60% Annual Appreciation Opportunity: How To Analyze The Facts
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Title: 60% Annual Appreciation Opportunity: How To Analyze The Facts
Word Count: 1127
Author: Chris Anderson
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60% Annual Appreciation Opportunity: How To Analyze The Facts
Copyright 2006 Chris Anderson
Greetings from the Los Angeles Real Estate Wealth Expo!
What an amazing event where thousands upon thousands of
real estate investors converge on the convention center to
listen to speakers such as "The Donald" himself as well as
Robert Kiyosaki.
In addition to the headline speakers, there was plenty of
opportunity for individuals to walk through the exhibit
hall and meet with different vendors and investment groups.
Michael and I were there for both days of the event and got
a great opportunity to talk with hundreds of new and
experienced investors alike.
Since this was our first "show", it was quite an eye opener
listening to the investors. Everybody at the show is
obviously very interested in making tremendous returns on
their investments. Who isn't? As the people bounced from
booth-to-booth-to-booth, they were getting presented so
many different opportunities.
While talking to them, I would invariably get asked about
what I thought about an opportunity being presented by
another group. Quite frankly, I had not analyzed any of
them so I could not respond; my gut feel is there where
some great opportunities there and some that were not so
good.
One very common theme that started to come out was that
people where basing their investment decisions on 3
different things: 1) did they "believe" the person they
were talking to, 2) how little money was required "down",
and 3) what kind of appreciation numbers where getting
quoted to them.
And then the realization hit me: these investors have no
idea how to even remotely evaluate a project but yet they
are ready to buy a $275,000 house!!! JUMPIN JELLYFISH,
THAT'S NUTS! I coached a number of new investors right on
the show room floor about some simple steps that they could
take from their desk to see if things even remotely made
sense.
One project that I heard about repeatedly sounded very
compelling. I probably don't have all the details correct
but here is the gist:
Located in Cape Coral Preconstruction House With $500 Down
Obtain Construction-To-Perm Loan Appraised Value Is $75K to
$100K ABOVE investor purchase price!
If all that makes sense, then how many $500 checks would
you write? For me, I would write a ton of them until the
bank quit letting me.
In actuality, I have been aware of this area for quite a
while, have visited there twice, and have considered
bringing a project out of this location. Looking at the
appreciation curve below, you see that the annual
appreciation has been amazing and well over 60% at times.
After the LA show, I decided I ought to take a quick peek
again to see if I missed something in my previous visits
and also to use it as an opportunity to show people how to
do their own quick analysis. From a quick look basis, what
do we really want to know? The two things that immediately
come to my mind are: 1) Is this market saturated or likely
to be saturated when your house is built; and 2) Are we
really buying this $75K below appraisal?
Let's address the appraisal question first. YES, YOU ARE
BUYING THIS $75K BELOW APPRAISAL. There is an appraisal
showing that value. But is that the real question you want
to ask? For me, I want to ask if I am purchasing $75K below
market value (heck, I would be happy with $25K below market
value). Market value to me means a price at which mom and
pops (not investors) will buy it from me within 2 months.
How would I find this out? Couple different ways. First,
let's just use the common sense test. If a builder could
build your house and sell it for $75,000 more than if they
sold it to you, do you really think they would do that?
There would be so many investors (Bill Gates types) who
would supply plenty of money to allow the builder to build
all the homes they wanted. Maybe there is a good
explanation but this immediately would raise a question
mark for me.
Next, take the features of the house that is going to get
built for you and then go to www.realtor.com and start
looking at competing houses for sale. My suggestion is to
know the zipcode for the new house and put that into
realtor.com. By skimming through the listings, you should
be able to get a pretty quick feel for what similar
properties are selling for in the area.
Now, let's take one other step from your desktop. I wonder
how many competing properties there are in the Cape Coral
area. At realtor.com, you could then see how many
properties fall into a certain bracket. So, for example, I
was told that a lot of the houses being constructed where
being sold in the mid $200,000's. At realtor.com, I plugged
in Cape Coral and I limited it to show me only houses that
were 0-1 year old, that were priced in the $200,000 to
$300,000 range.
The number of properties that I got back for sale was
staggering.. 1571 properties were found! That is a lot of
new homes for sale in a small place like Cape Coral.
****** Total Time Invested So Far: 10 Minutes Next, I did
my last step of the analysis just as a final sanity check.
If I am serious about buying a property in an area that I
don't know that well, then I call 3 realtors and tell them
that I am considering buying a property, I tell them what I
am looking at buying, and then give them the chance to
convince me that I should really be looking at something
else that they are selling. In my opinion, this is
perfectly fair to them because, in fact, I have
occasionally had them change my mind and I did buy
something from them.
The synopsis of what I heard pretty much confirmed what
realtor.com was telling me.. there was a lot of similar
property on the market and not moving fast. One realtor
even told me there was a 30% vacancy factor in those type
homes right now. I have no idea if that was true or not.
Based on the above techniques, the investor could then
start to make a preliminary informed decision. If you go
through the above approach and decide that this is a great
investment with low risk, high reward, then you are light
years above the masses. Oh, by the way, if you go through
that analysis and conclude you have a deal with $75K in
equity with only $500 down, then please call me!
About the Author:
Dr. Chris Anderson is the founder of
www.GetPreconstructionDeals.com and is referenced in
many venues including the New York Times and USA Today. Get
his weekly, thought provoking articles by signing up today!
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