Baltimore Real Estate Investing Blog

Ned Carey's Comments on Real Estate Investing, Business and Finance

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Does Huffington Post Think I am a Menace?

July 4th, 2010 · 5 Comments

The Other Foreclosure Menace

Mortgage Paid Off, Woman Loses Home — Over a Small Water Bill

By Fred Schulte, Ben Protess and Lagan Sebert
Huffington Post Investigative Fund

A version of this story appeared in The Baltimore Sun.

One raw day in early February, Vicki Valentine stood by helplessly as real estate investors snatched her West Baltimore home over what began with an unpaid city water bill of $362.

As snow threatened to fall, she watched a work crew hired by the new owners punch out the lock on her front door. A sheriff’s deputy was on the scene while Valentine and her teenage son piled whatever they could into a borrowed car.

Running out of time, Valentine scrambled to pack up clothing and mementos. The home had been her family’s for nearly three decades, and her father had paid off the mortgage in 1984. “It’s hard to say goodbye to this house,” she said. “It’s like someone forcing you out of something that belongs to you. I don’t get it.”

Valentine lost the two-story brick row home after the city sold her debt to investors through a contentious and byzantine legal process called a “tax sale.” This little-known type of foreclosure can enrich investors as growing numbers of property owners struggle to pay their bills.

These foreclosed homeowners are not the families making headlines for taking on mortgages they could ill afford. Families ensnared in the tax sale sometimes are unable to overcome relatively small debts owed to local tax collectors.

Rather than collect the overdue money they are owed, many local governments are selling tax liens. Buyers range from behemoths such as JPMorgan Chase & Co, and some regional banks and law firms, to small-fry investors lured by late-night television commercials promising quick riches. Investors generally bid in an auction for the right to collect delinquent taxes and other municipal debts on property owners, sometimes by paying only a few hundred dollars. When owners can’t pay, investors can pick up property at bargain prices.

It can be a good deal for everyone except the property owner. Selling the debts to investors can help governments efficiently ease budget woes without having the added expenses of debt collection, foreclosing and being a landlord.

Investors, meanwhile, can rake in hefty profits. That’s because they can tack on fees and steep interest rates, which can amount to 18 percent annually in Baltimore.

In Valentine’s case, legal fees and other charges climbed past $3,600 nearly 10 times her original bill.

Investors purchased an estimated $30 billion of real estate tax debt held by governments across the country in 2009, double the amount a year earlier, according to the Florida-based National Tax Lien Association. Altogether, 29 states and the District of Columbia can sell tax lien debt to investors.

Lien sales in Baltimore have nearly doubled since the housing bubble of 2006. On Monday, the city sold 12,689 liens – a probable record. Properties ranged from boarded-up shells and vacant lots to row homes in gentrified neighborhoods and some commercial buildings.


VIDEO: Vicki Valentine’s Eviction Day
Last February, Vicki Valentine was evicted when she couldn’t pay $3,603.41 to rescue her Baltimore home. Valentine’s wasn’t a typical foreclosure — the mortgage was paid off. But when she failed to pay a $362.28 water bill, the city auctioned her debt off in a tax lien sale. An investor now owns her home.


City records show that one in five of these liens on properties is for unpaid taxes or other municipal bills amounting to $1,000 or less. If Baltimore’s 2009 tax sale is any indication, hundreds will stem from delinquent water bills; there were 666 such liens last year.

Although the brisk tax lien trade thrives beneath the radar, largely unnoticed, it has occasionally drawn scrutiny from law enforcement authorities.

Some of Maryland’s most prominent tax sale investors have been swept up in a criminal investigation into bid rigging at the sales. Federal prosecutors allege that those investors agreed in advance which properties to bid at some auctions, improperly reducing the money earned by municipalities.

So far, Justice Department prosecutors have secured three convictions in the ongoing investigation. At a May 4 sentencing hearing for two of the defendants, a witness for the government was lawyer John Reiff, part-owner of the company that currently owns Valentine’s lien. He was not charged in the case.

Investing in liens can be risky, with profit on a particular property anything but certain. Investors generally compensate for such uncertainty by buying in large volumes, sometimes at a clip of thousands of liens each year.

Two of the investors who pleaded guilty in the bid rigging case made at least $10 million from fees and other costs collected from owners of some 6,000 property liens they bought over six years, according to federal prosecutors.

Prosecutors said in court filings they suspect bid-rigging occurs in other areas of the country. A JPMorgan subsidiary called Xspand and at least two other companies received grand jury subpoenas last year as part of a Justice Department anti-trust investigation in New Jersey, according to Bloomberg.

‘Unintended Consequences’

Some state lawmakers have questioned the fairness of the tax sale foreclosure process, which often sticks homeowners with thousands of dollars in legal fees and other costs. But cities and counties in Maryland earlier this year fended off an effort to keep water bills out of the tax sale, arguing that without the threat of losing homes many people would fail to pay their bills.

Revenue collectors defend their tax sales as a necessary, if sometimes distasteful, means for feeding the public treasury. In aging cities such as Baltimore, there’s also hope that new owners will rehab decaying or abandoned properties, restoring them to the tax rolls.

Investors say they aren’t the bad guys – they’re providing a service that helps plug holes in municipal budgets. Homeowners should face consequences for failing to pay their bills, they argue, noting that people faced with losing property have many opportunities to redeem it. The mounting fees, they say, reflect the costs involved in navigating complex legal requirements, tracking down property owners and taking them to court to enforce the liens. In Valentine’s case, they noted, a judge approved the fees.

“We are essentially the city’s bill collector,” said lawyer and tax lien investor Reiff.

Critics of tax sales question the morality of government tax collectors acting to enrich private investors at the expense of property owners with low incomes or facing hard times. They ask whether it’s the best way to compel people to honor their debts — especially involving relatively paltry public utility bills.

After all, when water bills go unpaid, some cities and counties simply shut off service. In Baltimore, officials often leave it on. Another alternative would be to have private collection agencies track down debtors.

“This is a case where good intentions have led to severe unintended consequences,” said Debra Gardner, of the Public Justice Center in Baltimore, a non-profit advocacy group for minorities and the poor.

Asked about Valentine’s story, David Vladeck, director the Federal Trade Commission’s Bureau of Consumer Protection in Washington, said it was “just horrifying to me.”

While noting that his comments did not reflect agency policy, Vladeck said he believed more recession-wracked homeowners across the country could face a similar plight. “It’s beyond tragic that this poor woman lost her home.”

Pleas – and More Fees

Valentine was incredulous when the price to keep her property shot past $3,600. Jobless and lacking the savings to pay, she said she could do little to stave off the day of reckoning.

That day arrived on February 3, when a Baltimore City Sheriff’s Department deputy served her with a court-issued “writ of possession” stripping her claim to the home.

Valentine, a former mental health counselor and rehab specialist with four children, said she moved back to her childhood home about a decade ago to care for her ailing father, Charles L. Turner. A retired brewery worker, he had Alzheimer’s disease.

As his condition worsened, he tended to hide bills from the family. (City records confirm that Turner often fell behind in meeting his obligations during the final years of his life and nearly wound up in the tax sale as early as 2000 over unpaid water bills and property taxes.)

When her father died in 2003, Valentine took over the home and stayed there with her son, Dimitrian, now 17. She said she fell into a serious depression in the wake of her father’s deteriorating health and death, and was unable to work or pay her bills on time. She has worked only sporadically since his death. Though she made partial payments on the water and sewer account in 2006, she acknowledges her failure to pay a bill of $462.28 in full. She went down to city hall and paid $100, but never took care of the balance.

When the deadline passed for paying up, the city added 2005-2006 property taxes of $287.92, interest and city tax-sale processing charges. That brought the total she owed to $710.57, according to city records.

The City of Baltimore washed its hands of Valentine’s debt in May 2006 when it sold the lien to Sunrise Atlantic LLC, an arm of the BankAtlantic in Fort Lauderdale. The Florida bank has bid on tax liens in a range of states, from Florida to Illinois, though it has largely sold off its Maryland lien portfolio and is not implicated in the bid-rigging case. BankAtlantic did not return phone calls seeking comment.

Unlike mortgage foreclosures initiated by banks, there’s no appealing a tax sale debt once it is sold off; a property owner has no option other than to abide by the investors’ terms and pay the fees. The lien holders also have little incentive to be flexible about repayment terms.

Maryland law gives property owners six months to redeem a tax lien with only minimal added costs. But if they don’t pay by then, lien holders can sue to seize the property and stick the homeowner with a slew of fees, including legal bills incurred in taking the matter to court. Sunrise Atlantic filed such a case on Valentine’s home in Baltimore City Circuit Court in December 2006, records show.

More than a year later, the court awarded the property to Sunrise Atlantic.

At that point, Valentine sent a handwritten letter to the court, begging for mercy and more time to repay.

In the letter, dated Feb. 9, 2008, Valentine described being unable to work because of depression and other problems. “For now, this is the roof over my son and my head. I am trying to get the money together to catch up on my delinquent bills.” She added: “Please allow more time to pay all bills connected with the foreclosure of said property.”

But the longer she waited and the more she protested, the more legal fees and other charges she incurred.

In 2008, Baltimore attorney Anthony De Laurentis, who represented Sunrise Atlantic, submitted itemized charges to the court: $305.91 in interest on the lien; a $1,500 bill for responding to Valentine’s requests to cut the fees and other legal work; more than $1,000 in assorted expenses, including $325 for a title search of the property and $79 for photocopies, according to court records.

The price list passed muster with a judge, who on Sept. 19, 2008 ordered that Valentine pay $3,603.41 – or forfeit her property.

She asked for another hearing, which delayed the process for more than a year.

While the case dragged on, the Florida bank started divesting its tax lien certificates from Maryland, eventually transferring the lien on Valentine’s home to a firm called Montego Bay Properties. Part of the firm is owned by a trust set up to benefit members of the family of lawyer De Laurentis. Reiff, one of De Laurentis’ law partners, also owns part of the firm.

In an interview in their Baltimore office, De Laurentis and Reiff said 90 percent or more of property owners eventually pay whatever is necessary to keep their homes.

They said most of the properties they take over are vacant and thus nobody is displaced. They also said they had repeatedly tried to settle the matter with Valentine and showed Investigative Fund reporters a thick file of court papers and other records as well as notes of more than a dozen contacts with her to make arrangements to clear the debt.

“We bent over backwards for her,” Reiff said, adding that his staff had tried for more than two years to “work something out” to no avail.

Feds Say Bids Rigged

Though Valentine had no way of knowing it, some investors rigged the 2006 Baltimore tax sale auction that led to her eviction, federal prosecutors alleged in court.

The roots of that conspiracy run deep, prosecutors said. For years, a handful of Baltimore real estate lawyers and their investment partners quietly dominated Maryland tax sale auctions, with few questions asked about their bidding tactics or collection policies.

That changed after The Baltimore Sun used city records and court filings to report in March 2007 that hundreds of mainly low-income city residents had been kicked out of their homes over small unpaid bills, ranging from water and sewer charges to minor environmental citations. Some people were driven from family property because they couldn’t afford to pay thousands of dollars demanded by lien holders.

The Baltimore newspaper also documented for the first time that while dozens of parties bid in Baltimore tax auctions in 2006 and 2007, just three investment groups had won about two-thirds of the liens.

Prosecutors went on to charge three men with conspiring to rig bids at 21 auctions in Baltimore and four other jurisdictions, including Montgomery and Prince George’s counties in the suburbs of Washington D.C. between 2002 and 2007. All three have since pleaded guilty. No other charges have been filed.

Another investment group involved in the conspiracy was DRT Fund, according to court filings by federal prosecutors. DRT is owned in part by De Laurentis and Reiff. DRT participated in a dozen of the 21 fixed auctions, though not the Baltimore City auction in 2006 in which Valentine’s lien was sold, according to court filings.

The Justice Department filed no charges against DRT, which came forward in the fall of 2007 and “fully and truthfully reported their own wrongdoing and that of their co-conspirators and terminated their part in the conspiracy,” prosecutors wrote in court papers filed last month.

DRT went on to sign an amnesty agreement with the Justice Department that commits it to “pay restitution to any person or entity injured as a result of the bid-rigging activity being reported in which it was a participant,” court records state.

Neither De Laurentis nor Reiff would discuss DRT’s settlement with the Justice Department.

Water Bill Woes

Some lawmakers have tried for years, with modest success, to rein in the tax-sale fees that can steamroll low-income homeowners. Maryland legislators passed a bill in 2008 that raised the minimum lien sold from $100 to $250. But a bill to prohibit cities and counties from selling delinquent water bills to investors failed in the state Senate earlier this year by a single vote.

Legislators also rejected a bill that would have prevented the sale of any lien of less than $750, as happens in some other locales outside of the state.

Both bills failed, lawmakers said, largely due to fierce opposition from tax collectors and officials in Baltimore, which conducts the largest tax sale in the state.

Andrea Mansfield, of the Maryland Association of Counties, testified that the tax sale process provides “a much-needed device to ensure that property owners remit payment for their fair share of taxes and charges connected to public services.”

Eliminating water bills from the tax sales would result in more “deficient accounts,” and lead to “increased rates on citizens who properly pay,” she wrote.

Sen. James Brochin, a Democrat from Baltimore County who co-sponsored the legislation that would have banned the sale of delinquent water bills to investors, vehemently disagrees. “It’s just disgusting. It’s highway robbery. It’s dead wrong. It’s immoral,” he said.

While city officials publicly defend the practice, he said, in reality “they’re humiliated and embarrassed by it. Deep down they know how immoral it is.”

Baltimore’s mayor, Stephanie Rawlings-Blake, declined requests for an interview on the topic with the Investigative Fund.

City officials were more talkative earlier this year when they sought to block lawmakers from banning the sale of water bill liens. Mary Pat Fannon, a lobbyist for the mayor’s office, said in prepared testimony for a February 5 hearing that the city had begun offering repayment plans for water bills to help homeowners avoid tax sale.

She said that the 666 water bill liens sold by Baltimore City in 2009 was way down from the 1,129 sold to investors the previous year and credited the repayment plans for the reduction.

And she went further, testifying that nobody had lost a home due to an unpaid water bill from either sale in 2008 or 2009. What Fannon neglected to mention: Because of the lengthy transfer process in the courts, it was too early for those groups of property owners to begin losing their homes. Most tax sale lawsuits have taken longer than two years to resolve through the courts.

Fannon also said that without the tax sale, the city would need to file debt collection lawsuits against each delinquent property owner, which she said “would be very expensive, time consuming and flood the courts.”

Two days before Fannon’s testimony at the state capital, Valentine stood watching as her belongings piled up on the sidewalk in Baltimore.

A Neighborhood’s Decline

More than three years after Valentine’s small debt drew her into the tax sale, neither the city nor the investors seem to have won much.

The property is unlikely to be fixed up any time soon. Instead, it adds to a sense of decay that permeates some parts of urban Baltimore. On Valentine’s old block in the Sandtown neighborhood, all but a handful of houses, abandoned long ago, are boarded up.

Such decline has summoned other ills. “Drugs moved in and replaced the good with the bad,” said Valentine, who is living temporarily with her mother. Many of her possessions are in storage.

De Laurentis and Reiff now hold a “writ of possession” for a property that’s in need of substantial repair. Though the home is assessed at $46,000, in such dilapidated condition the investors said they probably would have trouble selling it for more than $16,000.

In addition, investors could be on the hook for a $7,000 water bill of their own. Just how that happened is unclear; there may have been an undetected leak in Valentine’s home. Last month, the city finally turned off the water.

If the investors take the final step to secure a deed to the property, they would have to pay the city roughly $6,300, which the city is then supposed to turn over to Valentine. The law entitles original property owners to receive at least some compensation.

De Laurentis and Reiff say they’re still willing to work with Valentine to resolve the matter. Reiff said he gave her a key to the new lock so she could have more time to remove her belongings as a good faith gesture.

“We’ll definitely work something out with her,” Reiff said.






This story originally appeared on the Huffington Post

→ 5 CommentsTags: real estate · Tax Liens

Will the Housing Credit be Extended?

June 30th, 2010 · Comments Off on Will the Housing Credit be Extended?

Congress offered an $8,000 credit for first time home buyers ($6,500 for repeat buyers).  To receive this credit the home had to be under contract April 30, 2010 and close by June 30.

Many buyers have been unable to get their properties closed in time.  Settlements involving short sales for example can take many months to complete.  I was in the Baltimore City tax sale office yesterday.  This same office handles lien sheets and transfer taxes.  A title company employee was there with an expired lien sheet.  This could stop a settlement dead in it’s tracks.  Title companies were scrambling this week to get huge numbers of deals closed.  Through no fault of a buyer they could be out the $8,000 credit.

Yesterday the House of Representatives passed a bill extending the deadline to close on a home to receive the $8,000 credit for the purchase of a new home.  Today the Senate took up a bill to extend the closing time.  I would be against extending the credit itself but I do feel that buyers should have ample time to get the deal closed to get the credit.  Buyers have little control over how long it takes to get a property settled.  Almost all of the work is out of their hands.

What  do you think?  Leave a comment.

Comments Off on Will the Housing Credit be Extended?Tags: real estate

Advice from Winston Churchill

June 26th, 2010 · 1 Comment

Quote of the Day

“If you’re going through hell, keep going”

Winston Churchill

→ 1 CommentTags: Quotes

2010 Anne Arundel County MD Tax Sale

May 8th, 2010 · 7 Comments

Anne Arundel County flagAnne Arundel County MD tax sale will be held online June 8, 2010.  Their website for the Tax Auction is AAcountyTaxSale.com.  The site  currently lists 2876 properties for their tax sale.  This is about 1/2 the number in the Prince  Georges county tax sale and about 1/10 the number of tax liens is the Baltimore City Tax sale.  The site also has all the information you need to bid including video tutorials.

Tax Sale Registration Deadline

Registration to bid has just opened and will continue until 4:30 pm Friday June 4, 2010.  If you want to bid you must register in advance.   Registration is free!

What is the Interest Rate on Anne Arundel County Tax Liens?

The interest rate is 18%.  Anne Arundel County uses the high bid premium method of bidding.  This means you effective interest rate can be MUCH lower depending on your bid.  Make sure you know the rules before bidding.

Know the Rules, Know the Risks of Tax Sale

Tax sale investing can be a very safe way to get high returns.  It can also be a way to acquire properties at bargain prices.  But you must know the rules and the risks.  The biggest risk is bidding too much.  It is easy to do if you forget the hidden costs like the high bid premium which reduces your return or the attorney fees and subsequent taxes if you foreclose and acquire the property.

Good luck and don’t bid too  much,

Ned

→ 7 CommentsTags: real estate · Tax Liens

Mayor, Drew Carey has a Message for You

May 1st, 2010 · 12 Comments

Cleveland, Ohio and Baltimore have a lot of similarities.  Both were successful industrial towns after WWII.  Both have been losing population since the 50s as jobs left with the decline of heavy industry. They both now have crime, vacant housing and poor school performance.

Baltimore and Cleveland have used some of the same failed approaches to turning their cities around.  For example they both have sued banks because of the high foreclosures and both have high taxes.

Drew Carey Saves Cleveland

Drew Carey has made a career about being from Cleveland where he grew up.  He loves Cleveland and wants to see it prosper again.  So Drew approached the people from the Reason Foundation to go to study Cleveland to see what they could do to help.  Reason.tv now has a 10 part series (short videos) on You tube.

If you are interested in politics or urban development,  I think you will find these videos fascinating as I did.  They give good examples of what works and what doesn’t work.  Like the city council member who was proud that he got a permit through in 18 months for a constituent, contrasted to Houston, TX where a permit can be had in 1 day.  Which city do you think has better economic growth?

Here is the Drew Saves Cleveland intro video

Go here to see entire save Cleveland series.  John Stossel did a show with Drew using some of the same footage .  Watch the Stossel Cleveland show on Reason.tv or on Hulu.com.  Both are excellent and worth watching.

Mayor pay attention, Baltimore can use these tips

Baltimore can benefit from the same common sense approaches to growth and government that are recommended for Cleveland. These have been shown to be successful in Houston and around the country.  Baltimore and the entire state of Maryland are both in a bad fiscal cycle.  In  good times they spend money like drunken sailors and in bad times the struggle to pay bills and raise taxes.  Little thought is put to the long term consequences to policies put into place.

Happy viewing Mayor, apply these tips and you will be a hero.

Ned

→ 12 CommentsTags: real estate

Prince Georges County MD Tax Sale 2010

April 27th, 2010 · 1 Comment

Prince Georges County LogoPrince Georges County MD tax sale will be held online May 10, 2010.  Their website for the Tax Auction is PrinceGeorgesCountyTaxSale.com.  The site  currently lists 5760 properties for their tax sale.  The site also has all the information you need to bid including video tutorial.

Tax Sale Registration Deadline

If you want to bid you must register in advance.  The deadline for registration is fast approaching.  Registration is $150 must be completed by 4:30 pm April 30, 2010. There is still time because registration is online.

What is the Interest Rate on PG Tax Liens?

The interest rate is 20%.  Wow I had no idea the interest rate on tax liens was so high in PG county.  PG County uses the high bid premium method of bidding.  This means you effective interest rate can be MUCH lower depending on your bid.  make sure you know the rules before bidding.

What is the Risk of Tax Sales?

The biggest risk is bidding too much. That usually comes from not knowing the rules or how those rules will affect you. Check my other posts on tax sale and you will see more about the risks.  I will be writing a post specifically about the risk in Tax Sales, in the next few weeks, so be sure to check back.

Happy bidding,

Ned

→ 1 CommentTags: real estate · Tax Liens

A Base Hits Beats A Home Run

April 25th, 2010 · 9 Comments

With the start of the major league baseball season, a simple success formula recently heard comes to mind.  It uses baseball words, but contains plenty of success wisdom.

Which do you think is more important, a home run or a single base hit?  Most of us would choose a home run – even a “grand slam” home run.  Most of us were also brought up to believe that someday our “ship would come in” – that all of our success or wealth or whatever would arrive at once, in one grand port call.

Funny thing is – more ball games are won with base hits than with home runs.  Most ships arrive slowly in port – guided by tiny tugboats – and only after having navigated the wide oceans through a series of thousands of minor navigational corrections.

Yes! Big wins and successful journeys occur most often as the result of daily decisions – not life-altering, once-a-year, mega-decisions.   Want to lose weight?  It won’t happen because you vow on January 1 to do it.  It will be the result of your daily decision to walk, run, or work out.  Want excellent health?  Your daily, even moment-by-moment, decisions to ingest only healthy foods and avoid junk are the ones that will win the day.

The same holds true for your success in business.  While a master plan at the beginning of the year is important, it’s really the steps taken each day that produce the results.  As you face each of the very small daily decisions, be careful to make only the right choices.  By day’s end they’ll add up to valuable progress both on and off the field.

This is a guest post by Brian Gormley of Cornerstone Properties and Financial Services LLC.   If you like this post go to his website and sign up for his “morning coffee”  to get weekly inspirational e-mails.

→ 9 CommentsTags: Success & Wealth Building

Charles County Md Tax Sale 2010

April 23rd, 2010 · 4 Comments

Charles County tax saleThe Charles County Md tax sale will be held May 18, 2010.  Currently they list 837 properties.  Their auction for tax lien certificates will be conducted as an online auction.  Bids may be submitted starting Thursday May 13th and the Auction will end on Tuesday May 18.

Their website is www.charlescountytaxsale.com.  Their tax lien website has a list of properties, instructional videos, an FAQ, terms of sale,  and all the information you need to register and bid.  The interest rate is 12%.

Thanks to my friend Johnathan Benya, Southern Maryland’s real estate expert for the heads up on this tax sale.  Check out his site to know what’s going on in Charles County before you bid.

Happy bidding,

Ned

→ 4 CommentsTags: real estate · Tax Liens

Purple Cow

April 15th, 2010 · 8 Comments

Purple Cow, Seth Godins book on marketingSeth Godin is a great marketer.  His book the Purple Cow is a fun read.  Hey who says business books have to be dry and boring.  Seth’s books certainly aren’t.  It is only 137 pages and a fast read.   But don’t let its small size fool you.  It has a powerful message.

A Purple Cow Is Remarkable

The concept of the book is simple.  If you have seen one cow you have seen them all.  But if you saw a purple cow, well that would be remarkable!  You’d notice a purple cow.  You’d tell your friends about a purple cow.  That is why I Am telling you about the book Purple Cow.  When it comes to marketing books this one is – remarkable.

Seth Godin will guide you through the changes that are happening in the marketplace.  He discusses why the old paradigm of marketing doesn’t work any more.  Seth also describes how the products need to change to be successful today.

Otaku – What you want in your customers

I learned a new work from this book, Otaku.

“Otaku describes something that’s more than a hobby but a little less than an obsession. Otaku is the overwhelming desire that gets someone to drive across town to try the new ramen-noodle shop that a great review”

This is what you want in your customers.  This is why your products have to be remarkable.

Seth Godin Is Fun

One quote from the book I love

“Does the US Postal Service hire Annoying people or just train them that way?”

It is a great example of his irreverence and his unique way of looking at things.  Sadly the US Postal Service never quite looked at their own business that way.

Now I haven’ given anything away that you couldn’t read on the flap of  the cover.  Seth ads value by the humor and the case studies.  So buy this book.  You’ll be glad you did.  I “steak” my reputation on it.  I wouldn’t “steer” wrong.  And that’s no bull!  (Sorry, I’ve got to milk it for all it’s worth)

Buy Purple Cow from Amazon here at a great price.

Happy Reading,

Ned

→ 8 CommentsTags: Books · Business and Finance

Hard Money Lenders

April 10th, 2010 · 4 Comments

In my recent post What is Hard Money,  I promised to post a list of Hard money lenders.  So here it is.  Much of this list comes from an e-mail by Baltimore real estate investor John Parker; thanks John.

Local Baltimore Hard Money Lenders

Cavalier Realty Company, Inc.

Hard Money Bankers
Jeffrey Shiller from Hard Money Bankers is a practicing real estate attorney. He is active in several of the local investing clubs.

HML Capital Group
Beth Marsie-Hazen helps run the Mariea investing club. You can find her and her partner Michael Gabriel at their meeting regularly.

Neil Roseman, Imagine capital
Neil is a lead inspector as well as a hard money lender.  I have never used him for hard money but I have used him as a lead inspector.  I wouldn’t hesitate to use Neil if I was looking for a loan.  The best way to reach  him is by cell phone  410-591-4597

Rex Frost, Blue Island Inc.
Dr. Frost can be reached from 9am -12:00 noon at 410-592-2967

Commercial Lending, LLC
Commercial Lending LLC  Lends on deals in Virginia, Maryland, and DC. However they do not  lend in Baltimore. The contact is Michelle Baxter:
Office: 703 – 858 – 9539, Cell: 703 – 303 – 9013

ACC Mortgage Inc.
ACC lends in the Dc region.  They will lend in Baltimore for the right deal.  They will lend 100% of purchase price and up to 80% of rehab costs.  800-995-2226, or 240-314-0399.  My contact is Gary at ext. 21

 

Hard Money Lenders From Around the Country

Brookview Financial
Equity Development Corp.
Hard Money Funding Network
Cohen Financial group
Blue Water Funding
Private Financial Club
Fusion Cash and Capital
HML Funding LLC
Synergy Equity Management
Dial Financial
Kennedy Funding
Peaches Capital
Buy Now Hard Money NH and MA only

Other Funding Sources

The following are not true hard  money lenders but they may help with your quest to find investing money.

Go Big Network
Prosper
Lender Lab

→ 4 CommentsTags: Advanced tips · Beginner · real estate

Marketing tip from Walt Disney

April 8th, 2010 · 5 Comments

Quote of the Day

“Do what you do so well that people can’t resist telling others about you.”

– Walt Disney

I love this quote from Walt Disney.  What a great way to make your business grow.  Today the social media marketers would call it “Going Viral.”   Seth Godin calls it “Being Remarkable.”   His entire book Purple Cow, is about this very concept.

Today it seems most people and businesses do a poor job with customer service. The irony is this makes it easy to stand out from the crowd, yet so few take the opportunity to do it.

→ 5 CommentsTags: Quotes · Success & Wealth Building

What Is Hard Money?

April 3rd, 2010 · 16 Comments

Hard MoneyIf you are new to real estate investing you may have heard the term “Hard Money”.  Just what exactly is hard money?  It is a short term loan with high interest designed for investors who renovate properties. These loans do not come from banks or traditional lenders. They are offered by private lenders in the business of making loans to real estate investors.

You can remember the term by thinking it’s hard to pay back because of the high interest.  However I was at a foreclosure auction of a well know Baltimore hard money lender and he said it’s call hard money because  “It is hard to collect.”

What Are the Terms for Hard Money Loans

While traditional financing is made primarily based on credit scores and the borrowers ability to pay, hard money is usually based on the value of the property.  Hard money lenders will loan for both acquisition and repairs up to approximately 60- 65% of the after repair value of the property.  A typical hard money loan would pay for the property at closing and pay for the repairs on a draw schedule.  In other words repair money would be reimbursed as the repairs are completed.

Hard money lenders typically charge 12-15% interest and 3 to 5 points.  A point is  1% of the loan.  So for example if you were borrowing $100,000 and were charged 3 points,  you would have to pay $3,000 up front.

Why Should I pay Loan Shark Rates?

You might ask “Why would I pay that much in interest when rates are so low now?”

  1. Loans are hard to get now.  You may not even be able to get a loan from traditional lenders like banks.
  2. Even in a strong lending market it is harder to find construction loans.  Most mortgage lenders only want to lend on livable properties in good condition.  We usually need loans on properties needing work as well as the money to fund the renovations.
  3. Traditional lenders take a long time to approve loans and can be unpredictable.  Hard money loans are often approved in a few days.  Sometimes the ability to act fast will get you better deals.
  4. If you have poor credit, that may not be as important to a hard money lender.  It will kill you in the eyes of a traditional lender.
  5. It is often cheaper than a “partner”.  A common scenario is to find a money partner and split 50/50. You are giving away 50% of  your profits!  A  hard money loan would cost you a lot less.

New investors often think hard money is too expensive.  It is not the cost of the money that matters, it is how much money it will make you that counts.

New  Rules for Hard Money

The tightening of credit markets has affected hard money loans too. Today a hard money lender is likely to look at your credit. They may also  expect you to have some experience in renovating properties, and have some “skin in the game.”  In other words they won’t fund the entire deal.

In the high flying days of the hot mid 2000s market, hard money lenders would fund the entire deal. Today you will have to come to the closing table with some money to put down.  In addition to money to put down as part of the price you will also need funds for closing costs.  You will still need additional funds to start the renovations.  As said above, renovation funds are on a draw schedule.  This means you pay for the first stage of the repairs and when they are completed you get reimbursed. You then use those funds to complete the next stage.

For a list of hard money lenders both local and national see this Hard Money Lender List

Happy investing,

Ned

→ 16 CommentsTags: Advanced tips · Beginner · real estate

Today’s Quote

April 2nd, 2010 · 5 Comments

“You can’t run away. You can only repeat what you don’t want to face.”

Richard Flint – From his morning minute video

We often have tough issues in out lives that we don’t want to face. Our logical side knows we need to deal with the issue, but our emotional side holds us back because it will be uncomfortable. But if we don’t face it today, we will repeat the uncomfortable emotions every day until the issue is resolved.

How do you know the most important thing you should do today?  It is often the very issue you want to avoid and procrastinate.  While the task we dread may not be important in and of itself, it is the energy drain it causes that makes it important. Dealing with tough issues immediately is a great habit to have.  Unless and until, you deal with them, they continue to be an energy drain. Don’t just do it today, make it the first thing you do. The rest of the day will be a piece of cake.

To your success,
Ned

→ 5 CommentsTags: Quotes · Success & Wealth Building

2010 Howard County Tax Sale Anounced

March 31st, 2010 · 13 Comments

Update – see 201Howard County Seal1 Howard County Tax Sale

Howard County has announced the date of the 2010 tax sale.  The date will be May 24th 2010. Howard County traditionally has run their tax sale as a live auction and it appears that this year will be no different. A tax auction is for a tax lien certificate, which give you the right to collect interest on the taxes due and ultimately foreclose if the taxes are not paid. For more information go to the Howard County website tax sale section.

Howard County will have an information session about their tax sale on May 13th 2010.  Click this link for a PDF  flyer about their informational session.

Good luck and don’t bid too much,

Ned

→ 13 CommentsTags: real estate · Tax Liens

Cash Flow Game

March 29th, 2010 · 3 Comments

Join me and my friends from REACH to play the Cashflow game at Bare Bones Grill and Brewery in Ellicott City, MD April 8, 2010.  It is a great opportunity to network with like minded individuals who are interested in Real Estate and building their net worth.  RSVP for the CashFlow Game here.

The Cash Flow game is a blast and you will feel like a tycoon as you build your financial portfolio. It is designed by Robert Kiyosaki author of Rich Dad, Poor Dad,  as a financial teaching tool.  It will help you learn to evaluate and maximize your investments.  The game will also guide you as to what is important and what will trip you up on your path to wealth.  The goal of the game is about getting out of the “rat race” and building enough wealth to live off your investments.

Remember to bring business cards.  The cost is free but the restaurant will expect us to consume food and drink for providing the space.

RSVP for CashFlow here

I hope you can join us.

Ned

PS:  Don’t forget to RSVP.  Last time we had to notify people of an address change!

→ 3 CommentsTags: Beginner