Posts

What to Look for in Foreclosures

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William Bronchick : Foreclosure investing can be difficult if you are not sure what to look for in bank-owned homes. There are certain learned skills that come with consistent investment in foreclosures. Let’s take a glance at what a trained foreclosure investor’s eye looks for when seeking out the best home for his or her buck. Location Just like the price of homes sold normally, different locations offer different price ranges for foreclosed homes. Depending on the budget, foreclosure investors will decide which area they want to purchase in. Usually, the bigger the price tag of other homes in the area mean the investor will make more money off of the single sale of the house. With smaller investment neighborhoods, the single sale may not be a high return, but there is usually a quicker turn around on the sale. Some investors only secure funds for short periods of time, which means the house needs to be flipped and sold quickly. This would call for a smaller investment n...

The Risks of Flipping Properties

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William Bronchick : The first thing that should be noted is that flipping houses is a great way to bring home a rather large profit in a relatively short amount of time when doing so in a seller’s market so to speak. The problem is that we currently seem to be experiencing what is known as a buyer’s market from one end of the United States to another. Foreclosures are at an all time high, which means that the market has suddenly been saturated with properties for sale. While this is excellent news (believe it or not) when it comes to getting your hands on a property at a lower price, it also makes a difficult time of convincing buyers to pay top dollar when there are better bargains down the road. This of course is one of the primary risks involved in the real estate investment venture that is known as flipping properties. The massive profits that most investors seek cannot be accomplished if the property cannot be purchased, rehabbed, and sold quickly. Unfortunately, at the ...

Tax Breaks for Real Estate Investors

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William Bronchick : Taxes are your biggest expense in your lifetime, so choose your source of income wisely! Real estate has some of the BEST TAX BREAKS of any investment in America! The more you earn through your job, the more you get taxed, and the system is setup that way to punish hard workers and reward investors.  Have you looked at the bottom stub of your paycheck lately and seen how much the government steals from you?  Wage income not only requires work, it gets taxed at a very high rate, plus the government takes FICA, which is put into a system that may be bankrupt when you retire. Real estate has so many tax advantages over wage income: Capital Gains Rates The maximum federal tax rate on capital gains is 15%, whereas wage income is taxed at 35%.  There’s state taxes, too, and some states offer further discounts on capital gains income.  Remember, capital gains requires that you hold a property for 12 months or more before selling, as in th...

Land Contract Versus Lease/Option

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William Bronchick: Many investors are generally familiar with the concepts lease option and Colorado installment land contract (aka “contract for deed). Many investors confuse the two, and this article will help you understand the tax, legal, and practical issues between them. Lease Options First, let’s start with the lease option, which is really two things, a lease and a purchase option. A lease is a contract for the use and possession of land, creating a landlord/tenant (or “lessor/lessee”) relationship. A purchase option is a unilateral agreement wherein the optionor (“seller”) agrees to give the optionee (“buyer”) the exclusive right to the purchase the leased premises. The option price is generally set at a fixed price at the inception of the lease, although it does not have to be. At any time during the option period (which generally corresponds to the lease period), the tenant can exercise his option to purchase. An option is not the same as a regular purchase...

Common Mistakes New Real Estate Investors Make

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When you decide to start your career as a new real estate investor you have to follow many tips and strategies that will help you to become successful. And often you commit mistake at your beginning stage. Thus for this William Bronchick has tried come up with 5 mistakes out of his experience and attorney help, that you can mind in reducing your mistake. Here given below are the following 5 mistakes that most new real estate investors make very often time. Not Valuing Your Time Being a property director may sound simple until the point that you begin doing it. Numerous new and financial specialists think they can go only it. And decline to employ a property chief with an end goal to spare cash. Be that as it may, when the midnight crisis calls come in, you’ll end up singing an alternate tune. On the off chance that you intend to keep up an all-day work notwithstanding beginning as a land speculator it is vital you contact a property chief. Your opportunity is profitable,...

Colorado Lease Option Equitable Interest

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  Before we discuss the equitable interest, we need to discuss the basic owner–financed sale. When you sell a property, you give the buyer a deed to transfer ownership. If you owned the property free and clear before you sold it, you would take back a note for part of the purchase price, secured by a lien on the property (in some states a “mortgage”, in others a “deed of trust”). So, after the closing the buyer would have title (deed) and you would have a recorded lien against the property (“mortgage” or “deed of trust”). If the buyer stopped paying, you’d have to initiate foreclosure proceedings as specified by the mortgage or deed of trust. In mortgage states, the process is generally a lawsuit (judicial foreclosure), while deed of trust states the process is a “power of sale” (non-judicial) process. Before we move on to the lease option equitable interest discussion, let’s discuss the installment land contract. The installment land contract is an agreement by which the...

Why Now is the Time to Get into Apartment Investing

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If you’ve been buying and flipping or renting single family homes, you may want to look into apartment investing. Yes, I know, you think you need gobs of cash to buy apartments, when the fact is you can buy apartments with little or no cash out of pocket. I’ve done it, my students have done it, and you can do it, too! Why Apartments? Apartments operate on an economy of scale. If you have 10 units and one vacancy you are still 90% occupied. When you lost a tenant on a single family house, you are 100% vacant. Multiple units allow you to spread the risk around. Apartments are cheaper per unit than single family houses. The more units you buy, the cheaper per unit cost. Multiple units means bigger discounts on supplies and materials. It’s easier to negotiate for 10 fridges than one. Multiple units makes professional management more effective. You can be a passive investor in apartments . Depreciation can give you huge tax write-offs against other income. Financi...