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All Forum Posts by: James Hamling

James Hamling has started 14 posts and replied 4203 times.

Post: REO question! What does this Mean??!

James Hamling
#2 Creative Real Estate Financing Contributor
Posted
  • Real Estate Broker
  • Minneapolis, MN
  • Posts 4,363
  • Votes 5,775

I have flipped FNMA homes, WITH the 90 day seasoning restriction, no problem.

The rule simply covers the physical transfer/ conveyance. I purchase the property, do my rehab/ updates, stage, and list the home. All that together is 2-4 weeks.

Now any buyer you get will probably need 30-45 days to closing due to there financing.

I simply do my thing, list and market, get interested offers, go the negotiation rounds, and once I accept an offer I simply set the closing date for the 91st day (and it almost always coincides with when they could make closing) and it is done. I ALWAYS get a sizable escrow, determined by how many bids I had.

To wholesale one, you simply enter a JV with the investor who is rehabbing it for flipping. A JV is just as binding, and requires no conveyance. Then at final closing, it is executed like a double closing.

Or for wholesaling to a rental landlord, sell it lease option, with an exercise date 90 days in future, so basiclly a delayed closing.

Keep it simple. You can turn peeling an apple into a 5 hour nuclear engineering program with lasers and teams of techs, or just grab a peeler and peel the damn thing. K.I.S.S.

Post: Turnkey rentals... Too good to be true?

James Hamling
#2 Creative Real Estate Financing Contributor
Posted
  • Real Estate Broker
  • Minneapolis, MN
  • Posts 4,363
  • Votes 5,775

Turnkey properties make sense to be sold simply for the fact of funding. Very few people have any access to long term funding for holding rentals. Although hard money for rehabs is very easy to come by. And the little ugly truth is, the majority of these "turnkey" properties are being marketed at a price well above market value, rationalized and hidden in the "projected" rental income. All packaged, aimed, and sold to newbie landlords.

I am a experienced, 7 digit funded rehab investor. I have been absolutly flooded by these people in the last months trying to peddle properties, with extremly bad numbers, very very bad numbers, almost guarenteed losses.

That being said, I can see the reasoning for a legitimate place requiring an escrow to weed out the pretenders, although I would have countless confirmation including speaking with several people who have worked with them before I invested one dime in escrow.

BBB is the single WORST way to verify a company, hands down. I know, as a BBB A+ company owner. BBB charges a business a yearly fee to be rated, and that is about it. It is all smoke and mirrors. BBB real sell is that the public thinks there some consumer watch dog, which they are not.

If you want real turnkey properties, locate a good rehab investor in the area of your interest. In MN, I would love to offer those to people. I have over 100 realtors who work with me locating properties, and dozens of wholesalers. I have no interest in holding because it is not what I do, I rehab. I am a licensed contractor, and product licensed from all of the major product manufacturers, including distributor licensed, and accredited by many citys offices for excellence.
I would be more then happy to locate, rehab, and sell exactly to someones specefications. That is actually the easiest route for me. And if I exist, I am certain there are others.

Post: Getting started in real estate investing-Need advice

James Hamling
#2 Creative Real Estate Financing Contributor
Posted
  • Real Estate Broker
  • Minneapolis, MN
  • Posts 4,363
  • Votes 5,775

I think where is best to begin is to evaluate yourself first, you knowledge base and skills capabilaties. Real estate investment is not a singular thing, it is muti faceted with multipule specialties, and where people get burned and loose money is jumping into unknown waters.

In a generalization, I prefer holding as the best return currently. Although you have many options. Hire a good managment firm to run 100% of the business of renting the property, including finding a tennant, contracts, everything. Then use it as a training course, stay involved, observe and learn from the pros all you can.
-or-
Locate a savy local investor who is cash poor, and JV. They provide intellectual work, and you the resources. Again, stay involved in every aspect and learn learn learn.

One of the most powerful lessons in any business is, know what you are great at, and hire great people to do the rest.

My best advice, a great property can quickly turn into lead boots if managed wrong. Don't risk it, if your not a renting all star, get someone who is.