Archive for May, 2008

Motivated Sellers Star in Celebrity Real Estate News

Friday, May 30th, 2008

As housing values plunge and mortgage rates reach for the sky, the stars are among the droves of motivated sellers seeking to cut their losses and downsize. Here are some of the most interesting tales of celebrity home depreciation scraped from the annals of the World Wide Web to help us distort our comprehension of the term “distressed homeowner.”

  • Trump Real Estate Investing 101.1
    Self-professed real estate tycoon Donald Trump has ended his two-year quest to sell to sell his Palm Beach, Fla. home. The property, known as Maison de L’Amitie, lingered on the market with its $125 million price tag. So, the Don slashed the price by $25 million in March to get the property off his books. Forbes characterized the transaction as “the largest discount ever made for a single residence not involved in a bankruptcy proceedings.”
  • Avril Lavigne’s Home Price: Too Much to Ask?
    Twenty-something Canadian pop singer Avril Lavigne recently took a million dollar dip in home’s price rather than her pool. She recently reduced her Beverly Hills, Calif. area home listing price from $6.9 to $5.8 million.
  • Bad Real Estate Deal Wrecks Rock Star’s Nervous System
    Guns N’ Roses and Velvet Revolver ax man Slash bought a San Fernando Valley, Calif. home a couple of years ago for $6.2 million and later sold it for $5.7 million. Last year, he sued the Sotheby’s real estate agent he used to buy the home. Shash claims that the agent said the home was on a private street (it’s not) and the square footage in the listing turned out to be inaccurate. According to the $1 million suit filed last year, the house deal caused the rocker and his family “grief, shame, humiliation, embarrassment, anger, worry, disappointment, nervousness, stomach disorders, backaches, loss of appetite and inability to concentrate on work.” No word yet on how that one played in court.
  • No Toast to Honor Cheers Star’s Malibu Colony Real Estate Investment
    After a year on the market with no buyers, Ted Danson and his wife, actress Mary Steenburgen recently sold their remodeled Cape Cod style Malibu, Calif. home. Though it was originally listed for $18 million, the home’s last listing price before it sold was $16.75 million.
  • Stone’s Basic Instincts Don’t Include Savvy Real Estate Investing
    Actress Sharon Stone reportedly bought her prestigious California estate on Beverly Drive in 2006 for $11 million. Soon after buying the house she’s never lived in, she slapped it with a $12.5 million list price. The home, once occupied by architect Joseph Ambrose, has languished on and off the market, taking substantial price hits ever since. Stone recently dropped the listing price to $10 million and rumor has it that she’s also extended an invitation to renters who can swallow the $58,000 per month lease price.
  • From Best Seller to Motivated Seller
    After several months on the market and some division tweaks, Alexandra Sheldon, widow of best-selling author, creator and screenwriter Sidney Sheldon, has finally sold one of the properties that comprise her massive Palm Springs, Calif. estate. Sheldon cut the price of three other homes on the property by 30 percent hoping to woo buyers. It appears that Sheldon also divided the estate’s several homes and guest houses into separate properties to maximize her profits and make the real estate investment more accessible to buyers. Perhaps she was the inspiration behind her husband’s 1960s TV smash hit “I Dream of Jeannie.” Sheldon’s listing agent calls her a “motivated seller.”
  • PCH Prize Patrol, Buyers Pass on McMahon Mansion
    Johnny Carson’s former side-kick and Star Search host Ed McMahon, first listed his expansive Beverly Hills estate in 2006 for $7.7 million. As if living in a house that’s been on the market for two years weren’t adequate torture, McMahon also is recovering from a broken neck he suffered there last year. Since his estate has been on the market, McMahon, also known for his remarkable Publisher’s Clearinghouse Sweepstakes TV ads, has dropped the price three times to $5.7 million. Maybe some lucky winner will buy him out.

Freddie Mac Reports Mortgage Rates Climbing amid Falling Home Values

Thursday, May 29th, 2008

Long-term mortgage Interest rates rose this week to their highest levels since March, likely triggered by rising inflation, high gas prices, and dwindling consumer confidence. At the same time, home values are shrinking in every region of the United States. Can we call this a recession yet?

Mortgage Rates Take a Hike
Currently, the national average interest rate for 30-year, fixed-rate mortgages is up to 6.08 percent this week, up from 5.98 percent last week, This time last year, mortgage financing company Freddie Mac says it was 6.42 percent.

Shouldn’t this be moving the market? Not necessarily, says Freddie. As mortgage rates rise, home values continue to fall. More folks likely will be watching this selling season than the World Series.

Q1 Home Values Fizzle in Most States, All Regions
The value of U.S. homes fell 10.4 percent in the first quarter, says Freddie Mac, marking fueling the most dramatic annual dive since 1971. In the past year, Freddie’s Conventional Mortgage Home Price Index averaged 4.4 percent, the most remarkable decline in 39 years.

Freddie Mac data show that 46 states reported price drops in Q1, and 29 states measured drops over the same period last year. Only Montana, North Dakota, South Carolina and Wyoming reported price gains, however moderate, for Q1.

According to Freddie Mac’s numbers, based on the Conventional Mortgage Home Price Index Classic Series, no region in the U.S. is totally immune to the price drops that sometimes look like economic chronic wasting disease. But depending on your real estate investment strategy, there are some bright spots if you look at the big picture. Again, the real estate markets that didn’t pump-up the real estate bubble, look much more stable these days.

Regional Housing Trends
Here are are some regional housing value numbers crunched in Freddie Mac’s latest report:

West South Central Division

  • Includes: Arkansas, Louisiana, Oklahoma and Texas;
  • Current values reported for Q1: down 0.5 percent (-1.9 percent, annualized);
  • Over the past year: home values rose 1.6 percent;
  • Over the past five years, home values climbed 26.8 percent.

Middle Atlantic Division

  • Includes: New Jersey, New York and Pennsylvania;
  • Current values reported for Q1: down 1.1 percent (-4.1 percent, annualized);
  • Over the past year: home values dropped 0.2 percent;
  • Over the past five years: home values climbed 44.3 percent.

East South Central Division

  • Includes: Alabama, Kentucky, Mississippi and Tennessee
  • Current values reported for Q1: down 1.1 percent (-4.3 percent, annualized);
  • Over the past year: home values increased 0.3 percent;
  • Over the past five years: home values climbed 26.6 percent.

East North Central Division

  • Includes: Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, Ohio and Wisconsin
  • Current values reported for Q1: dropped 1.5 percent (-5.9 percent, annualized);
  • Over the past year: home values dropped 3.8 percent;
  • Over the past five years: home values climbed 9.2 percent.

Mountain Division

  • Includes: Arizona, Colorado, Idaho, Montana, New Mexico, Nevada, Utah and Wyoming;
  • Current values reported for Q1: dropped 1.5 percent (-5.9 percent, annualized);
  • Over the past year: home values dropped 3.3 percent;
  • Over the past five years: home values climbed 44.0 percent.

West North Central Division

  • Includes: Iowa, Kansas, Minnesota, Missouri, North Dakota, Nebraska and South Dakota
  • Current values reported for Q1: dropped 2.2 percent (-8.6 percent, annualized);
  • Over the past year: home values dropped 2.3 percent;
  • Over the past five years: home values climbed 16.3 percent.

South Atlantic Division

  • Includes: Washington D.C., Delaware, Florida, Georgia, Maryland, North Carolina, South Carolina, Virginia and West Virginia
  • Current values reported for Q1: dropped 2.6 percent (-10.1 percent, annualized);
  • Over the past year: home values dropped 4.4 percent;
  • Over the past five years: home values climbed 37.8 percent.

New England Division

  • Includes: Connecticut, Massachusetts, Maine, New Hampshire, Rhode Island and Vermont;
  • Current values reported for Q1: dropped 2.9 percent (-11.0 percent, annualized);
  • Over the past year: home values dropped 4.0 percent;
  • Over the past five years: home values climbed 22.2 percent.

Pacific Division

  • Includes: Alaska, California, Hawaii, Oregon and Washington
  • Current values reported for Q1: dropped 6.9 percent (-24.8 percent, annualized);
  • Over the past year: home values dropped 12.4 percent;
  • Over the past five years: home values climbed 40.1 percent.

WWW Ruled on NAR’s MLS Data Monopoly Suit Ages Ago

Wednesday, May 28th, 2008

A three-year standoff between the U.S. Justice Department (DOJ) and the National Association of Realtors (NAR) over the association’s attempts to virtually monopolize its multiple listing service (MLS) data is one legal hurdle away from resolution. Both litigants have consented to a settlement agreement just weeks before the case was slated for the Federal docket in Chicago.

DOJ launched its anti-trust suit against NAR in 2005, over anti-competitive policies revolving around NAR’s proprietary MLS database listings of real estate properties for sale. Keeping the listings under wraps, the Fed said, keeps consumers’ costs artificially high and inhibits competition among traditional and online brokers for home and condominium sales.

WWW Infoscape Changed while NAR Battled DOJ Anti-Trust Charges
In its lawsuit, DOJ aimed to open access to the data beyond NAR’s broker network to include consumers, data aggregators and property discounters who don’t meet state-mandated minimum requirements for providing real estate services to sellers.

While DOJ and NAR have been fighting it out, Web 2.0 technologies offering free on-line property information have transformed the real estate business and quietly built a mighty market presence that imperils the relevance of the traditional real estate business model. They also bring into question the future of the 6 percent broker commission.

Innovation, Free Online Data Jeopardize NAR’s Proprietary Model
By democratizing real estate data, Web sites such as Redfin, Trulia and Zillow have shattered NAR’s MLS-intrinsic business model and showed online real estate shoppers a new and easier way to do business: A way that doesn’t require buyers to sit in the back seat of a broker’s car, or sellers to trust that their broker always has their best interests at heart.

Online Brokers Win Right to Distribute Electronic Tear Sheets
NAR has been widely criticized for allowing brokers to block their listings from being displayed on Web sites that offer discounted commissions or standard broker fees on real estate transactions. In the settlement with DOJ, NAR agreed to adopt policies that don’t discriminate against on-line real estate brokers. Specifically, the agreement requires that online brokers be able to provide the same information online that traditional brokers offer to folks who visit their offices.

Pending final court approval, a process likely to take three months or more, the settlement agreement could provide consumers with easier access to MLS data, which could enhance their market research and help them save money on real estate purchases. It also could alter some current trends in how MLS data are obtained and used in the virtual real estate marketplace.

The changes NAR agreed to likely won’t have a dramatic impact on the real estate marketplace as a whole, but it might affect those who have capitalized on NAR’s ongoing stabs at keeping MLS data secret.

Realty Times predicts that the following practices are likely to change dramatically when the settlement agreement is finalized:

  • Lead generation services such as Lending Tree may have to stop filtering MLS data through broker shell companies.
  • Data mining companies such as Home Buyers Marketing (HBM2.com) may have to stop reselling MLS data for profit.
  • More open access to MLS data could detract from the credibility of values attached to property listings in real estate communities such as Zillow.

Registration Requirement Reinstated for MLS Data
Also as a result of the settlement agreement, NAR says it will reinstate an updated version of its virtual office Web (VOW) policy, and resume requiring customers to register before they can search MLS home listings online. NAR says it rescinded that policy in 2005, when its provisions were first challenged by DOJ.

Housing Slump Poses Real Estate Investing Opportunities

Tuesday, May 27th, 2008

Nationwide, single-family home prices in March dropped 14.1 percent from last year. It was the sharpest decline recorded since Standard and Poors began tracking the data in their Case-Shiller index some 20 years ago. What does this tell seasoned real estate entrepreneurs about future investment strategies? Now’s the time to start crunching some numbers.

Creative real estate veteran Ken Wade believes that there is nothing truly unusual about today’s housing market: There’s no crash, and the media focus on handful of markets is having a devastating impact on market psychology and prices. In reality, what we’re experiencing as real estate entrepreneurs, is the natural cycle that moves the market.

Since most U.S. housing markets were not subject to the price surges that are commonly associated with the real estate “boom,” Ken says, they’re holding steady during the “bust.”

Ken is the Harvard-educated numbers cruncher behind the Housing Alerts Total Market Master system for research-based real estate investing. He has spent much of his career tracking local real estate market trends and reaping the profits from his investments. Ken estimates that he’s done $100,000,000 in real estate deals over the past 30 years.

With Ken’s Total Market Master program and tools, real estate entrepreneurs can base their business decisions on the same types of proprietary data that the banks and major players use. Only with this system, the data are specifically tailored to fit the needs of an array of real estate entrepreneurs, regardless of investment strategy, experience or style.

To learn more about how Ken translates the “buy low, sell high” adage into hard science and cold cash, check out my review of the Housing Alerts Total Market Master system in the Resources section of GaryBoomershine.com.

Avoid Real Estate Investing Burnout with Ferriss’ 4HWW

Monday, May 26th, 2008

Make your real estate investment career meltdown the first day of the rest of you life with a new, optimized lifestyle design (LD) and bestselling author Tim Ferriss’ entrepreneurial manifesto, “The Four-Hour Workweek: How to Escape 9–5, Live Anywhere, and Join the New Rich” (4HWW).

Before taking his now-famous pen to paper, Ferriss, a Princeton University graduate, drove himself — and his business — into the ground with over-work and precious time squandered on tasks that actually kept him from generating wealth and attaining his goals.

Pursue your Dreams and Build Wealth
In this monumental work, Ferriss urges people to shed the traditional expectations that wedge us into cubicles and create our dream lifestyles by following his formula for achieving personal freedom and financial wealth.

In 4HWW, readers learn how to make this liberating transition through executing the four steps of LD, Ferriss’ efficiency-optimized approach to maximizing effectiveness in your work and creating more fearless joy in life. Not only is balance between the two possible, Ferriss tells us how to increase our profits while we’re at it.

In 4HWW, Ferriss provides a recipe for LD that revolves around the simple mnemonic: DEAL. Each letter represents a transcendent step to attaining personal freedom and financial wealth:

Ferriss’ Four Steps of Lifestyle Design

  1. Definition: Requires you to determine what you want, conquer fears, look past society’s “expectations,” and estimate the costs of your desires. This is about beating the game rather than playing the game and emphasizing your strengths instead of trying to change your weaknesses. Here, the pursuit of happiness is the pursuit of excitement.
  2. Elimination: This section begs readers to forget about time management and embrace the possibility that you can accomplish more by doing less. When you limit tasks and work time, you’re free to effectively focus on completing the most important tasks in less time, Ferriss says. More time economy comes, he adds, by eliminating time wasted by constantly checking email and using personal electronics, When you do this, you’ll defeat procrastination and be free to focus on the minority of tasks that bring the greatest results.
  3. Automation: Ferriss defines efficiency and encourages that it be abandoned and replaced with true effectiveness. In this section, he discusses how to maximize overall effectiveness by outsourcing low-end tasks. This can free up valuable time for entrepreneurs to build businesses that provide a sustainable, automatic sources of income. Using the right process models, and effective marketing practices, Ferriss insists that we can maximize income and best manage our businesses through absence.
  4. Liberation: When you’ve successfully defined your desires, eliminated unnecessary tasks, automated and outsourced your life, Ferriss says that liberation will manifest itself in many ways and you’ll be ready to join the ranks of the New Rich.

To learn more about how 4HWW and Ferriss’ formula for LD can help you be a better entrepreneur in your real estate investment business, be sure to check out my review, now posted in GaryBoomershine.com’s Resources section.

California Foreclosures: Five Stories from the Twilight Zone

Friday, May 23rd, 2008

California foreclosures and the mortgage meltdown have been making international news headlines for some time. But this month, news  from the Golden State went from bad, to the Twilight Zone.

Much like the classic TV show, first made popular in the 1950s due in large part to host Rod Serling’s melodramatic gravitas, California’s housing market begs for a prelude to prepare readers for the truly bizarre. As Serling said: “There is a fifth dimension beyond that which is known to man,” He might as well been introducing late-breaking developments in California’s foreclosure crisis.

Here are the five most most startling, weird and ugly foreclosure stories to come out of California so far this month.

  1. California REO Foreclosures Selling like Ipods
    This month, the LA Times reported that in April, California home auctions sold nearly 23,000 foreclosure properties at courthouses throughout the state. That’s is a 44 percent jump from the number of REO auctions reported for the state in March. That’s 1,000 homes sold at auction each business day for an entire month.
  2. IRS Tax Delinquency, Lies and the Lawmaker
    Although she denied it earlier this week in a written statement, public records show that California Congresswoman Laura Richardson’s Sacramento house was sold via foreclosure auction on May 7. When she bought the 1,600 square-foot home in 2007, she paid more than $535,000. By the time it sold at auction, she owed $600,000 in unpaid loans and fees, including nearly $9,000 in property taxes, reports Capitol Weekly.
  3. Countrywide Exec’s Email Debacle
    When an e-mail sent by a distressed homeowner inadvertently landed in his in box, Countrywide Financial Chairman Angelo Mozilo mistook the “reply” button for the “forward” button and sent his caustic response directly to the sender. The LA Times reports that not only was he unsympathetic in his response, he characterized the online foreclosure counseling service that encouraged the homeowner to contact his lender as “unbelievable” and “disgusting.” Mozilo has been under fire for cashing out while Countrywide, and the rest of the mortgage industry was tanking. In 2006, Mozilo was paid nearly $50 million in compensation; between 2006 and 2007, he cashed in stock options then valued at $140 million.
  4. Never Neverland Again?
    Mid-month, entertainer Michael Jackson averted the scheduled foreclosure sale of his 2,700 acre Encino Neverland Ranch when his $23.5 million loan was purchased by real estate investment giant Colony Capital, according to Reuters.com.
  5. REO Lender Takes the Bat to Canseco’s Portfolio
    At the beginning of this month, news got out that baseball great Jose Canseco let his 7,300 square-foot Encino home slide into foreclosure. He bought it in 2005 for $2.8 million, and when foreclosure struck, the property already had an IRS lien from a judgement levied against Canseco for starting a fight that leveled a Miami night club several years ago. This week, the Chicago Tribune reported that Canseco, who blames his two divorces for his financial woes, intends to generate wealth in his new career as a celebrity boxer.

Record Oil Prices Spark Real Estate Growth in some States

Thursday, May 22nd, 2008

Black gold is making real estate investment king in states that produce energy by fueling prices in dozens of local U.S. housing markets.

Today, the price of crude oil topped $135 per barrel, up from $65 this time last year, and experts are predicting that the price is likely to reach $200 before too long. While difficult for most of the world to swallow, these prices are producing a boom in some U.S. housing markets, while others languish in an ongoing struggle for economic survival.

Because soaring oil prices result in higher consumer costs for gas, energy bills and food, local economies in many housing markets still reeling from the foreclosure epidemic are suffering from lower tax revenues and other harsh realities. Once-thriving infrastructures appear to be fizzling out in many of the markets that saw the greatest gains during the housing boom.

Give and Take
At the same time, high fuel costs are driving hot housing markets in many energy-producing states. In these real estate markets, high gas prices are stimulating job growth, boosting personal income, contributing to a healthy tax base and rising demands for housing.

The Wall Street Journal reports that five states producing oil, gas and other fossil fuel commodities are beating April’s national unemployment rate of 5 percent and personal income growth of 5.9 percent by significant margins. Here are the numbers from some of the hottest energy producing states for the sake of comparison to the overall national average:

Montana

  • Unemployment rate: 3.8 percent;
  • Personal income growth: 6.6 percent.

North Dakota

  • Unemployment rate: 3.1 percent;
  • Personal income growth: 6.4 percent.

Oklahoma

  • Unemployment rate: 3.2 percent;
  • Personal income growth: 7.0 percent.

Texas

  • Unemployment rate: 4.1 percent;
  • Personal income growth: 7.4 percent.

Wyoming

  • Unemployment rate: 2.6 percent;
  • Personal income growth: 6.8 percent.

Since many of these states never experienced the real estate price surges that came with the housing boom, they’re not being ravaged hit by the bust. This may factor significantly into long-term real estate investment stability as the overall U.S. economy struggles to overcome recession, lost revenues and other related economic pangs.

Shelter from Recession’s Storm
Because energy producing states currently are boasting more robust tax revenues, public infrastructures are thriving: schools, hospitals parks and law enforcement are well-funded, roads are better maintained and additional funding is available for the improvements that contribute greatly to property value increases.

These factors all work together to improve the quality-of-life assets that attract qualified buyers for home relocation and up-sizing. When such conditions are in place, they also stimulate the service industry and retail sectors, prompting them to expand their presence, poised to join the party.

Nature Takes her Course
In energy booming states, especially those that smartly diversified their economies during former energy market declines to minimize their economic dependance on oil prices, these indicators offer real estate entrepreneurs broader investment options than many other markets. Currently, they’re generating demand for many different types of housing: rental properties, low-income housing, single family homes and retirement communities, to name a few. When favorable market conditions spark demand, the nature of capitalism takes its course.

Boom and Bust Economy
In the past, real estate markets in energy-producing states were vulnerable to the boom and bust economic cycle. When energy prices would surge, local economies would quickly grow, only to be subjected to painful busts when energy prices inevitably declined. Today however, analysts are saying that we may never again see dramatic declines in oil prices. So as long as the supplies hold out, and local economies strike a healthy balance, these markets look like promising investment opportunities. Savvy real estate entrepreneurs may want to take a look at what some of the up-and-coming markets in energy producing states have to offer their portfolios.

New Law, REO Pro to Aid Pets Abandoned in Foreclosures

Wednesday, May 21st, 2008

As the number of foreclosed homes continues to skyrocket in many real estate markets, an increasing number of pets are being abandoned by families who are forced to vacate their homes and rental properties. Since the mortgage meltdown began, animal shelters in areas with high instances of distressed properties have been reporting over-crowding, and neighbors complaining about an influx of stray animals roaming streets and alleyways.

Although abandoning animals is illegal, people leaving distressed properties, such as those in foreclosure, often move to locations that don’t allow pets or they find their finances are too strained to continue caring for their pets. Whatever the reason for abandonment, pets often are the helpless victims of their owners’ bad decisions, and the law offers them few meaningful protections.

Where Helping Hands Are Tied
Currently, bank employees, property inspectors and others who enter abandoned homes usually are advised to leave property, including pets, untouched until the foreclosure is complete either for legal reasons, or because because the real estate owned (REO) lenders don’t want responsibility for the animals.

In most states, pets are defined as personal property under the law. Often with foreclosure, property remaining after the home is vacated by distressed homeowners is subject to seizure by the lender. In some states, the law fails to provide for personal property forfeiture until a designated time has elapsed in accordance with the terms of the foreclosure. So, under prevailing laws in many states, REO lenders and others are prevented from removing the pets, even if they would like to help. This is where animals can really fall through the cracks.

Abandoned Homes and Neglected Responsibilities
When people such as property inspectors, REO lender representatives, real estate agents and brokers are allowed to enter an abandoned house, they often encounter the rubble of deliberate destruction. Widespread instances of abandonment-related animal abuse and animal neglect have garnered a great deal of media attention.

The problem is so bad, that even Business Week reports that increasing number of these folks are discovering dogs tied up backyards, cats and turtles in garages, and rabbits and lizards left in children’s bedrooms. Many cruel and unscrupulous homeowners have left forsaken dogs and cats behind inside their homes, who have created unmeasured property damages in the process of their truly horrific demise.

California Lawmakers Tackle the Problem
A new law under consideration in California seeks to make it easier for these pets to get the help they need. It also may effect real estate investors who buy properties where pets have been left behind. The bill, A.B. 2949, as it is currently written, would require anyone who encounters an abandoned animal in a property that has been vacated through lease termination or property foreclosure, to immediately contact animal control officials.

The bill recently made its way through the California House unopposed, and it currently is mid-way through the Senate’s deliberation process. Although the bill has a few more legislative hurdles to clear before it becomes law, it raises some issues that many of us in the REI community might like to address in our business practices.

REO Expert Makes a Difference
Last month, Default Servicing News wrote a great story about Integrated Mortgage Solutions President Cheryl Lang, who has been so touched by the effects of pet neglect and abandonment she’s seen working in the mortgage industry, that she’s launched a non-profit Internet forum she hopes will affect change in how the system handles abandoned pets.

No Paws Left Behind is Lang’s Web site that allows pet owners facing foreclosure in different jurisdictions to log on, type in a zip code, and find the nearest animal shelters in the area. It also provides resources for real estate professionals who encounter abandoned pets in the course of their daily business.

Lang’s efforts began with a dog that was abandoned in a Florida pre-foreclosure her group was servicing. Since there was no animal control in the rural area where she was working, Lang contacted the police. They called the Miami Humane Society, who couldn’t reach the area for five days. Lang and her staff spent the week feeding the dog and making sure he had fresh water. In the meantime, she reports that authorities visited the property several times only to post code violations because the dog had been abandoned.

Look for the Signs
Lang advises real estate professionals to be vigilant for signs of abandoned pets when dealing with distressed properties that have been vacated. Listen for animal sounds coming from the house. Even though you may not be permitted to enter, you can contact the appropriate authorities, including the Humane Society, Animal Control or the police.

Traditionally, unless the animal shows immediate signs of distress, local authorities will post notes on the door to notify the pet owner that he or she is legally bound to care for the pet. Eventually, local authorities will move the pet to a new home or shelter. Because this process too often doesn’t work, Lang’s No Paws Left Behind Web site contains a petition geared to change the legal process from the Federal level to protect the pets.

Do the Right Thing
More distressed homeowners and occupants in transition likely would surrender their pets to animal welfare agencies that rescue pets, if they only knew where to turn. By identifying potential problems before pets are abandoned on your properties, you’re not only protecting your assets, in many instances, you may be saving a life.

Although real estate investors are generally not required by law to take any action to help abandoned pets, many of us want to help when we can because we believe it is the right thing to do. Here are some steps you can take as a real estate investor that may help you to avoid the problems and heartache you’re likely to encounter if you discover abandoned pets on your property:

Seven Ways REI Professionals Can Help Save Pet from Abandonment

1. If you you’re working with distressed homeowners or dealing moving tenants out of a property, ask if they have made plans for their pets.
2. Identify animal welfare organizations and animal control contacts in your area, and keep the contact information on hand.
3. If you know that the occupants are looking for rental properties, suggest they check with the Humane Society or local shelter for pet-friendly rental listings, or advise them to check out Web sites like PeopleWithPets.com, or HomeWithPets.com.
4. Distribute animal adoption literature, or Web resources like No Paws Left Behind whenever suspect it might be useful.
5. After the owners or tenants have moved, ask neighbors if the former occupants had pets. Check to make sure no pets were left behind.
6. Ask people you may have visiting the property to keep an eye out for abandoned pets.
7. Call your local Animal Control, the American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals (ASPCA), the Humane Society or other shelter for help with rescuing abandoned pets.

Have you encountered abandoned pets in any of your properties? How did you handle it? Please drop us a line and tell us about your experiences. Feel free to share any ideas you think could help other real estate investors who run into the same problem.

Six Tips to Bolster Your Fix and Flip ROI

Tuesday, May 20th, 2008

Rehabbing your real estate investment property for a quick flip in today’s changing markets is a totally different game than it was during the housing boom. Nationwide, returns on major home-improvement projects are fetching only 70 cents on the dollar. That’s down from 80 cents in 2004, and likely to drop even lover in the next couple of years. Remodeling activity peaked in 2006 and started slowing last year. It is expected to fall 4.8% this year, according to a report by the Harvard Joint Center for Housing Studies released last month.

The Wall Street Journal reports that despite slumping home values, construction prices have soared — due in large part to rising fuel costs and the credit crunch. That means rehabbing a kitchen or bathroom will cost more, even as it contributes less to the home resale value. Minor fixes are the the most cost-effective and on-trend strategies to entice buyers without breaking the bank. In many markets, the following fast and cheap fix-ups are your best bet for cashing in on your flip:

  1. Sometimes a deep cleaning packs the punch of a remodel;
  2. Replacing old siding and painting trims provides a low-cost fresh look;
  3. Changing out old light switch plates and electrical outlet covers can make old walls appear new again;
  4. New hardware on drawers and cabinets adds a unified style element that buyers love;
  5. Cleaning up the grounds and minor landscaping, including a few well-placed, drought-tolerant plants, can make a property look like it is loved with little maintenance; and
  6. Installing energy-efficient windows provides great ROI in virtually every market.

An awesome, free resource to track which fix-ups will maximize your rehabbing return on investment (ROI), Remodeling magazine has a free online database that helps you do your homework before the bills start rolling in. Here, you can check out which remodeling trends pay-off most and quickly access relevant U.S. Census data at the regional, state and extended metropolitan local levels. This is a useful and easy-to-use tool for investors who are rehabbing flips in distant and home markets.

Lawmakers Target Real Estate Investors for Regulation

Monday, May 19th, 2008

An escalating trend of state legislatures regulating real estate investors who work as foreclosure consultants to help homeowners stave off foreclosure is taking many in our industry by storm.

Distressed Properties and Investors
In attempts to protect desperate homeowners, lawmakers have mandated consumer protections and fines for investors who violate the law. In many instances, these ongoing attempts to restrict real estate investors’ business practices are redefining the distressed property playing field .

With a growing number of real estate entrepreneurs using the Internet and other electronic resources to invest in markets outside of their home states, those who are using short sale, pre-foreclosure, and similar types of transaction strategies to invest in distressed properties should be vigilant in monitoring changes in state laws.

States Collecting Fines and Penalties
Last year, the National Conference of State Legislatures (NCSL) reported that a dozen states had taken steps to actively regulate foreclosure transactions. These states include California, Colorado, Georgia, Illinois, Indiana, Maryland, Minnesota, Missouri, Nevada, New Hampshire, New York and Rhode Island.

This year, more states have either considered or passed new laws geared to protect the interests of distressed homeowners and  penalize real estate investors who fail to comply with the law. These laws impose greater regulation on investors than some of the earlier legislation enacted in other states.

Lawmakers in Oregon and Washington have expanded their regulatory scopes by passing comprehensive laws that regulate lending practices and place restrictions on  property transaction as well as the contract between  investors (or real estate agents) and the sellers.

More Regulation Ahead
According to the National Association of Responsible Home Rebuilders and Investors (NARHRI), a Washington D.C.-based lobbying group for residential real estate investors, recent scrutiny of the industry by lawmakers and other policymakers is setting the stage for broader regulation in the future.

Because many states have assembled task forces to scrutinize business practices surrounding foreclosure and predatory lending, NARHRI predicts that ongoing legislative efforts will continue to target real estate investors by increasing restrictions on foreclosure consultants and their multifaceted business practices – especially with regards to equity-based and lease-back to owner transactions.

Look for ongoing coverage of this important trend here. Has increased regulation affected your business? Are you interested in seeing more posts like this one? Please drop us a line and tell us what you think.