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9 Fatal Mistakes Made by Real Estate Investors

As a real estate investor and advisor, I often see novice investors making the same exact mistakes. As a result, I decided to create the following list to help novices understand what these common mistakes are and how to avoid them.

The good news is that all of these mistakes can be easily corrected.

The bad news is that any one of these mistakes will seriously limit your potential for success. In my experience, these are the 9 most common mistakes I see novice real estate investors make:

1) Not getting an education

Getting an education is a critical part of becoming a successful real estate investor. It’s much easier and less costly to educate yourself than to make mistakes in the real world. We are lucky to live in a country full of educational opportunities for whichever endeavor we want to pursue.

Surprisingly though, not everyone takes the initiative to learn before they take action. This exposes these people to costly (and sometimes career-ending) mistakes that could have easily been avoided. Some misguided people even complain that the books, courses, or seminars promoted by real estate experts are too expensive. I guess that depends on where you stand.

To me, they seem cheap compared to what I know can be earned in this business. Perhaps to a novice though, they may seem expensive. But as the saying goes, “If you think education is expensive, try ignorance.” Think about it.

Is a $500 course worth it if what you learn makes you $5,000 on a single wholesale deal? What if it could save you a mere $5,000 on a single rehab? Or what if it helped you to create an extra $200 per month cash flow on a single property for just one year? Would it be worth it to you? The value of an education often doesn’t reveal itself until you’ve stepped up to the plate and put yourself in the game.

2) Not getting an education from the right people

The internet is a great tool. But it’s also saturated with too much information – good and bad, oftentimes, from less than credible sources. So don’t confuse the information you find on the internet as necessarily being quality information. For example, there are a number of real estate investing newsgroups and blogs that have proliferated on the internet.

Many so called experts on these sites are more than willing to share enough information to get you into trouble. Do you really want to get your information from “rei-man-TX” or “investor-guy75?” Carefully consider whether these are truly reputable sources to be obtaining information from.

 I can’t believe some of the misinformation I’ve seen posted on these sites. Remember, anyone can post on a newsgroup and anyone can create a blog. But just because someone has a blog, doesn’t mean they necessarily know what they’re talking about. The misinformation you get may be costly…in either lost profits or reputation.

Novice investors may also get misinformation from friends or family members. Perhaps they dabbled in real estate at one point. Now they feel entitled to tell you what little they may know about real estate investing. Be extremely wary of people who have “dabbled” in anything. Dabblers are rarely experts in anything. As the saying goes, “Jack of all trades, master of nothing.”

3) Not taking action

If you’ve managed to get a good education from a good source, the next step is to take some action. Knowledge will be power only when you begin to apply it properly. Merely buying a wide array of real estate investing products or attending boot camps isn’t going to make you any money.

Some novices neglect to take action because they’re still searching for that magical secret that is going to make it start raining deals. The real secret is hard work! Others are paralyzed by fear of what might happen if they get one of their offers accepted. Or, they may give up making offers if they don’t experience instant success.

Whatever the reason, not taking consistent action is a sure way to fail at anything. Personally, I believe that initial failure is the universe’s way of forcing us to make sure we truly want what we’re pursuing. In the end, persistence is what leads to success. And the more we persist, the closer we get to success.

Many novices regularly attend their local real estate clubs. Clubs and associations are excellent way to network with other like-minded people, learn techniques and strategies, and have fun.

Unfortunately, I’ve met countless club goers who have never done a deal before. Instead of using the club as a spring board into taking action, they tend to use the club as a warm blanket because they fear being out on their own. When I meet these people, my advice to them is to stop sitting around with the other novices talking about all the deals they would like to be doing.

My advice is simple, go out there and get some deals done. We all need a good education. But that is only one step in the process. There is no substitute for hard work.

4) Not having realistic expectations

Most novice real estate investors have unrealistic expectations. It may be about the amount of repairs a property needs, the time it takes to complete a project, or the profit they should get from a deal. They’re expectations are either too high or too low. If they’re wholesaling properties, they may get too greedy and try to charge the rehabber too much.

If they’re rehabbing properties, they may underestimate the repairs required.

If they’re landlording, they may underestimate the amount of maintenance a property will require or forget to factor in vacancies. While getting an education plays a large role in these mistakes, another reason is that they did not leave enough room for error. They assumed everything would go as planned.

Real estate deals rarely go exactly as planned. Experienced investors understand the importance of planning for the unexpected. This way, when things don’t go as planned it’s not the end of the world.

5) Not treating real estate investing as a business

Contrary to popular belief, real estate investing is not like the stock market. It is not a passive investment. It is an active investment. Whether a novice investor’s intentions are to flip or to own rentals, they sometimes think owning real estate is going to be a lot easier than it is.

While the profit potential in real estate is usually much greater than owning a stock, it inherently requires more effort than most passive types of investments. Whether you’re wholesaling, rehabbing, or landlording, real estate requires your time and constant attention. In this way, it’s more like a business than an investment.

For example, you must be disciplined about your business. You need to set a schedule for yourself and stick to it. You need to set policies and procedures and adhere to them. You need to set goals and do whatever you can to achieve them. Not everyone has that level of discipline without a boss telling them what to do. When you run your own business, you are the boss. You must be willing to make sacrifices to succeed.

For you this might mean that you need to turn off the television and read your home-study courses. It might mean that instead of spending money on new clothes, you invest that money in your business.

Or it might mean that instead of going to the park on Saturday you search the MLS, look at properties, and familiarize yourself with your target neighborhoods.

6) Not being patient

It can take awhile for novice investors to see positive results when starting out. You can’t expect to immediately find deals and make money. It may take several months to get your first deal. As a comparison, new real estate agents are often told by their brokers that it may take up to six months to close their first transaction.

Similarly, real estate investors should expect to wait a few months to close their first transaction. Furthermore, it can take years for your real estate investing business to become a thriving venture. There aren’t too many businesses that become profitable immediately – no matter the type of business.

It often takes several years for most businesses to get to a point where they make steady and reliable profits. Running your own business can be fun and extremely rewarding. But rest assured, the early years can be unpredictable. As a result, you need to have a lot of patience for things to take off.

7) Not concentrating on quality deals

This is one of the biggest mistakes I see novice investors make, especially after they have done a few deals. After they have some success, they begin to focus too much on quantity instead of doing quality deals. This mindset leads them to do less profitable deals. And once an investor begins to do thinner deals for the sake of doing more deals and outdoing their competition, they eventually find themselves in trouble.

For example, I know many wholesalers and rehabbers who became too confident before the housing downturn of 2006 and loaded up on properties. When the market went south, these investors were left holding a lot of worthless inventory. Most of these investors went bankrupt and lost all of their properties.

Unfortunately, this is a lesson that most investors learn the hard way. For some reason, avoiding the temptation to focus on quantity is a principle that most investors have a hard time accepting. Their natural inclination is to do more. They might feel the pressure to tell their friends what new project they’re working on. They might feel bored unless they’re working on something new. Or they might feel guilty about not “staying busy.”

Whatever the reason, novices must learn that investing is an activity in which “staying busy” is not always smart. Sometimes, the best deals are the ones you don’t do.

When an investor learns to concentrate on a small number of quality deals, they enjoy not only better profits, but also a better lifestyle since they’re not running around managing a huge portfolio of properties. For most people, the whole point of getting into real estate investing in the first place is to live a better quality of life, not to work longer and harder.

8)  Not moving on from bad deals fast enough

Since novice real investors usually don’t have a steady stream of leads coming in and don’t know what a truly profitable deal looks like, they tend to overanalyze bad deals far too long. They get anxious and want to get deals done. And even when they put the numbers of the deal into their spreadsheet and see the deal clearly doesn’t work, they still find a reason to justify it.

They logically know that a deal should be avoided, but they try to justify it anyway. While I believe everyone needs to start somewhere, the ideal place for a novice real estate investor to start is in a good deal not a bad one.

What novices eventually learn is that not too long after taking on a marginal deal, a great deal is not far behind. But because they’ve tied up their resources with the marginal deal, they can’t pursue the great deal.

9) Not writing down goals

Don’t try to run your business without a clear plan. Clarify your goals by committing them to writing. Then, revisit them once a week until they become reality. Something magical happens when you write down your goals on paper.

They begin to take root. When you focus on them repeatedly, you nurture them and they begin to grow. It’s important to write down your purpose, strategies, and goals. Begin by asking yourself the following questions:

  • What strategy am I pursuing?
  • What will I do with the properties I will buy?
  • How many deals per year will I do?
  • How much profit will I earn per deal?
  • How many offers do I make to make this happen?
  • What kind of life do I want to live outside of the office?

When you’re clear about your goals, you have a much easier time accomplishing them. And if your goals are unrealistic you should change them as necessary. Don’t get stuck in an unrealistic set of goals that will only produce frustration. At the same time, you shouldn’t change your goals too often either.

It’s hard to hit a moving target. You want to strike a good balance between having reasonable, achievable goals and also setting goals that will force you to get outside your comfort zone.

Alex Everest, Founder and President of Deal Maker Library ( http://www.dealmakerlibrary.com ), is a nationally known real estate investor, author, speaker, and advisor from Minneapolis, Minnesota. He specializes in the areas of wholesaling, rehabbing, owner financing, and land trusts for residential real estate.

Posted in Articles, Real Estate Investing TipsComments Off

Genworth using aggressive approach to deal with Canadian Foreclosures

Genworth using aggressive approach to deal with Canadian Foreclosures

Genworth using aggressive approach to deal with Canadian Foreclosures 

 

Genworth’s losses on claims were $62-million in the fourth quarter, $11-million higher than the same period a year earlier. Genworth’s stress tests suggest it could withstand either a 40-per-cent drop in home prices or a sharp spike in unemployment before its insurance business became unprofitable. But if a 25-per-cent drop in house prices were coupled with a prolonged increase in unemployment into double-digit levels, it would affect profitability. Canada's largest private sector mortgage insurer, has set up its own internal group of real estate agents to deal with foreclosure sales.

 The move is one of the steps mortgage insurers are taking to minimize their losses after seeing claims rise for the first time in decades. The insurance sold by Genworth and its main rival, Canada Mortgage and Housing Corp., compensates banks when homeowners default. The majority of it is backstopped by the federal government.

 Genworth previously relied on the bank that made the mortgage loan to take the property through to foreclosure. Now, its internal agents help to sell houses sooner, and for a higher price. They’re using basic techniques such as fixing up houses with fresh paint and hosting open houses.

 They’re also staging houses to make them more attractive, and making it less obvious that they are foreclosure sales, said Paul Holden, an analyst at CIBC World Markets.

 Calgary’s housing market took the hardest hit during the recession. Unemployment doubled and home prices in the city dropped by 15 to 20 per cent. Large chunk of foreclosures came from Calgary-Alberta.

 Before a home hits the point of being foreclosed on, Genworth works with the bank that holds the mortgage and will tend to forgive the borrower for a few months of missed payments. If there’s a longer period of unemployment or hardship, Genworth and the lender will look at tacking missed payments on to the back of the mortgage.

 But if it’s clear that the borrower is going to default, Genworth takes ownership of the property earlier in the process to cut its losses. The company is responsible for interest that accumulates and maintenance that must take place during the time the borrower can’t pay. It now has 13 people dedicated to its new internal realty team.

 Genworth’s policies required banks to notify it within 90 days if a customer was delinquent, but it is now asking banks to let it know after about a month. Lenders have been more willing to forgive a couple of missed mortgage payments since the financial crisis hit.

Losses and foreclosures remain relatively low. The number of delinquent mortgages for Genworth was 2,752 at the end of 2011, down from 3,401 at the end of 2010.

 Genworth has done a good job mitigating the number of delinquencies by offering homeowners flexibility on missed payments. Now it’s trying to tackle the amount that it winds up paying on claims, Mr. Holden said. The average paid claim in the fourth quarter had risen to $80,500 from $71,000 two years ago. Genworth is hoping to cut this number back down by selling foreclosed homes faster and getting more for them.

Posted in Alberta Foreclosures, ArticlesComments Off

Home ownership in Calgary with Interest free Mortgages & Grants

Home ownership in Calgary with Interest free Mortgages & Grants

Home ownership in Calgary with Interest free Mortgages & Grants

The PEAK Home Ownership Program — which stands for Public, Essential and Key workers — is a joint initiative with Habitat for Humanity, the Government of Alberta and the Trico Charitable Foundation.

“This is very nice program for Calgarians for the first time Home buyers and give them a head start” says Navtaj Chandhoke, founder of Professional Real Estate Investors Group (PREIG) Canada, instead of renting it and not able to built equity as well as take advantage of  appreciation. The carrying cost will be quite similar but pride of ownership has its own rewards”.

It provides qualified applicants a hand up into affordable home ownership by providing a repayable down payment and a mortgage subsidy. The program is made possible through a $2.7-million housing capital initiatives grant from the provincial government a $815,000 donation from the Trico Charitable Foundation.  

Applicants can be everyone from teachers and health care workers to artists.

This is the second year that the program has been in operation. In 2011, it was able to provide 64 local families assistance with home ownership in Trico Homes’ Milano development. The program is administered by Habitat for Humanity Southern Alberta.

Applicants are screened based on annual income — they must earn between $38,000 and $60,600 (combined family income).

This year, the program will be able to help 60 families in Trico’s York 29 project in New Brighton. Once applicants are approved by Habitat for Humanity, their application moves to an approved mortgage lender.

The application is conditional upon credit pre-approval and ability to qualify for a Canada Mortgage and Housing Corp.-insured mortgage.

The program provides approved buyers with a down payment valued at 16 per cent of the total home cost up to $43,000.It is interest-free for five years and is repayable when the home is sold. As well, buyers in the program receive a non-repayable mortgage grant of up to $12,000.

It was designed to target those people who can’t save for a down payment because they are paying more than 30 per cent of their income toward rent — including nurses, firefighters, social workers, administration and government workers.

 

What is the PEAK Home Ownership Program?

 

    The PEAK program brings home ownership into reach for dozens of families and individuals who help keep Calgary a vibrant place to live but because of housing prices may choose to move to a more affordable community.

    The program is aimed at assisting hard working, middle-income Calgarians who need a "hand-up" to qualify for a mortgage. The program is designed to get families and individuals into their own home and realize the dream of home ownership.

    All Peak Units are priced and purchased at market value and all buyers hold a mortgage. Units purchased under the PEAK Home Ownership Program must be the principal residence of the approved applicants.

 

    PEAK is short for “Public, Essential And Key” workers:

 

        Public stands for public sector workers such as civic, provincial and federal employees.
        Essential stands for essential workers like teachers, health care workers, social services, firefighters, police officers, paramedics and air traffic controllers.
        Key stands for key workers needed for a vibrant Calgary; like artists, trades people, non-profit sector, service industry and journalists.

 

Do you qualify for PEAK Home Ownership Program?

 

    Applications are dealt with on a first come, first served basis and are pre-approved by Habitat for Humanity Southern Alberta Society.

   PEAK Home Ownership Program Eligibility will be determined by the following criteria:

        Your gross family income needs to fall within a certain range for each unit type as determined by Habitat for Humanity Southern Alberta and be adequate to assume all the responsibilities of the full mortgage payment, after the 5 year assistance period.

        Your household size should be relative to the size of unit selected - Need.

        Your application is conditional upon credit pre-approval and ability to obtain a market mortgage and insurance through the assistance offered by the PEAK program - Financial/Credit worthiness.

        All applicants will be required to attend New Home Owner Workshops which will include topics such as Home Repair and Maintenance, Financial and Credit Management and Condominium Ownership: Understanding Legal Responsibilities.

For more information and to fill out an application online, visit peakcalgary.ca

Posted in Articles, Beginner Real Estate, Creative FinancingComments Off

BC First-Time New Home Buyers’ $10,000.00 Bonus Tax Free

BC First-Time New Home Buyers’ $10,000.00 Bonus Tax Free

BC First-Time New Home Buyers' $10,000.00 Bonus Tax Free

 The BC First-Time New Home Buyers' Bonus is a one-time bonus payment worth up to $10,000 for first-time new home buyers in BC. The legislation for the BC First-Time New Home Buyers' Bonus is expected in spring 2012.

“ Finally BC first time buyers would have the opportunity to have their dream release by  owning their dream home instead of  renting it” says Navtaj Chandhoke, founder of Professional Real Estate Investors Group (PREIG) Canada” it can be difficult for lot of Canadian families to save the down payment. This program will assist lot of families in the BC”.

BC First-Time New Home Buyers' Bonus are required to have following qualifications

  • Eligible claimants must be first-time homebuyers - an individual who has never previously owned a primary residence anywhere in the world;
  • For couples, neither the individual nor the spouse or common law partner can have previously owned a primary residence anywhere in the world;
  • The claimant must file a BC resident personal income tax return for 2011 or if the claimant moves to BC after December 31, 2011, must file a 2012 BC resident personal income tax return;
  • Individuals or families who move to BC after December 31, 2012 will not be eligible.

Newly Constructed Homes and Substantially Renovated Homes

  • The bonus is available in respect of new homes located in BC (i.e. newly constructed homes purchased from a builder and substantially renovated homes), on which HST is payable;
  • A substantially renovated home is one where all or substantially all of the interior of a building has been removed or replaced, generally 90% or more of the home must be renovated to qualify;
  • The written agreement of purchase and sale for the home must be entered into on or after February 21, 2012 and before April 1, 2013;
  • Ownership or possession of the home must transfer before April 1, 2013;
  • Eligible new homes include detached houses, semi-detached houses, duplexes, and townhouses, residential condominium units, mobile homes and floating homes and residential units in a cooperative housing corporation.

The BC First-Time New Home Buyers' Bonus is available in respect of owner-built homes:

  • Where the written agreement of purchase and sale for the land is entered into on or after February 21, 2012 and before April 1, 2013;
  • The bonus will be based on land and construction costs subject to HST;
  • Construction of the home must be complete, or the home must be occupied, before April 1, 2013.

Other Criteria for BC First-Time New Home Buyers' Bonus

  • The claimant must be eligible for the BC HST New Housing Rebate in order to receive the bonus;
  • The claimant must intend to live in the house as a primary residence;
  • No one else has claimed the bonus in respect of the home.

Bonus Calculation for BC First-Time New Home Buyers' Bonus

  • The bonus is calculated as 5% of the purchase price (not including HST) of the home up to a maximum of $10,000;
  • The bonus is income tested. For single individuals, the bonus will be phased out at a rate of 20 per cent of net income in excess of $150,000 and eliminated at incomes greater than $200,000. For couples, the bonus will be phased out at a rate of 10 per cent of family net income in excess of $150,000, and eliminated at family incomes greater than $250,000.

You must apply to the BC Ministry of Finance to receive the bonus. The ministry will process applications, determine eligibility, and issue the bonus payments. The bonus is not claimed when filing an income tax return.

Once available, the application form will be posted at

http://www.sbr.gov.bc.ca/individuals/income_taxes/personal_income_tax/tax_credits/fthb_bonus_about.htm

Posted in Articles, Government Grants, No Money DownComments Off

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