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May
14

Stay tuned!

Posted by: Jim | Comments (0)

Hey Folks,

We have some BIG NEWS tomorrow, so stay tuned. Check your email if your on my list, and be sure to check in here on the blog as well.

I cannot divulge what this is just yet, but I also cannot contain my excitement, so I just had to let you all know, keep your eyes peeled!!

This is the BIGGEST thing, something I never imagined when I began, and frankly, wish was available then.

See ya tomorrow,

Jim

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May
08

Some free tips from Jim on VIDEO!

Posted by: Jim | Comments (0)

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Hey Folks,
I thought I’d post a quick tip for investors who are holding any properties, even those you have occupied with tenants buyers in a lease option.
Whether you have purchased your properties subject to, or some other way, take a look at the outgo on each.
What do I mean by that?
Simple………what do you pay out EVERY MONTH on each property……..how much? To whom? when? Where?

Now, the most common places your money goes out to each month will start with your mortgage payment(s).
The first place to look, would be the escrow account, if there is one.
The escrow paid monthly is most likely going to pay your taxes, and property insurance.
From here, take a look at each insurance policy.
Evaluate them, and see what they cost. Check the coverage, and make sure it fits your property, and over all plan.
Perhaps increase your deductible from $1,000 to $2,000 to reduce the amount of the policy premium.
In addition, check to see the total amount you are insured for.
Here is why?
Example: Say you have a property that was worth $150k last year, you owe $100k against it, and now its worth $130k. Why insure it for the full $150k? See if that can be changed, it may lower the premium as well.
While you are at it, shop around for insurance prices.
You may be suprised what the difference would be by simply changing companies.
I know when I began, we by default, used State Farm for all insurance needs, because we had been for years, and all personal items were insured by them……..this gave us discounts.
The thing is, here in Florida, State Farm has had issues for years, with prices going up like mad, and crazy increases being asked for by the company from the state.
When we were told the premiums could rise by 45% one year (they did not), I shopped around.
From that, I was able to increase my cashflow on all properties previously insured by State Farm, a hundred here, fifty there, couple hundred another place, and in the end, we increased cashflow by a few thousand dollars.
This cost nothing, because insurance is escrowed with payments. All that needed to be done was sign up the new policy, cancel the old, and provide the new company with the mortgage lenders contact info, loan information, named insured, etc………and the new insurance company handles everything else.
Imagine if you are collecting $1100 in rent, and paying out $800, right now…….then, a change on the insurance makes your PITI payment go down to $800.
That’s $100 more in cashflow…or almost a 10% increase.

That is just insurance.
What about property taxes?
Now, the hassle to contest your property assessement may scare some off, however, most county tax collectors have a process laid out for doing do………and it can be done by any home owner.
It has to, because government must be accessible.
So, same scenario.
Property value drops, and your taxes are based on a 3 year old assessment, or, your property is valued at one thing by the county, but, there are foreclosures and reo sales in your properties area, that bring the value down.
If you get that changed with the county, your taxes go down……..which means your monthly escrow payments will go down.
This of course will not happen right away like with the insurance adjustment………..the mortgage lender will adjust escrow the next fiscal year.
But, knowing that your payments will descrease next year, when you will most likely raise rent as well, makes cashflow grow larger than it is today.

Home Owners associations;
If you own property that is governed by an association, whether it be a condo, townhome, or house in a neighborhood, you pay dues to these committes of residents, who set rules, and spend those dues.
Get involved, attend meetings, and check the books of these associations.
The first venture for me doing this was in a condo development we were working in, and the dues were rather high. After looking, I realized, the previous board had raised dues to cover some improvements, rather than a one time assessment from the owners.
Basically, spreading out the expense.
The thing was, the HOA now, after the improvements were completed, and maintenance free, the dues were creating a surplus of cash in the HOA account.
They had reserves, more than enough, for any upcoming issues, seen or unforseen………….nearly three times the amount needed.
My involvement, was to distribute a flyer outlining a plan to approach the board to reduce the fees.
This took 3 months of intense negotiations, as HOA folks seem to get into the “I’m in charge here, billy bad ass mentaility”. They feel power and don’t let go easy.
I did win, because we reduced the HOA fees from $375/month, down to $75/month.
That helped cashflow……….and yes, it took time, BUT, it was the right thing to do for all, and worked out well.

There may be other things you can reduce the expense on as well.
Lawn care? Maintenance? Property management?
Take a look at EVERYTHING you spend these days, and shop around.
In this economy, we hear about folks begging for jobs, so use that, and hire some of these folks.
They will work for less than you would have spent a couple years ago.
I would imagine I’m not the only one spending the same amount for some services that we did two years ago.
Some changes are taking place here as well.
My lawn guy, he’s gone, wanted to raise his prices.
Instead, we have someone else, who was laid off, and used to do lawn work part time.
Now, that is all he does, so his prices are cheap.
One house we have, went from $70/month in landscape maintenance, to $25………a neighbor will be handling it.
I’m sure it will look nice, because he lives two doors from it, and is retired with lawn equiptment.

Another thing, take a look at how you pay your mortgages. While it may only cost a few bucks, I’ll bet some of you make your payments online, or over the phone?
Ever notice the fees they charge for this service?
Check your banking institution, they most likely have online banking………most larger banks do these days.
One common feature is bill pay, and most times, its free……if your bank is not, find a new bank, or open a checking account where things are free.
From there, you can use online bill payments for free, and cut out the fees for doing so at the lenders website, or on the lenders phone line.

Rent collection?
How do you collect rents?
Most landlords have checks mailed to them, or dropped off.
This is nice, and how most of mine come in too.
However, we do have some on a trial plan, to test it.
Here it is, an insider tip for ya……..before the final report is released.
Set up autodraft, or epayments for your tenants.
Offer them incentive if they are on a lease already…..we did this.
A discount, like $10 if paid/deposited on the due date (the 1st).
The tenants signed a form allowing this, as an addendum to their lease.
The addendum further states that if direct deposit is not done, and payment is late, there is a new late payment schedule, and as always in my leases, fees for collecting rents (going to get them) fees to serve notices, etc, and these all become ‘additional rent’.
This can increase your cashflow as well.

Bottom line, look close, at all properties, the books, the numbers, and what you spend.
NOW is the time to bargain shop, for services, and tweak what you pay out……while keeping rents the same.

There ya have it, a few tips for the landlords in the house.

Take care, and Happy Sunday!
Jim
The Biker Who Buys Houses

P.S. Don’t forget to sign up for your charter membership in the “Real Estate Marketing Club”, and lock in your low membership price NOW, before it goes up! Insiders tips, articles, full courses, video’s, audios, and tons of information from many mentors on all subjects real estate.

May
01

Who wants to meet the Biker-Dogs?

Posted by: Jim | Comments (2)

Hey folks,
This post has nothing to do with real estate investing.
Actually, what it does, is show you the kind of freedom being an active, full time investor affords me.
I have time to play with my dogs, daily, while most are at work.

Some folks might think I’m off my rocker for posting my pets.
But, I am an animal lover. We currently have 8 pets, 4 dogs, and 4 cats.
At one point, we have had as many as 9 cats in the house at once………most of my cats are/were very old, so the bunch has thinned some.
However, all four dogs are here, and not camera shy.

So, I wanted to introduce the Biker Who Buys Houses, Family Pets.

A short video……….with more video’s on the way, real estate investing related, I promise!

Take care,
Jim
The Biker Who Buys Houses!

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Apr
30

Do NOT Fear Competition!

Posted by: Jim | Comments (0)

Hey Folks,
I thought I’d address something that comes up from time to time when I meet with, or speak to groups of new investors.
Quite often I hear from folks who are beginning to invest, that they are afraid there will be no good deals in their local market. They want to find deals far away from home, or in cities near home, but not at home.
When I ask why, usually two main things come up;
1. There are no motivated sellers in my home town, I need to target lower income areas outside my home town.
2. Too many other investors, there will not be deals left for me, and other investors market heavy all over the place.

Guess what?

SO WHAT?
Bottom line, there are truly enough deals out there to go around. The thing is, you NEVER truly know when, or why a seller will call an investors marketing message.

The Video below is an example……….this seller called me from marketing placed near their bank drive thru, and ingored the message DIRECTLY OUTSIDE THE FRONT DOOR of THE HOUSE THEY ARE SELLING!

Enjoy, and I promise over time, my video skills will get better. Have yet to figure out how, where, to hold the camera so I can talk into it……….just afraid to not watch where I’m walking….you’ll see what I mean.

Take care,
Jim
The Biker Who Buys Houses

Apr
21

Uh OH! Jim has a new TOY! Check this out!

Posted by: Jim | Comments (0)

 

 

Hey Folks,

Well, it seems the rage online is video.  So, even though I’m going kicking and screaming, I am joining the video revolution.

I have a new video set up here, still learning to use it, so my first attempt will certainly lack production quality. However, no matter what my videos look like (I promise they will get better), the content will be there. I plan to offer some online video training, as well as some new products and other services we will be rolling out here shortly.

Stay tuned for some GREAT things!

And while your at it, check out my first video. I know the sound is low, my microphone stinks…….so I’m going to buy a new one tomorrow.

Take care folks,

Jim

The Biker Who Buys Houses

Apr
12

HAPPY EASTER! don’t eat the rabbit!

Posted by: Jim | Comments (0)

Hey Folks,

HAPPY EASTER!

It’s 85 degrees here, sunny, and a fantastic Holiday.

So, I dropped by today to wish you a Happy Easter, and then I’m off to spend time with family for the day.

 

Take care and see ya tomorrow,

Jim

Apr
10

What’s on YOUR mind?

Posted by: Jim | Comments (0)

Hey Folks,

I had a few ideas for todays post, even some rough drafts. The thing is, this week my email was all over the place.  What do I mean by that?

See, I like to help people, and try to make my posts, articles, etc, about things people want or need to know. This  involves using conversations with other investors, both live and in email, as my guide on what  to  cover when?

The thing is, this week, questions came about so many things, and in such great numbers, there are just too many topics to cover in one post. However, one particular topic of concern did emerge as the hottest, or most sought after. That topic is of course, the life blood of this business, marketing!

I will address marketing, both here in the blog/articles, as well as a soon to be released CD series, strictly about making your phone and email buzz with motivated seller calls.

However, in the mean time, rather than have me sift thru personal emails and answer only the person asking about a particular topic, I’m opening the floor here on the blog to everyone.

I am asking you, the readers here on the blog, to submit your questions on this post, via the comments section. I will then post those, and reply to the comment……or, if the topic is one that requires some in debth explanation and discussion,  I will address them in a seperate post just for that topic.

This way we can talk about here, what YOU want to talk about, and perhaps learn a thing or two along the way.

So, let the questions rip………….I’m ready!

 

Take care,

Jim

The Biker Who Buys Houses

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Hey folks,

Last time, we talked about the current over-all state of the real estate market nationwide. Naturally, each region has its own market, and every one of them is different. However, for the majority of areas, it is clearly a buyer market.

Being a buyers/investors ourselves, this is a good thing.

I wanted to touch on some of the methods I am using now, in my business to make profit and show you that now is the time to employ creative real estate to the maximum.

First, we should define “Creative Real Estate”. For the purpose of this post, we’ll define it as “problem solving”, which essentially, all creative methods are. The main point, or problem that creative real estate addresses, is very simple really………it provides debt relief.

Let’s take a look at some strategies and methods that are working in TODAYS market.

Rather than say, “I’m buying using methods x,y, and z, sometimes combinations of them”, I’ll give you a sample deal……..one I finished up just this morning. I know I learn better by seeing things in action, or reading about them.

First, the background:

Seller calls from some of my marketing materials. This time, a business card the seller found on the counter at the local convenience store.

The seller, when he calls, let’s me know immediately, his level of motivation.
The call went something like this;

ring, ring, ring……….

Me: “Hello, how can I help you?”

Caller: “I found this card that says you buy houses and I want to sell mine right now!”

Me: Okay, well, you’ve called the right place. My name is Jim, what is yours?

Caller: Bob TwoBed

Me: Nice to meet you Bob. Can you tell me where your house is located?

Caller: Sure, its at 1234 Gats drive west, yourtown, fl. Its in good shape, I keep it clean, I just can’t afford it anymore and want to get out before they foreclose. I’m not looking for profit, just for someone to buy it out from under me.

Me: Well Bob, we can close quickly, if the property meets our buying criteria. Can you describe the house to me?

Okay, from this point, Bob describes a 2 bedroom, 1 bath house, smaller, in a rental community I know well. I own three rentals there myself already………therefore I am interested if we can get the numbers to work.

That becomes to next step. Checking the numbers. I determine that the mortgage the seller mentioned is indeed in place, but will still need to get a form signed by the seller, authorizing me to call the lender to verify interest rate, loan balance, arrears, terms, escrow accounts, etc.

The seller also tells me he is behind on payments, and cannot remember if its two of three months. Bottom line, it’s almost the first of the month, so either way, it will be one more behind in a couple days. Definitely need to call the lender to get some numbers.

One thing the seller failed to mention on the phone, that I did find, was the fact that the real estate taxes on the property had not been paid in 3 years.

Here in Florida, real estate taxes come due in November, and the tax payor has until March of the next year to pay them, with additional fees of course, before they are considered in default. After not being paid, a tax certificate is sold, which later can become a tax deed, thru county tax deed sales. This process takes, you guessed it, THREE YEARS……..So, because the seller’s house was three years behind, this meant that he had to pay at least the three year old tax bill, plus fees, in order to avoid losing his home to a county tax deed sale, by tomorrow, the 31st of March. (the sale really would not take place for at least a month, so there is a little time to play, but not much.)

Not a whole lot of options here. The taxes had to be paid one way or the other…….the question was, would I pay them, or not?

By the way, I don’t mind sending money to the county for taxes, I just prefer it not be my own. More on that in a bit………

So, after collecting info about the subject property, and armed with my experience in the same subdivision, I went to meet the seller.

He was right, the place was clean, not nice, just clean. A very neutral, rentable unit……..if the numbers make sense.

I left the meeting with a form authorizing me to speak with the lender, and a contract, contingent on verification of all information, and successful negotiations with the lender, to bring the loan current. Pretty much a purchase agreement, written up like an option really.

While meeting with the seller and going over his mortgage documents, late notices and tax bills, I discovered that the lender was a local portfolio lender I’d worked with before.

The loan balance made the deal, “okay”, as in, workable cashflow wise, IF we brought the loan current and paid the taxes.

Basically, just taking the deal as is, paying out my cash for taxes and back payments, would have required the deal to support itself for the first 18 months or so. After that, the cashflow would be profit.

The thing is, I am not patient, and with the abundance of deals out there now, taking on something that will pay later, just makes no sense.

So off to the local portfolio lender who holds this note I went.

I walked into the lenders office, spoke with the manager, we exchanged pleasantries, and then went to his office to talk about this potential deal.

I immediately told the lender what I had, and what I wanted to make happen. Of course I did ask him before getting too far into negotiations, “if we cannot work this out, do you REALLY want this place back?”

He said, “No, we did a drive by last week, and we don’t need any more small houses in our REO list, let’s get this taken care of”.

I brought the tax issue to the lenders attention, and was honestly kind of blown away they were unaware of it. I also determined that the loan was 4 months behind (including the payment due here in a couple days), and that the interest rate was a whopping 12.5%!!!
Holy COW!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! what on earth.

After talking with the lender, he agreed, if I showed up with a deed in my hand, from the seller, that the loan could be re-worked and the lender would pay the taxes.

Here is what we came out with………….

The lender paid all 3 years of back taxes, today.

ALL backpayments, forgiven, the loan is in good standing……very cool, first payment on new workout loan, is not until May 1st. (that gives me a month to fill it).

We reduced the principal amount of the loan by a small amount (not asa much as I wanted, but the over-all worout/negotiation makes sense).

Anyway, we reduced the amount owed by $8,000!

However, don’t forget the taxes………this amount was added to the principal AFTER the reduction…….which means we really only reduced the loan by about $5,000. Still pretty good.
And yes, it gets better……we also had that monster 12.5% rate reduced…….not as low as I wanted, but, it now stands at 8%.

So, essentially what happened here was this……..

I took title to the property from the seller (who moved this last weekend so the place is vacant)…..subject to the existing loan, and back taxes.

We then had the lender pretty much write a new loan, leaving it in the seller’s name, he signed some paperwork with the lender approving and agreeing to the workout.

I now have a nice little 2 bed, 1 bath house, that will rent for about $650/month, costing me a mere $278 per month in payments……..which now have the taxes escrowed in them. The lender insisted on this, and I’m cool with it.

I did manage to keep the insurance out there, because I have my own agent, and get deals with him…….easier and cheaper to just pay for the entire policy for a year. (especially since it’s only $600/year to insure the place)

So, I now have another rental in that subdivision, that makes 4 for that area. The marketing for tenants begings tomorrow, as soon as its cleaned up a bit. Grass will be mowed, signs placed out, directionals, and flyers.

I expect to fill this fast, as we have filled the others in this area rather quick. It’s a cheap, clean rental, in a non-crime area, with a fenced yard and nice neighbors.

Heck, we might even sell it, should a buyer come around.

By the way, for those watching the numbers, the total get in the door price for this one, was $28,978………..none of which came from my pocket……..it’s value, approximately $55k if sold retail to an owner occupied, or $45k to a landlord.

Folks, lenders are in pain now, just like MANY seller’s are. So, if you have a seller call, where they are behind and making up the arrears, or keeping the payments at the same amount monthly make the deal not work-able………..RE-WORK IT!

Remember, the only time the answer is ALWAYS NO……..is when you fail to ask.
I did not even propose most of the workout here, a frightened lender with a HEAVY REO list, panicked, saw a way out that worked for us both, and we got it done.

this post is long enough……..I’ll cover some other recent deals, with other methods used here in a future post.

Stay tuned!

Happy investing!
Keep the Rubber side down,
Jim
The Biker Who Buys Houses

P.S. If you missed the email announcement, I now have a couple of openings in my mentorship program. They won’t last long. I plan to take 5 more investors to the NEXT LEVEL in 2009! Are YOU Ready?
Sign up now! Click here for mentor package details:
Super Charged One-on-One Real Estate Mentoring with Jim.

Categories : Uncategorized
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Hey Folks,

As promised, I am writing today to talk about the current over all U.S. Housing market, and where creative real estate fits within that.

Some folks are now claiming that buying real estate right now is a mistake. I could not disagree more. For me, it’s always a good time to buy. The key of course is to buy RIGHT, meaning, BUY FOR WELL BELOW TODAYS VALUE!

Sounds simple right?
and yet, some seem to still get confused or ignore this concept.

The question I hear most often from newer investors, or those frozen in market fear is; “what IF the value goes down”?

Sure, this could happen and in many cases, very well might. However, remember, I said, you want to buy for BELOW todays value, considerably less in fact.

Imagine, you buy a single family house for $50,000 today, that has a value of $100,000 and rents for $950/month. What happens if the value of this unit goes down 20% more, and the market rent drops 20%. Your profit monthly will be less, and you will have less cashflow……..BUT, you will have value. A performing asset.

This market type (buyers market, with declining values), as well as any other type of market, (sellers, where appreciation is going up steady, or at even excessive rates as in previous years), are always the time to focus on cash flow. Cash flow is what builds wealth and freedom.

No matter what method you use to acquire investment real estate, cash, credit, combination of the two, or some creative method with no money down, or terms, the central focus needs to be to make the transaction support itself. I live in Florida, the land of the Gators, and around here, there are signs all over the place that say, “don’t feed the alligators”. This is very true, and a total waste of time. You cannot tame a gator. In real estate investing, we also have gators……..these are the transactions that cost you time, money, sometimes credit, and always aggravation……..all without profit, and most times, loss.

What I try to pass along to those who learn from me, is that creative terms, do not always mean a deal is in the works.

Let me give you an example. Someone local I am working with, just recently began marketing to find sellers in need. He’d been trying to invest for some time, and frankly, just needed a little boot in the rear and some guidance. As with anyone new, he still needs some guidance. (I did too back in a day, and will admit to seeking help here and there to this day). Anyway, this investor calls me all excited last week with what he described as his “first creative real estate deal”. He had a seller call who just wanted out, and was open to allowing him to buy for loan balance, and even take over payments.
The thing is, the seller owns a property where he owes more than the house is worth.
If anything, the sellers house is a good candidate for a short sale.
Had the investor gone ahead and purchased the subject property as he was wanting to, he’s have been ‘feeding a gator’.

Not something I encourage anyone to do, and TRY my darnest to make sure they don’t.

Unfortunately, the new investor, when talking to the seller, made it seem as though buying for what he owed was possible. This planted the idea firmly in the sellers head that he could sell, conventionally, and solve his problem.

So, when advised that taking the property as it sits, reinstating the mortgage and keeping it alive was not a deal, the new investor had lost the lead.

The new investors mistake, was to think that getting into a house creatively, with no money down, and no credit check equalled a deal. He missed the part in my teaching (actually chose to ignore it), where I STRESS to buy right.

So, while he’s not back to square one, he is rethinking his approach and attending some seller meetings with me this week to learn.

Now there might be some reading this who say, “But Jim, my marketing brings in calls from motivated sellers all the time who owe more than their house is worth, there are no deals in my area.”

You know what? They are wrong, and right at the same time. I’ll admit, last week alone, we had 34 calls from sellers, and in that batch, ONE was a deal worth going after. The others, either would have worked for a short sale, if the lenders agreed of course, or, were simply stuck losing their houses to foreclosure.
Most because the sellers simply do not realize that yes, a house they paid $250k for 2 years ago, is most likely worth $175k, perhaps less, in the current market.

There are ways to make money in this market, and using some of the tried and true creative investing methods will make investors wealthy, IF, they approach every investment correctly.

In the next installment, I’ll show you which methods of creative real estate investing I am using now, in this market, to make money and continue to create cashflow.

Until then………….be sure to check out the link on the left hand side here for the new “Be a Real Estate Heacy Weight” compendium project.
This is simply the BIGGEST, and BEST Real Estate Investing resource EVER being offered, and all for only $79!

That’s right, over 90 (94 authors), have contributed their latest cutting edge investing information………..along with a TON of FREE give-aways included.
Be sure to check out that link and reserve your copy NOW!

You can find the project here:
Be a Real Estate Heavy Weight!

Happy investing, and keep the rubber side down,
Jim
The Biker Who Buys Houses

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