Consumer
Reports & Tips Real estate investing is complicated enough without
falling for seller's dirty tricks. Here are some to watch for. (Disclaimer: This article was written from
research and what we learned from multiple sources over an extended
period of time. This information is for educational purposes only. Please contact
a professional in the area of concern before
making any decisions on this or any topic. No-More-Scams.com is not liable for any
damages or losses due to one using this information).
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Consumer Reports and Tips Archives Real Estate Investing - Don't
Get Ripped Off
Real estate investing can be simple in theory. You buy rental properties for a
price and terms that provide positive cash flow, or you buy a home which you can
fix up and sell for more. In practice, though, applying these simple principles
involves a lot of educated guesses. Nobody really knows precisely what a house
will sell for once it is fixed up. You also can't say for sure how many
vacancies you'll have in an apartment building.
Fortunately, with real estate investing experience your guesses get better. But
then there are the tricks and outright lies that some sellers will throw in your
way. Bad information makes good guesses difficult to make. How do you protect
yourself? Watch for the following dirty tricks that some sellers have been known
to use.
The most common tricks involve simply hiding facts about a property. This may be
illegal, but only if the seller knows about a problem. How do you prove that a
seller knew there were foundation cracks behind the paneling in the basement?
You probably can't. Unless you know a lot about the building trades, you should
normally pay for a home inspection - preferably by someone with some building
experience.
However, not all sellers are so careful about what they say. If you sense there
is a problem with water in the basement, for example, ask about it. If the
seller denies there has ever been flooding in the basement, get him to write
"There was no standing water in the basement during the time I owned the
property." The point here is that if you later find water, and the carpet
cleaner who sucks it out for you mentions doing the same job there a year
before, you have evidence that the seller was lying.
Income And Expense Tricks
With rental real estate, the more dangerous tricks are the ones involving the
reported income and expenses. You can have a property inspected, after all, for
physical problems, and a rotten roof is hard to hide. On the other hand, it is
more difficult to prove that a seller paid cash for snow-plowing to keep the
expense off the books prior to selling, or didn't really collect as much in rent
as he said.
Why is it so important to watch for this in real estate investing? Naturally,
you would be upset if the expenses are higher than they should be on your
rental, or the income lower. But this goes beyond your cash-flow problem. Rental
real estate is valued according to net income, so if this was reported
incorrectly, you may have paid much more than you should have for a property -
and much more than you can sell it for.
This gets into the area of capitalization rates, or "cap rates." A simple
explanation: If investors in an area expect a return of 8% on a property before
debt service, this is the expected cap rate. So if a property produces net
income of $50,000 before debt service, it is worth about $625,000 ($50,000
divided by .08). Now, if expenses are hidden and income exaggerated, so the
seller can show a net income of $60,000, you could pay $750,000 ($60,000 divided
by .08) - a big mistake, right?
How then, does a seller exaggerate income and reduce the reported expenses?
Expenses can be paid for in cash or with a personal check in order to keep them
off the books. That's fairly easy to do, but it does leave clues.
If the property is in a northern area and there is no expense listed for
plowing, that is suspicious. Of course it may be that the owner of an apartment
building shovels away the snow himself. But since most owners wouldn't do this,
you better add a reasonable expense for this and adjust your projected net
income figures before putting a value on the property.
Look carefully at the books and note the expenses shown for maintenance,
repairs, advertising, cleaning, management fees, supplies, taxes, insurance,
utilities, commissions, legal fees and any other expenses. If any of them seem
unusually low, ask about that, or better yet, just estimate a reasonable amount
and use that to adjust your net income figures. Also compare the vacancy rates
shown to the average for the area and ask questions if it seems too low.
Reported income is also easier to manipulate than you might think. Suppose an
owner of a 30-unit apartment building plans to sell it. To show more income, he
starts playing with the books a year before the sale. First, he reports income
from non-paying and even evicted tenants (watch for those unusually high
occupancy rates).
Then, several months prior to putting the property on the market, he raises the
rents to $100 per month over the area rents. He knows that people take time to
move, so the income spikes up temporarily, and by the time apartments start
going vacant you have bought the building. Now you face an exodus of tenants.
Another common trick is to include items that are not part of the normal rental
income. This might mean one time income, for example, like the sale of an extra
lot or company vehicle. It can also be income from vending machines or laundry
facilities. In the latter case, subtract out the income, figure the property
value based on the new net income figures, and then add back the replacement
cost of the machines. (There is some debate as to whether it is fair to include
this type of income when figuring the value of an income property.)
You might think that an owner would hesitate to show extra income or lower
expenses. He does have to pay more in taxes after all. But look again at the
example above. Showing an extra $10,000 makes his property apparently worth
$125,000 more. He might be willing to pay a few thousand in taxes to get that -
and you might be stuck with a property that loses money and can't be sold for
anywhere near what you bought it for. Real estate investing can be tricky.
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ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Copyright Steve Gillman. For a fuller expanation of how to price rental real
estate, see the page "Appraisal Using Capitalization Rates," and get the free
real estate investing course at:
http://www.HousesUnderFiftyThousand.com
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