Beginning Real Estate Investing - Understanding Leverage
January 7, 2012 by Kenny Santos
Filed under Real Estate Investing
This is one of a series of articles on beginning real estate investing. One of the fundamental concepts to understand as you are beginning real estate investing is the concept of leverage. Leverage is the ability to move or control something very large with a very small object or force. Leverage as it applies to real estate investing is the ability to control high value properties with small amounts of your own cash.
To understand why this is important, and why leverage is so valuable, an example will help. Let’s assume you are just beginning real estate investing and you have $20,000 cash to invest. The exact amount is really unimportant, so long as you understand the principle involved. To illustrate the power of leverage, let’s assume you are faced with three possible choices of how to invest your $20,000.
Choice one is to purchase a small single family home with a purchase price of $20,000. The market rent for this home is $250 per month, or $3,000 per year. For purposes of this illustration, let’s pretend there are no such things as taxes, Realtor fees, or any other costs involved with purchasing a piece of property. Wouldn’t that be nice? As a you are beginning real estate investing you’ll soon learn otherwise, but for now let’s indulge in a little fantasy.
Choice two is to purchase a duplex for $40,000 by putting our $20,000 cash down and borrowing the additional $20,000. The market rent for this duplex is $500 per month, or $6,000 per year. The monthly payment on our loan is $200, so positive cash flow is $300 per month, or $3,600 per year. Not too bad, considering we are just beginning real estate investing.
Finally, choice three in beginning real estate investing is to purchase a multi-unit apartment building for $140,000 by putting $20,000 cash down and borrowing the additional $120,000. The market rent for all the units in the building totals $1,500, and our monthly loan payment is $1100, leaving us a positive cash flow of $400 per month, or $4,800 per year.
Let’s see which of these three situations best demonstrates the power of leverage. To do this we need to make a simple calculation, called Return On Investment (ROI) for each choice. This is a very important calculation to learn as you are beginning real estate investing. ROI is calculated by dividing the amount of return we get back in a year’s time by the amount of cash we have invested.
In choice one, $3,000 return divided by $20,000 gives us a Return On Investment of 15%. Not bad, considering we’re just beginning real estate investing, but let’s see if we can do better. Choice two gives us a return of $3,600 per year for the same $20,000 invested, so our ROI is $3,600 divided by $20,000, or 18%. That’s excellent, but we still have one more choice to look at.
Choice three gave us a return of $4,800 on our investment of $20,000, so our ROI is a whopping 24%! Why so big? Because even though we’re just beginning real estate investing, we were able to “move” or control a much more valuable piece of property with a very small “lever”… in this case, our $20,000. What gave us that leverage? The ability to use Other People’s Money (OPM), but that’s a topic for another article.
Until next time, I’ve written another in-depth article called Beginning Real Estate Investing.
Now, go make more offers!
|
Crush The Biggest Obstacle to Your Success in Real Estate… or Anything Else! Download my FREE report HERE! Tom Dunn is a successful real estate investor and author of the popular DealFiles Real Estate Investor Stories free newsletter. You are welcome to share this report, unedited and in it’s entirety, with anyone you like. You may not remove this text.? 2007 by Tom Dunn. Website: DealFiles.com e-mail: tom@dealfiles.com |
Real estate investing does not have to be complicated!
January 1, 2012 by Kenny Santos
Filed under Real Estate Investing
Real estate investing does not have to be complicated
Do you know what is the hardest deal to ever do in real estate?
Your first one!
The challenge is that most people will quit before ever getting their first deal.
I also feel that there is sooooooo much information available in the marketplace that even getting started is almost as challenging as getting your first deal!
I think one of the reasons for this is there are so many ways to invest in real estate!
Do I buy No Money Down?
Do I invest in Foreclosures or Pre-foreclosures?
Do I invest in “Fixer Uppers?”
Do I do “Flips”?
Do I adopt a “Buy and Hold?”
Do I Lease-Purchase or Lease option?
Do I buy “Subject to” the existing financing?
Do I buy Single-family homes? Condos? Mobile Homes? Apartment buildings?
You get the idea! There are so many ways to invest in real estate today!
Ok, let’s say you’re lucky to pick one way to invest in real estate, let’s say Foreclosures.
There seems to be a hundred ways to do a foreclosure deal!
Now, in addition to finding your first foreclosure deal, you then have to figure out which of the hundred ways to do that deal!
I still wince in pain whenever I see a real estate program that has anywhere from 12 to 36 CD’s or audio tapes!
Who really has the time to go through all of that information?
And even if you make time, can you say, “Information OVERLOAD”?
We always said that we did not want to learn 100 ways to do a real estate deal but one simple, proven way that would take us to the bank!
When we wrote “Buy With No Credit–How to Make Money This Month in Real Estate” it was with the belief that people would appreciate a course that simply “cut to the chase” and taught one simple method (no credit checks and $1-10.00 down) to invest in real estate.
Something so simple that anyone could read it in a day and begin contacting homeowners the very same night!
We appreciate people that do not “Mickey Mouse” around and are direct and to the point!
So our strongest recommendation is to find one way to invest in real estate and then pay the price and really learn that one method.
Vickie and I recently went to our first “bootcamp” (yes we believe in continuing education)
During this 3 day event, there were 7 “guest speakers” and these speakers all had an upcoming “boot camp” they were promoting. The thing that blew us away was all the people who signed up for those additional “bootcamps”.
We saw some folks that signed up for every one!
I wanted to scream out, “What about the information that was being presented this weekend?!”
When would these people ever have time to implement the strategies they were learning that weekend?
The reality is that most people would rather write a check then to take action!
So the only action they have in a year is going from Bootcamp to Bootcamp, a massive credit card bill, and to officially be a “jack of all trades” in real estate!
Do not try to be a “jack of all trades” in real estate!
Jacks of all trades in real estate never make the money that the specialist will!
Let me ask you a question: Who makes the most money in the health field? Is it the General Practitioner (Family doctor) or the Specialist?
The Specialist, of course!
Choose this day to become a specialist in one area in real estate and then apply yourself to becoming a Specialist in that one method!
Once you have mastered that one method, then and only then, you can diversify and learn another method.
A word of warning:
When choosing a course or training program on any real estate method, do not confuse the price of the program with the value of the program.
Just because a program is a lot of money does not mean that it has more value than a less expensive program.
Case in point: One of our students spent $12,000 with a “real estate mentor” and was frustrated because it was like he was spinning his wheels.
He ordered our course for the special price of $97 and within 4 weeks was closing deals on his first 2 properties!
Remember this and remember it well… The value a real estate course or training program has nothing to do with the price!
Just because it is expensive does not make it automatically better than a more affordable course.
The value is only determined by the impact the course or training program has on that person!
This is absolutely critical!
Truly caring for your success! TC and Vickie Bradley http://www.tcandvickiebradley.com
About the Author
TC and Vickie Bradley are authors of the #1 best selling course “Buy With No Credit, How to make money this month in Real Estate”.
It has maintained a #1 ranking in Real Estate at one of the Internet’s most trusted and respected web sites since it was released in April of 2003.
This dynamic and caring couple has a passion to assist others in walking into the greatness that is already within them!
Beginning Real Estate Investing - Understanding Market Values
November 24, 2011 by Kenny Santos
Filed under Real Estate Investing
Another in a series of articles on beginning real estate investing. A crucial step to becoming a wise real estate investor is getting to know your local market, and learning to put a value on the properties within your target neighborhoods.
Beginning real estate investing involves learning a new set of skills, one of the most important of which is valuing property. For the limited scope of this article, we?ll limit our discussion to residential single-family and duplex homes.
When you are just beginning real estate investing, it?s helpful to set a goal for yourself to become the market value expert in one or two select neighborhoods. When choosing these neighborhoods, look for locations close to your home with a good selection of homes in the lower-middle to middle price range for your market. This is where you?ll find the best combination of working-class homeowners and what I call ?aspirational? renters- those renters who aspire to homeownership. These will become your best customers.
Once you?ve found one or two of these neighborhoods, start driving through at least twice a week, looking for all real estate activity, including listed sales, For Sale By Owner, auctions, estate sales, vacant property, even moving van activity. As someone who is beginning real estate investing you should get tuned in to the pulse of the neighborhood.
Look for and get to know the local Realtors. Stop in to the Realty offices and introduce yourself. Find out who the most active listing agents are, who sells the most houses, who deals with the most foreclosures, and who works with the investors. These are the best Realtors to work with as you are beginning real estate investing.
Also, beginning real estate investing means getting to know local service people, especially contractors. Talk to as many of these as you can, and find the ones that do a lot of work in your target neighborhood, especially plumbers. Ask them what kinds of recurring problems they see. They will provide you a wealth of information.
Give yourself a timetable to learn property values in your target neighborhood. Three to six months is probably realistic. When you are just beginning real estate investing you will need to work closely with a Realtor. Ask for all the listings in your target neighborhood, and try to see them all. Ask also for the listings of comparable sales (Comps) so you can see what similar properties have sold for recently.
Build a spreadsheet, database, or even just a handwritten notebook so you can refer back to it from time to time. This will become a valuable resource for you as you progress beyond beginning real estate investing. Slowly but surely you will become an expert on property values in your target neighborhoods. You will be able to look at most any property and know, within a few hundred dollars, exactly what it?s market value is. This knowledge will serve you very well as you progress in your real estate investing activities.
For more in-depth information, visit my website and read more about beginning real estate investing.
Now, go make more offers!
|
Crush The Biggest Obstacle to Your Success in Real Estate… or Anything Else! Download my FREE report HERE! Tom Dunn is a successful real estate investor and author of the popular DealFiles Real Estate Investor Stories free newsletter. You are welcome to share this report, unedited and in it’s entirety, with anyone you like. You may not remove this text.? 2007 by Tom Dunn. Website: DealFiles.com e-mail: tom@dealfiles.com |
Real Estate Investing Analysis
August 21, 2011 by Kenny Santos
Filed under Real Estate Investing
This article gives you a foundational understanding of residential real estate investing analysis, and a formula for determining how much to offer when purchasing property for rehab and wholesale purposes.
Anyone can learn the simple skill of real estate investing analysis. The important point to understand is that the analysis will vary, depending on the type of real estate being discussed. This article focuses exclusively on residential single family and duplex properties purchased for rehab and wholesale purposes.
The first step in your real estate investing analysis is to determine the fair market value of the property after all repairs have been completed. This is done most accurately by having a Realtor run a comparable sales comparison report. Make sure the properties your Realtor chooses are truly comparable, not simply the same bedroom count, but also the same type of construction, in the same neighborhood, roughly the same age, etc..
The next step in performing your real estate investing analysis is to determine the cost of all needed repairs to bring the property into what I call ?retail condition?. In other words, how much will all the repairs cost to complete, including materials, labor, and holding costs?
Once you have determined these two values- After Repair Market Value and Repair Costs- the next step in the real estate investing analysis process is some simple subtraction. Subtract the Repair Costs from the After Repair Market Value to arrive at the property?s Current Market Value.
Once you are armed with the Current Market Value of a property, it?s a simple matter to complete the real estate investing analysis and arrive at your offer price. Your offer price will be the Current Market Value minus either $20,000 or 30%, whichever is lower.
To make this real estate investing analysis process all very clear, here’s an example: Suppose you are looking at a single family home in a mid-priced neighborhood. The Realtor pulls Comparables and you determine that the After Repair Value of the property is $150,000. You further estimate that the repairs needed will cost $30,000 to complete, including materials, labor, and holding costs.
Next, as part of your real estate investing analysis, you subtract the $30,000 Repair Costs from the $150,000 After Repair Value, and arrive at a Current Market Value of $120,000. You subtract $20,000 from $120,000 and get $100,000. You also subtract 30% from $120,000 and get $84,000. The lesser of $100,000 or $84,000 is $84,000, so that is your offer price- $84,000.
Using this formula for real estate investing analysis you may miss out on a few properties you could have bought otherwise, but you will never overpay for a property, and you will always make money.
Now, go make more offers!
|
Crush The Biggest Obstacle to Your Success in Real Estate… or Anything Else! Download my FREE report HERE! Tom Dunn is a successful real estate investor and author of the popular DealFiles Real Estate Investor Stories free newsletter. You are welcome to share this report, unedited and in it’s entirety, with anyone you like. You may not remove this text. ? 2007 by Tom Dunn. Website: http://www.dealfiles.com e-mail: tom@dealfiles.com |
Beginning Real Estate Investing - Understanding Leverage
July 9, 2011 by Kenny Santos
Filed under Real Estate Investing
This is one of a series of articles on beginning real estate investing. One of the fundamental concepts to understand as you are beginning real estate investing is the concept of leverage. Leverage is the ability to move or control something very large with a very small object or force. Leverage as it applies to real estate investing is the ability to control high value properties with small amounts of your own cash.
To understand why this is important, and why leverage is so valuable, an example will help. Let’s assume you are just beginning real estate investing and you have $20,000 cash to invest. The exact amount is really unimportant, so long as you understand the principle involved. To illustrate the power of leverage, let’s assume you are faced with three possible choices of how to invest your $20,000.
Choice one is to purchase a small single family home with a purchase price of $20,000. The market rent for this home is $250 per month, or $3,000 per year. For purposes of this illustration, let’s pretend there are no such things as taxes, Realtor fees, or any other costs involved with purchasing a piece of property. Wouldn’t that be nice? As a you are beginning real estate investing you’ll soon learn otherwise, but for now let’s indulge in a little fantasy.
Choice two is to purchase a duplex for $40,000 by putting our $20,000 cash down and borrowing the additional $20,000. The market rent for this duplex is $500 per month, or $6,000 per year. The monthly payment on our loan is $200, so positive cash flow is $300 per month, or $3,600 per year. Not too bad, considering we are just beginning real estate investing.
Finally, choice three in beginning real estate investing is to purchase a multi-unit apartment building for $140,000 by putting $20,000 cash down and borrowing the additional $120,000. The market rent for all the units in the building totals $1,500, and our monthly loan payment is $1100, leaving us a positive cash flow of $400 per month, or $4,800 per year.
Let’s see which of these three situations best demonstrates the power of leverage. To do this we need to make a simple calculation, called Return On Investment (ROI) for each choice. This is a very important calculation to learn as you are beginning real estate investing. ROI is calculated by dividing the amount of return we get back in a year’s time by the amount of cash we have invested.
In choice one, $3,000 return divided by $20,000 gives us a Return On Investment of 15%. Not bad, considering we’re just beginning real estate investing, but let’s see if we can do better. Choice two gives us a return of $3,600 per year for the same $20,000 invested, so our ROI is $3,600 divided by $20,000, or 18%. That’s excellent, but we still have one more choice to look at.
Choice three gave us a return of $4,800 on our investment of $20,000, so our ROI is a whopping 24%! Why so big? Because even though we’re just beginning real estate investing, we were able to “move” or control a much more valuable piece of property with a very small “lever”… in this case, our $20,000. What gave us that leverage? The ability to use Other People’s Money (OPM), but that’s a topic for another article.
Until next time, I’ve written another in-depth article called Beginning Real Estate Investing.
Now, go make more offers!
|
Crush The Biggest Obstacle to Your Success in Real Estate… or Anything Else! Download my FREE report HERE! Tom Dunn is a successful real estate investor and author of the popular DealFiles Real Estate Investor Stories free newsletter. You are welcome to share this report, unedited and in it’s entirety, with anyone you like. You may not remove this text.? 2007 by Tom Dunn. Website: DealFiles.com e-mail: tom@dealfiles.com |
Keeping Real Estate Investing Simple
April 17, 2011 by Kenny Santos
Filed under Real Estate Investing
In real estate investment, do you know what the hardest deal to close out is?
The first one!
The challenge is such that most people eventually quit even before ever getting their first deal completed; in fact some would be real estate investors quit even before getting started!
With the glut in available information and the numerous real estate investment options available, getting started is as challenging as getting your very first deal!
Consider some of options that you can choose from if you want to invest in real estate.
Buy and Hold
Commercial space rental
Subject to the existing financing
Fixer Uppers
Flips
Foreclosures or Pre-foreclosures
Lease-Purchase or Lease
No Money Down
Single-family homes, condos, mobile homes or apartment buildings
Confusion arises when you are undecided which of the profitable and popular options as enumerated above you want to engage in.
Unless you are a very liquid and well-financed organization, you can engage in all of them. However, for ordinary investors, engaging in one or two investment options at the most is the preferred method.
If you are lucky enough to make up your mind in which real estate option you want to engage in, the next step is then to systematically search for and close your very first deal.
Again, there are several options open to you on how to close your deal and get to the bank in order to deposit the check of your deal.
The best way to invest in real estate is to find the option you are comfortable with and specialize in it! Learn everything all you can about your particular investment option.
If you have to, take informal courses related to it so that you will become knowledgeable and on the road to becoming a specialist!
Once you have mastered your specialization, take the necessary action in order to get and close your very first deal.
Then and only then, and only if you are serious in making money in real estate can you diversify and learn another real estate investment method.
In learning the ropes of real estate investing, either you choose to undergo a training course or do it on your own.
If you choose to take formal lessons, do not confuse the price of the program with the value of the program.
The cost of a training program is not related to the value it has and the methodologies and techniques you will learn.
About the Author:
Download A Free Ebook That Shows You How You Can Make $50,000 Per Deal From Real Estate Preconstruction: Free Preconstruction Ebook
The Guide To Real Estate Investing Book - A Review
February 25, 2011 by Kenny Santos
Filed under Real Estate Investing
Have you ever wondered if there was one resource for people interested in real estate investing, like the Guide To Real Estate Investing book? There are several of them, although none have exactly that title. I?ve read many of them, and I will give you my recommendations in this article.
When you?re looking for a comprehensive guide like the Guide To Real Estate Investing book, you need to understand that there is not one single book that will be all things to all people. Different investors will be looking for different information, depending on the type of investing they?re interested in. If you?re interested in residential income property, the Guide To Real Estate Investing book you choose will be different than if your interest is in commercial real estate or apartment complexes.
In other words, there isn?t one, definitive resource known as the Guide To Real Estate Investing book.
My experience and expertise are in residential real estate, such as single family homes and duplexes. Therefore, this discussion will focus on the Guide To Real Estate Investing book for that type of investment real estate.
Two of the best books I have read on residential income property, both of which could be seriously considered as the Guide To Real Estate Investing book, are Steve Cook?s ?Wholesaling For Quick Cash? and ?The No-Nonsense Real Estate Investor’s Kit: How You Can Double Your Income By Investing in Real Estate on a Part-Time Basis? by Thomas Lucier.
These books offer two different approaches to real estate investing, both of which are excellent. Steve Cook?s ?Wholesaling For Quick Cash? is really a full-fledged real estate investing course, giving you a complete strategic plan for breaking into the world of real estate wholesaling. It qualifies for consideration as the Guide To Real Estate Investing book because it?s a self-contained investing philosophy and plan.
Lucier?s book, ?The No-Nonsense Guide? is a book that gives you a complete, basic run-down of the important considerations when considering beginning real estate investing, as well as some complex and effective advanced strategies. This one is a sure-fire candidate for the Guide To Real Estate Investing book.
Of course, there are plenty of other excellent candidates for the Guide To Real Estate Investing book- these two are simply my favorites. If you have found a resource you think warrants consideration for the Guide To Real Estate Investing book, why not email me and let me know?
For now, check out my website, where I have tons more resources for investors, and some of the best articles and stories on real estate investing you?ll find anywhere! Hope you enjoyed this little article on the Guide To Real Estate Investing book.
Now, go make more offers!
|
Crush The Biggest Obstacle to Your Success in Real Estate… or Anything Else! Download my FREE report HERE! Tom Dunn is a successful real estate investor and author of the popular DealFiles Real Estate Investor Stories free newsletter. You are welcome to share this report, unedited and in it’s entirety, with anyone you like. You may not remove this text. ? 2007 by Tom Dunn. Website: http://www.dealfiles.com e-mail: tom@dealfiles.com |
Beginning Real Estate Investing - Understanding Market Values
January 18, 2011 by Kenny Santos
Filed under Real Estate Investing
Another in a series of articles on beginning real estate investing. A crucial step to becoming a wise real estate investor is getting to know your local market, and learning to put a value on the properties within your target neighborhoods.
Beginning real estate investing involves learning a new set of skills, one of the most important of which is valuing property. For the limited scope of this article, we?ll limit our discussion to residential single-family and duplex homes.
When you are just beginning real estate investing, it?s helpful to set a goal for yourself to become the market value expert in one or two select neighborhoods. When choosing these neighborhoods, look for locations close to your home with a good selection of homes in the lower-middle to middle price range for your market. This is where you?ll find the best combination of working-class homeowners and what I call ?aspirational? renters- those renters who aspire to homeownership. These will become your best customers.
Once you?ve found one or two of these neighborhoods, start driving through at least twice a week, looking for all real estate activity, including listed sales, For Sale By Owner, auctions, estate sales, vacant property, even moving van activity. As someone who is beginning real estate investing you should get tuned in to the pulse of the neighborhood.
Look for and get to know the local Realtors. Stop in to the Realty offices and introduce yourself. Find out who the most active listing agents are, who sells the most houses, who deals with the most foreclosures, and who works with the investors. These are the best Realtors to work with as you are beginning real estate investing.
Also, beginning real estate investing means getting to know local service people, especially contractors. Talk to as many of these as you can, and find the ones that do a lot of work in your target neighborhood, especially plumbers. Ask them what kinds of recurring problems they see. They will provide you a wealth of information.
Give yourself a timetable to learn property values in your target neighborhood. Three to six months is probably realistic. When you are just beginning real estate investing you will need to work closely with a Realtor. Ask for all the listings in your target neighborhood, and try to see them all. Ask also for the listings of comparable sales (Comps) so you can see what similar properties have sold for recently.
Build a spreadsheet, database, or even just a handwritten notebook so you can refer back to it from time to time. This will become a valuable resource for you as you progress beyond beginning real estate investing. Slowly but surely you will become an expert on property values in your target neighborhoods. You will be able to look at most any property and know, within a few hundred dollars, exactly what it?s market value is. This knowledge will serve you very well as you progress in your real estate investing activities.
For more in-depth information, visit my website and read more about beginning real estate investing.
Now, go make more offers!
|
Crush The Biggest Obstacle to Your Success in Real Estate… or Anything Else! Download my FREE report HERE! Tom Dunn is a successful real estate investor and author of the popular DealFiles Real Estate Investor Stories free newsletter. You are welcome to share this report, unedited and in it’s entirety, with anyone you like. You may not remove this text.? 2007 by Tom Dunn. Website: DealFiles.com e-mail: tom@dealfiles.com |
A Beginner’s Guide To Real Estate Investing Strategies
December 22, 2010 by Kenny Santos
Filed under Real Estate Investing
If you’re thinking about investing in real estate to make money, you need to first determine your financial goals. Do you need to make money quickly, invest for your children’s college fund, or build wealth for your retirement? Once you determine your financial goals, you need to decide which type of investing strategy works for you.
Make Money in Real Estate - Fast Cash Strategy
If you’re low on cash, get started by finding a bargain house and selling the contract to another real estate investor. Join a real estate investing club to find investors willing to pay you for finding good deals.
Make Money in Real Estate - Income Property Strategy
If you want to increase your monthly income, look for income property that returns a positive net income from month to month. Start with single family house. Look for a bargain below market value. Fix up the house to generate top rental income. Find houses that will rent for more than your mortgage payment. You may need to go out from your home area to a location that supports this type of return on your money. You can’t pay $300,000 for a home with a mortgage of $1,500 that only rents for $1,000. You might start with a home for around $300,000 that rents for $1,750. You will need good credit to get a loan with good interest rates. In a few years, your rental income should go up. Many real estate investors enjoy thousands of dollars each month generated by income property.
However, some investors don’t like dealing with tenants and prefer to make money in other real estate ventures.
Make Money in Real Estate - Investment Property Strategy
If you want to make money focusing on profits, investment property offers a different strategy. Instead of worrying about rental income, look for property that you can transform and sell or property that will appreciate significantly over time. Besides fixing a house up, you can transform a property by changing it. For instance, some investors buy apartment buildings and turn them into condominiums. Many investors speculate in land and make money by holding the land until new development in the area increases the value.
Examine your financial situation along with your long term goals. You can get started by flipping properties, move onto income properties, and then make larger profits with investment properties. You might end up using a combination of all three strategies to make money investing in real estate.
Copyright ? Jeanette J. Fisher
About the Author: Jeanette Fisher teaches how to find, finance, fix and sell. Free ebooks “Credit Tips” http://worryfreecredit.com “Flipping Houses” at http://doghousetodollhousefordollars.com

