Beware — Time Is Not Always Your Friend — Tick Tock

Posted @ 11:47 pm - Filed under 1031 Exchanges, Real Estate Investing, Purposeful Planning, Retirement, Financing, Builders, Investment Lessons

Time

While real estate investment offers plenty of benefits, sometimes it also provides, uh, time challenges. There are situations when time is your best friend. Sometimes it’s not much of a factor. Most often it’s a minor irritation requiring small tasks accomplished during transactions. It’s all part of what I’ve called Document Dictatorship. Sign this, initial that, scan, copy, email, FedEx, blah blah blah.

You’ll know it when Time with a capital T ceases being your best bud.

The following list isn’t all inclusive, but will give you a peak into time critical scenarios.

The Inspection Period When Buying

It’s different in each state but generally the buyer is allowed 10-17 days to do all of his inspections. In Texas our contracts allow for 10 days. Texas also has a clause for an additional amount of money to pay for the inspection period. The money goes towards the purchase price if you close the sale, but to the seller if not. (This money is separate from your deposit.) Our contracts charge a courtesy $200 for this. I like this approach. Make sure your ducks are in a row, so when your time starts running you’re not wasting 2-3 days scheduling various inspections. Remember, you’re interested in the reports generated by the inspections. Reports take time. Going over them takes time. Writing requests for repairs takes time. Tick tock. If the seller is particularly cold blooded your deal could go south as well as your money.

Your Lender

Here’s where time is an assassin. Since investors are used to contractual timelines they tend to slow play their lenders. This is just plain dumb on so many levels. Seriously? You should time how long it takes for you to respond to anything your lender wants with a stopwatch.

hand held stopwatch

  • Your delay can cause you to lose out on lower rates — move it or lose it.
  • When your lender emails or calls — get to them NOW! They’re your best friend.
  • When asked to FedEx info — don’t use snail mail. The lender needed it yesterday.
  • Murphy lives with lenders — act accordingly and expect underwriting silliness.
  • The Delayed Tax Deferred Exchange (1031)

    Thankfully there are only two ‘drop dead’ dates for this one. (normally) Even better, they both begin on the same date — which is the close of escrow of the property you’re selling. The IRC refers to it often as the Relinquished Property. Think they’ll believe your excuse about the dog eating your homework? When it comes to these deadlines yer the nail and the IRS is the hammer. There will be no debate if you dawdle. How serious are they? They count Christmas regardless. ‘Nuff said.

    1. You have 45 days in which to Identify the property(s) you are to Acquire. This is easily documented. They don’t take prisoners when it comes to this deadline.
    These properties are often referred to by guys like me as Uplegs. (slang)

    hammer and nail

    2. You have 180 days in which to close the property(s) you Identified. (Your uplegs)

    Fail to meet either one of these two deadlines and your exchange is steam in the air. You either identified on or before the 45th day or you didn’t. Same with closing on or before the 180th day. Again — both time periods begin counting on the day you close the sale of the property you’re relinquishing.

    The Current Market

    The window is closing as I write this. There are those who will disagree. My frequent flyer miles say differently.window is closing Everywhere we go, inventory is becoming more scarce. We’re already feeling shut out of certain regions because some of those sitting on the fence have begun their swan dives into the pool. Once builder inventory is decreased past a certain point, the really cool deals will mostly be history. Those who get in before that happens will brag about it years from now when their relatives are over for Thanksgiving. Don’t cost yourself that opportunity. :)

    Starting Your Purposeful Plan Past 50

    This is where it can get tricky. The problem is this — if time fliesyou’re retiring at 65, you have 15 years to make it happen. Sounds like a long time. Trust me, 15 years can fly by — but you already know that since you’re already 50. Most folks that age begin to edge over to the financially conservative side. It’s a natural tendency. But if ever there was a scenario in which time isn’t your friend — it’s now. At this point time can get downright mean spirited.

    I’m not saying you should swing from the chandeliers — just don’t go all Grandpa on yourself. :) Here’s the real punch line. If you don’t heed the clock ticking away, getting louder each birthday, you’ll find yourself one morning, 59 years old and having to accomplish 10-12 years worth of investing in just six years. Tick Tock.

    Don’t do that to yourself. Be your own best friend. Once you do that, sometimes time sidles over and smiles on you.

    This entry was posted on Wednesday, February 20th, 2008 at 11:47 pm and is filed under 1031 Exchanges, Real Estate Investing, Purposeful Planning, Retirement, Financing, Builders, Investment Lessons. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.

    15 comments to “Beware — Time Is Not Always Your Friend — Tick Tock”

    Sean Purcell on February 21st, 2008 at 4:42 am said:

    • “Murphy lives with lenders — act accordingly and expect underwriting silliness.”

      Hilarious… because it’s true. I enjoy the misfortune of dabbling in the commercial loan business from time to time and it makes residential lending look like grade school (at recess). Murphy does not just live with lenders, he runs the household.

    Vance Shutes on February 21st, 2008 at 6:31 am said:

    • Jeff,

      Nice continuing thread from your post yesterday, and nice tie into real estate with the various time frames we work with every day. And you’re right - 15 years can fly by. I see it every day with my elderly parents.

    Kelly on February 21st, 2008 at 7:14 am said:

    • Oh!!! thank you about the lender part, especially, underwrting silliness!

    BawldGuy on February 21st, 2008 at 9:55 am said:

    • Sean — I lose every time I compare stories with those on the commercial side. You just can’t make up some of the stuff I’ve heard.

      I’m for putting a contract out on Murphy.

    BawldGuy on February 21st, 2008 at 9:57 am said:

    • Kelly — Yeah, we’ll surely remember ‘07-08 as the years of the lender. Sometimes I think their business model is base on the template of a Chinese fire drill.

    BawldGuy on February 21st, 2008 at 10:00 am said:

    • Vance — Our parents are a constant reminder when it comes to time. Wasting even a day is sinful. Every week Josh and I have lunch at Mom’s place. Which reminds me, today is Lunch With Mom Day. :) We’re having homemade stew. Hhmmm.

    Beware - Time Is Not Always Your Friend - Tick Tock | The Long List of Odysseus Medal Nominees | Realtors and real estate, mortgages, lending, investments on February 21st, 2008 at 11:38 am said:

    • […] Beware - Time Is Not Always Your Friend - Tick Tock, by Jeff Brown. […]

    Chris Lengquist on February 21st, 2008 at 3:35 pm said:

    • Lender silliness? If it’s so funny why does my head nearly explode when I hear the reasons closings are delayed? ;)

    BawldGuy on February 21st, 2008 at 4:00 pm said:

    • >Lender silliness? If it’s so funny why does my head nearly explode when I hear the reasons closings are delayed? ;)

      You apparently haven’t received the most recent code word updates. :)

    Cher on February 21st, 2008 at 9:54 pm said:

    • Yes! Lets put a contract out on Murphy. I’ll chip in!

    Cher on February 21st, 2008 at 10:04 pm said:

    • Speaking of delayed closings. This was not a lender delay but there are also delays created by the sellers.
      One property was held up by an 85 yr old widow who got “seller’s remorse” the day of closing.
      She wanted us to pay an extra $20K for the property to sign off. It took two days for her agent to get her to understand that she couldn’t do that. Somehow he got her to sign off.
      Exactly, you can’t make this stuff up!

    Sean Purcell on February 21st, 2008 at 10:43 pm said:

    • I work with a Realtor that believes every real estate agent should be given two tags (renewable yearly) which allows them a “two lender” limit per year. (Yes, he means hunt them down and kill them!)

    BawldGuy on February 21st, 2008 at 10:48 pm said:

    • Geez Sean, last I heard the proposal was three, not two. :)

    REALTOR vs. Loan Officer: Put Up Your Dukes | Mortgage Industry Blog on February 22nd, 2008 at 6:34 am said:

    • […] I was reading Jeff Brown’s post Beware - Time Is Not Always Your Friend - Tick Tock and even left a comment the other day.  In my email I saw a follow up comment that made me laugh out loud.  It is from Sean Purcell: […]

    Robert D. Ashby on February 22nd, 2008 at 7:27 am said:

    • Excellent review of timelines and why buyers need to stop wasting time. I have had a few deals go south due to borrowers not giving me the documents in a timely fashion, despite repeated phone calls and emails. I always like when they start arguing with me about why the lender wants them in the first place, to which I respond…”he who has the gold makes the rules.

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