Hard Money Profits
Make hard money loans and you get a high
rate of return on your cash. You have to do it properly to be
safe, of course. You also need a lot of money to invest to do
this.
What are "hard money" loans?
They are short-term loans (usually 24 months or less) made to
real estate investors, usually so they can purchase and rehab
a property. There is often a loan fee of as much as five percent
or more of the loan amount, and up to fifteen percent or more
annual interest. Why do they want these loans?
Hard money means speed and simplicity.
When using hard money lenders, an investor can tell a seller
"I can close for cash in a week." That gets the seller's
attention, especially if he has had offers that have fallen through
due to financing contingencies.
Hard Money - How It Works
An investor can usually borrow 65% to 70%
of the property value, but not just the current value. As a hard
money lender, you'll loan money based on the ARV, or "after
repair value" (as determined by your appraiser). You'll
look at the property, more than credit scores, another reason
investors will come to you. Let's look at an example.
An investor finds a beat-up house that
he can buy for $105,000. He has a plan that when complete will
bring it up to a market value of $182,000. He figures it will
take a month to complete, and two months more to sell it. He
comes to you, and you agree that his projections seem reasonable.
Your appraiser estimates a $186,000 market value when the project
is done.
You agree to loan him 65% of the ARV, which
amounts to $120,250. The excess beyond the $105,000 purchase
price (about $15,000) goes into an escrow account, to be doled
out as the repairs begin. Notice that if this investor keeps
his costs down, he might do this whole project without any of
his own cash invested.
The 4% loan fee you charge is $4,810, and
is added to the loan balance, so the investor owes you a total
of $125,060. You are charging him 15% interest, and he can pay
just the interest due each month, but the whole balance is due
within one year. If it takes longer than that and you have confidence
in his plan, you might do another loan after that.
For the sake of our example, we'll suppose
that it takes Two months to finish the house, and two months
to sell it. The investor gets $181,000 for it. He paid $105,000,
and he made a profit of $31,000 after a total of $45,000 for
all of his expenses. he is happy. Now let's look at what part
of those "expenses" went to you.
You had the buyer pay for the appraisal
and any other costs of closing the loan, so your total investment
was $120,250. This was repaid when the house sold, along with
the loan fee of $4,810. You also collected four months of interest
on the whole balance of $125,060 (the loan and the fee that was
also financed), which totals $6253. Your total profit then was
$11,063 on an four-month investment of $120,250. That's an annual
rate of return of 27.6%. How many banks make that on their loans?
Does that seem like a lot for the investor
to pay? Well it is, but the interest rate and other fees are
irrelevant if they allow you to make a good profit. remember
that he made $31,000 after paying those expenses. In any case
it makes sense that hard money lenders get paid well to take
risks that banks won't take. If he screwed up the project, stopped
paying, and you had to foreclose, you might be selling a half-finished
house for just enough to get your money back.
Suppose you keep most of your money
out there in these kinds of loans. Since it isn't all invested
all the time, and is making only 5% in the bank, you average
just an 18% return. What does that do to a $200,000 investment
portfolio in 12 years? It makes it into 1.6 million dollars.
You can see why investors with cash make hard money loans.
Copyright Steve Gillman. This article was an excerpt from 69 Ways To Make
Money In Real Estate. Want to know the other 68 ways? Visit http://www.99reports.com/make-money-in-real-estate.html