
30 June 2016 | 3 replies
I was trying to see if people heard anything like fix and flip is super saturated and isn't something a new investor in the San Diego area should start with or anything along those lines.

1 June 2011 | 7 replies
You won't find any lender or private money that will loan out that equity to you.I do know investors with millions in cash that loan out on properties.They loan to people that have the properties literally almost paid off and want to cash out some.Example a house with recent appraisal in the last month is appraised at 800,000. 200,000 is owed on the property.Investor loans 200,000 and secures first position with payoff of the first.They set a high interest rate and if the borrower defaults and they foreclose the lender will easily make the money back plus a fat profit.It depends on each states lending laws and foreclosure process on what you can and can't do.You could find someone who might lend the 60,000 with a high interest rate if the house is really worth 150,000 today.There is not as much risk there in that the lender can foreclose and quickly sell the property to recover costs.With your track record you aren't going to get a loan for a car business.My brother has had his own used car dealership for over 20 years in Georgia.He buys all his cars at private auctions not open to the public for dealers.The rookie dealers always want to bid on the running vehicles which is a mistake.You see they rig the cars to run at auction and then when the dealers take them back to their lot to sell they overpaid for a piece of crap.The dealer finances this piece of crap with some money down and a high interest rate.Most of these buyers live paycheck to paycheck.So when the car breaks down the lot has to pay a repo man hundreds of dollars to recover the vehicle because if they can't get to work they can't make money.The lot try's to sell the car again and finance and keep going that way.My brother takes a different approach.He goes to the dealer auction and buys the "no starts".Usually gets them for 300 to 500 bucks.Puts all new hoses,belts in and takes and puts a new tranny and engine in if necessary.Usually might have 1,500 to 2,000 in it and sells for 2,800 to 4,000 depending on what make and model and year it is.By him working the car top to bottom he sells them for cash and gives a 1 to 2 year warranty on them and will fix things if they have a problem.This way he knows what he is selling instead of something rigged to run at the auction.He usually sells about 100 cars a year.Most of his cars he sells around tax return time.People wait for their returns and save up some cash all year to add to it and then pay cash for his cars.In 30 to 60 days he sells about 75 to 80 cars at tax check time.This way he gets all cash and doesn't have to worry about repo.He also builds a rep of selling quality vehicles with a warranty and whole families buy from home.Makes a very nice return for him and his family.

3 January 2009 | 0 replies
But, the key to many who truly invest is find the market that is not SATURATED with investors because it is what they DEEM to be a EASY WAY to make a QUICK BUCK.

16 November 2015 | 22 replies
Biggest downside to turnkey IMO would be the difficulty of buying a turnkey property with in-built equity.Many investors are always after some fat being left on the bone and this is hard when buying turnkey as the provider wants to make sufficient margins on the product for the services provided.Thanks and much success.

1 May 2019 | 2 replies
Cities and counties are trying to be "fat cats" right now and send out their assessors to pump up valuations.
10 February 2013 | 1 reply
Numbers on the property look like this:Purcahse Price:$143,200 Repairs: $32,944Carrying Cost: $746/month (utilities and loan payments)( carried for 2 months and counting) Total invested:$177,636 ARV: $205,000Listed at $209,950 ( on market 30 days, alot of interest and compliments but that doesnt matter because I have a big fat Zero offers) Major issue is home has a permitted garage conversion and buyers in that price range in the local market really want a garage.

6 March 2013 | 2 replies
This will tell you the saturation.

13 June 2014 | 13 replies
;)Desirable areas in the LA market are extremely saturated.

1 December 2017 | 13 replies
I like this saying:"Pigs get fat, Hogs get slaughtered"

26 March 2018 | 77 replies
@Brie Schmidt I agree with @Steve Vaughan theory of trimming the fat.