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30 December 2007 | 7 replies
[EDITED BY MODERATOR TO CONSOLIDATE EIGHT POSTS INTO ONE]Check for Notices of Default at your county courthouse . . . get the homeowner's name and address . . . then go knock on the homeowner's door personally.If the home has equity you might be able to put it under contract and "wholesale" the property to another investor.f the home has equity, you might be able to negotiate a short slae with the bank, and find a retail buyer and create a small spread (profit).Bottom line . . . easire opportunity for profit if you can nab the property BEFORE the bank takes it back.oooops . . . sorry about all the typos . . . fingers not coordinating with the brain.TIP: Before you go knocking on the homeowner's door, take the time to learn about the foreclosure laws in YOUR state . . .For example: judicial vs. non-judicial foreclosure, foreclosure timeline, right of redemptionThen learn about all of the ways a homeowner can save their home . . . go to the door armed with KNOWLEDGE . . .Your first priority should be to help the homeowner SAVE their house . . . yes, you read that correctly, give freely of your knowledge to help the homeowner save their house . . .Most of the real estate investors who knock on homeowner's doors do so with the singular intention of profiting from the person's problems . . . and that is very obvious to the homeowner.By HONESTLY trying to help the homeowner first you gain their trust and confidence . . . if circumstances are such that they cannot save their house, who do you think will have the first opportunity to do some kind of deal with them . . . obviously YOU.If the homeowner has equity, you might be able to structure a "subject to" deal . . . that means you take over the homeowner payments . . . notice that I did not say that you ASSUME the homeowner's payments.But once again, don't screw the homeowner and agree to take over his/her payments if you have NO intention of doing so . . . because using the subject to technique the loan is STILL in the homeowners name . . . so if you don't make payments, you are damaging their credit.If you take over a house "subject to" there may be back payments and other liens to payoff . . . and if the homeowner has a lot of equity, you will need to pay the homeowner a portion of their equity . . . you retain the balance of the homeowner's equity as your "fee" for getting them out of their jam and allowing them to move on with their life.You do NOT have to qualify for a bank loan because you have simply agreed (in writing) to take over the homeowners payments . . .You need to be aware that technically the lender/bank could possibly "call the loan" . . . there is a provision in most loans called the "due on sale clause", meaning that if the house is sold or the ownership is transferred in any way, that the lender can call the loan immediatley due and payable.However, it is very rare that a lender will call a loan, particularly now that there are so many foreclosures, if you make the house payments on time the chances are slim to none that the bank will care or even notice.So what can you do if you take over a house "subject to" . . . there are many options:One, you can live in it if you don't already own a home and if you can afford to make the monthly payments . . .Two, you can sell the house to someone else for more than you paid for it . . . they can either cash you out and you make a one-time lump sum profit -or- you can have the new homeowner make the payments for a period of time (perhaps 12 to 24 months) while they get their credit in order, then they get new financing and pay you off as well as the underlying mortgage . . . in the meantime however, you make a small monthly cash flow (i.e. the difference in the mortgage payment with the higher purchase price vs. the mortgage payment the original homeowner was making) . . . this could easily net you a $200 to $300 per month differential . . .Do the math with the previous example . . . 10 houses at $200 to $300 net cash flow each . . . could net you $2000 to $3000 per monthYou would have sold the house to the new buyers on a lease option contract, so all maintenance and repairs would be at their trouble and expense . . .The downside you need to consider is what if the lease option buyer doesn't continue to make their monthly payments . . .
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9 July 2007 | 12 replies
My contact says that if I submit a bid for 70% or 80% of the asking price my chances are slim of getting it awarded.
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2 May 2017 | 1 reply
However, competition for flips is very real here and most flippers are willing to rely on slim margins, so the best opportunity you may have is a custom value add property.
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22 September 2017 | 10 replies
@Bogdan Masca I personally think the deal is to slim and you're playing and appreciation game.
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25 August 2017 | 10 replies
I'd had an agent sending me properties that came up on the MLS and a couple of months ago, these data sheets went from a detailed listing to a very slimmed down version recently, barely enough info for even a non-investor to determine interest in a property.
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30 June 2009 | 10 replies
Obviously, if it is, the rule of the game change and yes, the 2nd is left for negotiation since the chance of recouping are slim.
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20 June 2008 | 15 replies
Assignments have nothing to do with seasoning issues, but double closings will have chain of title issues and reselling within 90 days will cause seasoning issues with over 90% of conventional lenders.I agree with Slim.
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7 October 2011 | 11 replies
Mine average about 225 a unit for my apartments after everything.Taxes are 2,600 a month but I am about to win a reduction of about 40 to 50%.That will give me about another 41 dollars a door a month when that happens.For 100 dollars a month per door there would have to be some other value play I was looking at as that is slim especially with all the properties to pick from.
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3 March 2015 | 11 replies
Numbers are to slim and time is limited.
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12 August 2015 | 41 replies
There is a slim possibility, although we have not investigated it and did not consider it when we bought, that we might (might) have room to put a new matching duplex up.