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Before Selling Your Home
Here are some important steps you should take before you put your house on the market:
1. Home Loan Approval for your next Home
You don’t want to be signing a contract to sell your house before knowing if you are qualified to buy another....
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Purchasing a vacation property is a big step for most people. If it is your first, you need to keep several things in mind before you move forward with a purchase.
1. Decide what type of property you want. Perhaps, as travelers, you simply want a...
Modular Homes - Affordable Housing
With soaring real estate prices, many Americans are looking to alternative home options. Modular homes are one of the popular affordable housing options.
Modular Homes
Modular homes represent almost 8% of all new U.S. home sales, with nearly...
Real Estate Marketing Online -- Search Engine Tips For Agents
Spend some time in a real estate marketing forum online, and you'll soon discover that search engines top the list of hot topics.
Every agent wants his or her website to rank high in the search engines, and rightfully so. But with so much...
Thinking Vertically
I’ve often wondered why we describe houses and other buildings in terms of square footage. Though we live in a three-dimensional world, when it comes to real estate, only length and width seem relevant. What happened to height, the 3rd dimension?...
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Exposed! The Real Estate Wholesale Quick-turn Flipping Deal
Wholesale real estate investing (i.e. "quick-turn" or "flipping" real estate property) is conceptually very simple. Here's how it works:
First, "Investor A" finds a great real estate deal with a lot of equity. Typically, Investor A will have spent a significant amount of time, money, and expertise to find the deal, negotiate the terms, and get the property under contract. By putting the property under contract, Investor A now has control of the property, and the equity in the property.
(For this example, imagine that Investor A has found a property worth $200,000 and has set a purchase price of $115,000 and he also knows that there are $15,000 in repairs, which leaves an equity position of $70,000).
Second, "Investor A" finds another party, "Investor B". Investor B recognizes that the contract that Investor A has established is worth $70,000 in equity, and so he strikes a deal with Investor A to turn the deal over to Investor B in exchange for some amount of cash, called an "assignment fee" (we'll use the value of $12,000 in this example).
So Investor A is giving up $70,000 in "potential" profit in exchange for $12,000 in current profit. And Investor B is paying $12,000 because he believes he can make more than that on the deal, since there's a
full $70,000 of equity built in.
This deal between Investor A and Investor B is called an "Assignment", because Investor A is assigning the contract to Investor B.
Third, Investor B does his "due diligence" (i.e. inspections, appraisals, etc.) to confirm that the deal is as good as he/she thinks it is.
Finally, at closing, Investor B closes the purchase of the property, and Investor A receives the assignment fee from Investor B.
This is obviously, a simplification of the process. But this is essentially how the "quick-turn", real estate flip deal works - not so difficult now, is it?
Now, get out there and hunt them deals down!
What? Not sure where or how? I can show you 3 quick sources to get ya started right away...
About the Author: Alain Diza makes it easy to understand the mechanics of the real estate wholesale quick-turn flip. Learn this principle and private strategies the 'gurus' are charging thousands for. Get your free e-course at: http://www.tm-RealEstateInvesting.com
Source: www.isnare.com
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