Ins and Outs of Today’s Real Estate for the Beginner

January 20, 2012

Foreclosures – When a homeowners’ right to home ownership has been terminated because of the owner’s inability to make mortgage payments. The lender seizes ownership of the home, but it doesn’t happen overnight. The home is typically seized after adjustments have been made in payment plans to allow the homeowner to regain ownership of the home.

Purchasing foreclosures is a great way to invest in real estate because you can purchase a home for as much as 60% off the market value of the property. Because there are so many foreclosure listings on the market today, many people are turning to buying foreclosures as a way of accruing wealth. Usually sold as short sales, REOs, or auction homes.

REOs - Also known as “bank-owned property,” an REO, which stands for “real estate-owned,” is a property that has gone back to the mortgage company after an unsuccessful foreclosure auction. Unsuccessful sales can happen because what is owed to the bank is typically more than what the property is actually worth. Once the bank owns the property, the mortgage loan no longer exists.

If you’re looking to purchase REOs, you’ll be dealing with a bank, typically an entire branch that specializes in REOs. Properties are sold “as is,” so you’ll want to do your homework to property investigate the property. You’ll want to research the values of the homes in the neighborhood. A common mistake with REOs and foreclosures – getting in a bidding war and paying over market value.

Short Sale – A short shale is when the mortgage company or bank reduces the note and you purchase the note from the mortgage company. This essentially comes at a loss to the bank and depends on the amount the bank is willing to accept.

Quick Sale – These are houses that are priced below other houses in the area to sell, just as the name suggests – FAST! But don’t let this fool you. It may be labeled a “quick sale,” but it doesn’t mean the home is automatically lower that comparable homes in the neighborhood. This is why you must do your research.

ROI – Also known as “return on investment,” this is the profit you make after you’ve purchased a foreclosure, short sale, or quick sale below market value, then made upgrades to the home and re-solid at a higher price than the original purchase price, which ideally is at market value or above, depending on whether you’re looking for a long term investment or to flip a home quickly.

Direct Express Realty is a realtor specializing in St Petersburg Foreclosures and REOs. Contact Direct Express to Invest in St Petersburg Foreclosures or for Remodeling Investment Property in St Petersburg.

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Bank Foreclosures: What Are They Really?

November 6, 2011

So you have heard the term again and again. You might even have some idea about it. But do you know about a bank foreclosure enough to explain it someone who asks you about it? Do the banking and mortgage terms sometimes befuddle you?

If you have been looking for someone to explain bank foreclosure to you in simple and straightforward way without using any jargon, then here are ten points that would serve the purpose.

10 IMPORTANT ASPECTS OF THE FORECLOSURE PROCESS

1. Foreclosure is a legal process by which a mortgagee (a lender, mortgage holder or a third party lien holder) can claim ownership of the mortgaged property under consideration in order to pay the mortgage by selling it off.

2. This strict measure is undertaken by the lender when the borrower (or mortgager) is unable to pay back the loan that had been used to buy a real estate property such as a house.

3. Depending upon the local state laws, foreclosure terms and conditions vary from one state to another. All the laws promote unbiased and fair foreclosure solutions to all the parties.

4. There are two types of foreclosure that are usually common to all the U.S. States.-foreclosure by judicial state and foreclosure by power of sale or non-judicial foreclosure. The other types of foreclosure are specific to the States and their local laws such as the Strict Foreclosure.

5. Judicial foreclosure or foreclosure by judicial state involves filing of a lawsuit by the lender in response to a mortgage payment default by the borrower. The mortgaged property is sold to pay off all the debts under the supervision of the court.

6. Non-judicial foreclosure or foreclosure by power of sale does not involve a court of law. The mortgaged property or collateral property is sold off and the proceeds are used to pay all the unpaid debts.

7. The proceeds from the foreclosure sale are used to settle the accounts of the mortgage holder, the other lien holders, and the mortgagor, in that order of preference.

8. The amount owed under foreclosure is calculated by the acceleration clauses accompanying a loan agreement. If a mortgager or lender wants to terminate a mortgage loan, a 30-day warning letter, called notice of acceleration, is issued. This means that the mortgager party wants to take ownership of your home unless you can pay the entire loan balance in full. Without an acceleration clause, the lender or mortgagee can only wait till all the outstanding payments are made or persuade the court to sell of the property to settle accounts.

9. In strict foreclosure, the lender party seeks the help of courts of law to retrieve the due payments from the defaulting mortgagee. The mortgaged property is auctioned publicly to generate proceeds that are used to settle the unpaid debts.

10. Once a notice of foreclosure has reached you, there are various ways to settle the matter. Some of these include negotiation measures such as loan modification, short sale and forbearance agreements. Foreclosure defense actions and bankruptcy under Chapter 13 and Chapter 7 can also be undertaken depending upon the situation and eligibility conditions.

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What to Expect From Your Buyers Broker

September 7, 2011

As a buyer you come to expect certain things from your real estate agent but everyone has a different expectation. As a realtor myself and knowing what is really in the scope of the realtors expertise and due diligence I will give you some information on the subject.

As a buyer you do not pay your realtor any money either prior to or after a transaction, the seller or bank if it is a foreclosure or short sale pays all the realtor fees. This being the case, your realtor is still working for you but it is only fair to give the same courtesy to a realtor you work with as you would expect of a client of your own. Having a realtor drive you around for days on end and then buy a property with another agent or on your own is simply disrespectful and unfair to an agent that has worked hard for you. You would not want to work that hard for your boss and not get paid.

Your real estate agent should first make sure that you are pre-qualified with a good lender that you are able to qualify for the purchase of a home as well as how much home you can afford. Once you have done that then they should get a list of the criteria you want or must have in a home. Some of these things could be the size, area, number of bedrooms or bathrooms you need to have. They can then find all homes that meet your criteria and have you view them first on-line. You will then be able to narrow down your search based on the information on the listing as well as photos or virtual tours. You will also be able to get a satellite picture of the location and outside of the home. This will help you see if the home is in an area or on a lot that is within your guidelines.

Once you have narrowed down your search your agent will assist in you being able to view the homes you like. Is this really the biggest part of their job? This is not the most important part of the job that is for sure. Once you have chosen a property they will be writing up a legal contract with the specifications you have discussed with them. This will include price, close of escrow date, home warranties and title company. They are responsible for making sure the paperwork is in order and you understand what you are signing. Ask them questions if you do not understand, do not just arbitrarily sign the paperwork.

Once you are actually in contract and they have negotiated with the seller all aspects of the contract they will be assisting you with inspections, requesting and receiving repair work on the property. They will be sure all parties have the proper paperwork needed like the title company or lender that may be involved. They can help you keep track of any time sensitive dates which includes the inspection and those negotiations. They can but may not be able to be there when you sign the final paperwork at the title company. It is often difficult to arrange a time that is good for the title company, buyers and the realtor. The title work is handled by the title company and questions about that paperwork should be answered by the title company personnel. If you get questions answered on title paperwork from your realtor you need to understand this is not within the scope of their expertise.

Accounting and tax information is also something you need to get from experts in these fields and do not rely on your real estate agent to give out that type of information or you may receive information that is not valid.

Nancy Niblett is a highly successful Real Estate Agent specializing in the Chandler area. She credits her success to hard work, integrity and honesty. Clients continue to refer her over and over again. Nancy is one of the most successful award-winning agents and currently with West USA Revelation. She was awarded the top 50 Realtors in Phoenix by the Phoenix Business Journal for the past several years.

Find your next home in Ocotillo of Chandler AZ at Ocotillo Waterfront Property or anywhere in Chandler, AZ at Cheap Chandler Homes

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REO Listings Update: 2010’s Record-Breaking Year

April 19, 2011

The Final Foreclosure Numbers on Last Year

As predicted by numerous housing experts, 2010 was another record-breaker in terms of numbers of foreclosures and bank REOs. For the first time since foreclosure numbers began to be recorded, over a million homes were converted to REO properties, despite the slowdown in foreclosure activity in the final quarter of 2010, due to the discovery of invalid bank foreclosure processing.

Foreclosure filings, which include default notices, scheduled auctions and bank repossessions, hit 2.87 million U.S. homes in 2010, up 2 percent from 2009, or one out of every 45 homes in America. “If not for the robo-signing controversy, which broke in early October, the total could have easily surpassed 3 million,” said James Saccacio, RealtyTrac CEO.

The five states that accounted for over half of all the foreclosure activity were California, Florida, Arizona, Illinois and Michigan. Nevada, however, continued to have the country’s highest rate of foreclosures for the fourth year in a row, with over 9 percent of all homes in the state subject to foreclosure filings.

The overwhelming foreclosure numbers began to skyrocket four years ago and, since then, approximately 1 out of every 10 American homes, 5 million properties in all, has been subject to a foreclosure filing.

As for 2011, more record-breaking numbers may be on the way. “Early indications in January were that this robo-signing related delay will be over by the end of first quarter if not sooner,” commented RealtyTrac’s Rick Sharga. “I think we’re going to see a significant spike in foreclosure activity early in 2011, and that will contribute in part to 2011 being a record year.”

Estimate are that as many as 250,000 foreclosures that would have happened in 2010 will now happen this year and add to an already-huge pool of bank REO properties. Currently, the four biggest lenders have in their possession approximately $7 billion worth of REO homes, while Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac have a combined $24 billion pool of REOs. This means there is at least a 3 year supply of REO properties in the pipeline. REO sales already comprise roughly a third of all real estate activity.

The U.S. government is considering a number of incentive programs to help sell the massive amount of REO properties that are and will be shortly on the market. The loan modification programs that the Obama Administration hoped would stem the foreclosure numbers have so far been ineffective. The focus now is enabling the sale of the REO homes and helping the housing market to recover.

Frank Patrick is the founder of ASREOS (the American Society of REO Specialists), the first professional association for REO Agents created by REO professionals and contains numerous resources and tools to maximize REO opportunities and find REO listings – as well as the ability to interface with other REO Agents across the country in an exclusive forum. Find out more at http://www.asreos.com

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Does Renting Make Sense Given the Bad Real Estate Market?

March 8, 2011

One of the basic tools used by financial advisors is to show their clients the advantages of homeownership versus renting. As you’ve probably heard, renting always seems to come out as the bad option. Many are starting to question whether that is still the case.

Regardless of where you turn these days the news regarding the real estate market is bad. Prices are falling. Lenders are not lending money. Foreclosures are going up. The Federal Reserve is going to raise rates. As I write this, the federal government is announcing that there will be no bailout of Fannie Mae. While that is good news, the fact that the financial viability of Fannie Mae is even being questioned is very scary.

Given all of the negative signs in the real estate market, we need to return to the fundamental question of whether buying a home now is a good move. There are many caveats that go into the answer, but we are going to ignore them. We are going to assume you are moving into a solid neighborhood, the home is in decent shape and the price is within a reasonable range of its appreciated value.

So, should you buy? The answer is yes! Not only that, there hasn’t been a better time to buy in the last 8 years. With the real estate market going down, you’re probably wondering how I could be taking this positions. Well, think it through.

People will always need a place to live. They needed homes 80 years ago. They will need them in 80 years. Unlike the stock of a company that can go up or down or even become utterly worthless, a home has an inherent value because it is real property. This means that sooner or later, the market will turn around. When it does, you want to be a homeowner so you can reap the benefits of the rebound.

Home values are falling. Practically every bit of news related to the real estate market is negative. Simply put, it can’t get much worse than now. That means it is time to buy. If we are not at “rock bottom”, we are mighty close. You might see the home you buy lose a bit more value through 2008 and even 2009, but what do you think it will be worth in 2011? A lot more than you buy it for if you act now.

The real estate market will rebound. In fact, it is going to rebound strongly and a lot of people are going to make some serious money. We are at or near the bottom. There is no better time to buy and reap the benefits when things turn around. In comparison to renting, well, there is no comparison.

Raynor James writes about issues faced by FSBO sellers for FSBOAmerica.org where you can list your property for sale by owner for free for 1 month.

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Planning for Affordable Housing

March 2, 2011

Every state has departments that are responsible for the planning and funding of affordable housing projects. Alabama’s is called the Alabama Housing Finance Authority or AHFA. In statements released late last year, the AHFA announced that its Board of Directors has approved both its HOME Action Plan and Low-Income Housing Tax Credit State Qualified Action Plan. These are two of the primary tools used by the AHFA to promote low-income housing development.

The HOME Action Plan defines several AHFA housing priorities for 2011, which will be used to determine how HOME funds are distributed. Those priorities include: adding to existing low-income housing stock, funding projects that could not otherwise include affordable units without HOME funds, and ensuring that HOME funds are evenly distributed throughout the state.

Over $16.5 million has been allocated for HOME funds for the 2011 fiscal year. Of that, about $2.5 million is designated for Community Housing Development Organizations (CHDOs), which are the primary drivers for low-income housing creation.

Alabama’s LIHTC Plan lists the same priorities as its HOME Action Plan, focusing on increased affordable housing stock and an even distribution of tax credits across the state. The LIHTC Action Plan includes credit ceilings, requirements for the application process, and required progress once tax credits have been reserved.

Though the AHFA Board of Directors has approved both plans, they are not finalized. The HOME Action Plan still has to be approved by the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development. The LIHTC plan requires approval by Alabama’s Governor. As a result, both plans are still subject to change. Current versions of both the HOME and the LIHTC plans are available online. They are great examples of the tools states use to ensure that proper attention and funding is given to affordable housing projects.

Want to get a free program guide of Sean Carpenter’s top 8 favorite government programs for real estate developers and investors? Request your free program guide today at:
http://www.governmentdealfunding.com/go/programs/

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10 Reasons to Short Sale Your Home This Year

February 19, 2011

Short Sale” is going to be the buzzword of the new decade. In the first half of the new millennium we saw real estate profit in the hundreds of millions come and we saw it go. We saw employees with 40k salaries making 100k in real estate; we saw an in-flux of previously-only-late-night real estate gurus buying prime-time slots between the Simpsons & LA Law. I think I knew at least fifteen people who owned second homes in places that made no sense: five people who hated snow owned properties in Wyoming, Telluride, and Salt Lake; five people who hated the heat & sunshine owned properties smack in the desert here in Scottsdale, Arizona; three more people owned second homes two blocks down from where they lived, two people who couldn’t swim owned waterfront property and one person actually forgot which city & state he had actually bought his second home in!

Now here we are entering the new decade and boy how the world has changed. We now see foreclosures at an all time high. We see home values plummeting nationwide We see people who used to make six figures by June now scraping by at 30k a year if they’re lucky; high unemployment rates and lower pay rates; even yesterday’s CEO’s are now taking your lunch order.

Foreclosures are winning the race in the real estate notoriety department right now and right behind them is the elusive, slippery “Short Sale”. Although not everyone quite understands how a short sale works, or how it benefits the average consumer, or the differences in short sales by lender or state, almost everyone has probably heard the word by now. 2011 and beyond will be the “Decade of the Short Sale” and here are 10 reasons why:

  1. HAFA Program (Home Affordable Foreclosure Alternative) - The HAFA program (or as I have sometimes un-affectionately referred to it, the HAHAHAHA program) is the governments’ idea of “helping”. I admit that when the program works it is fantastic and I’m here to tout it’s benefits not it’s shortcomings. If you qualify for the HAFA program you can be in a world of short sale heaven: Relocation costs paid to you (yes, get paid to do a short sale!), quick response time by your lender(s), and an agreement from your lender not to pursue you afterwards for any deficiency. A great program, with excellent benefits, if you qualify. Not everyone does but this should be your first question to your real estate agent: “Do you know what the HAFA program is and do you think I’ll qualify?”
  2. Loan Modification Failures - Millions were promised help and favorable loan modification terms, almost as many million were let down. The staggering stat is that of the lucky ones who did qualify for a loan modification, fifty percent of them will fail the program in the first six months. This however will work nicely in the favor of the short sale – with so many people not qualifying for a loan modification but still willing to work with their lenders this will mean an increase in the number of people willing to short sell their properties and will hopefully in turn motivate the lenders to staff up their short sale department. Maybe they can spend a Tuesday moving desks from the loan modification floor to the short sale floor…that’s my suggestion, take it or leave it.
  3. Realtor Agent Experts – Although this one can go both ways, I’m confident that it will benefit the consumer. When short sales first became prevalent most real estate agents shied away from them; afraid of the unknown, afraid of the lenders, afraid of the dreaded “short sale”. Now that they have become such a huge part of the marketplace agents have either had to leave real estate altogether or have been forced to learn about the process. Many agents have taken it upon themselves to become true specialists in this field and have taken multiple classes, found lots of clients with upside-down mortgages, and have now negotiated many short sales and can be considered an expert. Some agents however have nodded on and off through a forty-five minute intro course, printed out a certificate from their I-Phone, and have taken to the streets as “Shirley Short Sale”, ready to blindly lead the blind off the cliff. Find yourself a true expert with experience, knowledge, and a track record and avoid the Shirley Short Sale Agents at all costs.
  4. Lender Changes - The lenders, banks, servicers, investors, etc. have all learned that these types of transactions are not going away. Like ‘em, love ‘em, or hate ‘em, these entities have been forced to deal with them by the thousands or even hundreds of thousands. One bank we deal with frequently used to have four people in their short sale department back in the mid 2000’s. Yes, four. They now employ over 3,000. Although the lenders will continue to be overwhelmed and overworked they at least have some sort of structure and departments in place to at least attempt to deal with your needs. There’s hope that when you sit on hold for two hours, get transferred six times, and have eight people give you ten different answers to the same question that at least half of those people will work in the department as opposed to pretending they have no idea what you’re talking about!
  5. Neighbors Have Taken a “Chill Pill” - Neighbors were a big problem in the beginning of this era. When everyone on the block paid $500,000 for their homes the assumption was no one wanted to be that guy who sold for $350,000. People short selling their home didn’t ever want their neighbor to know and avoided contact with them at all costs. Leave the house a bit earlier than normal, come home at dark, don’t answer the door. Lawns everywhere went overgrown because people didn’t want to chance cutting their grass and having their neighbor corner them! In 2011 it will be different – for many people this is not only a smart financial decision (and who doesn’t like to brag to the neighbors/family/associates about smart financial choices) but now after a few years in this market the stigma of being upside down is gone. The decline is housing values is so pervasive that even those “responsible” buyers who put 20% down are way underwater. Here in the local Arizona, Phoenix – Scottsdale real estate market home values have declined 50%. So unless your neighbors bought before the height of the market or put more than that fifty percent down then they too are in the same boat as you.
  6. Real Estate Market Conditions – The real estate market will always exist and will be different nationally, regionally, locally. Underwater mortgage numbers may be higher in California, Nevada, and here in Arizona than in Connecticut, Kentucky, or Kansas but the national real estate market will affect us all. The national real estate market is not favoring very well and the outlook into at least 2011 is not very bright. We hope for the best but with the current economy in its poor state, high unemployment rates, and lack of consumer confidence home values will continue to sputter. “Appreciation” is a word of the past and a word of the possibly-distant-future, not a word of the present. Some areas will thrive more than others and we all hope for a sooner-than-later recovery but the facts remain that a turnaround in the national real estate economy is going to take a while. In that time short sales and foreclosures will dominate many local & regional markets which will in turn affect the national real estate market.
  7. Taxes – The Mortgage Debt Relief Act of 2007 brought about tax relief to those doing a short sale or a foreclosure on their primary residence. The Economic Stabilization Act of 2008 extended this tax relief to the year 2012. Some restrictions apply, check with your CPA to be sure you qualify, but the majority of people who do a short sale on a primary residence through 2012 may be absolved of all tax liability. Hopefully as 2012 draws to a close we’ll see this extended but until then this window is only open for a specific period of time and that time is now!
  8. Attorneys Versed in Short Sales & Foreclosures - Along with real estate agents, many attorneys are now well educated in the real estate & foreclosure laws of their practicing states. Many attorneys now offer free or discounted consultations, teach seminars, and some even help Realtors negotiate these types of deals. Attorneys are no longer just those guys in expensive suits with the goofy commercials every 5 minutes, they’ve become mainstream, personable, and affordable! Just like agents, not all attorneys know what they’re doing so be sure to ask around, get referrals from trusted sources, and don’t be afraid to get a second or third opinion.
  9. Mainstream & Morality – Professional real estate agents & attorneys do not coerce, entice, or force people to short sell their home. This is a business decision made by a client as to what’s in their best interest. Some people need to move because of financial hardship. Some people are forced to relocate and can’t sell their home otherwise. Others have unexpected medical bills, family issues like divorce or separation, or were tricked into some ridiculous interest rate that has now doubled or tripled. These people can put food on the table or they can pay their mortgage. What’s it gonna be? Well, if it’s the former then there are only a few options and foreclosure and short sale are two of them. People have become more knowledgeable of the process and as the idea and concept becomes less foreign the average homeowner can make a much more informed decision. Foreclosures usually benefit no one while a selling your home can benefit all parties involved, especially the lenders. Don’t believe that? Call your lender and tell them you are planning to stop paying your payments and I’ll bet somewhere along the way they tell you to attempt a short sale. In most cases, anything but a foreclosure!
  10. A Chance To Move On – This is not the end, it’s a new beginning! Sticking your head in the sand and waiting for someone to come along and dig you out is not a good idea. Maybe a short sale isn’t the answer; maybe it’s a loan modification. Maybe you turn your home into a rental. Or maybe a foreclosure may be best. Maybe you even make the decision to stop watching the news, stop reading the paper, and stop reading these “Top 10 Reason” lists and you decide to stick it out for the long haul. No matter what you decide follow these steps and you can succeed: Acknowledge the situation you are in, explore all your options, discuss your situation with the right professionals, make an informed decision, stick to it, have a backup plan just in case, and go out and live your life without stress or burden. A wiser man than me once said; “I have been given a finite amount of heartbeats and I don’t plan on wasting even one”.


You can find more information about short sales and foreclosure avoidance options at our Short Sale Home website.

Sean Bonini is a Real Estate Agent/Broker in Scottsdale Arizona specializing in short sales. He serves as the Managing Director of AzHomeHelp.com which is a company that helps homeowners avoid foreclosure.
Sean’s up-to-date Phoenix Real Estate blog also covers local and national news regarding the real estate & mortgage industries with a focus on helping homeowners in distressed mortgage situations.

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Addicted to Real Estate – Seven Figures Easily

February 9, 2011

I often tell people that becoming a millionaire in the real estate business is an easy thing to accomplish. They usually give me a look of bewilderment. I say that you don’t have to understand every aspect of real estate in order to begin investing. The best thing to do is start with a basic buy-and-hold strategy purchasing whatever type of property you are capable of buying with as little money down as possible. How you buy something with as little money down as possible depends on your financial situation and what types of mortgages you’re capable of qualifying for. Since guidelines for mortgages and government intervention changes daily, it’s impossible for me to tell you the best way to do that. I can tell you how I did it for years using the all-money-down technique I described earlier in the book. But I’ll give you a quick refresher course below.

If you bought $100,000 house through conventional means, you may have to put 20 percent down is $20,000 plus closing costs that will cost you approximately $3000. In this example, you put $23,000 down to buy $100,000 investment property. Using the all-money-down technique, you would buy a $100,000 property for cash putting all $100,000 down plus the closing costs of $3000. At this point, you have $103,000 down on the property and you begin to invest an additional $5000 to fix the property up. You now have a total of $108,000 of your money into the property. You put the property up for rent and you find a good tenant, so now you’re empty investment property is a business making money and shows a profit. Now you go to the bank and you get the property appraised with the intention of doing a cash-out refinance. Because you fixed up the property and it’s a money-making business, the property appraises for $114,000. The bank is willing to lend you an 80 percent mortgage on the $114,000 appraisal giving you a mortgage of $91,200. You originally put down $103,000 and received back a mortgage for $91,200 making your out-of-pocket costs $11,800.

When using the all-money-down technique as compared to buying a property through conventional methods, you save $11,200. Now of course, you’re going to have a higher mortgage and less cash flow coming from the property, but you’re also going to have $11,200 to buy the next property with.

Sometimes the homes you buy are going to cost you $10,000 to buy; other times you’re going to break even on the deal. You might even be lucky enough to actually get paid to buy a house, which has happened to me once or twice. The goal was simply to just keep buying as many properties as possible until you build up a portfolio worth millions of dollars. You will make a profit from the cash flow, but most likely that’s going to go back and do things like repairs and vacancies in all the other issues that come up with real estate. If you do end up banking $10,000 during the year from the cash flow of your buildings, there is your down money to buy an additional property and expand your portfolio further.

I have constantly repeated that you’re not going to find the cash flow to be something of tremendous value to you. The cash flow will help pay for the necessary things and give you down money for future deals, but in the end you will work hard for very little money. The real surprise will come when you’ve ridden the cycle from bottom to top and created a gap between your portfolio’s value and the amount of mortgages that you owe for the building. Accruing equity in your buildings, you will slowly begin to see your net worth increasing as the years go on.

For example let’s just say you bought one property a year for five years valued at $100,000 a property. Since the five years that you bought the properties, values have gone up somewhat and the mortgages have gone down, and your net worth is the equity in between. As you begin to see this throughout your investing career, especially when the market is on the rise, it can be an exciting time.

Your expectations should be to live off of the income from your job while the profit from the rental property business is used to fuel its needs. You’ll usually get to a point somewhere when a real conflict will develop between your current career and your real estate investments. It’s hard to be in two places at once, and ultimately it will begin to catch up with you. For me this conflict was easily resolved since I only wanted to be doing real estate anyway, but if you love your day job and you plan to continue it through your life, you’re going to have to make some tough decisions. You could keep your day job, but someone is going to have to run your portfolio.

I maintain that getting a seven-figure net worth in equity strictly in your real estate holdings is not that difficult to do. I recommend you join real estate investment clubs and read as many books as you possibly can. As you begin to make investments, you’ll find friends in the businesses that relate to your industry such as people in the mortgage business. I recommend that you associate with as many of these people as possible so that your knowledge of the industry expands tremendously.

A friend of mine who’s an intelligent guy took some of this advice and began moving quickly. In his first year, I think he bought two properties, but by his second year he was already doing $300,000 flips and buying multiunit investment properties with a partner that he has. First of all, I’m not a big fan of partnership for the deal size he was doing, and second, I think he was growing a little too fast. If he didn’t have a job, I wouldn’t have a problem with the speed of his growth, but because he had a well-paying job, I cautioned him not to move too fast. The second half of 2009 was a rough year for him as his $300,000 flip was not selling, and he’s already had to do two evictions. Carrying the mortgage and his $300,000 flip was expensive and was already causing some tension in his partnership. It’s not going to be all fun and games; as your portfolio grows, your problems grow with it and the workload grows.

Another thing I can say about the issues in the real estate business is that they seem to come in waves. Even when I owned dozens of homes, I would go six months where I wouldn’t need to change a doorknob and then all of a sudden all hell would break loose. I’d be dealing with an eviction, two vacancies, and apartments that were destroyed. When it rains it pours in the real estate business; at least that’s the way it worked out for me. I remember on two separate occasions during the summertime one year followed by the next summer a year later I was bombarded with all kinds of issues. In this business, you can’t let a vacant property sit and wait because you’re losing money every day it’s not rented. The process of getting it renovated and re-rented is the highest importance.

As bad as I make it sound, I think you’ll find it all to be worth it in the end. It seems that no matter how much money I made, I have learned in my career I never really save. As you earn more money, your lifestyle increases and you begin to upgrade your homes and cars to the point where your bills go right along with your salary. The real estate business is almost like a bank account you really can’t touch easily without selling a building, so it continues to grow and feed off of itself. It’s a terrific feeling when you realize that your $550,000 portfolio experienced a 10 percent increase in values in the last year and you’re up an additional $55,000.

I’m using the same principles today in the commercial arena buying larger buildings with similar strategies. I can’t buy a $3 million building with the technique, but there are many other things that can be worked out in the commercial world. Nowadays I use strategies that involve complex negotiations with the sellers where I convince them to carry paper or lease option the building. I can also borrow money from banks for commercial investments giving the bank that piece of real estate I am buying as collateral as well as existing pieces of real estate as collateral. I call it redundant collateralization and am seeing more and more of it every day from banks.

If you can go from broke to seven figures in one real estate cycle as I’ve suggested easily making yourself $1 million during your first real estate cycle, then just imagine what you can do in your second real estate cycle. I plan to be carrying a real estate portfolio with the value north of $10 million and have that portfolio under my control before the real estate market begins to show any gains. I expect the gains will begin to show sometime around 2013 or later. Can you imagine if you’re holding a $10 million portfolio and the real estate market goes up a meager five percentage points? It doesn’t matter how much money I made that year in income because as long as I can keep my business afloat I am up half a million dollars in equity in one year. If I’m ever lucky enough to see the crazy increases that we saw in 2005, can you imagine what it will feel like to see a 20 percent increase in values in one year when you’re holding a portfolio worth eight figures?

“Far better it is to dare mighty things, to win glorious triumphs even though checkered by failure, than to rank with those poor spirits who neither enjoy nor suffer much because they live in the gray twilight that knows neither victory nor defeat.” Theodore Roosevelt

Let’s dream about holding a portfolio worth $12 million when the market goes up 20 percent giving me a one-year tax free gain of $2,400,000. I believe that this is a realistic expectation for my second cycle of the real estate business. In the year 2025, I will be sixty years old. I feel certain that if I continue to just do what I’ve been doing my whole life, I surely should have a net worth of many millions of dollars strictly for my real estate holdings. I know of no other way to make money in these types of numbers as easily as I do in the real estate business. I don’t deny that other people have the means to make this kind of money or even more, but I am not familiar with those methods. I consider myself an expert on real estate, and I certainly feel as some of the things I’m talking about here will happen to me as long as I’m lucky enough to still be breathing when 2025 rolls around.

This is why I love the real estate business, and this is why I’m pumped every day to get out and keep it going because I can see my future is filled with bright and sunny days. I feel terrific about getting up in the morning and going to work, and when you have that kind of attitude, there’s no way you can fail. This morning I woke up at 5:30 a.m. and went to my office building to reorganize some equipment in our communication room. I’m spending some afternoon hours on a Sunday working on my book and feeling great about my possibilities. If you love what you do, you will be much happier and much more successful at whatever you try.

I don’t even consider the things that I did this morning or writing this book as work in the regular way people think of it. Obviously, it is work that I’m doing, but I don’t have a negative feeling about the word work or what it entails. I get a terrific sense of accomplishment from getting up in the morning and making things that happen furthering along my career each day in baby steps toward the ultimate goal of massive wealth accumulation. I hope that some of you reading this book will really grasp the things I’m talking about above. I feel that may be the most important message in the entire book.

Here’s an idea you should think about after you buy your first property. Make sure that you take some time after you bought it to really analyze what’s going to be involved in being a real estate landlord. If you like it or even love it, let’s get the party started, and if you don’t get out right now. If you’re going to proceed in the business just for the money but despise dealing with tenants and working on buildings, you really have to be careful and reconsider what you’re about to do. This business is not for wimps, and it takes a heck of a lot of guts to be a real estate investor. To get to the level that I have achieved, you may have to take half of your net worth and roll the dice on some large commercial building risking the twenty years of hard work on one deal. Until you go through that process, I can never truly explain to you what that will feel like. My name is Phil, and I’m addicted to real estate.

Phil Falcone is a Philadelphia area full-time real estate investor who started in the business at the age of 23, and whose portfolio today includes commercial offices, apartment buildings, and residential homes. As the owner of Falcone Real Estate Holding Corporation, he prides himself on his non-stop real estate focus and determination, his ability to be a great professional speaker, and on his fun, outside-the-box approach to real estate.

Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Phil_Falcone

Image Credit: florida.inetgiant.com

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Active Adults Communities Offer New Plans And Prices For 2011

February 2, 2011

According to U.S. Commerce Department figures released this month, nationwide housing starts increased 0.3 percent to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 610,000 units in September; which was due completely to a 4.4 percent gain in the single-family sector. Because of this slight increase in new home construction, the economic outlook is looking up for 2011. Many golf club and active adults communities are encouraged by this positive prediction as they introduce new plans and prices for 2011.

Builders Responding To Consumer Demand

Builders are carefully responding to the small improvement they are seeing in interest among potential home buyers. They are receiving more inquiries from potential customers and are cautiously excited about this renewed consumer interest. The golf club and gated community industry remains confident that their new plans for 2011 will bring even more potential residents to their communities.

Over the past several years as the real estate market has declined, builders have not sat idly by waiting for potential homebuyers to return. Many realized that they needed to hear from retirees about what kind of community they wanted to live in. By conducting market research and focus groups with their target audience, some builders got ahead of the game and are rolling out new plans and amenities that are more in line with their customers’ wants.

Plans From Award Winning Active Adults Communities

The active adults communities that are dipping their toes back into the market are those that have received design and marketing awards and have been featured in industry magazines. They are established communities that have withstood the lows of the real estate market.

Communities poised to do well releasing new plans offer detached and attached single-family homes priced from the $130s to $3000s. New floor plans offer various size options with one, two or even three bedrooms. These homes open the door to a fantastic active adult lifestyle. With multiple floor plans to choose from, many feature open flowing designs, sunny kitchens, and breakfast nooks, welcoming sun rooms and dining areas, cozy dens and master suites with breathtaking baths. Several plans allow for a lanai, which is great for quiet, relaxing afternoons or entertaining friends and family.

Communities With Golf Club & Amenities

Devoted golfers will feel right at home in active adults communities with private golf courses. Many communities house casual and formal restaurants in their golf club as well, and residents can also find everything for their golfing adventures at well-stocked pro shops. Additionally, men and women alike will be comfortable and find all the amenities they require at the locker facilities. Many clubs boast grand balconies overlooking the course, an aquatic driving range, practice chipping and putting greens.

Also found at many gated communities, residents can enjoy a spa and fitness center, ballroom, tennis and pickle ball courts, restaurants, and often even a community room and studios for a variety of arts and crafts.

Builders are taking advantage of the positive outlook on the nation’s real estate market by offering new plans and pricing for 2011. Retirees looking for a gated community with tons of amenities should take a look at what’s out there!

Chris Harman is a writer for Solivita, a premier gated community in Kissimmee Florida. Solivita, like many other active adults communities, is offering great new plans and prices for 2011.

Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Chris_A._Harmen

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Real Estate Marketing Strategies: How to Create Your Multiple 6 Figure Income for 2011

January 18, 2011

You are about to learn the secrets to creating a multiple six figure income while still having time to do what you love to do. This is a very exciting topic because we really are going to blow the lid off the roof and break through those glass ceilings that you’ve set for yourself.

This topic is for you if you if:

  • You are tired of stressing about money
  • You are frustrated that you’re not living your full potential
  • You are tired of feeling held back and not even knowing why
  • You know that you could be taking your business to next level and are tired of sabotaging yourself
  • You have done well in the past want to bring your business back up to speed
  • You are tired of using the economy as an excuse
  • You are ready to breakthrough all of your barriers and create a multiple 6 Figure Income for 2011

I was once where you are. I struggled with how to get more clients. I struggled with how to get more leads and how to fill up my pipeline. I felt the pain that many of you are feeling right now, the frustration and the stress of not knowing how to get my business back on track.I’ve been on your journey and what I realized was that it all began with me. Even though I tried to put the responsibility for my success on to the economy, competition or personal things were happening in my life; I didn’t start succeeding until I took 100% responsibility for my life. In other words with the help of coaches and mentors, I liberated myself from the victim position of thinking that I was helpless to change my income. I had to let go of the idea that the economy or the marketplace or anything outside of me determined my success.

In other words I found that by getting outside help and going within, I was able to win the “inner game of success” and that made all the difference. With coaching, I changed my inner programming. Instead of operating from an old paradigm that didn’t allow me to fulfill my full potential, I learned to let go and install new software in the computer of my mind. I created new Empowered beliefs.

The first thing to understand is that you can only be as successful as your inner programming allows you to be.

Say you want to create a new year’s resolution that 2011 is going to be your best year yet. But the part of you that is creating that resolution is your conscious mind and that is only responsible for 2% of the results you get in your life. That’s why it’s so common to make New Year’s resolutions and then forget them.

The other 98% is your subconscious mind. The subconscious mind is full of the self limiting beliefs about you and your success. Unless you have an image of yourself as of success on the inner level, it can’t manifest out on the outer level, or if it does you will find a way to sabotage it.

The second thing to understand is that the latest brain research tells us that we have programmed circuits in our brain from childhood and that we are unaware of them.

I was working with a client who recently discovered that she was programmed to think of herself as “defective”. As a real estate agent she struggled for years but could never get anywhere in her business, until she worked with me. In a short amount of time it became clear to both of us that if she was going to be successful, she was going to have to reprogram the belief that she was defective as well as many other self-limiting beliefs from her childhood.

In summary, you need to find the origin of faulty programming, and when you first began to believe things about yourself that weren’t true such as:

  • I have to be perfect to be okay
  • I’m not smart enough to succeed
  • I can’t seem to create what I want in my life
  • If I ask for what I want I’ll be rejected

It’s not enough to put an affirmation on top of the self-limiting belief. I would be like putting a Band-Aid on top of an infected wound. This is where a lot of people go wrong; they use affirmations which seem to work for a while but eventually the old beliefs surface again because they’ve never been wiped out.These self-limiting beliefs are not your fault. However, it is your responsibility to locate those beliefs and extract them so they don’t ruin your life.

The next thing to understand is that if you’ve been saying to yourself “I know what I should be doing; I’m just not doing it.”, then you are suffering from excess baggage that is weighing you down.

There are two kinds of coaching: there’s accountability coaching and there is mindset coaching. If you’ve had any coaching at all so far, it has probably been accountability coaching. There are many real estate gurus who give weekend seminars and then offer accountability programs to learn their system.

These accountability coaching programs are not bad. Many of them teach you how to prospect, how to have powerful scripts when talking to prospective clients, how to build referral systems, and many other things you need to know to be a successful real estate agent.

Most of the time however, people take these accountability coaching programs before they have cleared away the self-limiting beliefs in their mind. Before meeting me, my clients didn’t have anyone that could help them to discover their self-limiting beliefs, release them, and replace them with updated empowered beliefs such as:

  • I am more than good enough
  • Success comes to me easily and effortlessly
  • I make money by working smarter, not harder
  • I have a valuable service to offer people are happy to hear from me

This is the power of Mindset Coaching over Accountability Coaching. Once those new beliefs are installed in your subconscious mind, there can be no stopping you. Then you will realize that your success is entirely about keeping and maintaining positive pro-success mindset. In other words, mindset coaching can help you succeed in “winning the inner game of success.”

About the author: Dr. Maya Bailey, Multiple 6 Figure Income Business Coach for Real Estate Professionals, integrates her 20 years of experience as a psychologist with 14 years of expertise in marketing. Her powerful transformational work creates a Success Formula for Real Estate Professionals ready to create a Multiple 6 Figure Income. To get your free report: “7 Simple Strategies to More Clients in 90 Days” and to apply for an Initial Complimentary Consultation, go to http://www.90daystomoreclients.com.

Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Maya_Bailey,_Ph.D.

Image Credit: clintcoons.wordpress.com

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