Investment
Properties in the Tampa Area - Investing in Tampa
We
have several investment strategies for the serious real
estate investors. Investment opportunities with Cap
Rates of 10% and higher. Model home lease backs, distressed
condo developments, commercial real properties, strip
malls, REOs (bank owned properties), 1031 exchanges,
assignments, flips, etc. Serious inquiries only please.
Call (813) 671-6657 or email julia@tampa4u.com
for more info. Also: Property Management.
If you have a property that qualifies for a Tampa
1031 exchange, we can help you complete the procedure.
A 1031 tax-deferred exchange allows a investor to reinvest
the federal capital gains and defer the payment of the
tax that would normally be due on the sale. We can work
with your attorney on the sale of your property as well
as locating and acquiring a "like-kind" property
within the 180 day time limit. Contact us for more details.
The WRONG Way to Invest in Real Estate
"Real
estate fever" . . . it's hit the Country like a
plague. Zillions of "newbies" are hitting
the bandwagon, trying to make a profit where they lost
in the stock market. I meet them all the time, and many
are making big mistakes!
Mistake
#1: Stock Market Mentality
You'd
think after losing $7 trillion in the stock market people
would have learned! Nope, they are making the same mistake,
which is assuming what happened yesterday will
happen tommorrow. Nine of ten new investors
I meet say they are interested in real estate because
they saw someone else make money from the rapid appreciation
of the market over the last few years. But, buying real
estate solely for short-term appreciation is often a
big gamble! If you buy real estate to hold for 15 years
or more, the chances are you will come out on top. If
you buy a property and flip it in within a year, you
probably are fine, too. And, despite the risk, many
people can intelligently time the "boom" of
a local market (or subdivision within a market) and
make a profit. But, if you buy a rental property for
full market price with break even or negative cash flow,
you'd better have a backup plan if the market doesn't
keep going up. Investing is a lot like surfing... if
you don't know how to ride the wave, you will drown!
So,
should you refrain from investing if you think the market
has peaked? Absolutely not! You can find bargain-priced
properties in every real estate market, even the hottest.
You can find low-interest rate financing that will increase
your cash flow so if values drop, you still are covered.
You can plan short-term (six to 12 months), because
real estate markets rise and fall slowly. And, if you
keep a cash reserve for your business, you won't sweat
when the market tanks, because you know that in the
long run, real estate markets virtually always come
back.
Mistake
#2: Investing Blind
You'd
think after losing $7 trillion in the stock market people
would have learned! Nope, they are making the same mistake,
which is blindly buying real estate based on bogus advice
or complete lack of education. Real estate is one of
the few investments in which risk is directly proportional
to knowledge. True, it has a higher learning curve than
investing in the stock market, but there's no proof
that having knowledge of the stock market reduces risk
(just ask your mutual fund manager).
I
read a comment on a real estate discussion group on
the Internet. In response to an inquiry as to whether
a particular seminar or training program was worth the
money, someone answered, "Why waste your money
on that stuff? Just use your money as a down payment
and learn as you go." This is probably the worst
advice you could ever give a beginner. Money for real
estate deals is easy to find if you can find good deals.
But, you won't know what a good deal is without
having first invested in your education!
The
more knowledge of real estate investing techniques,
financing, acquisition, negotiating and, of course,
your local marketplace, the less risky your investments
will be. A bargain real estate purchase will generally
always be a safe investment; a bargain stock purchase
isn't - after all, who says the company you bought into
will be in business next year?.
Mistake
#3: No Cash Reserves
Ask
anyone in real estate long term (or any other business,
for that matter) and they will tell you the two most
important words for survival are: "cash flow."
Heck, even K-Mart failed to learn that valuable lesson!
In
order to stay in real estate long term, you need cash
reserves. Buying real estate nothing down is easy; handling
negative cash flow, repairs and other expenses in the
meantime is the trick. In fact, if you can handle the
bad times, real estate will always make you come out
on top. Lack of cash reserves puts unnecessary pressure
on you to do substandard repairs, accept less than qualified
tenants and give into tenants' demands for fear of vacancy.
When
you have a sufficient cash reserve, you act rationally.
You hold out for a higher sales price. You hold out
for a qualified tenant. You leave properties vacant
rather than rent to low-lifes. You call a tenant's bluff
when they threaten to leave. You take care of necessary
repairs and improvements on your properties. It's a
whole different ballgame than operating from a lack
of cash. Like I said, buying properties with no money
down isn't hard; it's handling the cash flow. In other
words, you can buy real estate without money, you just
can't survive in business without cash reserves. Thus,
consider accumulating cash reserves before investing
in rental properties.
Mistake
#4: Being Greedy
Many
investors get started flipping properties to other investors,
which is a good idea to generate cash reserves. However,
you must be realistic about how much profit is in a
deal. If there is a potential for a $20,000 profit in
a rehab project, you can't expect to make $10,000 flipping
that property to a rehabber. A rehabber has a huge risk
in embarking in such a project and wants a large enough
profit to justify the risk.
For
example, if a house needs $10,000 in repairs, the rehabber
investor wants to make at least a $20,000 profit. If
you find a deal with $20,000 in profit potential, how
could you expect to get $10,000 for flipping the property
if the rehab investor you flip it to is only going to
make $10,000? You should be happy making $2,500 and
moving on to the next deal. If you want to make more
than $2,500 on such a deal, then you must find and negotiate
a better bargain that has more profit potential.
Mistake
#5: Treating Real Estate as Anything OTHER than a Business.
People
are lured to real estate because of the quick buck that
it promises. Don't hold your breath, you won't get rich
quick. An "overnight sensation" usually takes
about five years. More than ninety percent of the people
who take a real estate seminar quit after three months.
Why
the high fallout rate? Lack of action and unrealistic
expectations. Real estate investing should be treated
with the seriousness of a career. It takes months, even
years for a business to cultivate customers and have
a life of its own. You need to treat real estate like
any other business.
Give
yourself at least six months to see if real estate works
for you. It may even take a year before you buy your
first property. Maybe in the second year you will buy
three or four properties. If you work hard at it and
keep your eyes and ears open, you may even find your
first deal in 30 days. Certainly, you will not make
money by talking or thinking about it; you must go out
and take action.
by
Attorney William Bronchick
Reprinted with permission - 2005
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