For the Love of Money with Real Estate
If you've been reading our newsletters you know about the
manslaughter case, our crack house and you know we have had
many problem tenants. You probably wonder why we love real
estate investing and keep doing it? Well, if we stopped today,
and did nothing else relating to real estate, in 20
years we would have over $2,000,000 in assets (in 2006 dollars)
and almost $8,000 per month in income coming in after
expenses. After only an average investment of 4
hours per week over the last five years that thought makes us
giddy.
It's also the same thought that makes us want to share our
stories. Our investments have not all been good ones, and it
has not been easy, but much of our pain could have been reduced
just by knowing more about the pitfalls and traps. We want to
help you, and others, succeed while avoiding some of the
mistakes we made.
Please help us help others, and pass this newsletter along!
Your friends and family can sign up by emailing us their name
and email address at info@revnyou.com.
On One Condition: Putting in an offer
by Julie Broad & Dave
Peniuk
You have found your potential
purchase, and you did the analysis. You think that this is
a good buy and it meets your
goals (remember those?). You are ready to put in an offer
to get a little closer to the deal... so, now what?
Our caveat: Our methodology does not apply to the hot market
conditions that areas like High Park, the Danforth or downtown
Vancouver have seen in the last couple of years. We avoid
bidding wars and always put at least one condition on our
offers in case we need to back out.
Determine your price:
In the evaluation of your property we discussed last month,
you should have reached a conclusion of what you feel you can
pay for this property based on it's income and your goals. You
also should have an understanding of where it is relative to
the market. Now you have to solidify that, and get ready to
pick a price. You can:
* Ask your realtor what he/she thinks you
could get it for and ask for recent sales in the area that
compare to that property,
* Review MLS.ca and see what other
properties are listed for on that street or in that area,
* Know the maximum you can pay for it based
on your goals, your financing options and the rent and expenses
of the property.
On One Condition!
Get a few extra days to think and research your investment,
while ensuring you've got the deal if you want it. You do this
by putting in an offer with conditions in it. We always do this
so we have a way out in case our financing doesn't work out
well, the inspection turns up big problems or we find a better
opportunity.
To give yourself a few extra days of thinking room,
while ensuring you have the property if you want it, put in an
offer "subject to" financing or an inspection. This
will usually give you 5 - 10 extra days (identify in the offer
that they are business days) to get everything in order. A
deposit of $1,000 should hold the property in the meantime. If
you decide to walk away in that 5 - 10 day timeframe then you
get your money back, and the property goes back on the
market.
We often find there is significant pressure to put down a
larger deposit. Agents will say that this shows you are
serious. A larger amount down can be challenging if you are
doing a deal like we often do that requires, for example,
refinancing one property to get the downpayment for the second,
getting a Vendor Take Back mortgage to help reduce the required
down payment, or if you are pulling your down payment out of
RRSP's or somewhere else.
We have found that a way to work with this request is to say
you will pay a $1,000 deposit conditional upon acceptance of
the offer by the vendor. Then, pay an additional $5,000 deposit
or more, upon the removal of conditions. Once the conditions
are removed, the deal is very hard to walk away from and you
have had another week or two to pull together a little bit
extra money to solidify the deal.
It's important to remember that putting in an offer
shouldn't be stressful as long as you have a condition that
allows you to back out. The more important consideration is
whether your offered price works within your goals. Now, get
out there and start making some offers! Practice makes
perfect!
Published August 15,
2006
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