|
So when it comes to choosing a strategy, your
choice will be dictated by the situation. Is there a lot of equity
to work with? Perhaps wholesaling is the best choice. Is there very
little equity to work with? And it's a pre-foreclosure too? Then a
short sale might be the only way to make the deal work.
On the other hand many investors choose a
strategy and then try to find a house that fits that strategy. For
example if you want to be a real estate wholesaler, you have to go
where the wholesale deals are.
This is what most professional wholesalers will
do. They don't limit themselves to a small geographic area. They
travel all over the metro area in order to find all the potential
wholesale deals that they reasonably can. They may limit their
territory somewhat, but generally they will cover a wide geographic
area to find only the wholesale deals.
Their focus will be on contacting owners of older
properties that are abandoned, or need lots of repairs. This is
because these properties generally represent the best opportunity
for lots of equity and a flexible seller.
If you are a wholesaler you don't want to waste
your time contacting owners of 2 year-old houses with no equity.
Wholesalers who do this are using the demographic
method. They are not looking in a particular location, they are
looking for a particular type of seller.
Demographic prospecting means using more of a
mass marketing technique, and targeting pre-foreclosures, health
issues, job transfers, probate, divorce, and the whole range of life
related events that can lead a person to become a motivated seller.
It is more common among professional investors to
search for deals demographically rather than limit themselves to
specific geographic locations. However this means you must have a
willingness to drive sufficient distances to check leads. I
personally have driven more than 200 miles in a single day, while
viewing as many as 12 properties. At that point I was specifically
looking for wholesale opportunities so I had to go where those
opportunities were.
Had I wanted to stay close to home, which is
located about 45 miles from downtown Atlanta, I would only pursue
strategies that work with pretty houses, such as lease options,
subject-to or buy and hold, because my geographic area is newer and
therefore it contains very few wholesaling opportunities.
It can take you some time to get a feel for the
types of deals that are most likely to be found in your area. If you
are in an older area mostly built prior to 1970, then chances are
very good that you would find more wholesaling opportunities.
If you live in a new area where most of the
construction is less than 10 years old you would find more
opportunities with less equity.
Retailing to owner occupants on a Lease with
Option to Buy, is my personal favorite strategy in suburban
neighborhoods that are predominately owner occupied. You can make
that deal work at 80% LTV, instead of the 65% LTV you need for
wholesaling.
So, one key to determining what strategy to use
in what area is to look at the age and condition of the properties
in that area and make offers that work for those properties.
In Atlanta, the outlying suburban areas are much
more likely to be ideal for retailing, or buy and hold strategies.
The in-town neighborhoods in the older parts of the city are better
suited to strategies like wholesaling, because older houses tend to
have more equity and need repairs.
Newer houses usually have less equity and
therefore are better candidates for creative cash flow strategies,
like "lease with option to buy", or "subject-to the existing
mortgage".
Creative cash flow strategies may require less
equity where Wholesaling strategies will require more equity in
order for the numbers to work.
Any strategy only makes sense if the numbers
work. Regardless of where you are located, and whether your market
is "hot" or "cold", the bottom line is -- what will cost you? and,
Can you sell it or rent it for more than it will cost?
Donna Robinson is a real estate investor, author,
and consultant located in Atlanta Georgia. You may read more of her
articles on her website at
http://www.realestateinvestorhelp.com/
or you may contact her by email at
drobinson@reihelp.com or call 404 542-9903. |