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Posts Tagged ‘real estate foreclosure’

Taking Advantage of Real Estate Foreclosure Investing

Monday, April 13th, 2009

If you spend a lot of time watching late night tv, smoking the crack pipe, and drinking the infomercial Kool Aid, you may think that foreclosure investments are super easy to accomplish, make you bags of cash.

Reality has to intrude sometime. Making money in real estate investing is no different than any other investment really. The amount of time you spend before, during, and after a foreclosure investment deal will determine how much money you make or you do not make.

Plan on working at it as seriously as you want to get a financially significant value out of. Very few sweetheart deals will come to you, knock on your door, and hand you a bag of money.

While not absolutely required the more money you have available to take part in the deal, the better positioned you will be to do the deal. You can get foreclosure investments done without money if you plan on investing more of your own personal time to do it. Choose wisely.

Keep in mind that houses that are being foreclosed on inevitably need a little TLC to bring them up to Market Value. That money or personal time spent fixing the issues has to come from somewhere to realize maximum market Value.

While we would like to think you could also just fire up the MLS and have all your foreclosures listed on page one in order of the money you will make, reality seeps in there sooner or later. You need to pour throw the listings, see some properties, to figure out which deals make sense. Monitoring the opportunity is required as is beating the bushes to gather everything there is to know about that property while still staying in front of all the other investors who may want the property.

Quite often knowing your personal strengths and weaknesses is a major problem for the majority of people beginning in foreclosure investing. xperienced investors will have developed a system to help then in evaluating opportunities. They developed it the hard way, by previous investments, making money and sometimes losing money when something overlooked turned a deal into a loser.

Next you have to be aware of the law in the state where you are investing in the property. Structuring a deal that won’t pass the legal ’sniff test’ in your state won’t work. Your deal has to be rock solidly legally which requires you to be appropriately informed.

Finally there is the issue of money. The more you have the easier it is to find good deals to invest in. Its not completely impossible to find deals that don’t require it, you just have to work harder for them.

Don’t get discourage and don’t let anything stop you from achieving your foreclosure investing goals. You can do it. Be smart, work hard, and you will be making the internet marketing videos, speak at real estate conferences, and be lauded by all.

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How To Prevent Mortgage Foreclosure

Saturday, March 21st, 2009

Whenever you read a general article about mortgages the term foreclosure is oftentimes accompanying it. Millions all over our great country are unemployed and struggling. Many American households are being destroyed because of foreclosures on mortgages. The ongoing word is this mortgage crisis is predicted to get a lot worse before we begin to see any light at the end of the tunnel.

Webster states that mortgage is the pledging of your property to a creditor as security of a debt.Which can also be taken as, you apply for a loan through a bank, receive that loan to buy your property and have to pay funds back to the bank. With having to pay back to the bank, there are legal litigations that have to be filed. The litigations state that if you default for a consecutive period of time the bank can then take ownership over your property. There are a few things we can do to cease the foreclosure on our own property. We can choose to refinance, apply for a reverse mortgage, or a loan modification.

Refinancing a mortgage means paying off your own mortgage and signing a loan for a new one. Millions of people refinance their property aspiring to get a lower yearly interest rate. When considering refinancing your property read all fine print with your contract and try to obtain a rate between 2-4%. This sounds pretty crazy, how an interest rate can make so much of a difference. In the long run you will save more money on interest and be applying more to your principal.

A reverse mortgage is beneficial to senior citizens. If you are 62 or older, own your home, have a low mortgage, and reside in your dwelling. Reverse mortgage may be the answer to your prayers! A reverse mortgage allows you to transform a bit of your equity into cash and pay off your existing mortgage. And, you simply do not need to repay until the home is not occupied by the owner or they die. Money from the reverse mortgage is considered tax free and is considered income. The only downside to reverse mortgage is the debt on home increases, equity diminishes, and the upfront costs and expenses can be pretty expensive.

A new trend in helping to solve the foreclosure dilemma is loan modifications. Loan modifications enable you to find an affordable mortgage payment for your situation. This saves people time and money comparative to refinancing. With a loan modification instead of looking for a new loan you’re simply modifying your existing loan. To be considered for a loan modification you need documented proof of a financial hardship you are facing. You would have to be behind 3 payments, and have not filed bankruptcy. The terms are pretty straight forward and you should have no problems obtaining this form of mortgage.

The economy is in shambles right now, and every American can clearly see that. But, we shouldn’t let this economy be our downfall as well. Stop the world from taking from you what’s rightfully yours, and explore all options with an open mind. The welfare of yourself and your family is at risk.

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Investing In Foreclosures: A Shortcut To Real Estate Riches

Monday, January 5th, 2009

Foreclosure investors who had been carefully watching the housing boom at the turn of the century unfold may have been able to anticipate the current housing crisis. Along with the growing number of foreclosures has come a wealth of investment opportunities.

In the last two years mortgage lenders have been reporting dramatic increases in defaults and foreclosure rates nationwide causing many sub-prime lenders to go under. Many real estate investors turned their attention to buying foreclosures. But what you may have seen is just a tip of the iceberg.

Its A Huge Foreclosure Investing Boom, But Can You Capitalize On It? While cashing in on the housing crisis might seem as simple as getting a list of properties which are in default, getting in touch with the owners and trying to make a deal before the bank retakes possession of the home. You may want to fix the home up and resell it or hang on to it and make your money from rental income. You probably think that there is no way to lose money on the deal, this is, however not always the case.

Getting into the foreclosure investing game could be an extremely lucrative move that alone could not only feed your family but pay for lavish lifestyle and vacations. Or it could turn into a big black hole consuming all of your time, energy and marketing dollars.

There are few people who consistently turn a profit on their foreclosure investments. Why is this? They are in a competitive, crowded market and are going about things the wrong way.

How Can You Stand Out in the Competitive Business of Foreclosure Investing? To call foreclosure investment a competitive field is understating things. A lot of news stories have come out about these investments, meaning that many investors have gotten in on the action. Investors send mountains of mail, deluge homeowners with phone calls and some even go so far as to show up at their doors.

In short, if a homeowner is behind on payments, you can be prepared for a major fight for his attention. Just imagine for a moment that person sitting at his kitchen table plowing through a pile of letters from lawyers, bill collectors and investors. Your mailing piece is just one of many that goes straight to the garbage can. You must find a way to differentiate yourself from the investment crowds. Here’s an idea that will put you ahead of the competition.

Take An Ethical Approach To Deal with Sellers Facing Foreclosure. People who are facing foreclosure are not exactly going to be eager to speak with you about selling their home. In fact, most see real estate investors as scavengers swooping in to profit from their troubles.

If you want to get people facing foreclosure to call you, what you need is to offer them the option of staying in their home.

Advanced Foreclosure Investing - Keep Homeowners in Their Homes Instead of Purchasing Their Homes As Your Starting Point. Reason number one is giving homeowners facing tough times a chance to keep their home is simply the right thing to do.

Yet another reason is, you’ll actually make money doing it. You can help them negotiate a repayment plan with their current lender (the process is called loss mitigation) and collect a fee for your service. There’re several companies nationwide with an in-house list of Loss Mitigation department contacts for literally every lender in the country that will do all the work for you. So, even if you never buy a single home, with tens of thousands of foreclosures in your hometown, offering loss mitigation services could turn into a lucrative income stream by itself.

Last but not least, this is also a highly profitable route to foreclosure investing. In many cases, the loss mitigation process will not work out for the homeowners and you will end up buying their home anyway. And whom will the homeowner turn to when they find that their best option is to sell? You guessed it, the foreclosure investor who tried to help them keep their home. Thats how the cookie crumbles back to foreclosure investing.

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