About Low Ball offers for a Cape Coral Property

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The basic of a Real Estate transaction is obviously a seller willing to sell to a buyer willing to buy. Once you have those terms agreed upon, you are half way to closing.

But if the seller have to settle for a low ball offer from a buyer, everyone involved in the deal may lose time and money. This is where a clever agent can use valuable skills to negotiate the deal and make it happen all the way to the closing.

One thing I use to do is really showing the temperature of the market to  my buyers. I think it is important that they acknowledge how the today’s Real Estate market in Cape Coral is reacting to. I compare sold pricing instead of listed pricing, and this can be valuable to sellers as well in order to ask the right price instead of waiting an offer forever. Once my buyer understand the market, of course, it is ultimately their decision on what to put in their offer. But at least they know the potential result.

Also, I like to compare what’s comparable. I recently visited a seller. It was a “by owner” and his price was close enough to what the neighborhood was asking for. However, the features of his home were very different and a realistic price should be much lower. That’s why it’s still for sale with no showing today, after months on the market. So, I show only similar features home for comparing and make a wise decision about the offering price.

Low ball offers usually waste buyers’ time. And that time is valuable. If a buyer is offering low ball offers on 20 properties and getting denied each time, offering a decent price at the first one would most likely had given equity by now to that buyer. Not only he had money in the property, but he is an owner instead of nothing, hoping for “the best deal” to happen. Make low ball offers if you don’t need to buy, not if you are looking for a roof to live under.

Now, if you see a property bought around 2005-2007, when the Real Estate was at peak, chances are the seller is selling at lost. He knows that and it is already difficult for him. Showing a low ball offer right there is to shoot yourself in the foot. This is something I have the need to emphasize for the health of a transaction. Sellers are people with families they have to take care of, not just a number. Ultimately, again, my buyers have the last decision about their offer.

Low ball offer

Low ball offer

But let me tell you something that happened in the last few months when a buyer from Pennsylvania emailed me asking for a “good deal” foreclosure. I had several of them and even if I explained that the market is bouncing back, often with multiple offers, this buyer wanted to get a bargain in a location where everything was dirt cheap.

I found a nice pool home located in the SE of Cape Coral with access to the gulf of Mexico. It was a foreclosure well priced at $179,900. He told me he would pay that price when he saw the other similar sold properties I sent to him. But he wanted to “grab a deal” and he made an offer at $150,000, hoping a counter offer in the mid $160K from the bank. The scenario I told him just happened. They was a counter offer, but to another buyer who offered $175,000 and who ultimately close on that property. At this time, there is no more gulf access pool home in SE cape under $200K. No need to say the buyer made an easy $25K equity in one month. My buyer? He closed on a lovely property with a nice pool for $195,250. He does not have access to the gulf of Mexico. He’s on a fresh water canal. He knows he missed it.

So, if you are thinking of low ball offers, just know what to expect. And don’t make me wrong, I make low ball offers myself time to time, but I don’t have to buy. If I close it, great. If not, oh well, next…Not a big deal :-)

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Comments (0) Apr 25 2012

E2 investor VISA Business for sale | 4 cabins rental in Sevierville, TN

Posted: under Investments.
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Ideal 4 cabins rental properties on 8 Acres for owners/operators and qualifying for E2 visa.

This business will qualify for foreign investors seeking an E2 investor Visa.

Grossing $75,000+/year and could be better if on site owner and if rented as overnight.

Possibility to built 2 more units and cottage on the creek side.

20 minutes from the Great Smoky Mountains National Park with 11 millions visitors/year!

This property has huge potential. I strongly suggest to use the basements and garage as home theater and game room/entertainment area with big flat screen TVs. With the 2 other cabins built, this property will have 6 cabins in total. The potential rent for those completed cabins could be as follow:

1 X 4 bedrooms cabin: $45K/year

2 X 2 bedrooms cabin: $64K/year (2 X $32K)

3 X 1 bedroom cabin: $75K/year (3 X $25K)

Cottage/camping site/RV space could go from $25/night to $60/night with a potential of $$36K/year

So the total potential gross could reach the $220,000 mark per year.

The 2 cabins that can be built would cost a roughly $160K for both.

The cottage are smaller studio like cabin that can be extremely competitive if priced below $60/night because that will be a cheaper alternative to hotel room while bigger,more private and located in a better environment.

Asking: £590 000/$945,000/725,000 Euros | 70% financing in place already | £180,000/$315,000/225,000 Euros down (30%)

Claude THOMAS

1-865-237-5043
www.isellsevier.com/156868

Sevierville cabin E2 investor visa business for sale

Sevierville cabin E2 investor visa business for sale

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Comments (0) Feb 08 2010

Unqualified to buy a $160,000 home, earning only $285,000/year…

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I had a chat with a mortgage broker today, about one of my buyers. He will have a hard time to get them qualified to buy. They only earn $285,000 yearly gross and have only $60,000 in saving. Fortunately, since the home they have an eye on is listed at $160,000, there is still a small chance they can buy it. Here are the interesting datas:

They are married and filed their tax return jointly.

He earns $25,000/year and has a credit score of about 720, with no red spot, pays his 3 credit cards on time and his car’s loan as well.

She earns $260,000/year as a successful internet entrepreneur and has no credit history, no debt, no credit card and a FICO of 450, no red spot, no nothing in there actually.

She has the $60,000 for a down payment in a bank account for several month on her name only.

They are looking to put a 10% as down payment.

Here are the scenarios now:

If they are going to purchase the property jointly with both of them on the deed and on the note, the average FICO score from the LOWEST number will be used, and most likely they won’t be qualified.

If they are going to purchase the property on his name, with a better score and history, the payment is way above the 40%ish debt to income ratio necessary, and most likely, they won’t be qualified.

Also, she will have to give him the down payment from her account as a gift. She’s paying, but she’s nowhere on the deed or on the note.

I’ll have more info by tomorrow though, and maybe they’ll get a green light, hopefully.

But there is a way to be more than comfortable financially and unable to buy anything…

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Comments (0) Jan 21 2010

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