Some Days Are Higher Energy And Ah, More Focused Than Others

Posted on April 4, 2008 @ 3:56 pm - Written by BawldGuy

Focus on this — Dallas is now thought of as the best real estate investment market in the country. Opinions vary, but I’d surely put it into the top three without hesitation. All the factors required to put a smile on investors are in place. This hasn’t happened since I didn’t have kids. Wait a second, it’s never happened in my entire career — which began in October of ‘69.

We called this last year. It’s a win however you wanna look at it. Get in on some of it yourself. It’s not difficult — just email me. Before long we’ll be laughin’ and scratchiin’ and pretty soon we’ll be talkin’ about investing in real estate too. :)

So how’s your day been? Ever wake up without a care in the world? Today wasn’t one of those days.

First of all, The Boss is outa town for a week and a half being Designer Girl in Chicago and New York. When I’m in her world, I’m about as close to being a complete nobody as you can imagine. “Oh, you’ve never met my husband, have you? Honey, this is Michelle.” This is when I first realized my real world ranking. “Oh hi Mr. Designer Girl, how ya doin’ today?” “Oh, just fine thanks. Gotta love those new earrings, eh?” Then I’m off to the nearest flat screen sporting the ESPN logo. :)

Now you know why she goes on these trips sans Mr. Designer Girl.

Anywho, woke up this morning with about half a gallon of ‘I give a #$%#@’ for no reason I can think of. Grab a huge cup of coffee, then remember Josh and I are supposed to work out this morning ‘cuz it’s Mom’s 77th birthday. We’re takin’ her to lunch at our favorite Mexican place. Still, gotta workout in the morning, and with an amazingly ah, inferior attitude.

We’ve all had these days, right? Anyway, Mom’s birthday lunch was cool. I was feeling so superior as we sat down for lunch ‘cuz I’d worked out hard on a ‘bad’ day. That’s when Mom let us know she’d gotten her workout in before lunch. 77 years old and still goin’ to the gym. Talk about a pin in your self congratulating balloon. :)

Called my lender while walking into the restaurant. He’s more distracted than a six year old at the zoo. He excused himself, saying he was having a strong ADD day. I told him, “I thought I’d seen you at the meetings.”

Grandma always said talking care of business on the days you wanted to play hooky was called being an ‘adult’. Blech.

Filed in Real Estate Investing, Check This Out, Sez Me, Real Estate Markets, Lunch With Mom, Dallas  |  No Comments »


Oh How I Love The Smell Of Being Right In The Morning

Posted on April 2, 2008 @ 12:32 am - Written by BawldGuy

Please forgive the title, but sometimes I grow weary of all the nay sayers out there, rooting for a complete collapse. Surely this correction, both for the national economy as a whole, and real estate housing specifically, have demonstrated unique qualities. Subprime is now part of the culture’s lexicon. The banking system has been tested mightily, as has the leadership of the Federal Reserve and its Chairman, Ben Bernanke.

bernanke

I’ve never been one of those real estate cheerleader types. You know the ones, there’s never a bad time to buy real estate, yadda yadda. When the market’s sucky that’s what I call it. You can’t go through as many bad markets as I have and do otherwise.

Those who’ve been buying real estate investment property lately are gonna feel pretty good about themselves a few years down the road. Even back in the post recession years of ‘74-75, or after the S & L Crisis resolved itself, the perfect storm we see today never materialized. The missing link? The permanent loss of historically reliable investment regions like say, the entire west coast for instance. Or how ’bout the emergence of new ‘destination’ regions in Texas, (Dallas/Fort Worth) Idaho, (Boise) and Kansas City to name a few? But the real difference is the long term fixed interest rates available for investors.

Just to be consistent and on point for my San Diego readers — Get Outa Dodge — and get out now. :)

Thanks — I needed that. Now back to our regularly scheduled post.

sam zell First Sam Zell says what I’ve been saying for months. The housing market isn’t nearly in as bad a shape as mainstream media wants us all to believe. In fact he said a recovery would begin this spring. I think he’s pretty aggressively optimistic to say that, but he’s the billionaire, so I’ll let time tell us if my 3rd to 4th quarter scenario is correct or not.

This was followed shortly thereafter by the markets in Texas I like so much experiencing incredible real estate growth, even more impressive population growth, and a precipitous drop in vacancy rates. Oh, and did I mention the simultaneous increase in apartment construction there? Oh yeah — good times. :)

This week two giants also decided it’s time to buy. As David Stejkowski duly noted, both Shorenstein and Blackstone have raised prodigious amounts of capital for the acquisition of billions in commercial real estate.

And here’s a gift for San Diego readers who are owners of local income property. Allow a short preface. Your properties are worth significantly less today than they were three years ago. Yet, if you had the choice, you wouldn’t buy your own property for even today’s value. I’ve asked that question of a couple dozen local real estate investors, and with two exceptions, they all admitted they wouldn’t think of buying their own properties again — even at today’s discounted values. Get outa Dodge

Read this quote from Mr. Shorenstein and think of what you should be doing with your San Diego income property. (Hint: Get Outa Dodge) :)

Shorenstein, son of company founder Walter Shorenstein, told the New York Times in 1995: “If somebody is willing to pay a lot more than I would pay, then we’re a seller.”

That quote was taken out of an article published two days ago in the San Francisco Chronicle, entitled — Waiting for real estate bounce. Read the article to learn how Shorenstein is thinking about this market.

Bloomberg tells us about Blackstone’s $10.9 Billion in today’s update. Blackstone Group for those reading the name for the first time, is the world’s largest leveraged buyout fund.

So, there you have it. Sam Zell — Shorenstein Co. — Blackstone Group — all saying the window of opportunity is upon us.

Wall Street

Put that together with what Wall Street has been saying, especially today, and one could conclude the Bulls are about to make their final move against the staggering Bears. The jury is still, of course, out. But I’ve been saying in these pages for the last 90 days or so, that this is the final skirmish between the two. It appears to me the Bulls have the Bears in the corner hoping for a last minute miracle.

Finally, without wavering, I’ve been backing Fed Chairman Bernanke since Day 1. He’s made the correct moves, all the while listening to critics who wanted him to do their bidding on their schedule. He’s done it his way. We won’t know for awhile, but it’s my contention we may look back at the first 92 days of 2008 as the period the good guys triumphed, led by Bernanke.

I’d give you a much clearer picture, but since the crystal ball hasn’t come back from the shop, this’ll have to do. But, just before I put it in the shop, I looked to see what might be next for the general lending outlook.

BawldGuy Prediction: On or before July 4th, real estate loan underwriters and their bosses will have rolled the clock back to basic sanity. Meaning? Loan programs now unavailable will reappear. Virtually impossible underwriting requirements will quietly be retired. Lenders will wake up, realize it says L-E-N-D-E-R on their foreheads. The next thought will be how little they’ve been acting like a lender. Then they will find ways to lend.

Why?

BawldGuy Axiom: Lenders lend. :)

Filed in Real Estate Investing, Boise, Financing, Selling Income Property, San Diego Property Owners, Real Estate Markets, Market Correction, Economy, Dallas, Kansas City, BawldGuy Axiom, Texas  |  8 Comments »


Brown and Brown Back In San Diego and Starring In Getting Outa Dodge

Posted on March 27, 2008 @ 11:40 pm - Written by BawldGuy

Though we’ve been to Austin, Dallas/Fort Worth, Kansas City, Boise, Phoenix, Palo Alto, and the list goes on, we’ve pretty much ignored San Diego real estate investors for nearly five years. Our plan calls for reentry in April or May. And no, we’re not gonna be tellin’ folks to buy San Diego investment property. It hasn’t made sense for a few years now. In fact, we don’t think it will ever be wise to invest here again.

Why?

Here’s the short version.

Your half million dollar duplex has monthly rents these days of $1,800-2,500 or so. For easily less than half the value of your property,duplex you can own a duplex (and brand new, not ancient like yours) with monthly income of $2,000-2,400. Does yours offer 3 bedrooms and 2 baths? And an attached 2-Car garage? In a neighborhood you’d allow your 70-something mom live in by herself?

I’d put my mom into these properties to live alone. In Phoenix they started calling it BawldGuy’s Mom Rule. If I wouldn’t put Mom there, don’t tell me about the property. That policy cut out a whole lot of useless conversations. :)

If your small 1-4 unit residential income property has a net equity of $60-500,000 you’ll be able to move that equity, tax deferred no doubt, to areas in the country allowing for leverage San Diegans can only experience through time travel, or Grandpa’s stories. Your capital growth rate will soar. Oh, you’d rather have a whole bunch of cash flow? How ’bout doubling to quintupling your current cash flow?

San Diego income properties simply cannot compete with other regions. It’s not possible. And if your Plan calls for you to sell your San Diego stuff in the next 3-10 years, here’s something to think about.

brightly colored homes

If they’d be ah, ill advised to buy your property today, at it’s lowest value in quite some time, how silly is it gonna be for them to buy it in another decade? It’s ancient now, right? If it’s value goes up in the next 10 years do you believe they’ll pay even more? Really? It’s my professional opinion they won’t — even if they were all the colors of the rainbow. :)

The bottom line is this: We can get you Outa Dodge — significantly increase your capital growth rate and/or cash flow — plus your tax shelter — while dramatically improving your chances for a magnificently abundant retirement.

Let’s continue with an example of what’s possible.

Let’s use your duplex mentioned above, with loans totaling $250,000 — here’s what you can do.

Your net proceeds from a sale will be more than you might expect because of our new business model. Instead of having sales/closing costs of around $40,000 or so, they’ll be far less. Brown and Brown no longer takes a listing commission of 3%. Tell me that isn’t cool. More on the details later. (Or, here’s an idea — you can contact us and we’ll give you the scoop way before everyone else finds out.)

multiple street signs

Even with the normal brokerage fees your net proceeds from a sale will be about $210,000 +/-. With that capital we can tax defer you into $1-1.5 Million of very well located property — brand new too. And that’s not all, not by a long shot. The problem is, most folks don’t know what to do, where to do it, or who can help them get it done. In what direction should they go?

You’ll increase your annual depreciation by over $40,000 — not an insignificant improvement.

The difference is we’ll take your equity from here to there for a whole bunch less — and with way better marketing. We suspect our new model will end up costing our San Diego sellers about 75-90% less on the listing side of the commission. There’s nothing we can do with the buyer’s agent’s cut.

I mentioned marketing. We think those who have been selling small income props have been getting short changed on the quality of marketing. This has resulted in most of these props not selling, or taking forever. We’re gonna change all that — or at least that’s what it says right here. :)

Back to saving money.

This will result in a savings of well over $10,000 per property at the half million price range.

We’re serious about this.

Are you serious about your retirement plans? Are you seriously counting on San Diego to yield the retirement income you’ll need? If you could safely double, triple, quintuple your retirement income — never mind, silly question. :)

What are you waiting for? Contact me — we’ll sit down and let you know what’s possible. Most San Diego property owners can make surprisingly significant improvements in their capital growth rate, cash flow, tax shelter, and retirement income.

We’ll be standing by — there’s a pretty convenient Contact BawldGuy button on the upper right side of this page. Says ‘Contact BawldGuy’ and everything.

It works too.

Filed in 1031 Exchanges, Real Estate Investing, Boise, Retirement, Selling Income Property, San Diego Property Owners, Real Estate Brokerage, Real Estate Markets, Cash Flow, Retirement Income, Capital Growth, Dallas, Austin, Kansas City, Palo Alto, Tax Shelter, RE Investment Practice, Texas  |  14 Comments »


Describing The Texas Real Estate Investment Market

Posted on March 22, 2008 @ 12:50 pm - Written by BawldGuy

Prolific — Exciting — but most of all — a long term classic. Invigorating and spirit lifting. A market where all the elements required to produce both long term capital growth while protecting the investor’s capital. It will stand the test of time. Just like this classic has. I think it passes on the spirit and flavor of Texas remarkably well.

Notice how it starts quietly then builds on itself. Just like Texas investment properties. :) It all comes back to quality, doesn’t it?

Filed in Real Estate Investing, Sez Me, Weekend Thoughts, Dallas, Austin, Texas  |  2 Comments »


How To Get The Real Scoop On Rents OR They Call It INCOME Property

Posted on March 13, 2008 @ 9:54 pm - Written by BawldGuy

As written recently on these pages the internet isn’t the end all be all for data collection — especially income property stats. One of the most egregious errors a real estate investor can make is the purchase of a property based upon erroneous rent assumptions. Since it’s called ‘income’ property one would assume it’s potential to garner that income would be important. One might even take it a step further and insist on empirical evidence. :)

pen and paper

Way back in the days of pen and paper, the only acceptable way to acquire concretely reliable rent info was to hit the pavement — literally. Grab yer clipboard and yer basic comfortable shoes and start walkin’ and knockin’. I’ve been doing exactly that since the late ’70’s. It’s not sexy work, trust me. Though most people are more than happy to help, some folks can get downright rude.

BawldGuy Axiom: Nothing beats first hand research done at street level, in person — nothing. The gold standard for research is always first hand — their lips to your ears — in person. Hearsay just doesn’t cut it.

Still, when a client asks us what makes us so confident in our rental figures as stated on our after tax cash flow analysis, we grin and pull out ours, or sometimes our team’s rental survey. (Note: The minute I find out a team member hasn’t done a required rent survey, they’re fired.) This isn’t done by phone, fax, email, or channeling the local apartment tenants in an area. You do what needs to be done — you knock on doors yourself. no problem

Management firms will tell you, “You’ll easily command $XXXX a month in rent for that unit — no problem.” When it ain’t their butts on the line, it’s never ‘a problem’. Most management firms make their rental decisions based upon their own relative convenience. I ran my own management division for a decade and know what it takes — and it ain’t hangin’ ’round the office when you’re not sure of what the rents should be.

Agents/brokers will be smother. “Our experience in the area says you should get this amount.” Whereupon they give up a number. Rely on that number the same Mom relied on me having all my homework done before bedtime. :)

Builders are the comedians of potential rents. It’s long been my theory they size you up and decide in the middle of their answer what rent figure to give you. If they discern I’m from California, it goes up at least 10%. Exceptions: I’ve met two builders in the last 18 months who gave me rents backed up with empirical evidence — one in the Kansas City area, and one in the Dallas/Fort Worth Metroplex area.

Short diversion.

The first thing a California real estate investment broker/advisor learns when leaving the state is the strange thing that happens to their forehead — In bold lettering a message appears. CALIFORNIA FRUIT LOOP — I’LL BELIEVE ANYTHING.

Tomorrow I’ll give specifics on how I’ve conducted rent surveys over the last 30 years. I’ve learned a ton, and it’s all come in handy. Meanwhile, keep this in mind: Buying investment property without slam dunk, sun-settin’-in-the-west reliability is foolhardy at best and a quick way to lose a bunch of your hard earned money at worst.

Remember: It’s called income property for a reason. :)

Filed in Real Estate Investing, Builders, Buying Income Property, Investment Lessons, Dallas, Kansas City  |  1 Comment »


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