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The Truth About Real Estate Investing…is It Right For You? You have probably been hearing, seeing and reading that real estate investing is the best thing since sliced bread. There are many late night cable television infomercials spewing out sales pitches for courses that teach you how to buy residential real estate no money down or for next to nothing. Furthermore, polished pitch men on the advertisement emphasize that it is so easy that anybody can do it. They smugly show you that it is simple as they pencil out on the back of a napkin how you will supposedly make a fortune in real estate. Then these real estate investment course promoters show "actual" interviews of people who have reportedly made gobs of money with the course system. Although it is true that fortunes can be made in real estate it is actually more likely that it will be the guru owner of the real estate course than you! The reason is that real estate investing is a lot harder than most people realize. When you buy, rent, and sell real estate as opposed to stocks you are dealing directly with people and there is not organized exchange to keep things standardized. Don't forget that courts see it as their duty to protect the shelter of families even if they are non paying renters who are total deadbeats. Another problem is that many contractors who do odd fix up jobs for real estate rehabbers are drifters with as many personal and financial problems as bad tenants. They damage houses and are down the street
NYC Coop Sales Price Now Public Information It's an old axiom that, despite increasing numbers of condos, coops still account for around 80% of NYC's apartment inventory.
Yet, until recently, the sales figures were shrowded in mystery. No more. A recently passed law allows access to these figures through use of the City's ACRIS system. While the link may not be up for long, you can find a pdf guide to how the system works at NYC.gov/html/dof/html/jump/acris.shtm. Noah's Ark 2006 In the year 2006, the Lord came unto Noah, who was now living in the United States, and said, "Once again, the earth has become wicked and over-populated, and I see the end of all flesh before me.
Build another Ark and save 2 of every living thing along with a Few good humans."
He gave Noah the blueprints, saying, "You have 6 months to build the Ark before I will start the unending rain for 40 days and 40 nights."
Six months later, the Lord looked down and... Commercial Rent Prices Up - Square Footage Down? A recent article in Business Week suggests that the open space model of the dot com era may, actually be a paradigm to enable businesses to reduce one of their largest expenses, namely, commercial office rent.
Yet, the position of the author is hardly universally shared, eliciting a number of rejections and criticisms in the posted comments following the article.
From my own experience, there is no doubt that, technologically, more and more things can be done in more and more places.... Bubble Metrics I came across a very interesting website, that of the Center for Economic Policy Research, an organization that's done alot of looking into the housing bubble issue and that has alot of articles that you'll find interesting and informative.
What's really noteworthy, though, is a unique bubble calculator that seeks to measure whether you'd be better off renting or buying by plugging in the price, mortgage terms, location and projected hold time into the fields, which then takes into... Expected Report of Year Over Year 2nd Qtr Condo Price Declines Today's NY Sun reports that an expected industry report on condo prices will show softening on a year over year basis for the second quarter.
As the article recites, industry analysts opine on whether they foresee a repeat of the coop collapse of the late 1980's when oversupply combined with softening demand and tax reform to cause a sharp drop in prices.
Some, according to the article, feel the City's overall healthy economy will prevent this recurrence in the case of... Worried about Interest Rates? Tell that to the Rent Guidelines Board In an unusually raucus session of the Rent Guidelines Board's annual spectacle on guidlines increases for rent stabilized apartments in NYC, the Board members could hardly hear themselves over incessant drum beats from Tenant activists, yet still managed to outrage them, while disappointing landlords in the process.
Read about the meeting and the increases at <a... Problems When the 1031 Tail Wags the Dog Here's an interesting article about what happens when investors, in their zeal to meet the stringent time requirements of a 1031 exchange, invest in properties in areas they're unfamiliar with and do so without their usual degree of due diligence.
<a href="http://www.realestatejournal.com/buysell/markettrends/20060615-hagerty.html?refresh=on" >http://www.realestatejournal.com/buysell/markettrends/20060615-hagerty.html?refresh=on</a> Everybody into the Pool! When it comes to Terrorism Insurance, the government's days as a reinsurer of last resort are numbered, ending in 2007 following one extension of a temporary act intended to restore confidence among the Nation's insurers and reinsurers following the huge losses suffered as a result of the 9/11 attacks.
A lobbying group called the Real Estate Roundtable, <a href="http://www.rer.org/," >http://www.rer.org/,</a> recently proposed modeling a future system after that... Taxes and Commercial Real Estate Activity in NY Today's NY Sun has an interesting article sure to reinvigorate the timeless intellectual arm wrestling about whether booms and busts in real estate are primarily driven by tax policy or the business cycle.
This article focuses on the infamous "Cuomo Tax", formally known as the Real Property Gains Tax, enacted in the '80's by then Governor Mario Cuomo. In short, the tax that excluded townhouses and one and two family houses, surcharged capital gains on most other... Another View on the Bubble-No Bubble Coin Toss Glenn Roberts, Jr. of Inman News today quotes from findings of the Anderson Forecast, an economic report out of UCLA.
According to the report, housing is more likely to head for a crash rather than the gradually deflating balloon we've all be hearing about lately.
For more, check out the article ( subscription required) at <a href="http://www.inman.com/hstory.aspx?ID=53488" >http://www.inman.com/hstory.aspx?ID=53488</a>
as soon as they get a little cash out of the hapless real estate investor.It also takes many years to learn how to properly assess value in a town or neighborhood and get the required experience in real estate closings to not have the big profits you initially think you see in a deal leak out. The key point is that real estate investing is a business. Like any other business it requires constant dedication and education. If you work full time it means losing your free time to your rentals and rehabs. If a property doesn't sell or if the tenant doesn't pay you will have to lose part of your salary to cover the mortgage. You should enjoy your regular full time job because you selected it. If you prefer cookouts and trips to the beach over collecting rent and repairing your residential real estate investment then the stock market is a better place for you. If you are interested in real estate investing I have a list of reliable real estate investing courses as well on my website!. Short Bio:ABOUT THE AUTHOR: Dr. Scott Brown, Ph.D., the Wallet Doctor, is a successful investor. Dr. Brown holds a Ph.D. in finance. For more information visit Dr. Brown’s site at http:// www.BonanzaBase.com or sign up for his investment tips at http:// www.WalletDoctor.com
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