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V.
R. M. C a p i t a l |
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Buying
, fixing up, and selling houses is fun! I’ve been doing it, one way or
another, for over 30 years and believe me, it’s profitable if done right. So
this little section of my website is going to tell you a little about what
I have learned all these years. Very
few houses placed on the open market i.e. in the MLS or advertised in the
newspaper or wherever, sell for much less than “market value”. Currently
of course we are inundated with so-called bank owned properties or
properties where the owner is still in the house and the selling agent has
listed the house “subject to bank approval” i.e. a “short sale”,
meaning the property has a loan against it for more than it’s worth. Stories
abound about how stupid and irrational and difficult to deal with lenders
are. Many Realtors won’t even show houses to their clients if it means
waiting for some silly “loss mitigation officer” to make up his or her
mind to finally approve the short sale. Many if not most agents don’t
even bother with these listings because of the heartache involved. Bank
owned properties are generally priced too high in order for you to make a
decent profit. Before listing a property for sale, loss mitigation
departments are generally required to obtain a professional appraisal and a broker price opinion. So what makes you think that these
people, who presumably have their employers best interest at heart and who
deal in this stuff day after day, are going to sell little old you their
property cheap so you can re-sell it and make a bundle? You must become more
knowledgeable than them. That’s
it. You must become so comfortable
in your chosen market that when you do
see a deal where the “experts”, meaning the agent and the lender,
have made a mistake , you can pounce on it and “steal” the property. Do
they make mistakes often? But of course. Are they under pressure to dump
properties at certain times of the month? Probably, I don’t know. Are
they under pressure at certain times to sell a certain number of houses? I
would assume so. Did the previous three so-called buyers get rejected by
the new lender and did this particular deal just get back on the market
and did the lender decide that “this house has to go today?
May be. Did
the appraiser and the Realtor tell the lender that the house in question
needs X amount of work and did you discover they are wrong and you can fix
the problem much cheaper than they thought? Well? So how do you learn
all this and how do you learn about values and such? Work.
Hard, old fashion work my friend. Such as: Deciding on a part of town you
are comfortable with and then learning all about it. Seeing every
house listed for sale in and out. May be that is 100 houses, I don’t
know. Looking up and driving by every sale in your chosen price range and
area. Finding out how these houses sold and how long it took. Finding out
what concessions the sellers had to make and weather or not fraud was
involved. Learning
what things cost. How much it costs to do a bathroom and a kitchen.
Finding out how much a roof costs and how much to do a yard all over with
pretty flowers and a new lawn and fence. Learning how long all that takes
and finding out who is going to do all that for you or weather you are
capable or willing to tackle this yourself. Alright, so now I
have done all that what’s next? Now,
my friend, you get make offers. Many offers. A lot of offers. Dozens of
offers. So many offers that the Realtors you were working with have all
left you in disgust because they can’t make any money off you because
you are too tough. So many offers that the listing agents representing the
lenders get to know you and remember you may be a little and when they get
your third offer on the same property within 30 days you might just get
lucky. Because
you are now so confident of your values and you know what things cost you
can make offers without any
conditions whatsoever and beat all those other fools who first have to
have their contractor look at the house before they can commit. Because
you are now so confident that you know what you are doing you can give the
seller a cashier’s check for, say, $10,000.00 as non refundable earnest
money and promise to close any time it suits the seller. Because
you are now the expert you can make an all cash offer and not worry that
you can get the financing. You know
you can get the dough. Do
you get the picture? To
be successful you must concentrate and specialize. Do you live in Do
you live Up North? Great. Jeffco?
Perhaps. Much tougher to buy here. South
North
A final word about
buying right. If
you are just getting started you will no doubt be a little discouraged or
daunted by my remarks above. Don’t worry. Better
to barrel ahead and learn on the job then to endlessly analyze and worry
about the what ifs . You can always recover and do better next time. During
the last big down turn in the Eighties and early Nineties I personally
bought and sold 137 houses and I can assure you that not every deal was a
fabulous success even though I had already been in the business as a
Realtor for over 10 years. But
in the end I was able to start this business of lending money to people
like you with savings I accumulated doing fix and flip houses.
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V.R.M.
Capital Corporation
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