In real estate, there's no room for assumptions
Jessica White/DC Columnist
Issue date: 7/27/08 Section: Business
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I want to buy an investment property. I went to an investment seminar and learned a lot of different strategies on how to buy foreclosure properties without a realtor, without a lender and for no money down. Now I think I am interested in wholesaling properties or assuming someone else's mortgage. Are these good ways to make money?
Thanks!
Karyn C.
Dear Karyn,
No and no. And for all the "ifs, ands and buts" that you are about to throw in - no to all that as well. For those who do not already know, "wholesalers" are people who get a contract to buy a property for one price and then turn around and sell it to another party for a higher price, and the wholesaler gets to pocket the difference. For example, the wholesaler finds a foreclosure property in Baltimore worth $120,000 and puts it under contract for a fraction of the value, say $80,000. The wholesaler then finds a buyer who is willing to buy the property for $90,000. The wholesaler pockets the $10,000 difference at settlement (assuming the wholesaler finds a title company willing to do the deal).
I would like to suggest another name for that type of person: real estate agent. Real estate agents make their money by bringing buyers and sellers together, and they get paid a commission by the seller, which is deducted from the purchase price. And to practice real estate, you need to take the appropriate course work and get a license from the state. "The real estate commission is going after people like this," said Nancy Gusman, managing attorney for Cosmopolitan Real Estate Settlements, Inc. in Largo, MD. And, she added, title companies that close this type of transaction are playing a game of legal jeopardy as well.
Acquiring property by assuming someone's loan or taking the property "subject to" the existing mortgage is also not a good move. When you assume someone's loan, the buyer takes over the monthly payments of the seller and obtains title to the property. However, assuming the mortgage without permission from the lender is a breach of the terms of the deed of trust and the note, which almost always has a "due on sale" clause. Very few loans are assumable these days. And even if the loan was assumable, the lender will have rules for the assumption. If you assume a loan without going through the process, or assume the loan even though it is non-assumable, the lender can institute foreclosure proceedings immediately because it is a non-monetary breach of the deed of trust.
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I.P. Freely
posted 7/28/08 @ 4:54 PM EST
The depth of this woman's ignorance is matched by her occupational bias, here ignorance of fundamental economics, and apparent desire to cater to conventional wisdom, ie. (Continued…)
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