it costs about $ 269.00. While this is a chunk of cash to spend on a piece of software, I would encourage you to look at the big picture. I can guarantee that using a database like this one will make you money by managing your contacts and keeping your direct mail campaigns on track.

Easily Accessing Your Contact Information

There have been many times a seller has called me after I have already spoken to them one or more times. With my database, I have the ability to quickly pull up their contact page while I have them on the phone, look at the notes section to see what we discussed in previous conversations, and see what their motivations (or objections to an offer) were. It allows me to pick up the conversation where we last left off. Motivated sellers will be impressed that you remember them and their last conversation. It definitely helps build rapport with them.  I like to put basic information about the property here to jog my memory.

You are also able to see the “history” of your mailings with individual contacts and groups. When you buy a house, you can easily look back to see how many times you mailed this particular person before purchasing the property.

Marketing To Motivated Sellers Gets A Whole Lot Easier

Having all of your contacts in one place where you can easily send out marketing pieces is something that you just can’t put a price on. One of the keys to successful marketing campaigns, especially where direct mail is concerned, is “consistency”. When you use a database that is set up properly, it is easy to be consistent with your marketing.

I use a written direct mail log in conjunction with the database. I can look at my log, check off the group I just printed and move on to the next one; I am able to closely monitor the dates of the mailings. As I am a very visual person, I like being able to look at my list. I also post these mailing dates on my great big wall calendar. My great big wall calendar is my “accountability partner” for my direct mail campaigns.

How should I set up my database?

Just about every real estate investor will do his own mailings especially in the beginning. Many of them will continue to do these mailings for a very long time.  It’s important to have a system so that you can stay on track, and this system needs to be easy to manage. I believe that all comes down to how you set up your files in the very beginning.

Next week I will show you the exact way I set up thousands of contacts in my database so they are easy to find and easy to market to.

This Article is Copyright © 2004-2011 BiggerPockets, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

How Using A Database In Your Real Estate Business Makes You Money




Real Estate Investing For Real | A BiggerPockets Investment Property Blog

Bringing Sexy Back to Seller Carry Backs

seller carry backs

I’m sexy and I know it. Thank you LMFAO, a techno rock music group, for teaching my 9-year old daughter this catchy little tune:

When I walk in the spot, this is what I see
Everybody stops and they staring at me
I got a passion in my pants and I ain’t afraid to show it,
I’m sexy and I know it 

LMFAO (the band) is not an urban acronym for laughing your backside off.  According to their Wikipedia page, it stands for loving my friends and others. Regardless, I miss the days my little girl would beg me to play the Wiggles’ popular hit Toot Toot Chugga Chugga Big Red Car.

I’ve often said that fixing and flipping houses is sexy.  TV networks and real estate gurus make it sound so cool.

In baseball terms, flipping is like a home run. It’s an 80-yard touchdown pass in football or a slam-dunk in basketball. Conversely, buying and holding and seller financing, both more long-term investment strategies, are baseball’s version of the weak bunt back to the pitcher, or a 1-yard football run. Yawn.

The truth is I’d abandon my fix and flip business tomorrow if I could raise enough capital and create enough cash flow to focus solely on seller carry backs.

Why?

Because with fixing and flipping I have no control over THE most important part of the equation – having a qualified buyer ready to pay my price for the home. And unlike a rental property, all I have to do with a seller carry back deal is collect the check every month. I needn’t worry about property management, running toilets or leaky roofs.

Last year, I sold a house in Peoria, AZ for $ 140,000 and carried back a note of $ 124,000 at 10% interest.  The buyer made 10 payments and then defaulted. I got the house back two months later and sold it again this weekend for $ 155,000 to a well-qualified buyer.

I have two other performing carry back deals that generate $ 1,400 a month in positive cash flow. In four years when these notes mature I’ll be able to purchase 3 more properties and start the party all over again.

That’s sexy and I know it.

This Article is Copyright © 2004-2011 BiggerPockets, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

Bringing Sexy Back to Seller Carry Backs




Real Estate Investing For Real | A BiggerPockets Investment Property Blog

real estate marketing

How often do you see advertising or marketing from companies that you know, usually from experience, the ad is either untrue or nice little stretch from reality?  In the turn-key real estate business, unlike any other profession I have seen, many of the advertising and marketing pitches out there are at best a stretch of what the reality is on the ground and at worst straight up lies.  I am one to give the benefit of the doubt and believe that many companies really believe that what they are saying is true.  The problem begins though, when reality on the ground does not meet the words from the mouth.  As often happens, my decision to write this article came from a recent conversation in my office with another Memphis company.  But as I relate the story, let me also caution everyone reading…this is not simply a “turn-key” company issue.  It goes to the very heart of marketing and advertising.  Learning how to play to your strengths without adding too much weight for your shoulders is a key element to growing your business through marketing.

I Always Thought You Were Making That Up

I have never had a fear of competition.  Since I was a young boy, competition with others has always been what drove me.  I simply wanted to be the best at everything I did and I can’t remember a time when I did not feel that way.  At the same time, I am a pleaser.  I like helping others.  That should suffice to explain how I came to be touring my office with another company from right here in Memphis.  I had known the owner of the company or a while and he and I had had our battles, but we had always been cordial to each other.

He was in the process of starting his own company and I wanted to help him find success.  As we talked about our business and I offered to help him however we could, the conversation turned to property management and customer service.  His previous company had copied much of our marketing, all the way down to the “family-owned business” moniker and although he was not in charge of the marketing, he was intimately familiar with the back and forth.  Then he said something that absolutely floored me.  His previous company did not provide any where near the level of service that they advertised.  But, he had always assumed we did not either.  They thought that we simply marketed our company by making up services and numbers and embellishing on everything.  They followed suit.  They had thought we were lying about our size and the way we conducted business and thought copying our marketing was akin to simply keeping pace.

Needless to say, again, I was floored.  As we walked around our offices and I introduced him to our staff and showed him how our process from purchasing, to renovating to property management and all of the back end customer service works, he was amazed and actually said to me “I never believed you actually did all of this”.

Marketing is not a game.  Marketing is not an endeavor where fiction works for very long!  What too many companies, especially in the turn-key niche of real estate investing, fail to understand is that marketing is not a place to attract clients with false claims or statements about your company or your process.  Boasting of how good you are is one thing – and honestly – if you did not think you were providing your best, then what are you in business for in the first place.  But when boasting crosses the line to outright falsehoods for the sake of attracting more eyeballs; then you set yourself and your investors up for failure.

I Like That Line…I Think I Will Borrow It!

Part of being the leader of the pack is that everyone else is following.  When you market your business or develop a brand, it is important to realize and understand that much of your work – well, – it will be lifted by others.  I was astonished one day to receive a phone call from a colleague asking if I had franchised my families company.  He had come across a website – my website to be exact – only it featured someone else’s video and name across the top, but it was definitely my website.  The colors were exactly the same.  The text on the tabs was exactly the same.  Heck, the guy in the video had even copied my words as if they were a script to follow.  Apart from being in poor taste, it also showed an inherent lack of understanding what makes business professionals successful.  It sure wasn’t the website or the words I use.  It was every bit the actions that a whole team of people take on a daily basis.

Speaking of websites, I had one other funny experience early on with our website.  I have a propensity to type and speak fast.  Just ask anyone who heard me at the BiggerPockets Summit in Denver and they will attest to how fast I can talk!  When I get to typing quickly I can easily make grammatical or spelling errors.  At one point, I made some adjustments to some of the text on our website.  I was in a hurry and made some errors.  Some meaning 2 or 3, and they were scattered across text discussing why my market was a good market for investors.  It took us a few days before we realized the errors and we quickly made the corrections.

However, to this day, there continues to be two websites from others in my market who have never caught the mistakes.  I can still go to two separate websites and read the original text that I wrote with the grammatical and spelling errors still in plain view.  I was amused at how quickly either a lazy web developer or an even lazier business-person copied the new text I put out.

There was a time when this bothered me.  There was a time when I would have been all up in arms and wasted hours making legal threats and stomping around my office vowing to do all sorts of fun things to everyone who copies the materials we put out.  Eventually I learned that I have much more important things to put my time towards.  Such as training a full staff to make sure they are actually doing everything that all of our marketing advertises! 

For those that find their materials being copied, I have two pieces of advice when you see this happening.

1.  The worst thing to have in business is an enemy!  When I discuss this with other business owners the reasoning as always lost until I explain.  Many think you don’t want an enemy because they will say bad things about you.  In reality, if you are any good in your business, what others say about you will be so far from your reputation that no one will ever believe them.  No, it has nothing to do with what someone may say about you.  It has everything to do with what you say.  An enemy can take us away from our message and can make us spend valuable time talking about others instead of talking about us!   It is simple, if someone is using your marketing pieces, copying your words, creating websites that are 99% duplicates of your site, you have a couple of choices and the one I suggest you take is to ignore it.  There is only so long someone can copy you before they actually have to live up to the words.

2.  Innovate – Develop – Grow.  One of the great things about finding that others are borrowing or just straight copying your marketing materials or website is that it gives you a great reason to change!  And when you are in a position where you need to change it is a great chance to think not just outside the box, but really like there is no box.  And not just think about your marketing, but think about your business itself.  It is often said that a business that is not growing is dying.  So take someone using your hard work in marketing yourself or your business as a chance to grow and develop new services, strategies or expertise.

Be Honest, Be Transparent And Be Successful

You see, other companies or individuals in your line of work, they cannot copy you.  They cannot copy your personality or your proficiency.  In my experience, I have found that eventually people stop copying you because they realize it is not marketing; it is not presentations or even a fancy website that makes you successful.

It is your actions.  It is hard to continually promote what you do or how you do it if, in fact, what you say is not what you do or how you do it.  Be honest and give prospective clients a true representation of what you do.  Just because one company is bigger or offers different services, does not mean you have to do the same in order to be successful.  It is often quite the opposite.  In order to grow, you have to find what you do best, concentrate on doing it better and then tell the world how well you do it.  That is the essence of good marketing.

What makes men and women and even companies successful is how we handle ourselves and the actions we take.  The words, images, videos and ads we use to promote ourselves and our companies are just that – promotions.  And over time, when others use your words to promote themselves, they usually find that it is hard to live up to the leader and end up further behind.

This Article is Copyright © 2004-2011 BiggerPockets, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

Real Estate Marketing: If You Talk It…You Had Better Walk It!




Real Estate Investing For Real | A BiggerPockets Investment Property Blog

It does not take a genius to realize that the relationship between landlords and tenants can sometimes become strained.  In fact there have been times when tenants have managed to get me so riled up that I am willing to pull my hair out just to end the frustration — and, I don’t have a lot of hair left.

With my keen understanding of the potential dynamic that exists in every tenant landlord relationship I am still amazed at some of the really dumb things landlords will do to “get on up” on their tenants.

Can you imagine placing a sign over a tenants door essentially claiming that she is a prostitute?  Well… I couldn’t until I read this article: Landlord harassed woman by posting ‘no prostitution’ sign, panel finds.

I have to admit that I was laughing my behind off, and I have lots of that to laugh off when I read about the landlords actions.  I would venture a guess however that the landlord wasn’t laughing when he was found guilty of harassing his tenant by his actions.  This one definitely falls within the category of Stupid Landlord Tricks!

So, what lessons other than the obvious, can be drawn from what is presented in this article?

Here are a few of my thoughts…

Remember the landlord/tenant relationship is governed by your lease.  Make sure it protects you while at the same time giving you the rights you need to properly manage your rentals. 

A couple of key tips to avoid problems with tenants like this include:

  1. Clear delineation of your rights of enter and the notification process for those entries.
  2. Tenants rights and responsibilities regarding parking spacing, their use and the consequences of not following the requirements of the lease.
  3. Avoid paying for the heat at all costs.  As described in the article, the tenant claimed to have the windows open when the heat was on just to “aggravate” the landlord.  If you have to pay for the heat as part of the lease put thermostat limiters on the unit(s) to limit tenant abuses like those described in the article.
  4. Don’t, I repeat DON’T allow situations like these to escalate verbally.  Once you see that things are becoming difficult with a tenant shift all communications to either letters or emails and be sure to save both.  If things really start to get challenging, start to send letters via first class and certified mail return receipt requested.

It is a rare landlord who will not find themselves in trying circumstances with a tenant at some point in their career.  Your responsibility as the landlord is handle these situations professionally and not put yourself in a position where you make the local paper, get big fines or end up in jail!

This Article is Copyright © 2004-2011 BiggerPockets, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

Stupid Landlord Mistakes That Could Cost Big Money




Real Estate Investing For Real | A BiggerPockets Investment Property Blog

Weather Report on the Foreclosure Storm

Foreclosure reports have been unusually sunny lately.  On March 12, the multi-state Attorneys General agreement was filed, ending the Robogate scandal and opening the way for expedited foreclosure processing.  Foreclosure activity hit a five-year low in the first quarter according to RealtyTrac and Lender Processing Services  reports first-time foreclosures remained stable in February as repeat foreclosures saw an 8 percent month-over-month decrease.  Even delinquencies were down 12.2 percent from last March, according to LPS.  Foreclosure sales are down one-third, 32.2 percent, reports FNC.

But don’t break out the bubbly quite yet.  There’s a monstrous cloud on the horizon.  Some 1.6 to 2 million foreclosures have plugged up the processing pipelines for the past 18 months and now the AG settlement will free them to pour into hundreds of real estate markets across the nation.

In a statement that may go down in foreclosure history for its graphic candor, RealtyTrac CEO Brandon Moore certainly got our attention last week.

“The low foreclosure numbers in the first quarter are not an indication that the massive reservoir of distressed properties built up over the past few years has somehow miraculously evaporated,” he said.  “There are hairline cracks in the dam, evident in the sizable foreclosure activity increases in judicial foreclosure states over the past several months, along with an increase in foreclosure starts in many judicial and non-judicial states in March. The dam may not burst in the next 30 to 45 days, but it will eventually burst, and everyone downstream should be prepared for that to happen – both in terms of new foreclosure activity and new short sale activity.”

Hairline cracks?  Bursting dams? Thirty to 45 days?

Wait, it gets worse.  Stepped up foreclosure starts are not being matched by REO sales.  First-time foreclosure starts, either default notices or scheduled foreclosure auctions depending on the state’s foreclosure process, increased 7 percent from February to March, the third straight monthly increase. Foreclosure starts in March exceeded 100,000 for the first time since November 2011, although they were still down 11 percent from March 2011.  All these new foreclosures are going in one end while very little is coming out the other because faster processing has yet to start.

These new foreclosures are piling up largely in the 26 judicial states, which already have the greatest inventories because lenders have been very carefully processing at a crawl to avoid liability actions while the multi-state agreement was being negotiated. Judicial states combined accounted for 243,074 properties with foreclosure filings during the quarter, an increase of 8 percent from the previous quarter and an increase of 10 percent from the first quarter of 2011.

So combine the new starts with the backlogged inventories, add in the normal flow of foreclosures, which are down from the peak years but still substantial and the numbers get scary.  About 800,000 foreclosures were sold last year.  To clear out an inventory of 1.6 million foreclosures alone would take two years… but all the new foreclosures would pile up to create a continuing problem.  And the problem would be much bigger problem in some places than in others.  How long would it take for the markets to absorb the backlog as well as new defaults, and their current rate?

According Lender Processing Services, as cited in USA Today, the timeline for some markets is frightening.

In New York and New Jersey, it would take lenders more than 50 years at their current pace to clear the lenders’ pipelines of homes that are seriously delinquent or already in the foreclosure process. In Washington, DC, 57 years; Maryland, 21 years; Connecticut, 20 years; Illinois, 10 years; Pennsylvania nine years; Florida, eight years and California, two years.

Investors looking for bargains can anticipate the release of REOs into markets in these states will increase the REO inventory, destabilize markets and drive down prices.  How long it will take markets to recover will largely depend on local economic factors, especially job growth.

Look for more large lenders with big inventories in these states to follow Bank of America’s lead and rent out large numbers of REOs to keep them off the market until prices improve.

Stay tuned and get ready for the deluge.

This Article is Copyright © 2004-2011 BiggerPockets, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

Weather Report on the Foreclosure Storm




Real Estate Investing For Real | A BiggerPockets Investment Property Blog

A quick rundown of the important real estate news from the week of April 7 – April 13, by the numbers:

10% – Increase in foreclosure filings in the first quarter, in states where the foreclosure process must undergo judicial scrutiny. The increase in fillings come on the heels of the $ 26 billion mortgage settlement between the government and the nation’s largest mortgage lender.

2.4% – Decrease in mortgage applications (seasonally adjusted) for the week ending April 6th, from the previous week.

70.5% – Number of all mortgage applications that were for refinancing for the week ending April 6th. It’s the eight straight week that the refinance share of mortgage applications fell. The previous week, refinances made up 71.2% of all mortgage applications.

3.88% – Average rate on a 30 year fixed mortgage this week according to Freddie Mac. The rate was down from last weeks average rate of 3.98%.

$ 3 Billion – Amount in refis major mortgage lenders have agreed to give to customers with underwater mortgages that are current. The deal is part of a settlement on complaints of foreclosure abuse.

3.11% – Average rate on a 15 year fixed mortgage this week, a record low. The rate is down from last week’s rate of 3.13%.

6.4% – Increase in initial unemployment claims for the week ending April 7th. Claims are now at the highest level since January.

$ 700 Million – Amount in seriously delinquent commercial real estate loans and foreclosed commercial properties on the books for 30 banks at year-end 2011. “Michigan Commerce Bank in Ann Arbor reported the highest total with $ 98.5 million.”

This Article is Copyright © 2004-2011 BiggerPockets, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

Real Estate News by the Numbers: Week of April 7 – April 13




Real Estate Investing For Real | A BiggerPockets Investment Property Blog

Though I’ve dealt extensively in notes, both for myself and clients, I’ve not included them in my quiver since the 1980s recession recovery. Truth is, becoming proficient with notes and their trust deeds was a matter of survival. When interest rates are over 16% you get creative or you learn how to operate a cash register at the local grocery store. Lucky for me a couple of my sainted mentors were slam dunk experts on the topic. Their tutoring sessions were literally keys to the vault, though they sometimes gave me headaches. Ironically not cuz the principles, formulas, and investment strategies re: notes were so complex, though they were indeed. Headaches sometimes arrived when trying to remember the laws and tax regs that applied when using notes inside tax deferred exchanges. It seems like it’d be fairly straightforward, but the only simple use of a note in the exchange context occurred when structured as a partial installment sale. Everything after that? Um, more involved.

The main value found in the use of notes/TDs was either in acquisition or as down payments on property.  When sellers needed to sell, and buyers didn’t come in crowds, a note looked pretty dang good. In today’s market, that strategy would die on the vine most of the time. Way too much cash and low cost loans.

How beginners can build their capital more efficiently using notes.

I get calls from folks who have $ 15-30,000 and wanna get started investing long term. Since I deal in blue chip locations and properties, that’s not quite enough. The top of that range can actually get one’s foot in the door now. The problem however, is having sufficient cash reserves. Oops. That’s why I often tell them to acquire notes at a discount with the goal being the growth of their capital. This is why I like Kevin Kacmerek so much, cuz that’s exactly his area of expertise. I know real pros when I meet ‘em, and Kevin is a pro. Anywho . . .

If you have $ 15,000 and aren’t swayed by the nothin’ down school of real estate investing, here’s an idea. Buy an existing note at a relatively deep discount, with the idea being to sell for a short term profit. Short term in this context could be a day or two, or a year or two. Using this approach will allow you to more rapidly grow your capital without incurring the horrific risk often attached to the acquisition strategies used by fearless, yet equally cash challenged. I’ve seen serious people go from $ X to $ 2X in very short time periods without risking financial life ‘n limb. In fact, if you choose to simply create another income ‘basket’ in your portfolio, over 20 years you can create some seriously impressive monthly income, which would be completely separate and independent of your real estate cash flow. Imagine a note portfolio of a million bucks generating a minimum double digit yield. That’s a lowest case monthly income of over $ 8,300. Like investing in brick ‘n mortar, the million dollar value is far less than what you actually invested.

WARNING: Regardless of your DIY inclination, do NOT try this on your own. It took me a couple years of doing it almost daily before I wasn’t dangerous. The most valuable lesson I learned back then? The principle warning us about that the answers to the questions we never knew to ask are most often the answers that end up kneecapping us at the worst possible moment. When it comes to ‘trafficking’ in notes/TDs, find an expert and leave him/her to their specialty.

The math

Without going through endless number crunching, here’s the short version when opting for a long term basket. Before continuing though, understand that this basket can be used when appropriate, to significantly improve other factors in your Purposeful Plan. This would, of course, involve Strategic Synergism. OK, on to the general numbers.

The principle goes like this. Acquire the note for far less than its face amount. Until it’s paid off or sold, bank the monthly payments. When the note is sold/paid off you’ll have the accumulated payments plus any final principal payment if there was one. Rinse and repeat. Don’t smirk, as this seemingly simple formula can yield incredible results, given reasonable time. Let’s do one quick example, cuz I can’t help myself.

$ 15,000 buys a $ 25,000 note which is secured by a home with 25% equity behind you. The payments are monthly, interest only at 10%. The payoff is in 5 years. Payments = $ 208.33/mo. — $ 2,500 a year. Let’s say it pays off as agreed. In that time you banked $ 12,500 in payments. So, after 5 years your initial $ 15,000 investment works out like this, as far as yield goes.

Your yield was just under 24%. Or, if you were forced to foreclose it would, more likely than not, increase your yield. Two things I tell investors when dealing in notes.

1. Don’t buy a note for which you wouldn’t be happy to be ‘forced’ to take the property/security back and sell it. If that prospect scares ya, DON’T BUY THE NOTE.

2. There are NO exceptions to #1.

Take the $ 37,500 in cash (plus your lousy bank interest on the payments) and do the same, only more than twice as big. Every now and again you’ll be able to turn the profit very quickly, maybe even a few months.  Either way, those who do this with solid discipline can and do end up with bunches of income.

An obvious caveat is to realize the example used doesn’t account for taxes, which will surely reduce your gross profit, both from payments and payoff. But this applies to flippers too. It’s a cost of doing business. Those using their self-directed IRA/401k (yuck) will be able to defer those taxes ’til retirement. The takeaway is that over the long term, say 15-30 years, the ability to grow your ‘note basket’ will be relatively predictable. In fact, you can almost rely on the fact that in that 15-30 years there will come a market in which your current note portfolio will be able to be applied in a manner that will synergistically turbo charge your Plan.

When that happens, don’t forget to yell Bingo!

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From Beginning Real Estate Investors To Aging Boomers – Consider Secured Notes As Another ‘Basket’




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