Posted on 08/20/2008 6:30:46 PM PDT by SeekAndFind
The statement above means: once people learn how to make money in residential real estate, there is no going back. Many people believe that real estate as an investment is dead, buried and never to be seen again, but I sincerely believe they are wrong. As I write this, there is a new class of millionaires-in-training who are preparing to get wealthy in real estate. They are buying all the foreclosures, in good areas, they can find. About 3% of the population is busy in this enterprise and about 30%, 10 times more, are people who will tell anyone who will listen that real estate investment should be talked about only in retrospect. Let them talk, while the smart ones are out there. Oh, by the way, not all the smart ones are Americans. Many from across the pond are here spending like they have 50% more money than they do well actually they do as many currencies have a very positive exchange rate with the dollar.
Why am I so sure about real estate investment? During my early financial training in the securities business, I watched a small-business environment become a mega-industry, showing how great wealth can come from inauspicious beginnings. When I was active as a stockbroker in the 1960s, the number of shares traded in a day would not quite equal the number of shares traded in a minute today. A billion shares change hands each day the markets are open now; about 6 million changed hands then. The 60s even had a mini stock market crash and managed to get up to 28 million shares May of 1962. How could this almost 100-year-old business become a giant in its most recent decades? I will be happy to give you my eyewitness account.
The mutual fund industry came to life in those swinging 60s. The growth of the Fidelity Group of Funds, for instance, was so phenomenal that one of the fund managers, Gerald Tsai, became a superstar and launched his own fund that was oversubscribed upon the offering. How could this happen? Thanks to mutual funds, ordinary people, not just bankers and corporate presidents, could take advantage of the stock market by making small investments, and they did in droves. In turn, the mutual funds would buy the common stock offered on the stock exchanges and volume started to build. From here, Congressman Keough authored the House of Representatives HR-10 bill which became law and the Keough accounts for retirement were born. Today they are better known as IRAs. Once the ball got rolling, there wasnt any stopping it and people found the stock market a fine place to invest their money thanks to the new-found security and simplicity of mutual funds and IRAs.
The stock market had its setbacks as well and people lost money, swearing that not only would they never invest again, that the stock market would never rise again. Wrong! But it does sound familiar. As volume grew, the brokerage houses began inventing some of wildest investments commonly known as derivatives and the rest is history. A billion shares a day is nothing to sneeze at and we are only just beginning. In the 1990s, the Internet craze hit Wall Street and the new economy pushed even the poorest of Americans to find a way into the market and receive riches beyond their wildest dreams.
At the dawn of the 21st century, Wall Street ran out of steam and all the riches started to look like fools gold. People pulled out, gains turned into losses, and the stock market came down. Again the thought was its over and it isnt coming back. For the general public, never lasted only about four or five years. Thats when investors and stock market gains returned.
Now lets take a look at real estate. I bought my first house in 1968 for $37,500, and five years later I sold it for $43,000. It took 6 months to sell, which wasnt unusual at the time, and the profit was about right. I bought a bigger house for $44,000 and 3 years later I sold it for $72,000 over a weekend. Wow! How did I yield that tremendous return? Inflation, inflation, inflation! What got it going? Believe it or not: oil. It came with an embargo that drove prices up. Houses couldnt be built for the same costs because building materials were spiking. Sound familiar? Starting in the early 70s, everything went up in real estate in Southern California until the late 80s and early 90s when the aerospace industry, one of the largest employers in the state, stalled with the end of the Cold War and moved to less-expensive states, triggering a mini-recession. Prices fell and didnt return until the middle 90s. What helped bring the market back was the Federal Reserve cutting interest rates and ushering in 30-year lows in rates in 1993. By now you must be getting the picture.
The turn of the century also brought an unprecedented attack on our shores that changed a stock market recession into the beginnings of another bull market in both the stock market and the real estate market. What facilitated this was another drop in interest rates by the Federal Reserve to 40-year lows in the early 2000s and we took off, full speed ahead, until we hit the wall. Is everything the same as it was in all the earlier times? Not exactly, but we are a pretty smart nation and we will figure out how to get rolling again. If it doesnt appear to be happening, check the underlying data and you will see that we could be close to or have already hit the bottom in a number of real estate markets. The fact that real estate is more a local phenomenon and the stock market a national one should be noted as some real estate markets will soar from this point and some may never rebound.
Five to ten years from now, we will look back, wonder what the fuss was all about, and ask why we all didnt take advantage of the opportunities. That also never changes because as they say, hindsight is 20/20.
I have tried to paint a picture of the investment world and why we always say its changing while it basically remains the same. At least now you can tell the naysayers to take a hike and feel confident, based on history. Like I said, the genie is now out of the bottle. Ive told you why you should be investing in real estate. There is no going back. Time to make your wishes come true!
It's called "greed." It is the love of money and it is the root of all evil.
There is no sin in wanting a more secure life for your family.
I’ve met some of these folks. They didn’t love money to an undue degree. They simply wanted more — which does not define greed.
There's thousands of people in Hemet. My dad lived there for 10 years. Lot's of seniors because of the prices and small town. Now it's become a city with families and housing tracts.
I wouldn't live there unless I had no easy alternative, but it's a very active market right now.
I'll freep mail you about the other.
The lamestream media is predicting that high fuel prices will drive people into the cities. This is wishful leftist thinking. With suburban house prices so cheap the envious city dwellers will move out of their tiny places and into real sized houses and buy real sized cars. They spend so of their time focusing on what the suburbanites should be doing they've obviously got their green monster eye on the suburban lifestyle.
More precisely it's envy, keeping up with the Joneses after they brag about their stock or real estate profits. True greed is fairly rare, and the greedy tend to end up in jail under their own power, but envy is in great oversupply. The first murder in the bible was over envy, not greed. So much of what is claimed to be greed is really someone projecting their envy. Envy is the root of most evil.
Money is just information and banks are just information businesses. If you go in the back office you won't see mounds of evil paper cash but a tiny computer hooked into other computers. Money is not evil, it's information on how much useful wealth you have created for your fellow man but have not yet exchanged for something else.
OTH, I have a condo in Dalton, GA which is only four years old that went down in appraisal this year and there are several in the ‘compound’ for sale at reduced prices.
PS- Illegals don’t buy new or nearly new condos, and Dalton is over-run with illegals though many are disappearing as the carpet industry declines in Dalton.
I'm in the process of paying cash on a short sale house, assuming the bank agrees to their losses. What would be the benefits of getting a loan if I don't need it? I plan on leveraging later on a nicer place after the market starts appreciating again, which could be many years from now.
If you borrow $100,000 at 6.4% and are in a 25% tax bracket, the cost of the loan is actually 4.8% with the mortgage deduction. Loan payment WITHOUT the deduction: about $626 P&I after the tax deduction: about $520.
The loan payment is the same year after the year, but the investment compounds. If you make 7.2%, tax free the investment pays 7,200 the first year. In the 11th year it pays $14,400.
Equity in a house has no rate of return, it's not very liquid (less so as you get older, and if something happens to you), the bank will say "who are you" if you try to borrow.
I might add, this is how banks make money. The give you 3% for your deposit and then they loan at 6.4 or in the case of credit cards 10-20%. So if you can borrow at 4.8 and receive 7.2 how much do you want?
Very little, actually. It doesn't answer my question (If you mean "for investment", do foreigners buy houses as opposed to commercial real estate?
How many homes in Beverly Hills are in foreclosure? How many were bought by foreigners?
Either way, are they representative of the rest of the nation? Because if they are not representative of most other markets, the number of homes bought in Beverly Hills will not be a drop in the bucket in the overall housing market and will not effect the overall recovery when it comes.
I don’t know where this happened then. I am in real estate and even been involved in some “no doc” loans. But as you know, I’m sure, even in these “no doc” loans there was some documentation required just not the typical pay stubs, etc. 1040’s were required but not given as much weight. Maybe some illegals got around it somehow but not nearly as important a number as you seem to be assigning them.
Apparently, right under your nose.
I am in real estate and even been involved in some no doc loans. But as you know, Im sure, even in these no doc loans there was some documentation required ......
What part of "fraud" and "scam" and "con game" do you have trouble understanding?
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Good for you that you have kept things clean in your work. However, there is plenty of evidence, especially in California and other places that have lots of illegals, of exactly these things (no doc loans) occurring.
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