Pre-Foreclosure - How To Invest
By investing in properties "pre-foreclosure,"
you get ahead of the crowd and possibly get a great price. The
downside? You may have to walk a fine line between helping an
owner and taking advantage of him.
Pre-foreclosure is simply that time between
when the home owner gets the notice that he is in default on
the mortgage loan, and when he finally loses the home. This may
be where the most money is made on "foreclosures".
By going straight to the owner before the home is lost, you are
a step ahead of investors who wait for foreclosure sale or wait
until the bank owns the property.
Are you taking advantage of an owner when
you make a profit off of his financial troubles? Maybe. You might
also be helping him make the best out of a bad situation. You
really can do the latter and still make a good profit. Let's
look at some examples of how.
Examples of Pre-Foreclosure Deals
There are essentially two ways to help
an owner who is in default on his mortgage loan. The first is
to find a way to help him stay in his home. The second is to
help him salvage his credit and get something out of the home
he is losing.
Most owners who are seriously in default
will simply lose the home. They will also wreck their credit,
and lose most or all of their equity - unless an investor steps
in to help. This is why you can feel good about making a profit
from a home owner in distress.
Suppose you put an ad in the paper, something
to the effect of "Losing your home? Let's talk." You
get a call from a woman who is several months behind in her mortgage
payments, and is about to lose her home. With back payments,
her loan balance or payoff amount is about $95,000. The home
is probably worth $130,000.
You ask her about her financial situation,
to determine if she has the income to eventually get caught up
and make the payments on time. You ask her if she mainly wants
to stay in the home or if she just doesn't want a foreclosure
on her credit report. She says that she is ready to move. She
could try to sell the home to pay off the loan and have a bit
of cash left over, but there isn't time. She doesn't want the
bad credit, but she also doesn't want to lose all of her $35,000
in equity.
You agree with her assessment of the situation.
You explain that if she did try to list the property with a broker,
she would have a sales commission and other costs, which together
could be $10,000. She also would likely have to sell it for $120,000
to get it sold fast. In this best case scenario, she might get
to keep $15,000 of her equity. But it is risky, because if it
doesn't sell and close in a few weeks she loses everything.
You tell her that you can buy the home
for $107,000 and pay all the closing costs. This will leave her
with $12,000 and no foreclosure on her credit report, so she
may be able to borrow again for a home when she is ready. She
says no. You explain that after the costs of buying and selling
the home, you will make $10,000, and though you understand she
is losing some equity, you just don't do deals for less than
$10,000 profit. You wish her the best.
Soon she calls back and accepts your offer
rather than lose her home and equity and credit rating. You have
to have a line of credit ready or cash in the bank for deals
like this, because time is of the essence. You also have to treat
people well. In the example above, you might even offer another
$500 cash if the house is left clean and ready to sell.
Look at the numbers, paying particular
attention to the expenses you'll have in buying and selling a
property. You can see that there has to be a fair amount of equity
in a property to be able to help the owner and help yourself.
Verify exactly what the payoff amount on the loan is before you
sign any contract. Owners are often underestimating.
Other Pre-Foreclosure Examples
A friend of mine liked to help people stay
in their homes when the were in default on their loan. He felt
this was easier and more profitable. There are several ways to
do this.
One obvious way, if there is a lot of equity in a property, is
to put a second mortgage on it in exchange for making up the
back payments. Sometimes a family has trouble that really is
temporary, and once caught up on their mortgage payments, they
will be able to pay them on time again, along with a payment
to you.
Suppose the home is worth $185,000, and
they owe $115,000 on it. They need $4,000 to catch up back payments
and no longer be in default. A loan fee of $1,000 and interest
at 5% higher than current mortgage rates might make for a decent
return on your investment. A second mortgage on a property with
so much equity makes it a safe investment.
Another way to help owners stay in their
homes is to buy the home and rent it back to them. They get to
avoid having a foreclosure on their credit report, maybe get
a little cash, and they don't have to move. You should of course,
have positive cash flow and a good profit if you should need
to evict them and sell the home.
You could also make it a lease-option deal.
In this way, if the previous owner gets into a better financial
situation, he can buy his home back. Of course the purchase price
will be high enough to give you a good profit.
If you have a lot of cash to invest, you
can buy the home and sell it back to the owner on payments. Of
course you will have to sell it for at least $10,000 more than
you bought it for, and you will have to have charge high interest.
If this is likely to cause some bad feelings for the person who
will be living in your investment, you may want to consider another
way.
You could provide the cash for him to refinance
and so keep the home. Since you may have to foreclose on the
loan, so you want to do this only when there is a lot of equity.
Charge high interest and high loans fees (perhaps rolled into
the loan), and make it a balloon loan, with the balance due in
three or five years. Explain that you do this for the profit,
but it at least gives the owner a chance to keep his home, and
he can refinance at better rates when he is doing better financially.
A Little Trick
Here is a a little trick used by an investor
I met in Arizona. A holder of second mortgage in default has
the right to foreclose and take the property. But in Arizona
at that time (and possibly in other states - but ask an attorney),
the law also said that if the holder of a second mortgage foreclosed
on a property, he had the right to assume the first mortgage
loan - without qualifying, and regardless of whether it was normally
an assumable loan.
This investor "helped" people
facing foreclosure, using this little known law. For example,
suppose there is house that would make a nice little rental property.
The owners owe $60,000, and it might be worth $80,000, but they
are about to lose it. The payments and interest rate on the loan
are lower than what is currently available.
This investor would convince the owners
that rather than them losing everything, he would give them the
$2,500 necessary to make up the back payments, and also $10,000
cash to walk away. Actually he loaned them the total of $12,500,
and put a second mortgage on the property. But they were instructed
to never pay on the loan. He made the terms outrageous enough
that they weren't inclined to anyhow.
In this way after they missed their first
payment, he could start the foreclosure process. Once he had
foreclosed, under the law he could assume that first mortgage
with its excellent terms. Now he had a nice rental that would
cash flow, and with some built-in equity from the start. The
previous owners got their cash, and perhaps a big black mark
on their credit report from the foreclosure.
Pre-foreclosure investing can get very
creative. These few examples are just a sampling of ways it has
been done.
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