Posts Tagged ‘Real Estate Investing’

Just Listed 119 78 Avenue NE Calgary

Thursday, June 7th, 2018

Excellent opportunity to gain some sweat equity, flip a home or have a rental.

C4189464 : 4 Level Split in Huntington Hills for only $350,000

Open House Saturday June 9, 2018 from 2pm to 5pm

Open House Sunday June 10 from 1 pm to 4 pm

Looking for a renovation project, look no more. Fantastic 4 Bedroom, 4 level Split in a great location in Huntington Hills. This home provides good bones but is just dated and provides a great opportunity to get into Huntington Hillls at a great price point. Living room features vaulted ceilings, kitchen is spacious, updated and offers a large dining area. Upper level provides 2 spacious bedrooms and a full bath. Third level provides another 2 bedrooms and full bath.  Forth level is developed with a Rec room with awesome stone fireplace, and the utility room. Enjoy your large backyard and your oversized (23×25) double garage. All this and located close to public transit, schools, shopping nearby and easy access to Deerfoot trail. Shingles replaced aprox 2003. Some windows have been replaced.

The #1 Investing Mistake – Fighting Your Emotions

Monday, November 21st, 2016

Try an experiment. Pick a stock, a business venture, a real estate area, or another kind of investment and ask your friends and family what they think about it. What do you think will happen? We are willing to bet you will get as many different answers (or at least variations of answers), as the number of people that you ask. The question is: Why?

Where Do Our Emotions Come From?

Everyone has past experiences that shape the way they view the world today. Without delving deep into the psychological, everyone carries emotional baggage attached to the events that have occurred at previous times in their life. This is unavoidable; however, the key is to recognize the facts from your own jaded perception.

If someone heard their parents warn them about a potential real estate crash (similar to that in the 1980’s), and never looked deeper into it, then it is likely they will avoid real estate investments. If someone read an article in the paper about a murder in a certain area of town, they may feel the area is dangerous. Had that same person never been subjected to these stories, they would likely never have had any fear attached to real estate, or a particular area of town.

The Origin of Fear

We are actually only born with two natural fears: the fear of falling and the fear of loud noises. But what does this mean for all of the other fears we have? Every other fear in our life has been learned and taught to us. Someone with different experiences will have completely different fears. How do we know if something is dangerous or should be feared?

Think back to some of the fears you may have: spiders, snakes, etc? Or maybe things a little more pertinent: bankruptcy, certain areas of town, technology stocks (especially after 2001), etc? What do we have to believe to feel these fears? Chances are our fears are based on a small piece of information we gained in the past. We have now spent our lives focusing on supporting evidence for this fear and perhaps overlooked real, refuting evidence.

Your Emotions’ Role in Investing

Since emotions and fear are based on “hearsay” and false evidence that seems real, and not on facts and fundamentals… they have no place in investing. It is impossible to make an unbiased investment decision when emotions rule the basis of that decision.

Investing out of emotion and not fundamentals is the #1 investment mistake.

Fear is not the only emotion to be careful of. If you are choosing a place to invest because you grew up there or because it is close to your home, or you think the house is cute, or worse yet, because your parents told you too . . . Be Wary.

Fundamentals vs. Emotions

Investing fundamentals are based on objective, unchanging, non-deviating facts, whereas emotions are based on . . . well . . . very little, if any facts. If your research and due diligence meets the criteria, and is in line with your ultimate goal, then make the investment. However, if you are basing your decision on the past advice of a friend or relative that no longer applies to a marketplace, then run away until you can get the facts straight. You want undeniable, measurable facts.

Real Estate Fundamentals

If a city is growing in income level & population, the development in the area is starting to take off, the price to income ratios are low, vacancy is low, interest rates are low, unemployment is low, and prices have begun to climb after a plateau . . . then invest. If an area is beginning to redevelop (i.e. new buildings) with a few projects and things are starting to clean up, where traditionally this has been a “tough” area of town, then invest and ignore the fear.

There are lots of economic indicators that will make a particular city (or area) a good place to invest in real estate. These indicators are what you need to make your investment decisions based upon. If the type of transaction fits into your portfolio (flip, wrap, lease option, joint venture, cash flow, etc.) and will help you meet your goals, then the decision is unquestionable.

The Boring Side of Investing

After you have done 1 or 2 transactions, real estate investing should become boring. It is a mindless game. Either the fundamentals are there, or they’re not. The numbers work or they don’t. You don’t care what the house looks like, where it is located, or what nationality is prevalent in the area. The only thing you care about is this: Are the facts good and will it help me reach my goal? Investing in real estate is a mindless process that can be repeated over and over.

The fun of real estate investing is rising above your fears & emotions, and enjoying your wealthy retirement as a result.

Building Your Real Estate Investment Team

Monday, November 7th, 2016

Whether you like it or not, you can’t do it all by yourself. Investing in real estate requires many different professionals. There are REALTOR®s, appraisers, inspectors, builders, renovators, mortgage companies, banks, property managers, lawyers, partners, accountants, sign companies, printing companies and yes even mentors, buyers, sellers and tenants. I have heard in business that you are only as good as your weakest link. I want to suggest that you choose your real estate investment team carefully. You may even want to go as far as interviewing your team players.

After all, this is a business and the dollar amounts can be substantial, so you want to make sure that your team members have the same morals, ethics, business philosophy and complimentary personality to you. This is not to say that you will not make some mistakes and/or changes along the way, but when you start out with a list of the qualities that you are looking for in your team, it makes the decision-making process much easier. Yes, I did say qualities, and not experience or education. It’s easy to find someone who knows the business or has experience, but it can be a challenge to find the right qualities and personality to match you and your goals.

I would start my search by seeking a referral from someone who is already in the business and is successful. Make sure you know the person you are asking for the referral from, well enough to know that you will be well received when you contact whomever they referred. Notice that I indicated that you seek a referral from someone who is not only in the business, but is “successful”.

It doesn’t do any good to contact a banker for a line of credit when you have been referred by someone the banker just turned down, nor does it look good to contact a REALTOR® referred from someone who just backed out of the last deal they had under contract. I think it is only appropriate to note here, that if you are making a referral to someone who is building their team, make sure you know a little about this person as well. It doesn’t help you to refer someone to your banker, who just got out of bankruptcy and has a history of shady deals. Protect your reputation.

Once you establish your team players, you should be loyal to them. Let me give you an example. Who are you going to call when you find a listing online or another REALTOR®’s listing while driving the neighborhood? Most people would say I would call the listing agent. I used to do the same thing. Let me suggest you call your team player and let them go to work for you.

If you call the listing agent and buy the house, it may be the only sale you give that REALTOR® this year. By calling your REALTOR®, that closed 30 transactions for you last year, they will go to bat for you to get you the price and terms that they already know you are looking for. Not to mention the fact, that you will be the one they call when they find an awesome deal that fits your model. Trust me on this, as I know from experience.

Be a smart Real Estate Investor – Do the math

Monday, October 31st, 2016

Should I use cash or credit? A variable rate loan or fixed rate? Ten percent down or twenty percent? Should I pay down debt or keep a cash reserve? These are all good questions, and here are some of the answers.

Cash vs. Credit: The Concept of Leverage

In order to understand real estate financing, it is important that you understand the time value of money. Because of inflation, a dollar today is generally worth less in the future. Thus, while real estate values may increase, an all-cash purchase may not be economically feasible or wise, since the investor’s cash may be utilized in more effective ways. Leverage is the concept of using borrowed money to make a return on an investment. Let’s say you bought a house using all of your cash for $100,000. If the property were to increase in value 10% over 12 months, it would now be worth $110,000. Your return on investment would 10% annually (of course, you would actually net less, since you would incur costs in selling the property).

If you purchased a property using $10,000 of your own cash and $90,000 in borrowed money, a 10% increase in value would still result in $10,000 of increased equity, but your return on your invested cash is 100% ($10,000 investment yielding $20,000 in equity). Of course, the borrowed money isn’t free; you would have to incur loan costs and interest payments in borrowing the money. However, you could also rent the property in the meantime, which should offset the interest expense of the loan.

Taking leverage a step further, you could purchase ten properties with 10% down and 90% financing. If you could rent these properties for breakeven cash flow, you would have a very large nest egg in 20 years, when the properties are paid off. Balance that with what you could make by investing the cash flow from one free and clear property for 20 years. And, of course, look at the potential risk of negative cash flow from repairs and vacancies on ten properties. Finally, consider the tax implications – if you have cash flow, you have taxable income; if you have an increase in equity, there’s no tax (capital gains) until you sell.

Cash Flow vs. Cash Reserves

On a similar note, the size of your down payment will affect your cash flow on rental properties. Let’s consider two examples.

Example 1: $100,000 property with $20,000 down. $80,000 loan @ 6% interest, including taxes and insurance is about $600/month. Assuming you could rent the property for $800/month, you have $200/month cash flow or $2,400/year. Not bad.

Example 2: $100,000 with no money down. $100,000 loan @ 8% (higher rate is generally common for zero-down/cash-back loans) would make your payments closer to $900/month. With zero down, you have $100/month negative cash flow.

Which is better? Well, it depends on what your goals are and what the rest of your financial picture looks like. Let’s say your goal was to hold the property for 10 years. In the first example, you have $200/month cash flow, but no cash reserve. In the second example, you would have $100/month negative cash flow, but you have $20,000 in reserve. The knee-jerk reaction of some people is that example #1 is safer. But is it really?

Think about it… in the first example, if your property becomes vacant for one month, you’d be out of pocket $600. It would take three months to make that up. In the second example, you have $20,000 in cash cushion to make up the deficit. With $20,000 in the bank, you could handle $1200/year negative cash flow for 16 years. If the property were in an appreciating market, you’d come out fine, even with negative cash flow. Another factor is the choice of mortgage. You could buy a property with nothing down and an interest-only loan fixed at 5% for three years. If your exit strategy is a lease/option that should cash you out within 36 months, why do a fixed-rate traditional loan?

The point here, is that you should not automatically go with traditional fixed-rate financing. Nor should you seek positive cash flow as the only goal. Likewise, you should not buy properties with nothing down and negative cash flow and assume that short-term market appreciation will be the only source of your profit.

Paying Down Debt

For years, our parents’ generation discouraged debt as a “very bad” thing. For some investors, the goal is to own properties “free and clear,” that is, with no mortgage debt. While this is a worthy goal, it does not always make financial sense. If you have free and clear properties, you will make a certain amount of cash flow and pay a certain amount of income tax. If you need more cash, you are forced to sell the asset, creating a taxable gain.

If you refinance a property, there’s no taxable event. And, since mortgage interest is a deductible expense against income from the property, the investor does better tax-wise by saving his cash. Think about it… the higher the monthly mortgage payment, the less cash flow, the less taxable income each year. While positive cash flow is desirable, it does not necessarily mean that a property is more profitable because it has more cash flow. More equity will obviously increase monthly cash flow, but it is not always the best use of your money. On the other hand, paying down debt may make sense if you can’t get a higher return elsewhere in the market. Also, if paying down debt can have other rewards, such as bringing a loan below 80% LTV, you may be able to avoid paying mortgage insurance and save additional money.

In Short, Don’t Rely on Assumptions… Do the Math!