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I have created a time machine.
Just think back to the remember when days... remember when
you could buy a house for $6,500, hold on to it for a few
years and sell it for $30,000...if I could do that now I'd
buy ten. Well I'm here to tell you. You can. I just did.
The city was Baltimore, but the location can be anywhere
that inner city decay is prevalent: Board ups, drugs, high
crime etc, exactly the place everyone expects to find a
fortune...
The method has 4 steps (Courtesy Robert Allen)
1/ Find it. 2/ Fund it. 3/ Fix it. 4/ Farm it.
1/Foreclosures, Delinquent Taxes, REO's etc.
2/Seller held financing from tired landlords, REO departments or
credit cards.
3/Fix it to FHA minimum standards. Get a copy from an
appraiser.
4/Farming it or selling it to some of the inner cities'
poorest eligible inhabitants is the essence of my money
making idea. FINANCING IS KEY.
It is one thing to fix the property to FHA standards, but
quite another to sell it that way. The process is slow and
tedious and many good people don't qualify. Often it is for
lack of funds that cannot be overcome by seller assistance
above the 6% level.
So, What to do?
BE THE BANK... But you say, "What about the Due on Sale
clause or that credit card debt?"
The answer is to create a note to sell the house and
at the same time sell the note to create the cash to close.
A couple of months ago I posted an entry on this site titled
"A Notable Question." I asked if it was possible to create
a note on a property I was selling and then to
simultaneously sell it to an investor at the closing table.
The answer was YES.
I chose Mike Jones from Mid South Funding to work with and
he showed me how to write the contract, structure the
deal, the terms on the note, etc. This is what we came up
with: Sale price $30,000 First trust of $24,000 @12% x 20yrs
2nd Trust of $4,500 @12% x 20yrs balance paid as down
payment.
The first would be sold at a discount to produce a yield of
13.8% ($21,500) This would pay off our $8,000 release on the
blanket mortgage we have on the ten properties, provide the
funds to close including the seller assistance that FHA
wouldn't have allowed and still leave us with a balance of
$11,396.03 and the 2nd trust of $4,500. Not bad for a $6,500
investment and about $2,000 worth of fix up.
The Buyers are happy, too. They have a decent home with
monthly payments of $314 plus taxes and insurance, on a
property they would have had to pay $400 to rent.
In conclusion, I believe my time machine is unique.
Investors have overlooked the possibilities of our inner
cities and its residents as an opportunity to create wealth
and bring back those communities. This system is very
workable. I have done it and continue to use it. The profit
potential is only limited by the original cost of the house
and how many you can complete in a year. Good Luck.
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