Thursday 27 December 2007

7 Big Reasons To Invest In Pre-Foreclosures

Looking for an "in" to real estate investing?

Working a nine to five job swapping time for money can be incredibly dispiriting. After the futility of it all hits home, it's all you can do to limit the number of home business opportunities you investigate to twenty per week.

One of the more compelling home business opportunities is real estate investing. Real estate investing is the perennial wealth builder, and the transition from working a job to achieving wealth through real estate investing is becoming increasingly well documented.

You've probably thought about investing in real state yourself but you've not gone for it because you thought you needed tens of thousands in savings for a down payment, and perfect credit along with strong banking relationships.

Well, you can get all that together if you want. It doesn't hurt to have those resources. But it's not necessary to have a huge pile of cash and perfect credit to buy a house cheap and resell it for a profit.

It's especially not necessary in the preforeclosure market. Preforeclosures are houses in the default phase of foreclosure; where the bank has filed initial foreclosure papers but the Sheriff Sale or Trustee Sale where the bank auctions off the property, or repossesses it if no-one buys at the auction, hasn't occurred yet.

Buying during the preforeclosure period is one of the best ways for anyone to get involved in real estate investing. With little more than a few hundred dollars and some specialized knowledge you can buy a house at a substantial discount and resell it retail picking up a five figure profit check in the process.

Don't believe it?

Well, let me give you seven reasons why it's true:

1) When people are in default on their mortgage they have stopped making payments to the bank. So when you are negotiating with the seller, and the bank, right up until the point where you buy, no-one is making the payments. For novice investors worried about holding costs this is a huge advantage.

2) Preforeclosures are a very well defined niche market. One of the most deadly mistakes rookie investors make is trying to be a jack-of-all-trades, going after any and everything they can lay their eyes on. The result of this lack of focus is they are soon back at their jobs. By being a very defined market, preforeclosures allow you to develop focused marketing campaigns and standardized processes to get deals completed and closed.

3) One of the fundamentals of real estate investing is contacting and talking "only" to motivated sellers, and avoiding all the rest. Sellers in preforeclosure are some of the most motivated sellers you will find. Their world has been turned upside-down, they are about to lose their house, and their motivation is such that they just want out of the house and the bank off their back. By buying houses from people in preforeclosure, creating 30%+ equity spreads on houses often in good condition is not a difficult thing to do.

4) Buying houses in preforeclosure enables you to create unusually large equity spreads. Recent economic uncertainty has caused a lot of foreclosures, and rising rates will cause more in coming years. If banks had to take back all of the properties that went into foreclosure the FDIC would shut them down. They know this, so they try not to take properties back they don't have to. By requesting the Lender discount what is owed on their payoff, large spreads of equity can be created on houses that are totally "maxed out" with loans. This can't be done on loans not in default.

5) Because Lenders are under pressure to liquidate bad loans rather than take the property back, large discounts can be negotiated. After becoming familiar with the issues that cause Lenders to discount, larger and larger discounts can be achieved as you hone your negotiating skills.

6) If your plan is to buy and hold the property, having good enough credit and financials to get bank financing excludes a great many people from getting into real estate. On top of that, if you do get a bank loan, your financial exposure is at it's maximum when everything is in your own name and personally guaranteed. Buying houses in preforeclosure allows you to simply take over the existing financing already in place. No qualifying needed. You can take title to the property in a Land Trust, begin making payments on the existing mortgage(s), and still get all the tax advantages, appreciation, depreciation without any of the risk of being personally liable for the mortgage and the property.

7) If you have ever bid at auction for property at the courthouse steps, you are only too aware of the competition breathing down your neck. Lots of mind games. The 40 thieves are talking trash to you trying to get you not to bid. If you are Larry Bird, no problem. Make sure you have $500K on your credit line though. However if you are not the 'Bird' and you don't pack half a mil' of credit, you can sneak in and avoid this NBA showdown by buying the house during the preforeclosure period... before the auction.

Make no mistake about it, there are many ways to make healthy profits in real estate investing. But when you look at how easy preforeclosure makes it to buy houses cheap and resell for five figure profit checks, all the while helping people out of agonizing life circumstances, it makes little sense to pursue real estate investing any other way.

Tuesday 18 December 2007

Flipping Houses: Bargains, Distressed Houses, and Fixer-Uppers Explained

If you're interested in making money flipping houses, it still can be done in a slow real estate market. In fact, many investors are looking for other ways to make money so the competition isn't as fierce. Also, sellers become more anxious every day their home sits on the market.

Flipping houses for money success doesn't depend on an active real estate market or in thirty percent appreciation. Your ability to make money in real estate depends on your ability to buy a bargain property and to sell it or rent it for profit.

Bargain Houses Have Distressed Sellers

Real estate investors make money when they find a bargain property which they can purchase for less than market value and resell or rent for profit. The key may be a "distressed seller" who needs out right away because of overwhelming problems like financial difficulties (pending foreclosure, lack of money to pay bills), divorce, death, addictions, job loss, or transfer. Sometimes a seller wants to use the money to purchase another property or start a different business and is willing to offer a bargain price to move on.

Distressed Houses Are Fixer-Uppers

A "distressed house" is one that needs help to bring it up to saleable condition--a fixer-upper. Owners of fixers are not always distressed sellers. They might not be in foreclosure or facing financial problems. They may just lack motivation or know-how to fix up the property and haven't sold it because most home buyers want a house in good condition.

You can make money buying both bargains and fixers. It depends on whether you want to work with houses in good condition or fixer-uppers. Some investors only buy houses in prime condition from sellers who are willing to discount for a fast sale. In today's market, you must know how you're going to make a profit before you purchase a house. If you know the market is still active in your area and you have a strong chance of reselling in a couple months for full price with the right marketing strategy, you can make an offer that gives you plenty of margin.

If you want to turn a fixer into a new owner's dream home or rental, you must know how much the house will cost to fix. Many investors buy fixers with rehab funding and don't risk their own money. After fixing the house, they refinance and rent, take some profit out, and have the tenants make the payments. House flippers fix and sell right away for fast cash.

Of course, if you want to fix houses, you want to find a fixer-upper that is also a bargain property for the highest return on your investment--money, work, and time.

By: Jeanette Joy Fisher

Friday 14 December 2007

How To Use Equity to Your Advantage

Once you have purchased a home and are making monthly payments, you are in the process of building equity. The opportunity to use the equity you have built up in your home is one of the benefits of homeownership.

The equity you have built up can be used for many purposes on your advantage. Many people will use this equity to draw out cash by refinancing their house; the cash may be use to finance other major purchases such as second mortgage, making major improvement to your property or to fund their children educational expenses.

If you are in bad debt situation, your equity can be the hero in saving you from bankruptcy. You can pledge your equity to apply for a home equity loan which will allow you to borrow a relatively large amount of money to consolidate your debts. As compare to other personal or unsecured loan, a home equity loan is easier to get approve even you are in a bad debts situation; lenders may be more liberal because they view home equity loan as relatively safe. You can't disappear with your house or hide it if you default on your loan, so the lender has a good chance of collecting the collateral.

Besides using your equity for bad debt consolidation, you may use it for other high-interest rates debt consolidation. One of the advantages of home equity loans are they typically have lower interest. And you could you this advantage to consolidate all your high-interest monthly payments into a single loan which had a considerably lower interest rate.

Typically you are allowed to refinance up to 75%, (sometimes 80%), of the value of the property on conforming loans whereas on jumbo loans you are limited to 70% of the property's value. For example, if your home is now valued at $150,000 and your loan balance is $70,000, you might be able to get a new $150,000 x 75% = 112,500 mortgage. That would allow you to repay the existing $70,000 balance and use the $42,500 for your financial needs.

Another possibility to use the equity to your advantage is home equity lines. Many lenders offers home equity lines for homeowners and allow them to draw cash advances with their credit card or write checks up to certain credit limit.

Before using a home equity loan or home equity credit line for any purpose, you should be aware of the pitfalls of these loans. The main thing is that you can lose your home if you fail to meet the payment schedule required by the loan. Therefore you need to consider it carefully before do a cash-out with your equity.

By: Cornie Herring

How to Quickly Sell Real Estate without Denting Your Pockets

People sell homes for lots of reason: Sometimes homeowners are concerned about the rates in their neighborhood; sometimes they find a better home for sale somewhere else, and sometimes work-related transfers force people out of their houses. In most and usual cases, people ask the help of a real estate agent to sell homes the fast and effective way.

Having a real estate agent though has disadvantages. When you sell homes through real estate agents, they're inclined to take a commission out of your sale. This in and of itself can be very irritating if your home is not that large or expensive to begin with.

However, more and more people are discovering that they can sell homes on their own, without the need of a commission-charging real estate agent and this is through private sales in the Internet. Through free real estate listings, home sellers and homebuyers can transact between themselves and get more value for their money that otherwise would have gone to a real estate agent. With so many free real estate listings on the Internet, it's no wonder homes for sale is on a healthy boom.

Also, some real estate agents do very little beyond putting a sign on your lawn to advertise your home for sale. For that, you could have just sold it yourself. Of course, there are additional reasons why selling your home yourself may just be the right move for you and your family. Here are the top 5 reasons to sell your home yourself:

When you sell home on your own, without the help of a real estate agent, you won't have to pay commissions.

Selling your home on your own gives you more control over the process. You are not forced to deal with many of the overhead hassles that agents may put you through.

Control: you get to decide how much to sell your home for and when to close a deal.

Costs. When you sell home, you are going to have to pay a certain amount of money in getting things rolling, such as transfer costs, mortgage payments, home construction, etc. You will save on doing much of these on your own, as opposed to relying on a real estate agent, since there will always be extra fees when for their services.

Convenience. Selling your home on your own is a great deal more convenient because you are in charge of what happens at all times. From your open house to your home improvements, nothing will get done without your say-so. For homeowners who like feeling in control of situations, private home for sale without the meddling of a real estate agent is a no-brainer.

By: b. thorp

Saturday 8 December 2007

Real Estate Tax Breaks for Your Home

It is always beneficial during tax season to own real estate, which gives you many annual deductions. If you purchased residential real estate during this year, however, you can look forward to even more generous savings at tax time.

Mortgage Interest
Though there are several real estate deductions you will be able to take this tax year, the largest is the interest you paid on your mortgage. According to Kiplinger’s (August 31, 2006), you may write off up to $1 million in mortgage interest for your primary or secondary home (does not apply to third home real estate, unless it is a business or rental property). This can be an enormous tax savings, especially within the first years of ownership with most of your monthly payments going to interest.

Property Taxes
Each year, you may deduct the property taxes you paid. If you recently purchased your home real estate, you also may deduct any taxes the seller paid in advance that were applied to your property tax debt. This applies even if you did not reimburse the seller for these real estate taxes.

Points Paid for Mortgage
Even if the seller paid your points, you may deduct them on your tax return within the year of purchase of the real estate. Each point is worth one percent of the real estate mortgage. For a loan principal of $250,000, you may deduct $2,500 for each point. For a loan face value of $500,000, you may deduct $5,000 per point.

If you refinanced your real estate, you also may deduct these points paid. However, the deduction must be spread over the life of the loan. If you sell the real estate or pay off the loan early, then the remaining deduction may be taken within the year of sale or loan payoff.

Home Equity Debt
You are allowed to deduct up to $100,000 of home equity debt each year, regardless for what you used the money. This makes home equity loans low-interest alternatives for purchasing cars, paying student tuition, underwriting your dream vacation, and so on.

Home Business Use Deductions
If you run a business out of your home or use the real estate for business purposes, such as rental property, you have many deductions for the use of this space. For home offices, the percentage of space you actually use may incur the same percentage in deductions for mortgage payments, utilities and home insurance. Improvements made to accommodate the business, such as bringing the real estate up to standard as rental property or installing a private bathroom when renting out a room, may qualify for a deduction against your profits.

Property Damage
If you incurred uninsured real estate damage due to a qualifying disaster (especially within a presidential declared disaster area), you may qualify for a tax deduction. There are limitations, however, and the deduction generally must be taken within the year the disaster occurred.

What You Cannot Deduct
If you recently purchased or sold real estate, you incurred many costs but not all may be deducted from your taxes. Examples of nondeductible expenses are closing costs, major home improvements to attain a higher sales price, title insurance, appraisal and inspection fees, or attorney fees.

Don’t forget, deductions that lower your federal tax debt also decrease your state tax obligation! As with all financial advice, always check with a qualified accounting professional.

By: John Harris

Tuesday 4 December 2007

5 Useful Tips in Buying a House

Buying a house is a very serious matter that comes in to people’s lives. It is very risky to invest your money in buying just any house you find. You must have some guidelines that can help you decide which house is the best for you. Here are some:

1. Determine your rights

When you are ready to buy your own house, be sure you understand your rights as a homebuyer. Knowing the process of buying a house prevents you from getting scammed. You can personally do your home work or seek for a knowledgeable person like a real estate agent or a broker. Make sure that the agent you hire is licensed and have a wide knowledge regarding the area.

2. Make sure you can afford it

Your budget is really a big deal in buying your own house. What you want is different from what you need, so be practical. You don’t really need a big house if you’re just one person that travels everyday, right? Make sure that you make the best for your money. Seek help or ask for suggestions especially for those who have knowledge in real estate prices. If you can’t stay for at least a year, buying a house is inappropriate for you. You may save a whole lot more of money if you sell it urgently.

3. Make sure it fits your lifestyle

Make your house a home. Be sure it really fits your way of life and you are comfortable with it. A good example of this is if you’re working in an office, a good place to find is near or in the vicinity of your office. If you love nature, a good place to find is outside the city with clean air, near parks, has a mountain view or near at the beach. Your personality really matters in finding a good house. Make sure to look at its suburbs first and try to gather some information about the area and its surroundings. Try also to consider the kind of neighbors you will have.

4. Consider your future plan

If you’re newly married, you might to consider how many kids you want to have. You can assume the number of rooms or the home space you need. If you can afford a house that is near to a good school, it is better. School districts are more important to home buyers, therefore, it will increase your property values.

5. Be organized

It is very important to make your document files organized and safe. Because it will prove that you own the house. It will help you a lot especially when it comes in paying your house payments (taxes and amortization).

Friday 30 November 2007

Real Estate Problem Solver

Introduction

There are many areas one can invest in. Since I was 15 years old I have looked for the fastest, most effective way to accumulate a lot of wealth, with the least amount of risk. I am now 58. While looking for this road to truth, I spent a lot of time in the school of hard knocks. The school of hard knocks is a very interesting but painful school to attend. It is also the most expensive way to learn something, but when you graduate you have a PHD in what to do and not do with your time and money. The schools I attended were: Investing in businesses as a silent partner, owning my own businesses, working for another family member-in my case my father, buying publicly traded stocks and securities, penny mining stocks, commodity trading, investing in gold and silver, real estate private lending, real estate development, real estate remodeling, buying foreclosure properties. I also worked as a real estate problem solver/matchmaker, bringing business owners together with business buyers, and matching up real estate owners with real estate buyers.

Writing about all of these activities would take an encyclopedia, so we will limit this essay to the kinds of situations you can run across in the real estate school of hard knocks. I will present my solution with the given situation. There are more than one possible solution and I invite you to come up with other possible solutions as you read. If you get some value from my experiences that will hopefully lower your tuition to the real estate school of hard knocks. Feel free to e-mail me your comments, alternate solution or stories. Do, please, let me know that it is all right for me to publish them.

My Real Estate Philosophy

As a way of introducing myself, I thought you might find what lessons I have learned, after all these years of real estate, interesting. Buy real estate instead of stocks, bonds, mutual funds, or commodities. When you pick a winner in one of these non-real estate areas you can make 5-10 times your money. When you are wrong, in one of these non-real estate areas, you can actually loose up to 90% of your money. In real estate, if you are not greedy-not trying to get rich quick-in one year, you can make 100 times your money, on the upside. The downside risk is only based on how well you looked at all the possibilities ahead of time. If you did, the downside risk is reduced to only the holding time to fix a mistake. If you rush in and do not explore all the possibilities of a business venture, you can actually loose 100% of your money. In my mind an upside of 100 times profit is better than 10 times profit.

My philosophy on real estate ownership has changed in the last 15 years. I used to think that selling at the top of the market was the smart move and buying in the crash. Now I feel that buying when prices are down is still a smart move but never selling is the way to go. In order to hold on to a property in a down market you require proper planning to survive the crash. This I call a back door or emergency plan. This is have a plan and knowing what you will do if everything goes wrong with you original plan. When you have a backup plan, you rarely need it. This is the basis of my philosophy. With this understanding, you might more clearly see why I did what I did in these situations.

The Stories and article:

The area of real estate investing is one of the most complex because it is a combination of law and real estate. It is one of the most interesting because fortunes are made and lost in this area, and the numbers are so enormous. Lastly it is an area where crooks can make a lot of money and many times get away with it. Following are some stories (case histories) I have dealt with and some articles I have written on the subject of fraud in real estate. Finally, I have included an article on the basics of foreclosures and real estate in general, for your interest. I hope you enjoy them.

The Stories:

Story #1:
It was early March 2000 and I received a call from Kevin. He said that he had heard about me from some mutual friends. He wanted to speculate in buying HUD houses (Properties that the Government had foreclosed on). He wanted to buy them, fix them up and then sell them at a profit. He had heard that I had bought many foreclosures in the 1970’s and 80’s and he was hoping I could advise him. We met for lunch and he told me his life story. The important part of this conversation is that he had bought a boarded up 14 unit apartment building in downtown San Bernardino, across the street, from one of the roughest high schools in California.

By the end of the meeting, I had figured out that he had overpaid about $75,000 for the building, he had already wasted $200,000 trying to remodel it, and it was still $100,000 away from being finished. He had bought it 1.5 years ago and a large part of his costs was the interest on all his loans, related to this project. He was now broke, and in deep trouble, but in his mind, the badly needed money was coming.

It is interesting to note where he got the money to invest in this project. 4 years earlier he was given money to buy an apartment building by his father. He was given enough money that he only needed a very small $150,000 real estate loan to purchase a building in Pasadena that cost him a total of $525,000. In order to buy the San Bernardino rehab project, he first refinanced the first trust deed on the Pasadena building and jumped the loan balance to $385,000. When that money was gone he borrowed $74,000 as a second Trust Deed on both the Pasadena and San Bernardino properties. By the way, that loan cost him 15% interest and $15,000 in up front fees to get the money. Before we parted, I told him that he made a very expense mistake in buying San Bernardino. I explained that from the day he bought the building it was a sure bet that the project would fail. I then had to tell him that I would not lend him any money on San Bernardino, to save his butt.

Over the next 2 months I received periodic phone calls, telling me the progress of the fund raising. One of those updates I was told that the existing 2nd Trust Deed lender was saying that he might give Kevin the added $100,000 he needed to finish the project. At the same time, Kevin also believed he had found a bank that might refinance all the loans of San Bernardino. The difficulty with the bank loan was that the appraisal fee was $3,000, and it had to be paid in advance, even to just apply for the loan. Again Kevin asked me for money. Again I refused to put more good money down his black hole.

Then one morning I got a call from Kevin, “If I don’t make the $2,000 payment to the 2nd trust deed holder, he will start foreclosure in 2 days. Kevin also told me “The 2nd trust deed lender said that he would buy the Pasadena apartment building for what I had paid for it, 4 years ago, $525,000.” The offer had a stipulation to it. Kevin had to bring the loan current first. In my mind, if Kevin could bring the loan current, why would he even bother to sell the property for a wholesale price? I couldn’t believe what I was hearing.

After hearing all of this I decide that it is time I stop saying no and help. What Kevin thought he wanted was a real estate loan for a lot of money. The truth is, that money was not the solution to his problem. The problem had to be different than what Kevin believed, which is why the problem persisted. The real situation was not more borrowing. More borrowing meant more money down the drain.

Experience has taught me, “If the problem was what Kevin thought it was, it wouldn’t be a problem.” What does this phrase mean? A businessman has a financial set back. He thinks that with some short term funding he can recover from the set back and return to the top. After looking around, our businessman will usually find the money, but strangely enough the problem doesn’t resolve. If the problem did correct itself, then the businessman was right about what the problem was, and the problem would be gone. Usually the money doesn’t help, but the businessman doesn’t understand that. He doesn’t realize that the problem wasn’t money in the first place. If it were, the problem would now be gone. Lets continue the explanation. The last money borrowed is now gone and the problem persists, so our businessman goes out to find more money to solve the problem that didn’t solve with the money he borrowed, the first time. What happens the second time? The same thing. The money is used up and still the problem continues.

Our businessman is working on the wrong problem. The problem is not money, or the problem would have been gone. Kevin thought the problem was money. It wasn’t. He had already poured $300,000 into the San Bernardino building, on top of the $209,000 1st Trust Deed loan that came about when he bought the building. Before he was finished, he spent over $500,000 in a building that needs $100,000 to finish, but was only worth $475,000, after it was finished.

What could I do? Use what the good lord gave me. 30 years of experience, on the subject of getting out of problems that I created when I was young and inexperienced. Here was the war strategy. I got Kevin to agree to turn over total management of the two properties to me. Knowing that I was managing the property and working on what I believed was the correct problem, I felt comfortable about loaning money on this deal. If I can’t trust myself to solve this problem, whom can I trust? I started by loaning Kevin $25,000 to make needed repairs to the Pasadena building, pay the property taxes and to bring the first and second loans current on the Pasadena property only. Nothing was to be spent at this time, on the San Bernardino building.

Now that I controlled the Pasadena apartment building, I discovered what repairs the building needed. The list was so long it took one man three months, full time, to fully handle it. I then did a very detailed market study and determined what the market would pay in rents. I asked the tenants for a list of everything they wanted done in their apartments to be happy. I then did everything the tenants requested and I then raised their rents 30%. After the building was full, I raised the rents another 15%. The value of the building went up and I received an offer for $725,000. This was $200,000 more than its value 6 months earlier. I put it into escrow, and then I realized that I could raise the rents some more. I raised the rents again in escrow and forced the buyer to pay another $25,000 for the building. Bringing the price to $750,000. That $225,000 profit was needed to help cover the money being lost in San Bernardino.

Author’s Note: The escrow fell through and the building was kept until this update, December 5, 2004. The building is now in escrow for $1,583,000

What did I do about San Bernardino? I contacted the seller/lender and asked him if he would like me to pull the security guard out of the building and let him have it back in foreclosure. He didn’t want it back, even though he pretended that he was willing to do that. He offered me $25,000 in incentives to get me to personally lend the money necessary for the completion of the building, so he wouldn’t have to take it back. For 3 months he tried to get me to put money into the building, with the idea that once I put my money in I wouldn’t walk away from it. The real story was that I wouldn’t put a dime into that black hole until I figured out how to make it recover at least $100,000 of Kevin’s lost money. I asked for a $70,000 discount on the note, and offered to pay him off. We negotiated for two months. Just when I was ready to finish the deal, the seller sold his note to someone else for only a $30,000 discount. I was not able to make the money I wanted because now the new note holder wanted 100% of interest and principal due. This threw a monkey wrench into my negotiating. All this time, I had a buyer standing in the wings to buy the building from Kevin while I was negotiating. I was then forced to sell the property to this buyer and Kevin recovered only a little bit of his investment. The lender and I were both playing a high stakes poker game. I lost this round. If I could have gotten the payoff reduced, Kevin would received a large hunk of money from an “as is” sale. This is what I call playing “Craps” on a very big Monopoly board.

Author’s Note: The buyer, thinking he was going to put $125,000 to finish the remodeling, notified me, after one year, that he had spent $300,000 to finish the building. The apartment building values were increasing rapidly during this time period, so Kevin’s project was increasing in value at the same time the buyer was going deeper and deeper into construction costs. The buyer made out all right in the end. If the market had died, he would have lost $200,000 on this building after Kevin had already lost a fortune. It’s all about timing, isn’t it?

Kevin learned that money alone was not the answer to his problems; he needed a Genie, to turn his turkey into a swan.

Story #2
Janet is the daughter of one of my oldest and wealthiest friends and clients. We have been doing real estate deals together since 1975. Janet and her husband started buying distressed real estate in Phoenix Arizona in 1994, which was 8 years ago when it was the thing to do. It was now Dec 2000. The market appears to be slowing down and did after September 11, 2001. Janet had been continually borrowing money from her father, whenever things got too difficult. She later sold everything in Phoenix and bought property in Northern California. Then in 1999, one year before I was brought in, she started buying real estate in Kansas City. One day Janet’s father called me and asked for my help. He had loaned his daughter $200,000 and felt that everything she owned was upside down. (Loans more than the market value.). This was further complicated by the fact that if she sold her properties, to pay off her father, the capital gains taxes would eat up any cash, from the sale. On top of all this, Janet kept asking for more money to keep up the payments on the properties that had a negative cash flow and didn’t have enough rental income.

He hired me to help his daughter and agreed to pay my fee. I would work with this 40 years old kid, to get her to return her fathers $200,000 and make herself totally debt free. Janet and I met. She was brilliant. She did know what she was doing, as far as picking good real estate deals. She owned, at the time of our meeting, 10 properties located in 2 different states, and there was $500,000 in equity. If we could get it out, before her father had a stroke things would be great. Janet agreed to the arrangement, happily, if I would be her adviser, not his. Her father agreed to fund whatever money was requested as long as I approved it. Also I had to be the one to ask Janet’s father for the money, since the upset between the farther and daughter was getting unbearable.

This is what we did. A list of needed repairs was created for each of the 11 properties. Bids were received and the work ordered to be done within 30 days. This was not to take months. It had to be done immediately so we could go to step two. Step 2 was to put on the market all of the expensive Northern California property. To my disbelief, Janet wanted to move her family, to a new city, in the middle of all this and her father agreed to let her do it. She had found an old run down house that she felt was undervalued. That meant that her old residence was put into the group of properties to sell. Sell is what we planned to do. Everything was to be put on the market, and sold at the best price to be gotten, but sold regardless. The property in Kansas was to be repaired and fully rented. The properties that could be sold at what we thought was full retail, were also put on the market. The plan was that when everything was sold, the father would get paid off; the loans on the remaining properties would be paid off and the balance of the cash would be put into the bank. Since all of the Kansas deals appear to be a good investment, Janet could now continue to buy more Kansas property, (she had only been spending $25,000 on each deal) but for all cash. The rents coming in would generate enough income for her family to live on without having to ask for money from dad or touching her investment nest egg. That was the plan.

I forgot one last thing. Because many of the properties had been bought years ago on a 1031 exchanges (tax-free exchange), the capital gain tax was going to eat up the cash proceeds. That was one of the traps Janet fell into. She felt she couldn’t sell without buying a replacement. Of course by not liquidating before starting anew, she would never get out of debt with her real estate lenders or her father. The solution, for this problem was simpler than one would think.

First, the father did a 1031 exchange with Janet for one of the big profit houses. The father sold Janet his personal residences for no money down. Now Janet rented her father the house he lives in. So much for capital gains tax on the $150,000 profit in that one big sale. The second big profit was in the house Janet currently lived in. That was tax-free under the current laws. Since the other houses sold had smaller profits, it was decided that the business decision to get out of debt was more important than avoiding paying any taxes.

Author’s Note: That was the plan. So what happened? Janet decided she didn’t want to sell the junk in Kansas and fired me. She refused to pay her father back and as of December 2004 he had not seen a dime. Father has deducted what she owes him from her inheritance, which will be put into a trust administered by her brother for the benefit of the grandchildren. Real estate in California skyrocketed after 9/11/01 terrorist attack and her properties all doubled in value.

Summary: Everyone thinks that his or her problem is not confrontable and therefore unsolvable. I have found that someone other than myself can solve my un-confrontable problems in 10 min and I can do the same for them. It is not a question of being smarter, or more experienced, though experience helps a lot when coming up with easy solutions, quickly. It is really that we all are willing to confront someone else’s problems much easier than our own. When we are willing to confront our own problem head-on, solutions begin to appear miraculously. What I do is help people take their mountains and turn them into molehills. The molehills are then flattened with ease.

The Real Estate Fraud Articles:

These articles were published individually at different times. Here they appear all together, as parts 1, 2 and 3.

Fraud in real estate, are you being victimized? (Part I)

Rip off artists appear in all shapes and sexes. They usually are nice looking, well dressed and very smooth talkers. They, in conversation, tell you about a financial killing they made, or are in the middle of closing. Then they change the subject. A really smooth talker never asks or suggests you invest. They wait until you beg and plead with them to let you in on their great deal. At this point you are HAD. That means, " your goose is cooked and you are invited to the feast, because you are the main course." The logical question is how do you know, before you lose your money that you are going to be ripped off? The answer is independent research, and lots of it.

1) Find a friend, or a friend's friend who is an "expert" in the specific field of investment you are considering. Ask lots of questions and listen to him. Ask him or her how to make sure you are protected. In the years, 1990 to 1995, eight people I know paid the same real estate trainer over $5,000 each to show them how to buy real estate for "NO MONEY DOWN." The trainer claimed she got results. Not one of the students, all of who got to know each other, after years of trying, ever bought a property for "No Money Down."

Recently the same trainer is offering to get her students 100% financing on real estate, even with bad credit. The MARK (the name for a con artist's pigeon) thinks he is paying for an education. The education is that you are $5,000 poorer and you have the name of a loan company that will charge you 8.5% on a 1st Mtg. and 11% on a 2nd mtg. I will tell you how to find such a lender yourself and it will only cost you a phone call.

2) See an attorney or an accountant to review the deal, especially the paperwork. I have seen contracts that if you just read it yourself, word for word and think about what it said you would run like a wolf is chasing you. He is. One simple real estate contract allowed the con man to take the money out of the joint account before he did the repair work. He took the money and never did any work. Never release money until you have everyone's signature on the paperwork and your adviser has read the whole contract, word for word. If you cannot afford an attorney, do not do the deal. It is better to not make a profit than to loose what you already have. "A fool and his money are soon parted." Don't be the fool.

3) Get to know this person. Who are his friends? Who does he work with? What information does the real estate commissioner or the "Better Business Bureau." have on him or her? Ask for the names of people who have already invested with the "con artist", made their profit, and are out of the deal. Do not ask anyone who has gotten in but hasn't gotten out yet. Multi-level people love to have you talk to people that have just entered the group, just before you have.

One of smoothest people around was a securities investment adviser in Santa Barbara. He got hundreds of people to invest with him because hundreds of people had already invested with him. None of them did the level of homework they should have. The few people, who did do independent research, smelled a rat and didn't invest. Many of his investors have lost their whole life's savings; the rest just lost a lot of money, but will recover. If you think I am trying to scare you, then you are absolutely right. "Money should come in rapidly and be spent very slowly.

Fraud in real estate, are you being victimized? (Part II)

The phone range and Peter was on the other end of the line. "Willard, I have a friend of mine that has a real estate problem." I said, "Send him over." Two hours later, Jerry sat in front of me terribly upset. Three years earlier, he had been talked into buying a 4 unit building in partnership with Smooth Talker, a knowledgeable, smooth talking real estate salesman. Smooth Talker offered to find the property, arrange the financing, manage the building and even put up the down payment. Jerry was told that all he had to do was use his perfect credit to qualify for the loan and then sit back, wait seven years and the money would come rolling in.

Smooth Talker also promised that the two of them would do more deals and Jerry would make over $100,000. What Jerry did not know and would not figure out until 3 years later, was that Smooth Talker had no intention of splitting anything and Jerry could kiss his perfect credit goodbye! 3 years ago, Smooth Talker had Jerry and two other buyers, buy three buildings, located on one street. The buildings cost $150,000 each. Smooth Talker put up $1,500 down payment for each property, while at the same time, telling the buyers that he was putting in $12,000.00 for each. There was an unexplained difference of $10,500 each.

Smooth Talker also collected a $9,000 Real Estate commission on each. Smooth Talker also agreed to take the building in as-is condition, with no inspections and without requiring the seller to make any repairs. There were, unknown to Jerry $10,000 worth of air-conditioning as well as other work that needed to be done on the building.

Smooth Talker had those other two buyers borrow from the Federal Government a remodeling loan of $48,000 to make the needed repairs. When those other two buyers each got their loans, Smooth Talker took all the money and said he spent it on Jerry's building. Let me clarify that. Smooth Talker stole the money from the other two investors, telling them he used it on Jerry's building. That is still stealing. My research later showed that he did almost no repairs to any of the buildings, and what little repairs he did have done, were not even paid for.

Smooth Talker cheated the poor workers out of their pay. No one could ever understand what he was doing. He even collected rent, pocketing any cash. When the buyers wanted an accounting. Smooth Talker wouldn't even supply it. When I came on the scene and demanded, as a matter of law, an accounting of what was received and spent. Smooth Talker didn't have any proof of what happen to all the money.

Jerry wanted out of the partnership but Smooth Talker didn't want the building sold; but he did want to make sure he got his due, if it was. He gave me a statement showing that he had put in $34,000 (which was not true) into the building and wanted that before any split of profits. This would have left Jerry receiving $5,000 and Smooth Talker making $46,400 on the whole deal.

To avoid being in this kind of a situation, I advice the following, before doing any sort of real estate deal; a) Evaluate your risk. What is your downside? Have a real estate expert study the deal. b) Set up operating and reporting guidelines with your partners. Put everything in clear English. c) Have everything reviewed by an attorney or an accountant. d) Choose your people partners with care.

Fraud in real estate, are you being victimized? (Part III)

Jonathan's Story: Jonathan had the sadist story I ever heard. You decide how the story turns out. It was 1997 and I received a call from Jonathan. He had received my letter asking if he wanted to sell his business any time soon. He asked me to come out and see him. Jonathan was 81 years old. He owned a woodworking factory that had been going for 40 years. He also owned two commercial factory buildings and had a beautiful residence that was debt free.

His wife, Janet, also 81, was the sweetest woman I ever met. They were both healthy and they loved each other dearly. They had no children or grandchildren. Janet had nieces and nephews on her side of the family. Jonathan had no living relatives of any kind. When I met Jonathan I adopted him. Sounds like the perfect picture, doesn't it. It was until 5 years ago.

Jonathan received a letter from Nigeria explaining that if he would front them some cash to pay off some government officials, they would pay him millions of dollars out of what the government owed them. You may have heard this story. It has been on 60 minutes. In fact Jonathan had heard this story; the problem was that he thought that his contact was different. They showed him legal documents, had Nigerian attorneys certify the validity of them and they did everything else necessary to con a rich old man into believing that his ship had come in.

Over the next 3 years, Jonathan stopped paying his real estate loans, borrowed on his factory equipment, ran up $500,000 in credit card charges and cleaned out his wife's separate bank account, all without telling her anything. Every payment to Nigeria was supposed to be the last one, and Jonathan was hooked. When I found Jonathan he couldn't raise what he thought was the last $10,000 necessary to finish the deal. His creditors were getting very upset and were ready to sue him.

As terrible as this sounds, Jonathan was the 3rd person that I have met in the last 10 years that has been stung by this scam. I cried. I know that at least $500,000 was sent. Jonathan thinks he sent closer to $1 Million. Jonathan decided that it was fate that sent me to him. He may be right. By the way my company name is Kismet Real Estate Investments, Inc. Kismet means Fate, Destiny, Karma, etc in Turkish, Indian, and Arabic. Time was very short, we had work to do and fast.

His wife knew nothing of what was happening, and I had to get Jonathan to tell her that they had gone from being millionaires to destitute in one conversation. Jonathan told his wife the truth. She forgave him. (Now that's love.) Her one concern was that she didn't want to loose her home. We were but a few weeks away from the creditors coming down on his business and her mortgage free house. In one clean swallow, they would put her into bankruptcy, a one-bedroom apartment and living on social security, which would have actually killed her. How much can one take at that age?

I went to work. First I promised Janet that no one would take her house away from her. She needed to trust ME, a total stranger, to not put the nail in the coffin. I do not know if I could have made the decision she had to make. We put her house in an irrevocable trust for her family when she died. That meant she had to give up ownership of her house, to me, a total stranger, in order to continue to live in it the rest of her life. Next we sold his two buildings to an investor who would work with us. The loans on the two buildings were equal to the market value at that time.

We then found a buyer for the worse of the two buildings and made a deal with the Small Business Administration, to lower the interest rate and payments on the remaining building. Those payments are about 30% of current market rents today. By making those very low payments, the lender who is on the building and the business equipment was happy. The result of all this was that Jonathan was able to keep his factory running and make just enough to pay his current living expenses.

Then the creditors, eight of them, started suing Jonathan, one after the other. Each tried to take the assets of the business. There was nothing to take. Some tried to go after the commercial buildings. That failed as they had been sold. One tried to go after the house. I arranged for someone friendlier than the bank to buy the bank's judgment at a discount and hold it until it doesn't make any difference. The bankruptcy attorney said we would never get away with what we were doing. He said that Jonathan needed to file Bankruptcy. Jonathan decided that he trusted my ability more than the attorney's advice. It has been 3 years now and all is quiet on the northern front. Jonathan and Janet are now 84 years old, still healthy, and still in love.

Everyone thinks that his or her problem is un-confrontable and therefore unsolvable. I have found that someone other then myself can solve my un-confrontable problems in 10 min and I can do the same for them. It is not a question of being smarter, or more experienced, though experience helps a lot to come up with easy solutions quickly. It is really that we all are willing to confront someone else's problems much easier than our own.

When we are willing to confront our own problem head on, solutions begin to appear miraculously. What I do is help people take their mountains and turn them into molehills. The molehills are then flattened with ease.

Foreclosure; the basic procedure:

In order for foreclosure to occur in California, there are certain basic things that have to take place. How this works, in the case of a Deed of Trust, called a ‘Non Judicial Foreclosure,’ goes like this - with regard to the time line.

The borrower (property owner) does not make the monthly payment to the person or institution that he or she borrowed money from. Technically, a default occurs the moment the first payment is missed. However, for practical purposes, most lenders do not really start the foreclosure proceedings until after the third payment is missed. A few only wait until the second payment is missed, but this is rare.

The procedure, once started, is continued on through to the end unless the property owner stops it by bringing the loan current (bringing it current means to make all back payments owed to the lender).

· Day 1 - A notice of default is recorded.

· Within 10 business days - The Notice of Default (NOD) is posted on the property, mailed to the property owner and published in a countywide newspaper.

· After 3 months - A sale date can be set for the property to be sold, in order to repay the lender their money. The Notice of Sale (NOS) is also posted on the property, mailed to the property owner and published 3 times in a countywide newspaper. The publications are one week apart, announcing the public auction.

· The recording of the notice of sale must be done at least 21 days before the sale date. A notice of sale is sometimes sent to the I.R.S, if necessary - it is not in all cases.

· 7 days before sale date, if this is a court action, the 7-day rule may apply.

· 5 business days before the sale date - The right of the property owner to re-instate the loan (bring the loan current) expires.

· Sales Date - the trustee, for the benefit of the lender to recover his or her money, sells Property to the highest bidder at a public auction.

Should we Buy, Sell or Hold real estate in this Market?

It has been said, “Buy land, they aren’t making any more of it.” It is really a true statement. Of course there is a lot of land to be had, some very very cheap. Other land like beachfront is very limited and over the years gets even scarcer. I have a book in my library written in 1964. It talks about buying California land. It makes reference to the expansion of Los Angeles into the surrounding neighborhoods, as would be expected.

It also talks about land prices in the desert and other outlying areas where city expansion even today has not happened. Funny, land that was never going to be useful for anything for at least 100 years was selling in 1964 for $40 per acre and is today dirt-cheap worthless land for $200 per acre. Even junk real estate has gone up 500% in 38 years.

So lets look at the question: Is real estate a “buy and hold” investment or a “buy and sell” investment. First I would like to investigate why people have actually lost money buying real estate. We are not talking about “no profit” or “breaking even” owning real estate, we are talking about actually losing money. Let me tell you a story of where I actually lost money, and a lot of it. In 1987 to 1989, the real estate market went up double in 3 years, much as it has been doing in between 2000 and 2002.

I bought 2 houses in rent control West Hollywood, with the idea of building 9 condominiums. Expected profit was to be $1 Million. The market turned south in 1990 and stayed that way until 1995, when it began to go up 5% per year. I lost that property which today would have made me $2-3 Million. Why did I loose it, when if I would have held it for 10 years, I would have been much richer than if I would have been able to build and sell those condos in 1990?

The mortgage payments on the houses totaled $6,600 per month, including taxes and insurance. The market rents were $4,500 per month, which I couldn’t get because West Hollywood rent control would not allow me to raise the rent, even when a tenant moved out. I was locked in to $3,200 rent which meant I was loosing $3,400 per month or $40,800 per year. Since I needed to hold the property for 10 years, which was 2000 before getting a great price for the property or the build condos, I needed to have the ability to put $408,000 cash into the property. This was after paying $700,000 for the property in 1990. I didn’t have the staying power at the time.

Real estate investors usually do not just buy one property at a time. They tend to own many. I have owned up to 30 properties at one time. I know people who have owned and managed 100 houses or 100 units at one time. It is not being able to support the negative cash flow that can wipe out everything you worked years for. If you understand this, and do not get excited by big profits and greed, you will avoid these kind of deals.

In hindsight, if you think this was not a good risk, you would be correct. At the time it appeared that the condos would be built and sold within 18 months and my partners and I would be $1 million richer. Things are not always as they seem in real estate. Of course if you had a mortgage payment of $2,000 and rent of $2000 including taxes and insurance. You would never have this problem. Or would you?

I know it appears that rents would never go down, but in real estate recessions they do. We never believe that our loan payment will go up but they do also. If you have an adjustable rate loan, maybe with a 6 month teaser rate, you will find your payments going up $150.00 per month every year and it doesn’t take more than a few years before the yearly increase gets expense to support, especially while property values are flat or dropping.

When buying property to hold, these risks must be taken into consideration so that you are not surprised by them but are in fact fully prepared for these eventualities. When people buy at the top of the market they always tell me they are in for the long run. But in fact they usually sell out at the bottom, after being hit real hard by the negative cash flow.

On the other hand, people who buy in bad markets, get increasing rents, decreasing interest rates and appreciating property values guaranteeing the investor success. By the time the market peaks out this investor is making 100% profit on the appreciation, double the rent needed to pay the mortgage and the ability to support the property for another 10 years if the market drops and the investor has not sold. Risk free, at this point, unless the investor borrows all his equity out to buy two more deals.

The bargain buyer is in the exact same situation as the top of the market buyer, except he owns 3 houses, not one. I had four friends who, in the late 1970’s, did this exact thing. They each owned 10-30 properties. One of them owned only beachfront Malibu properties. The result was the same for all of them. By the bottom of the market in 1983, all of them had lost everything. Two of the four also got divorced in those 3 years because of the financial stress from a falling market.

Lessons to learn: First, do not think you are smarter than the people who passed this way before you; you’re not. Second, markets never go up forever, have not performed as if they will. Third, if you are not prepared for the worst, it will kill you. If you are prepared, it will only hurt a little. You will survive and come away much richer in the end.


About the Author: Willard Michlin is an Investor, Business Broker, California Real Estate Broker, Accountant, Financial Distress Consultant, Well known Public speaker and Administrative/Business Consultant. He can be contacted at his Ventura, California office by calling 805-529-9854 or by e-mail at broker@kismetbusinessbrokers.com See other article by Willard at http://www.kismetgroup.com

Residential Real Estate Appraisal Key Terms

To be able to fully understand the concepts of residential real estate appraisal, here is a list of important terms with meaning. Appraisal becomes important in times of selling the property, buying a property, divorcing the partner, settling the estate, and relocating an employee. In some point of our lifetime, we are going to encounter appraisals at least once.

Fair Market Value

It is the median price between the highest price acceptable to buyer and lowest price acceptable to seller.

Market Value

It is the most likely price at which the property would sell. The property must sell at a right price in which the price is not too high and low. Thus, an overprice property will sell a little longer. In most cases, an overprice property sells when the market value catch up with the selling price.

Price

It is often confuse with Market Value. Price differs slightly from Market Value. Although the Market Value gives the seller an idea how much to sell the property, the price may be higher or lower than the Market Value. For example, a buyer is willing to pay $20,000 more than the Market Value. This happens when there are many potential buyers for the property.

Value in Use

This relates to the net present value (NPV) of the property use. The NPV is the difference between present value of cash inflow and outflow. For example, a home buyer wants to purchase a property. He estimates the future cash flow that the property would generate. Then, he discounts the cash flow into a lump sum value amount. Let us say $450,000. If the home owner sells less than $450,000, the home buyer considers in purchasing the property.

Investment Value

It is the amount that the investor would pay to acquire the property. The Investment Value may be higher or lower than the fair Market value.

Insurable Value

The Insurance Policy covers the value of the property which is the Insurable Value.

Subject Property

It is the property which the appraiser evaluates or analyzes. The Appraiser analyzes the location, amenities, and condition of the subject property to arrive to the fair market value.

Comparables or Comps

Appraiser compares the subject property to another local property. The other local property is called Comparables or Comps. With the information from Comparables or Comps, the Appraiser calculates the fair market value of the subject property.

Real Estate Appraisal covers a huge scope. It is impossible to include all appraisal terms. For any missing key terms, you may consider online mortgage dictionary. A dictionary awaits your command. In an instant, it searches for possible definition.


About the Author: Dennis Estrada is a webmaster of mortgage calculators website that gives access to many resources, and calculators for mortgage.

Now Real Estate is Money Machine

The identifiable real estate fields are title insurance, construction, mortgage banking, property management, real estate appraisals, brokerage and leasing, and real estate development. Over one-third of the world's wealth is tied up in real estate. Real estate is collateral for mortgages and a large amount of financial assets. Real estate professionals are tied to the development of our society in a very direct way and participate in decisions that will shape the way we live for centuries.

Work in real estate is personally rewarding, ever-changing and challenging and the issue is near and dear to every heart. Some people will be grieving — some people will be filled with sorrow.

Key areas:

Residential Real Estate Agent/Broker

Commercial Real Estate Sales

Real Estate Appraisers

Property Managers

Real Estate Advisory

Development and Construction

Real Estate Entrepreneur

Find single family homes of all types, as well as town homes and condos, and more! Compare home photos, prices, amenities, and schools. Get maps and driving directions, locate open Houses, take virtual tours, and even save any houses you like. Moving within the India and surrounding area, or relocating to Delhi for the first time? After searching on internet we came to the conclusion that Onlineghar.com directory for real estate are professionals who can help you find your perfect home.

The evolution of real estate is that the release of new real estate information Web site onlineghar.com is a multifaceted Web site that delivers a variety of information (local, regional and national) to consumers, real estate professionals, businesses and government.

With the ability to research any individual's or company's real estate assets, onlineghar.com allows research on real estate, ownership, assessed value, property characteristics and property identification.

While talking with Mr. Mahajan the CEO of the company http://www.onlineghar.com he said, “real estate portal should have a commercial segment that should cater to all possible commercial requirements of the real estate market in India. Properties of the leading property developers from various parts of India should be focused. Whether commercial or residential, www.OnlineGhar.com understands the customer’s requirements and serves with state of the art quality and assurance in every job.”


About the Author:
Firoj Khan is an author related to http://www.onlineghar.com

Friday 23 November 2007

Real Estate Markets and Their Price Spreads

The price difference between various real estate markets is what many people try to profit from. I call this the spread. For example, Manhattan residential real estate prices are roughly $1000 a square foot. Downtown Jersey City and other equivalent outlying urban areas of Manhattan, such as Brooklyn Heights and Park Slope, might be $600 a square foot. That makes the spread between those markets about $400 ($1000 less $600) a square foot.

Bond traders or people that trade stocks look for or observe price spreads. Bond traders refer to the spread in basis point and in yield to maturity. So if a corporate bond yields 8% and an equivalent term US treasury bond yields 6%, then they would say that corporate bonds trade at a spread of 200 basis points or 2% (8% - 6%) to US treasuries.

In real estate people reach out to more far reaching real estate markets in the hope that those markets may mature or improve and that the price may rise closing the spread between that market and another.

Example: Brooklyn Heights versus Downtown Jersey City.

In Brooklyn Heights versus Downtown Jersey City, I observed there to be a significant price spread. The selling price per square foot for housing in some comparable neighborhoods of Brooklyn Heights can be significantly higher than in Downtown Jersey City.

Recently I previewed several properties in Brooklyn Heights selling for about $750 a square. Since Downtown Jersey City is at about $550 per square foot, then this would imply a spread per square foot of $200 ($750 - $550) between Downtown Jersey City and Brooklyn Heights.

I am looking for those spreads to narrow. A lot of development is transpiring in Downtown Jersey City. This will probably keep prices down in the near term (next couple of years) as a lot of inventory comes on the market and requires market absorption. However beyond the next couple of years as Downtown Jersey City improves, I believe those spreads will narrow.

As larger developers further their projects and advertise their projects on an international level, more attention should be brought to bear on Downtown Jersey City. I speculate that Donald Trump has every intention of marketing his Trump Jersey City beyond the local markets. Plus let’s not forget about the new $130 million dollar international golf course over at Liberty State Park. This is all free advertising on the coat tails of these projects and I further speculate that these projects will bring international attention to Downtown Jersey City.

So expect to see some price spread movements between the above mentioned markets over the next ten years. Although there is no guarantee that the spreads will narrow, I speculate (based on the above circumstances) that the probabilities point to the spreads narrowing rather than widening.

Link: www.RealEstate-Calc.com

Brokers or Lenders — Which Do You Want for Your Real Estate Mortgage?

A mortgage is a mortgage is a mortgage. NOT! Not only do mortgages differ between lenders, but they also differ greatly by the lenders, themselves. There are two types of real estate originators — brokers and loan officers.

Brokers generally are self-employed professionals, who work to secure a real estate loan for you. They work through a variety of lenders and earn a fee for the transaction. Most of the mortgage lenders who advertise on the Internet are brokers.

Loan officers are employees of a bank, credit union, or other lending institution, such as a mortgage company. They sell and process mortgages and other loans only for their employers. They are usually local and in a physical location.

There are advantages and disadvantages in using both brokers and loan officers for your real estate purchase, so you need to shop for the one that is right for you and your particular circumstance.

Brokers

The advantages to using a mortgage broker for your real estate purchase are many. Usually, the better deal they get for you, the buyer, the more they are paid on the transaction — a big plus for you. If your local bank, mortgage company, or credit union has refused you a loan, a mortgage broker may be able to find a lender, even if you have bad credit — just expect to pay a higher interest rate. If your real estate is unique or commercial property, using a mortgage broker to secure a loan is at times easier and faster.

One downside of using a mortgage broker is that your mortgage loan will be sold to another lender immediately after closing. Another is that brokers choose to do either non-conforming loans, which are higher risk and usually higher interest rates, or conforming loans. This limits your loan options. Brokers do not have to disclose a “good faith” estimate on what closing costs will be, nor are they regulated by the Fair Credit Act. Additionally, they seldom have a physical office with employees offering you face-to-face customer service, and they generally are in another town or state than where your real estate is located. This means they may not understand the local market in which you purchased your real estate. Important issues may arise from the real estate classifications and terms used by your appraiser, for example.

Loan Officers

Though loan officers offer a variety in the types of loans available, you are limited to only those products offered by one institution. Usually a local institution, the loan officer will be familiar with all local regulations and issues will not arise over lack of knowledge in local market terminology.

Banks and Mortgage Companies
Bank and mortgage company loan officers will give you face-to-face customer services, at least before the closing. Like brokers, banks have the option of selling real estate loans on the secondary market. Some banks sell only low-end mortgages or those that require too much servicing with little return. Some sell the loan but keep the servicing portion, making it appear that your mortgage continues to be owned by the bank or mortgage company. They are required, however, to tell you during the initial paperwork if your mortgage may be sold. I suggest you ask before you ever get to that point, if this is a deal breaker for you.

Bank and mortgage company loan officers are licensed and must meet certain criteria. They have more criteria that you must meet, as well, in order to secure a loan (banks usually require the most). Many real estate buyers are refused mortgage loans by these institutions. Both banks and mortgage companies generally do offer better rates and terms. They also must disclose a good faith estimate on what closing costs will be, and they are regulated and audited under the Fair Credit Act.

Credit Unions
You must be a member of a credit union to apply for a loan with them. Many credit unions do not offer real estate loans. The major advantage of securing a loan from a credit union is that they pass on only actual costs of the loan to you — no broker fees or commissions. They also never sell their loans on the secondary market, they always are local, and give you continuing face-to-face customer service.

What to Do

The time to begin looking for a mortgage lender is before you begin looking at real estate. Ask family and friends for referrals, as well as their experience with the real estate lender. Ask your real estate agent for referrals. Then, contact each prospective lender and ask questions — lots of questions! Compare interest rates, terms, after the closing mortgage sale policies, and what criteria do they require that you meet in order to qualify for a real estate loan.

If you are a residential real estate buyer, consider getting pre-approved for a loan. You will know exactly what you can afford to buy, which usually turns out to be much more than you expect.

Spend as much time shopping for a mortgage lender as you will for your real estate. The deal you get can save or cost you thousands or even millions over the life of the mortgage. Get the best deal possible, as well as the right lender for your real estate purchase.


About the Author: John Harris is an expert researcher and writer on real estate topics such as economics, credit improvement tips, home selling advice and home buying preparations. For more on San Diego Homes for Sale visit www.twtrealestate.com

The Difference Between a Real Estate License and Broker License

You've decided that you want to get your real estate license. You've heard of a broker license too. What is the difference between these two real estate professions? Unless you've been involved in a real estate transaction or are familiar with the careers, you might not know the exact differences.

If you want to pursue your real estate license, you should thoroughly understand the similarities and differences.

All states require that real estate sales professionals, including salespersons and brokers, be licensed by that state. Brokers will generally be required to complete more real estate education and experience than a salesperson.

A real estate agent is usually an independent contractor who provides his or her services to a licensed real estate broker on a contract basis. In return, the real estate broker pays the salesperson a portion of the commission earned from the agent's sale of the property.

Real Estate Salesperson - An individual who can show property for sale on behalf of a seller, but who may not have a license to transact the sale and collect the sales commission.

* Assist sellers in marketing their property and selling it for the highest price.
* Assist buyers in purchasing suitable property for the best possible price.
* Acts as an intermediary between the buyer and seller.

Real Estate Broker - A person licensed by his or her particular state to charge a fee for bringing a buyer and a seller together to purchase real estate.

* Assist sellers in marketing their property and selling it for the highest price.
* Assist buyers in purchasing suitable property for the best possible price.
* Acts as an intermediary between the buyer and seller.
* Buys and sells real estate for a company or individual on a commission basis.

Real estate salespersons and brokers perform many of the same duties including: obtaining listings, determining sales price; showing properties; assisting with financing; selling property; overseeing inspections, and more.

The state examination, which is more comprehensive for a real estate broker than an agent, includes questions on real estate transactions and laws affecting the sale of property. Most states require that a real estate salesperson complete between 30 and 90 hours of instruction. A real estate broker needs between 60 and 90 hours of real estate education and a specific amount of experience selling real estate (usually 1 to 3 years).

http://www.realestatelicense.com

Ever Met A Real Estate Agent you Could Trust?

The only time a real estate agent tells the truth is when he calls another
real estate agent a liar! Real Estate has a bad name and it's not always
deserved but it's pretty unusual for a week to go past when you don't see
some type of property scam or similar all over the current affairs news. More
often than not it's the work of the bad few that tarnish the industry as a
whole, in practice selling real estate can be a thankless task and agents can
grind long hours for little reward! There are alternatives for those who are
willing to take on the role of the agent when they decide to sell their own
property.


If your selling property why not pocket the expensive commission you would
normally pay the agent? Why not use a good
FSBO website? Properties are selling
online from free real estate sites
every single day. The question is are we seeing a shift in the role of agents in
the traditional real estate transaction? Are you the type of person who can
handle selling your own property with confidence?


If your prepared to try using an online service you stand to save thousands
in commissions and marketing fees which gives you more scope to negotiate price,
terms and conditions with potential buyers. Your also representing your own
product with the greater product knowledge than an agent is likely to have.
Owners are better positioned to look after their own interests, often agents
will play buyers and sellers off against each other with their own financial
interests central to the transaction, this is not an ideal situation for buyer
or seller. Agents have been known to pressure buyers into price reductions if
the property does not sell within a few weeks and often if the owner stands
their ground the agent may let the listing go cold and use the sellers
advertising to pull the "bait and switch" trick- selling other stock from
their portfolio. What many sellers don't often see realize is that they will
often pay for marketing their own property and at the same time they are
promoting the agents business for them. If you have ever wondered how agents can
afford a huge presence in the print media the answer lies in the sellers
marketing budget.


In some areas agents will get a commission or kickback on the
advertising budget paid to the agent by the owner! Agents can pick up at both
ends of the transaction at considerable cost to the seller, advertising
campaigns can and do run into thousands of dollars even if the property does not
sell! In a hot real estate market it makes a lot of sense to do it your
self! With a little market research a home owner can quickly educate themselves
in the local market conditions and preferred marketing methods of the local
agents, locate a good for sale by owner
website online, take some digital photos and get started! The internet can
deliver a lot of information to a potential buyer and even act as a conduit for
price negotiation if your not comfortable doing face to face negotiation
yourself. You can find real estate
selling advice and tips online, general promotion and marketing advice,
advice on getting your home ready for an open inspection day and then advice on
selling, negotiating price and contract terms and conditions.


Agents will always have a place in many real estate transactions and will
always find ways to justify their existence. Unfortunately there is still a lot
of dishonesty and under the table kickbacks in the industry. Many agents will
pretty much say and do whatever it takes to get a listing then go to work on the
seller after they have an agreement to act, if you use an agent then do
your homework and try and get one on referral from a trusted source.


Increasingly people are using the internet to harness the resources to
sell property themselves,
sellers have little to loose and thousands of dollars to gain. They will have
total control and peace of mind knowing that they control the process from start
to finish. Check fastrealestate.net if your thinking of selling.


About the Author: Maxine Clark has been running fastrealestate since 2001
http://www.fastrealestate.net/

Tips to Sell in a Buyer's Market

The experts say that it is no longer a seller's market. This doesn't mean that it will be hard to sell, but you might need to make the extra effort to get your house to move faster. By completing a few easy steps, you should be able to get your house sold in the optimal amount of time.

1. Pick a realistic price. Buyers are learning to be more cautious when it comes to investing their money in a new home. With prices leveling off a bit, they want to know that they are making a wise choice. Be practical and choose a price that reflects the current market, not the market six months ago.

Tip: It is recommended that you list your price at or below the competitive market price. (e.g. If your neighbors are asking $400,000, list your home at $395,000 to generate interest.)

2. Go the extra mile. You can attract more buyers by providing an incentive. Gone are the days when people are willing to pay more for less. Buyers are going to be more cautious and sensible about their purchase. You can make them feel like they are getting a good deal.

Tip: You can offer to pay the buyer's closing costs as a perk of the sale. Or you can be flexible with the length of escrow and willing to fix items in the home inspection report.

3. Spruce up the place. Spending a little money to improve the appearance of your house can work magic when it comes to attracting a buyer.

Tip: Fix that wobbly doorknob, plant a new flowerbed, or put on a fresh coat of paint to give your house a fresh and new appearance.

4. Clean, clean, clean. Make sure your house is always clean and pleasing to the buyer. Remember that they are most likely going to be looking in closets, opening the oven door and peeking in showers. You want to show your house in the best possible light.

Tip: Polish the hardwood floors, clean the tile grout, scrub walls, dust high shelves to provide your house with a sparkly appearance.

These are not foolproof methods for a quick sale, but they can give you a leg up on the competition. It's important to show that you are keeping the buyer in mind and that you want to provide a fair sale. That can go far in today's real estate market.

http://www.realestatelicense.com


About the Author: Heather Brunson is a lead marketing writer for Allied Schools. She has a B.A. in Journalism with an emphasis on public relations. She has additional experience in technical writing.

Simple Online Revenue Models

Setting up an online business is nothing new, consider the amount of new
sites going live every day and you can be sure more than just a few of them
going to produce some type return on investment. You can increase the odds of a
positive return by selecting from a proven and simple revenue model such as
advertising banners on a
free dating site or using adsense and google on
a free realestate
site or selling a service such
SEO and development. Travel is another huge
online industry that returns commissions to website operators for traffic
referrals that convert to a booking or sale.

Retail has been established online for years now with sites like amazon.com
and the huge auction site ebay one of the biggest sites online.  For the new
players to the online world there are many established sites to study and model
your web business on. Many of the hard lessons have already been learned and a
wealth of information is available for those willing to seek it out and benefit
from the experience of others.

Clearly you don't have to have an established business to make money online,
affiliate sales make up a huge percentage of online sales with many companies
becoming specialists in this lucrative field of online enterprise. Typically a
market and a product or service will be identified and the online affiliate will
source traffic
and funnel into their own website as a conduit to the main site. The customer is
tracked along the way via a code and any purchase is tracked and credited to the
affiliate who is in turn paid a pre determined percentage of that sale.  It's a
very good system and there are thousands of niche industries now running
affiliate programs for the products and services they offer. In effect there is
something for almost everyone who has aspirations of selling to their online
audience.

Another popular method is paid banner placement on your site, you simply
charge an advertiser for the amount of impressions or click thrus on their
banner placed on your site. Selling impressions in my opinion is the least fair
with banner ads, click thru advertising represents better value for the
advertiser as they only pay when a customer has a genuine interest in the
product or service being advertised. I've been burned on impression advertising
before, the numbers sound impressive but if you have a product such as blue
widgets on a site where people are only looking for bright red widgets then sure
your going to get lots of impressions but not many clicks. The result is the
advertiser is not delivering value to the client and so the client only gets
caught once.

Adsense is googles way of giving back to the people! The adsense program
allows website owners to display google PPC ads on their sites and then pays
then an undisclosed percentage of the going click through price. I've heard of
some big cheques being written by google to their advertisers and some of the
high paying keyword industries can deliver impressive single click prices if you
have the right type of traffic. Examples include finance, medical, hosting, real
estate and travel. Be prepared to forever wonder exactly how much google is
actually making off your traffic if you adopt this model and always consider
going direct to the advertiser if you have enough traffic, you may in fact make
a lot more this way!

About the Author: Maxine Clark is an expert on the online dating
http://www.casualdate.com.au/sexy
and SEO http://www.moreclicks.com.au
industry and has been involved for 5 years keeping sites at the top of the
search engines.

Real Estate Investing Myths That Steal Profits From Your Pocket

One of the things that distresses me about our industry is the amount of wrong or incomplete information available to investors. Some myths block what otherwise would be a great deal, while others would have you believe that a bad deal is actually great. For example, we encourage purchasing homes “subject-to” the existing mortgage as an option to finance the purchase of an investment property. This means that title to the property is transferred to the purchaser, but the loan remains in the original borrower’s name with payments made by the purchaser. Unfortunately, many myths exist around this method which could rob you of your profits. Let’s take this opportunity to dispel 5 of the most common.

Myth #1: Buying A House “Subject-To” The Existing Mortgage Is Illegal.

Absolutely not true! Some states are attempting to pass legislation to regulate “subject-to purchases because of unscrupulous investors. Check with your local attorney to determine the status in your state because most still have no laws passed.

This myth has been around a lot longer than these new laws in a few states. The reason is that most mortgages have a “due-on-sale” clause which states that if the house is sold without paying off the mortgage, the lender has the “right” to call the entire loan due. The key here is that they have a “right” – not an “obligation”. In other words, it’s their choice. Before doing my first “subject-to” deal I asked several attorneys in town who represent lenders to see if they had ever heard of a bank call a loan due because of a sale. In every instance they said: not as long as the payments were made timely. Why? Because banks are in the money business – not in the real estate business. If they call the loan due, and it goes into foreclosure, they have a poor performing loan on the books (for which they have to increase their reserves), they incur additional costs, and they inherit a property. Their other choice is to just continue to accept timely payments from the new owner. Which makes more sense?

Note: This is only true when the mortgage holder is a bank. If the mortgage holder is a private individual, they may in fact prefer to have the house rather than timely payments.

Myth #2: Buying “Subject-To” Is Complicated And Requires A Ton Of Paperwork.

The truth is that all you have to do is write it into the Purchase and Sales Agreement (PSA). I write it in right next to the Purchase Price. Here’s an example using my PSA:

Total Purchase Price to be paid by Buyer is $80,000.00, payable as follows: “subject-to” existing first mortgage with Acme Finance with a balance of approximately $77,500, and monthly PITI payments of $695; remainder of Sellers equity to be paid in cash at closing.

That’s it. You and the Seller have now agreed that you’ll purchase the home subject-to their mortgage. As a precaution, I have the Seller sign a disclosure that they know and understand that the loan has a due-on-sale clause which the lending institution can invoke since the property is being sold. It also discloses that I make no promise as to when the loan will be paid in full, or how long it will remain in their name. I also prepare a letter from the borrower informing the bank that all future correspondence should be forwarded to me, and that I have the right to act for the Seller in every way regarding the loan so they’ll disclose loan information to me in the future.

It really is that easy. After closing, you just start making the payments. I don’t hide my identity from the bank. I send in my own checks, and the house insurance is in my comapny name.


Myth #3: No Homeowner Will Ever Sell Me Their House And Leave The Loan In Their Name.

If you’re dealing with a seller who has no problems with his house, this may be true. But when you deal with motivated sellers – ones that either have financial, personal, or house issues – this will not be an issue. Motivated sellers need a way out – quickly! Often, they’re already behind in their payments, and facing foreclosure. When you tell them that their worries are over, and you’ll catch up their back payments, and make all the subsequent payments on time they’ll jump at the opportunity. As a bonus, their credit will even improve.

The key to successful negotiating lies in your confidence. Realize that you’re providing a viable alternative solution which allows the highest price to be paid, with the quickest closing, and immediate relief for the Seller’s situation.

Myth #4: Kitchen Table Closings Are Perfect For These Transactions

Investors love to say that they “got the deed” at the kitchen table when they presented their offer. The concern is you have no validation of what you purchased. Without a title exam, there’s no guarantee the correct owner even signed the deed, nor whether any other loans or liens exist on the property. You also have no title insurance to protect you from any unanticipated title problems. Finally, the actual payoff on the loan must be validated with the lender by requesting a statement of account. Do not use the principal balance payoff shown on the monthly statement because it does not include past due payments, other interest accrued, fees and penalties, and any prepayment penalties. I have seen actual payoffs tens of thousands of dollars greater than the principal payoff.

You could argue that what difference does it make if the loan isn’t in your name and you gave the Seller no cash. The problem is that you may not discover any of these issues until much later in the transaction – maybe not until you try to sell the property. By then, you will have invested time, energy, and money in the property only to see it all lost, when all of these problems could have been avoided by conducting a standard closing with your attorney or title company.

Myth #5: I Can Always Just Walk Away If I Can’t Pay The Mortgage

This is technically true, but not a great strategy for the successful investor. Legally, you are not responsible for the payments, although some states are attempting to pass legislation to stop investors from just walking away. You also have your credibility and reputation to consider – which are critical to your long term success. You definitely don’t want an angry seller defaming your reputation in the community, or submitting a complaint with the Better Business Bureau. Not to mention that you probably have cash invested in the house, which will all be lost. I recommend treating “subject-to” mortgages just like any other with your name attached – make timely payments.

Best of success & abundance,

Lou Castillo

Yours Free: 6 Full Months Of Specialized Real Estate Investing Strategies - Delivered To You By e-Mail, Audio and Teleseminar - All At No Cost To You...
Go here right now--> http://www.freerealestatestrategies.com

So, You Want To Buy Pre-Foreclosures?

So you want to buy pre-foreclosures? So many investors ask me about this method of finding deals. Here's my 30-second seminar on the topic. If you're going to buy PRE-foreclosures--after the seller is behind on their payments, but before the lender's auction date-then there are some pros and cons to consider.

Pros:
• There is a good possibility of buying the house subject-to the loan from a very motivated seller who just wants out.
• Information on the homeowners in pre-foreclosure is public information, and readily accessible (although this can also be a con – see below)
• Foreclosures across the country are at an all time high.

Cons:
• Depending on your state, you either have so little time before the auction date that it is almost impossible to contact the homeowners, obtain signed contracts, run title, obtain funding, and close – or – the auction is so far away that the homeowners are not even motivated by the threat of foreclosure. The truth is that they can probably live in the house rent free for a year or more.
• Most pre-foreclosure homeowners are in denial about their situation and/or angry that their private situation has become public knowledge.
• Everyone and their mother contacts these sellers once they hit the pre-foreclosure list. It’s not just investors, but also real estate agents, bankruptcy attorneys, and forbearance consultants.

If you want to focus on pre-foreclosures as a method for finding deals, then you want to stand out from the others. You might want to try unusual mailings. Have you ever received an envelope with a pen or something bulky inside? Could you resist opening it? No, you had to se what was inside. There are companies that specialize in these type of inexpensive premiums to place in your direct mail pieces. They even have unusual mailing containers (trash can, coconut, stick of dynamite) that make your advertisement stand out. The trick is to get your marketing piece read, remembered, and acted upon. The other thing to remember is that it takes multiple impressions – so you have to mail numerous times: 5-7 before you’ll even get noticed. Consistency is critical. Don’t give up.

Develop your plan for contacting the homeowners on a regular and consistent basis. If there is a long foreclosure process in your state, then you may want to consider one initial mailing when they hit the list, then only one more contact each month until your are closer to the auction date at which time you may step it up to once a week. Remember that most of your competition will stop contacting these homeowners long before the auction. The sellers who wait until the last minute are usually faced with far fewer options – that’s a great time for you to contact them.

When you do speak to these homeowners, remember to be sympathetic, but not condescending. Act as a consultant helping them to find a viable alternative to destroying their credit and their future chances at a new mortgage. What they want more than anything is relief and respect. Provide both, and you have a great chance at a deal.


Best of Success & Abundance,

Lou Castillo

Yours Free: 6 Full Months Of Specialized Real Estate Investing Strategies - Delivered To You By e-Mail, Audio and Teleseminar - All At No Cost To You...
Go here right now--> http://www.freerealestatestrategies.com

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About the Author: Phil LaBoon is a well known author who writes articles on finance and investment, real estate, etc. for www.investrealestate101.com