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Tag: "high-end"

Mansions Ripe for Short Sales?

The noise is getting louder every week. While entry level homes seem to have leveled off after a steep price drop, it looks like higher and homes are the next wave in foreclosures.

The Orange County Register reports that foreclosures in the high-value County has passed a record 8,800 for the month of September 2009. And the media blogs are of course all over the “bad news“!

homefeatureThe question is if these foreclosures are good short sale candidates for investors, or if we should let the banks deal with their losses and go the route of bank owned listings?

There are two criteria that make for great short sale deals.

One: The lenders’ motivation. On larger properties, lenders have to deal with larger loan amounts. A short sale on a larger loan removes a larger non-performing asset from their books. Lenders know that and act like it.

I was recently tracking a foreclosure on a $1.4MM loan. Unfortunately I got on the case too late and wasn’t able to prevent the trustee sale. However, the trustee told me that they had permission to take a bid of $765,000 at the sale. (Of course, the opening bid was advertised as $1,375,000, so nobody showed up…)

Two: Buyers willing and able to buy. Well, that’s a different story altogether. There are buyers with a lot of cash on the side, looking to put it into great deals. In the current lending environment there is no 100% financing for jumbo loan amounts. But that’s OK.

There is money for cash down payments and some buyers who can qualify. Most likely these sales will happen through buyer’s agents anyway, so it’s just a matter of how you structure your deals and setup your team.

On question that you have to keep a close eye on is what will happen with buyer confidence once a significant drop in prices is evident in areas that are now still hyped up as “recession proof”. You definitely don’t want to get in a position where you spin a lot of wheels on your short sales and can’t find a buyer in the end because your accepted offer is not good enough after the time it takes to get accepted.

Summary: Short sales for high-end properties and mansions are comming and are a very viable and lucrative foreclosure niche business. Leave a comment here if you want to hear more about our “Syndicated Short Sales” program! (And if you have any other questions or comments as well…)


Hi-End Fixer – Deal In Progress…

Dear Visitor:

…hopefully you’ve had a swell Memorial Day.
We had a little cook-out with the family, and
I just finished giving my three sons buzz cuts.

Way to go for Memorial Day family fun!

OK, I’ve decided to give you a little insight
in my wholesale business today as I want to
talk to you about a very special piece of
real estate.

It’s so special, that I’ve been following up
and prodding the seller for more than a year
now – talk about persistence…

The property is a 2500 sf house on a 20,000 sf
lot in one of the best parts of Arcadia, CA. The
specific location is North of Foothill Blvd,
between Baldwin and Santa Anita: a multi-million
Dollar neighborhood.

Zillow has the value of this property at about
$1,270,000. Newer, 2-story homes in the immediate
area are going for around $2,500,000.

As I mentioned before, this is a fixer. It has been
vacant for a few years and needs updating, but there
is no major damage to the house.

Now, here is my question: What would you do with
this property, and how much would you pay for it?

And I don’t mean theory, what I mean is: If you
are interested in that kind of property AND in
a position to close the deal, how much are you
willing to pay?

This deal is about to happen and I’m really eexcited
about it, but frankly, I wouldn’t want to promise the
seller a price that I can’t close on with a buyer who
is ready to go.

So I thought, why not ask you first…

Now, I know, you couldn’t possibly commit to a deal
like this without knowing more details, and of course
you would have to verify the information that I give
you here.

But suppose for a minute that my numbers are good
and the property is as exciting as I say. What’s
the MOST you’d pay? (I know it’s easy to come up
with a number that anyone would pay, but I don’t
think the seller will go that low.)

Big secret: The key to closing great deals is to
make them win/win, otherwise someone else will, and
you’ll miss out again. BTW: It’s not neccessary to
pay ALL CASH for this. The condition of the property
would probably allow conventional financing…

So, why don’t you leave a comment to this blog post
right now and let me know at what price range you’d be
interested in this deal?

I’ll talk to you soon. – Have a great day!

Thomas Bartke

P.S.: Join the new real estate community at
The Property Channel: http://ThePropertyChannel.tv

It’s free to join, share pictures, videos,
listings, deals, and anything else that gets
you excited about real estate!

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