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A Guide to Going Bankrupt in Real Estate!!!

A Guide to Going Bankrupt in Real Estate!!!

First off, watch some late night infomercials on TV. And possibly order some real estate tapes from Carlton Sheets. This will provide you with a positive upbeat attitude and a sense of false confidence that is essential in order to go bankrupt. Believe that after listening to some tapes, you can compete with people that have done this 7 days a week for years.

Second. For your first investment, buy in a city you know little to nothing about and avoid using a buyers agent who does know the city. Go directly to the sellers agent. The best way to make a truly horrible decision is to avoid any outside advice. The best part of this is that avoiding a buyers agent usually doesn’t save you any money since the selling agent simply makes more when you deal with them directly.

Look for a discount or a distressed property over a good long term investment. Late night infomercials and Carlton Sheets talk a lot about this. Getting equity at the point of sale. One thing about distressed properties with desperate sellers is that they frequently are in crappy areas with low appreciation rates. Buying a property at under market rate in an area with low appreciation potential versus a property in a good area is the kind of short sighted thinking that will really help you reach the goal of bankruptcy and foreclosure.

When you talk to people including your realtor, try to spend time talking about all the crap you learned from your book or light night infomercial. The more you listen to other people, the more you might get different perspectives and the higher chance you might learn new things. This could really hurt your chances of going bankrupt so avoid listening to anyone. Remember you know everything even if you only got interested in real estate last week.

Be positive to the point of stupidity. Alot of investors I know always think about how their situation would be affected by a 10 or 20 percent drop in the market before making a purchase. You should avoid this kind of thinking. You need to be blinded by greed. You should only fantasize about how you are going to double your money.

When calculating your monthly cashflow, assume that you will have 100% occupancy all the time and no maintenance cost. While you are at assume that its going to rain money tomorrow.

Also, be stubborn when renting your properties. Decide upon a number say $900 a month and refuse to budge. Come up with some bizarre logic about how the property deserves $900 a month. Lose months of rent having the property sit vacant instead of going down $50 on the rent. Instead of responding to the market make statements like “Well the markets wrong then”.

As you move closer to foreclosure, don’t alter your spending habits. Don’t move into a smaller house or cut spending. Act like nothing is wrong.

Overextend, overextend, overextend. Are you approved to buy one house. Why not buy 5, heck why not 20. Instead of building up a portfolio of properties over time, gaining experience along the way, just buy alot of properties next Tuesday.

Alot of people are getting into the foreclosure game. Their is no reason you should be left behind. Throwing caution to the wind and filling your eyes with greed and you should find yourself walking down the golden path to foreclosure.

This is not a definitive guide to foreclosure. Alot of people end up in foreclosure due to many things unforeseen events like unpreventable family illness, divorce or job loss. This is simply a guide to what I call elective foreclosure.

Watch the video related to real estate investment

www.localmentor.com Colorado Real estate investment expert, Michael Jake, teaches zero down investing techniques. Learn foreclosures, short sales, subject to, land contracts, owner financing and other creative real estate financing structures. Free Colorado real estate investing course teaches you how www.localmentor.com

Help answer the question about real estate investment

Are there any real estate investment courses out there that arent scams?
I am basically looking for a course, if anyone knows of one that isnt a scam, that teaches the basics of real estate investment.

About Author

Escapesomewhere Austin Real Estate is a realty company operating in Austin Texas. Their website has a page on Austin Foreclosures along with a real estate cashflow calculator.

Category: Real Estate Investments

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5 Responses

  1. bigmacfann says:

    I'm in the same boat and looking to buy my first property as well.

    I set it up as an LLC.

    Sole Proprietor is generally a bad move in my opinion as it offers no protection of personal assets should something happen to that property.

    If you want to send me an email through the system here, I'm more than happy to chat about what I've done, who I've talked to, and what contacts I've made.

  2. Alexander G says:

    Your best bet, and it is a bet since gambling is involved, is to start an investment club. This would probably be local and you could have meetings etc. Just open a bank account under the name to be used. Collect investment money and go for it.

    Now an investment fund would give the idea of a mutual fund. A lot of time and red tape involved with selling stock on the market. This would also cost you the start up and leave nothing for investing.

  3. Jason252 says:

    You need a team.

    See if there are any real estate investment groups in your town. Google it.

    Then go to yahoo groups, msn groups and google groups and search for real estate investment groups in your community.

    Find out when they meet and go sit in on the meetings. Don't discuss your plans until you know who you're dealing with. You're there to learn first, network second, and do business third.

    Your goal is to build your team (investors – contractors – etc)

  4. jeffnicolas says:

    I think you are right on starting as a corporation.

    HOWEVER…as legalities vary from state to state on private investors, I think you really need to find a good small business attorney in your area, pay him a fee, and find out the in's and out's from there. A lot to consider with investors. 1) Are they going to be silent partners? Or 2) Are they going to have an equal say in how the company is run? Would be worth the fee.to find a good business attorney to lay it all out for you. Or find a book on amazon about starting a business. Once you are using someone elses' money, the company is no longer yours exclusively, unless you have a proven track record and your investors are willing to leave you in full control.

  5. MRLOVE says:

    REITs have had a great run these last several years. Be aware it may not continue. I do not know the best one. But there are some index funds of REITs. Think about investing in those. They were among the best performing REITs this year.

    RWR and VNQ and IYR. Each is up about 38% ytd. Sort of a broad brush approach to picking the best. Just pick them all.

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