Posts Tagged ‘real estate investment’

Importance of Real Estate Training

January 8th, 2011


Is Real estate training necessary? Yes any person who is seeking for a big money in a very short span of time in real estate training is necessary. It gives the basic information and tools you require to explode your profit with confirmed results..! You would not try to build a car with out having the facts and training to do so. Much like you would not surely start trying to flip properties with out some first hand full knowledge of how to do so. The purpose of the real estate training is to supply all the necessary information so that you could get new skills and teach more yourself in real estate investing field.

Real estate training concentrates uniquely on technology offered by real estate industry. They realize the business of real estate investment and are exclusively positioned to achieve you dream goal. In the world for commercial real estate technology is changing day by day. Real estate training institutes might as well provide their training through the online. If you are not keeping in advance of your competitors, they are to leave you behind. Training could help make sure you are utilizing the tools, which ensure you remain aggressive in this new technology age. No other training program is as personalize and bespoke as this.

Case studies and real-life instances have proved you how real estate firms are using knowledge to gain a spirited benefit in their marketplaces and offering a higher level of service to their clients. Courses and training for real estate agents seeking their real estate certify requirements. The real estate training seminars present coaching, consulting and learning on Internet marketing by using e-training and other web-based business training. The real estate training Institute’s further offers a broad variety of enduring education courses to keep your real estate license or evaluator certification current.

The final goal of the real estate investing training is to present the essential real estate investing choices and principles in a simple and very trouble-free manner to be understood. It is our hope that this information would surely benefit individuals who are interested in getting good income out of their real estate investments.

By: Narayanan Vk

About the Author:
Narayanan is a skilled real estate professional who can perfectly increase your property value. Contact: vknarayana@gmail.com and for further real estate investing articles, investing articles, real estate investing tips and other related real estates resources please visit http://www.real-estate-investing-articles.net



The Real Estate Coach

January 7th, 2011


This text entitled The Real Estate Coach with the subtitle A Story of Real Estate Investment Success, is written by Bradley Sugars, a renowned entrepreneur, author and business coach who has helped nearly a million clients around the world to achieve business success. Sugars is the founder of Action International, a global network of business coaches with nearly 1000 offices worldwide. He and Action International team have refined more than 500 business strategies and systems that are used by Action business coaches on six continents.

Sugars says you should stop working for someone else and start living the dream of working for yourself. This author stresses that it is a fact that you will never get rich by just working for a living. The only sure way to achieve real wealth and the attendant freedom is by letting your investments work for you, asserts Sugars. He adds that as a self-made multi-millionaire, the quickest and safest route to the kind of ‘passive’ income it takes to live your dream is real estate investment.

Sugars assures that in this text, he offers you the same ‘easy-to-understand-and-use strategies that brought him and millions of his clients success.

He shows you how to find great investment opportunities; manage your property for maximum profit; add value to your investments without breaking the bank and sell for a substantial profit.

Sugars says when it comes to your financial future, it is no longer as simple as work hard, put some money away and hope for the best in your retirement years. He adds that retirement is no longer about your age or how long you have worked, but about your ability to make and manage your own money.

Sugars says it is how you spend, or preferably invest, that determines your wealth and obviously your retirement age.

Sugars educates that having a good job, or even great income is of no benefit at all, if all you do is spend or borrow more, adding that building wealth is about investing at least some of what you make in your future. And when it comes to investing your money, most people are too scared to make a decision, so they either make no investments or put their in the hands of a professional broker, submits this expert.

Sugars says this text is about your learning how to make some of these decisions yourself, gaining knowledge so that you can be financially literate and control your own future wealth.

Structurally, this text is divided into 12 parts. Part one is entitled Follow the rules. Here, this author adds that it always amazes him how many people just dive straight in and buy their first investment property before they stop to think about the big picture. He restates that most people seem to just want to get a foot in the market before they even have a half reasonable idea of what they ultimately want to achieve, how they are going to achieve it, what structures they need to set up and what principles they will use to guide them. Sugars stresses that the real scary thing is that most of them do not seem worried that they have not got the basics in place first, adding that if the truth be known, they probably would not even know what the basics are.

This expert asserts that if there is one thing he wants to impress upon you, it is the fact that you should never fall into this trap and make the same mistakes that the vast majority of so-called investors do, reiterating the need for you to follow the rules.

According to this author, the basic idea of becoming wealthy is to first develop your cashflow through your job or your own business and then turn it into physical assets that in turn produce cashflow all of their own.

Sugars says real investment must produce an income stream while it is increasing in value. Sugars says most investments only increase in capital value slowly, adding that there are exceptions but in general, this is a longer and slower process.

He illuminates that on the other hand, most people who regard themselves as fairly familiar with investing also make the mistake of having the belief that it is just about a return on investment. They seem to think that once their investment is producing a cashflow of, say, 11 per cent a year, they are doing well, adds Sugars. He says his own definition of an investment is that an investment is an asset that both grows in capital value and gives off passive cashflow.

This author stresses that the investing rules for buying a new inner city unit are quite different from those that apply when buying an existing house in an outer city suburb. He adds that there are rules for property you intend living in yourself; property you intend renting out; property you want to buy and sell again quickly; property you intend holding onto long term; property you aim to get capital gain from; property you are buying for a rental purchase plan and property you are buying through vendor finance deals. Sugars educates that there are about 27 different types of residential real estate categories.

Part two is based on the subject matter of balancing your portfolio. According to this author here, most people understand only two basic philosophies for investing in real estate. That is, you buy a property item for the cashflow it will give you or you buy it for the capital growth it will give you. He illuminates that rental income is a great reason for investing in real estate. Sugars says statistics for the last three decades show that around 60 to 70 per cent of the population of most western countries own their own homes, while over the same period, the number of renters has grown from around 20 per cent to now around 30 per cent. He emphasises that this is a global trend. Sugars illuminates that a property item that has relatively low capital growth usually has a higher rental flow, while investment property items that generate a greater cashflow can usually be found in lower socio-economic areas, outer suburbs, country towns and in some high-density housing areas.

This author says property offers investors excellent tax advantages in many countries around the world. He adds that paper losses associated with depreciation are totally tax deductible and tax deductions make investing in real estate a very attractive option.
In parts three to eight, Sugars discusses concepts such as buying land value, not houses; buying residential real estate; buying, renovation and redrawing; profit at purchase; buying on the numbers; and cosmetic only, not structural.

Part nine is entitled “Buy where you are an expert”. According to this author here, when you get out there to start looking for your first property and the others that will follow, there is really no substitute for hardwork. It really takes a lot of effort to become successful at this game, because if it were not so, everyone would be doing it, says this expert. He adds that most of the work he is talking about here is physically getting out and about and inspecting property, talking to agents and other knowledgeable people and gathering information.

In parts 10 to 12, this author beams his intellectual searchlight on concepts such as building a great team; four green houses becoming one red hotel and catching up.

As regards style, this text has recorded a huge success. The language is simple while the presentation is unique, logical and didactic. Sugars lends credibility to this work by using dramatic instrument of conversation technically called dialogue to convey his message. He uses Coach, the major character, as his mouthpiece to pass his message across to readers who are contextually represented by Brian and Sarah. With the presentation mode and simplicity of language, Sugars really proves that he is a coach and also reinforces the title of the text.

What’s more, this author employs a lot of illuminating illustrations and precise quotes to achieve analytical reinforcement and ensure easy understanding on readers’ part. He uses graphic embroidery to achieve visual amplification of the readers’ understanding of the text.

However, the text should have been segmented into chapters not parts, more so that it is not very voluminous.

On the whole, this text is a treasury of real estate ideas. It is highly recommended to anybody that wants to achieve success in the real estate business.

By: Goke Ilesanmi

About the Author:
GOKE ILESANMI, Editor-in-Chief/CEO of http://www.gokeilesanmi.com and Managing Consultant/CEO of Gokmar Communication Consulting, is a Certified Public Speaker/Emcee, (Business) Communication Specialist, Motivational Speaker, Career Management Coach, Renowned Book Reviewer, Corporate Leadership Expert and Editorial Consultant.
Tel: +234(0)8055068773; +234(0)8056030424
Email: info@gokeilesanmi.com; gokeiles2010@gmail.com



The Margin of Safety in Real Estate

December 26th, 2010


Benjamin Graham is arguably one of the world’s greatest investors. He taught, trained, and inspired the world’s currently richest man, Warren Buffett. He wrote several books. Two of the most famous are Security Analysis and The Intelligent Investor. The former is a giant textbook which is very technical; a solid understanding of accounting, investment principles, and stock are needed to full absorb this book. The latter is the layman’s version of Security Analysis, and touted by Warren Buffett as “the best book on investing ever written.”

Part of Graham’s philosophy is something called the “margin of safety.” This margin of safety refers to a “buffer” that will protect against unforeseen drops in the prices of the stock and the loss in value of the underlying assets behind the stock. This margin of safety is achieved through the analysis of the actual value of the stock, rather than the price of it. This is done by removing any assets that cannot be counted on in the event of liquidation, such as land, factories, and other fixed assets. First, remove these fixed assets; then, divide the number of shares into what is left, the current assets. The quotient is what the stock price should be; this is the actual value of the stock. So, you definitely want to pay no more than this price. But, this is where the margin of safety concept comes in. You don’t want to buy stock at this price or even just below it, but you want to buy substantially below it. Buy it at least sixty-six percent or less than the value it should be. This thirty-four percent difference is your margin of safety. This thirty-four percent is a buffer, because the price can drop substantially before you experience any real loss.
How does this apply to real estate? Unfortunately, there is no Benjamin Graham for real estate. However, that doesn’t mean the principles don’t exist. This does apply to real estate. In real estate investment, there is also a margin of safety which is equally as important as the margin of safety in stock investment. Commercial property management teams and investors must be aware of this margin of safety when making purchases of offices or complexes.

How, then, do we find this margin of safety? We start by figuring out the new construction cost of the building, which is derived by finding the new construction cost per square foot of similar buildings in the area and multiplying it by the number of square feet in the building. Then, we have two options. We can either find something sixty-six percent below the new construction cost of the home if the home is in like-new condition, or we can use the second method of fixing the property. The first method is very unlikely to ever occur, although it does sometimes in events such as foreclosures and property forfeited under tax liens. The second method is what most real estate investors should use. This involves finding a building in need of repair and making a good estimate of its repair cost. The sum of these two should be compared with the new construction cost of the home. Here, you want your calculated value to also be substantially less than the new construction cost of the home. The sixty-six percent rule is still useful, but real estate has more wiggle room than stock, so we suggest investors use a fifty-percent rule when examining real estate. An investment is both smart and safe when every dollar you put in can be at least doubled. This way, if the property value falls, you have a “layer of fat” to protect you. More than likely, though, the property value will not fall, and this “layer of fat” will become a piece of your next down payment.

So, the margin of safety in real estate is very real and very necessary. Just because there hasn’t been a book like Security Analysis written for real estate, that doesn’t mean the principles aren’t there and hold true for real estate investors. Keep these principles in mind when examining property and use them. If you do, you will end up with investments that have a high level of safety and promise a high rate of return.

By: Cody Scholberg

About the Author:
Cody Scholberg is an expert author of real estate investment and writes at the commercial property management guide