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Real Estate Investing - The Motivated Seller
How the heck do you find a "motivated seller?" The motivated seller doesn't wear a tattoo on his forehead that announces the distinction. And he never drags you onto his property begging you to buy. In fact, the motivated seller may be very subtle in trying to hide his strong desire to sell. He may not want to exhibit his anxiety. (And if he did act anxious, you would suspect problems with his property!) You will almost always pick up a property at the best price and terms when buying from a motivated seller. That pronouncement sounds OK, but what does it mean? Here's an example. Has your mode of transportation ever become a junker? Everyone who has owned a car or truck would probably admit "yes." We arrive at this perspective because of some dissatisfaction with the vehicle. Maybe it didn't run like it did when we drove it off the lot. Maybe it had lost the luster in appearance. Maybe repairs became more frequent, and we concluded that it was too much trouble to fool with any more. That vehicle became a noose around our neck. It was an albatross. It had become a huge liability. We wanted to get rid of it. We had become motivated to ditch the junker. Sellers develop similar attitudes toward their real estate investments. A rental house doesn't have to "fall apart" for the owner to become a motivated seller. Property management can be tough and aggravating. Landlording can be Dullsville. Maybe a landlord gets sick, and can't continue to keep up his rental house. Maybe a landlord becomes fed up with tenant problems, and wants to throw in the towel. Maybe the owner of a residence gets a job transfer to another city, buys a second house, and can't sell his first house. Do you think making TWO MONTHLY MORTGAGE PAYMENTS per month can convert a smug seller with a firm price into a motivated seller who will accept a discount? Maybe a couple divorces, and the court orders a house sale for settlement. Maybe a family is facing bankruptcy, and selling their house quickly is the only solution they see for relieving financial pressures. This short list of motivational reasons is just the tip of the iceberg. Sellers can develop strong motivations to sell in the flash of a moment! That's when sales price firmness softens, and ease of negotiation begins. Phil Speer, Ph.D., started his real estate investing career 25 years ago. Without the availability of credit and using only a $10 bill, he purchased $1 million in properties in his first year, and had accumulated $10 million in properties by his fourth year. http://www.CashinHouses.com/ He was featured in a Wall St.Journal editorial as most successful investor in the Nothing Down Real Estate Movement, and was honored with a Caribbean cruise as top investor of the year. In his hometown of Nashville, Tennessee, he has been a businessman and Human Resources Consultant for 30 years. He is an author, speaker and seminar director. To learn how to profit in real estate investing, even without cash or credit, read his report at http://www.Real---Estate---Investment.com/nomoneydown/flipping.html/ Subscription is free to his Fix-up Ezine. He and other contributing authors provide free articles and resources on real estate investing at his online "Academy of Advanced Real Estate Investing Techniques" at http://www.AAREIT.com/
MORE RESOURCES: Among the ambitious garages built in New York after 1900, some are still hard at work. But even preservationists take them for granted. A five-bedroom Greek Revival farmhouse on 15 hillside acres in Delaware County has sweeping mountain views. A 1750s farmhouse has a beautifully carved sandstone facade and offers sweeping views of vineyards and the Dordogne River. In downtown Manhattan, new condo developments offer owners both single-house-style privacy and luxe-building-style amenities. Until the financial crisis, foreigners had been a significant force in the real estate market, an area broker said. A 1907 brownstone in Washington; a 1914 English Tudor in Kansas City, Mo.; and a 1925 bungalow in Sarasota, Fla. The difference between viewing housing as a luxury good or as a staple is the subject of a debate about the recovery. The property market in Stockholm has been insulated from the worst of the housing crisis by low interest rates and by a shortage of apartments in the city. Laka Nona medical city will include a medical school, hospitals, research centers and space for biotech start-up companies. Real estate listings noting a need for TLC acknowledge problems with a property. Just what those are is not always clear. Some economists and analysts urge a dose of shock therapy that would shift benefits to future homeowners from current ones: Let the housing market crash. Where others saw a ruin, the buyer of a house in Millburn — a former contractor — perceived buried charm. Two longtime loftmates appeared to be going their separate ways, but the hunt for new apartments landed them in the same building in Williamsburg. West End Avenue and vicinity was once a stronghold of town houses. Three of the now-rare breed bear distinctive traces of the attentions of recent owners. At River Pointe, a community in Manchester, N.J., solar technology that earns energy credits is a standard feature in each house. Questions for a principal of the law firm Proskauer Rose and a co-chairman of the firm’s real estate division. The wealthy and celebrities often buy property under limited liability companies, often with whimsical names. Once a grand mansion steps from Central Park, it had fallen into disrepair. Now it is for sale for $8.95 million. One in eight homeowners had household debt exceeding half the monthly income in 2008, a recent report says. A parking space that comes with the lease; a condo building with no emergency reserve fund; a landlord’s liability in a burglary; dealing with fees on security deposits. An art collector builds a nontraditional house in an Alpine village where life hasn’t changed that much in decades. On Lake Waramaug, a converted boathouse has a stone foundation, a wraparound deck and direct access to the water. A half-dozen buildings on Second Avenue will house ventilation equipment, disperse smoke and allow for evacuation from subway tunnels in emergencies. A one-bedroom condo in Philadelphia, a three-bedroom bungalow in Tennessee and a two-bedroom house in Wisconsin. Developers in Midtown are refurbishing older buildings, using tax credits and public financing, as much as they are building from scratch. |
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