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Find information on buying Real Estate in the greater Venice
and Englewood, Florida areas
Buying Distressed Properties
According To Forbes - Geisen, himself a long-time investor
in distressed homes, has a few tips for beginners thinking
of making unsolicited offers to distressed borrowers. For
starters, focus on a neighborhood you know well--maybe the
one you live in, so you’ll have a rock-solid sense of local
property values. If you’re lucky enough to find a homeowner
willing to sell, they’ll want to close fast, and there won’t
be enough time to research the neighborhood.
Consider working with a "hard equity lender," who
specializes in making loans to vulture buyers. They charge
higher interest rates than local banks, but Geisen says the
higher cost is usually justified by the guidance and advice
they offer. "It’s a second set of eyes on your deal," he
says. Your local mortgage broker should be able to refer you
to such lenders.
Get ready to work the phone--a lot. Geisen says the vast
majority of distressed purchases happen well before the bank
actually repossesses a home. You’ll have to find and
cold-call homeowners who’ve been flagged as delinquent or
who are still in the early stages of foreclosure, and you
should expect to work on at least a dozen different homes
before you hook a deal. In most cases, the best way to
contact the homeowner is by telephone. Letters don’t work.
"You have to make personal contact," he says. And be
gracious. "Offer to help them find a lender or an agent
first," he suggests. It might mean losing a potential sale
in the short run, he admits, but a distressed homeowner is
more likely to seek a deal with you later.
Don’t waste too much time on how-to books and seminars. Most
of them are "OK for motivation," says Geisen, but they don’t
contain the genuinely useful knowledge of how to get a
distressed purchase finished. That you’ll have to gain
yourself, most likely by the first 14 or so deals you fail
to close.
One absolute no-no: Buying property sight unseen. Another:
Taking it personally when deals fall apart. "If you’re
bidding a property up because you’re frustrated or you’re
really trying to beat the other guy, you’re going to end up
overpaying."
A good lesson to remember, since more than likely,
overpaying is what got the guy you’re buying property from
in trouble in the first place.
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