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Category Archives: investment

From the Mailbag… Part VII (Foreclosure deals?)

I did the first six parts of this on my A/R blog.  I thought I would drop one here, too…  Here are the previous visits to the mailbag:

Part I, Buyer’s Price Range

Part II, When should we start to look?

Part III, New Homes inducements

Part IV, Should we sell?

Part V (A), What should we do to our house?

Part V (B), And what else?

Part VI, Why didn’t my house sell?

I get asked a lot about foreclosures.  A LOT.  Seriously.  Everyone is thinking that there is money to be made in foreclosures, or killer, super-duper, bona-fide deals.  And… there are.  But, these are dangerous waters.  Navigate carefully.

What it comes down to is that there are some VERY important considerations to keep in mind when looking at foreclosures.  These are also true with short sales and pre-foreclosure sales… in fact, almost ANY distressed property is going to have pitfalls.

There are only two tools that can be used to address the pitfalls.  Either or both may need to be employed.  Money.  Time. Anything can be solved by money alone.  You can simply hire someone to take care of it.  Some things CAN’T be solved with just time, but time can be traded in for money.

  • Here is the first thing to remember, Time is NOT free.  If you are looking at a house, and it needs paint and other work, even though the money isn’t high (paint is only a couple hundred dollars for a whole house), it WILL take a lot of time if it isn’t hired out.  And that is time that you could work or play or stare at the TV… or blog.

So, since we know that no matter what, there will be expenses, and we can be sure that the “seller” won’t want to come out of pocket with a lot of allowances…

  • Know that buying a distressed property requires cash AFTER the closing. It might be as cheap as paint and serious cleaning… and filters and septic treatments, etc.  Or it might be a roof and fixing foundation damage.

The next thing that needs to be kept in mind is that when people can’t make the house payment, or they are stretched to the absolute limit, maintenance is NOT a priority.  We have a euphemism… deferred maintenance.  Even in homes that look good at first glance, there will be things that have been let go.

  • Next on the list, Inspections are your friend.  And don’t think that the inspection is something you should scrimp on.  Get a good inspector.  Get an inspector that you trust.  Ask questions.  Understand EXACTLY what the results are, and how they will affect you.

Since everyone is asking me about foreclosures and distressed properties, I know that there is competition for the “best” deals.  That’s right.  Right here in the middle of a huge Buyer’s Market, there are properties that have competition.  Low-ball offers and outrageous demands aren’t making it with the banks in general (even on the properties that suck…) and certainly not on the ones that are actually worth buying.

  • Finally, when you find a good deal, be ready to buy it.  Just because Katie Couric and Clark Howard are saying that this is the best buyer’s market in the last 40 years, for money making properties, you have to move and move fast.

I love to get question.  Email me, and I will answer your questions on my blog, or via email.

Is Atlanta, GA good for entrepreneurs?

According to the Kauffman Index… yes.

Georgia ranks 9th among the states in entrepreneurial activity, and Atlanta is 3rd among the 15 largest cities.  Here is the blurb from REALTOR® Magazine Online’s Daily Update.

 Entrepreneurial business is growing in many parts of the country with 495,000 new businesses per month started in 2007, according to the Kauffman Index of Entrepreneurial Activity.

The study, which is sponsored by the Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation, found that some areas encouraged far more entrepreneurial activity than others.

The 10 states with the highest entrepreneurial activity rates were:

  1. Idaho
  2. District of Columbia
  3. Arizona
  4. Tennessee
  5. Louisiana
  6. Wyoming
  7. Vermont
  8. Montana
  9. Georgia
  10. California


The 10 states with the lowest entrepreneurial activity rates were:

  1. West Virginia
  2. Alabama
  3. Delaware
  4. Pennsylvania
  5. Ohio
  6. Connecticut
  7. Rhode Island
  8. Hawaii
  9. Washington
  10. Virginia


Among the 15 largest metropolitan areas in the United States, the highest entrepreneurial activity rates were in Phoenix, Riverside-San Bernardino, Atlanta, Los Angeles, and Miami. Philadelphia posted the lowest rate of entrepreneurial activity.

Source: Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation (04/24/08)

Source.

Selling your house? Buy your domain!

I am in the process of building a butt-kicking single property website for a home here in the Atlanta area (not ready to spill the beans quite yet on which one…).  I have previously mentioned this here.

As I’ve put this together, I have been consulting with a small number of other agents around the country that are doing or planning similar campaigns.  I think this is going to be a full step past most of what has been done previously… but that is another post…

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Do you do del.icio.us?

if you aren’t already familiar, del.icio.us is a “Social Bookmarking” site.  I ran across it last year, bookmarked it (how appropriate…) and then just kind of left it alone.  At the same time I downloaded a plug-in for FireFox… and left it alone.  I thought it was cool, but got sidetracked with running a business and building my website and logo.

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This might actually help…

Walk-away borrowers have been a problem in a few markets (luckily, not so much in Atlanta).  The government and lending industry are both looking at ways to keep borrowers from just walking away.

So, here is the situation…

Someone buys a home with a 0% down loan.  The market turns a bit south, and now the property is worth less than the mortgage balance.  The ARM is getting ready to reset, or does reset to a higher rate.  The payment is no longer comfortable. 

At this point, the borrower is faced with a tough decision.  They can stop paying… it will take a few months for the bank to foreclose.  They can try to sell the home in a short sale.  Or, they can try to find a way to refi or keep on making the higher payments. 

The problem is that a lot of borrowers are choosing to ride it out as long as possible, and then walk away.  There are even websites and groups promoting this.  They tell people facing these choices that they can “save” thousands of dollars and not face any negative consequences.  They are right that one could bank up a goodly amount of cash (house payments for 3-12 months)… but there are going to be negative consequences.

The government and the lending industry are taking aim at “walk-away” home owners who stop making payments and months later send the house keys back to their lender.

Such borrowers will not be able to get another mortgage through Fannie Mae for five years, unless there are “documented extenuating circumstances.” In that case, the prohibition is three years. Even after the prescribed time has elapsed, a borrower with a foreclosure in his file will have to make at least a 10 percent down payment and have a FICO credit score of at least 680 to qualify for a Fannie Mae loan.

Freddie Mac, which counts foreclosures as major credit black mark for seven years, is now aggressively pursuing walk-away borrowers where permitted under state law, a senior official said.

Federal legislation enacted last year allows home owners who negotiate loan modifications with lenders and have portions of their principal debt eliminated to escape income tax liability for the amount forgiven.

Walk-away borrowers, by contrast, have nothing forgiven, and the Internal Revenue Service may demand taxes on the balance they never paid, the IRS says.

Source: Washington Post Writers Group, Kenneth R. Harney (04/12/2008)

There are some very good short sale agents (I’ll tell you flat out that I am not one of them… it is a specialty that requires more than a 4 hour class to do well… and a complete focus on just short sales) and a good short sale agent can negotiate a loan modification to sell the home.

Do yourself a favor.  If you are in trouble, get help.  I’ll be happy to help find a good short sale specialist wherever you are.   If you want to stay in your home, contact your bank.  Talk to them.  It won’t be fun, but it will be way better than having the Sheriff do an eviction.

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