Archives for February 11, 2015

Do you have the Right Real Estate tools in your belt?

good foundation, start right, build a power team

 

The only way that you can build a house that won’t fall down is to start with all the right tools, most people say you need a good foundation – which is true but if the people pouring that foundations don’t have the right tools the foundation will be terrible.  A real estate business is much the same, without the right tools you will have a very shoddy product with which you will be trying to use to turn a profit.  Even IF you have all the right tools and resources put in front of you or you have been told about them if you don’t know how you USE those tools properly you might “cut off a finger or two” trying to get things off the ground properly and see results in a reasonable time frame. There are many real estate tools that you have likely been told about in courses or other resources such as:

-build a power team

-find a good lawyer

-get three quotes from contractors

-have a home inspector

-find a great mortgage broker

-build a website

– Have a social media presence

However has anyone of those courses or resources actually shown you all the specific details on HOW to execute all those items (and more) on the list?  I know from experience that learning about all these things the hard way through trial and error can take cost you dearly in time and money, not to say that I did not learn a truckload of things from that experience. That said, I normally like to take advice from successful people from the past such as Albert Einstein who said “don’t ever memorize anything you can look up” and adapting that advice a little to say that you should not waste too much time learning skills and thrashing around in the dark without a direction if there is a better way or you can leverage someone else’s experience so that you do not make the same mistakes.  I think that the investment of time and money (sometimes both) in working with and networking with other successful real estate investors can provide exponential returns.  The only resource we can not make more of no matter how much technology advances in this world is time – we only have the same 24 hours each day to get things done, so how much do you really want to accomplish in a day?

To your success!

Tim R

 

Small towns BIG Real Estate Profits

I have seen a lot of investors over the past couple years very interested in commercial and multi unit residential properties, which is the best place to be in real estate especially in the end game.  The reason that multi tenant buildings are so desirable is that you have multiple streams of income and if you have a vacancy you do not lose out on the whole profit for that month.  There are also other great things about multi tenant buildings such as charging for multiple parking spaces as well as laundry and in some cases other amenities such as pools and gyms if they exist in the building.  One of the largest barriers to getting into these types of buildings is often the price – I recently saw a 4 unit apartment building in Calgary listed for over 1.2 million dollars! This property has the zoning to build a 12 unit building on the land but this is just an example of how high the prices can be in some of the large markets like Calgary and Edmonton.  The standard cap rate that someone should generally be looking for in an apartment building (depending on their goals of course) is around 8% and of course greater where possible.  This is impossible in the Calgary market at the current time and most smaller centers near Calgary due to the price increases we have seen over the last 24 months.  This causes a dilemma for those trying to make the move into multi tenant properties, now you could look in other provinces to be sure but there is a better bang for your buck if you are willing to open you mind to smaller towns in other parts of Alberta!  There are a precious few investors that would even think about buying an apartment building in a “small” town – why? I personally do not understand their objections: its not in a major center, there is no job growth there, what if the factory closes.  Now, the factory closing argument has some merit in some cases but only if 40% or greater of the whole town’s population works there and its closing would mean nobody could pay rent.  If the numbers make sense and the fundamentals are there such as vacancy rates being low and having more than one industry that fuels the job market then why not take a look at a small town? I know of a deal right now that is off market for a 12 unit building with an 8% cap rate that is only 83000/door and is only 2 hours from Calgary!  There are lots of these deals out there just waiting to be snapped up by savvy investors that know a deal is a deal no matter it’s location – not I know it is nice to invest in your backyard or close to a major city in your province but sometimes a major center means major prices that just don’t make sense when compared to some of the other options in the market.  That deal I mentioned is off market as well so there are deals that a lot of the conventional world just does not see so keep networking to find those pocket deals that never hit the MLS.

 

To your success!

Tim R