I received a call from a friend today who is interested in investing in rehab properties. He knows that I have done it successfully and asked about my secret.
It is really not a big secret at all. Not going to charge $5. Don't worry!
When I was growing up (ages 4-22), I played hockey and later coached some very successful little guy hockey teams. While playing I was on 4 Illinois State Champion teams. One when I was about 10 and another 3 in high school. Back in the days of playing, all of my coaches had the same theory; one I share. Winning was about working the numbers. Offense was all about shooting and scoring. The higher the shot on goal stats were, the higher the chance of scoring and, by extension, the higher percentage of WINS.
There were high percentage shots and low percentage shots. A shot, no matter the difficulty and angle, was still a shot. No shot, no chance of a score. It is all numbers.
Investing in real estate is the same thing. No offer, no chance to buy.
If you get in front of the net, shoot. If you look at a property, offer. Some offers have a high percentage and some have a low percentage. Every so often the goalie will have his legs apart or will have fallen down. When this happens even a low percentage shot can create a goal. Quite often, you are not going to see the opening before you take the shot but circumstances that you do not control will create additional opportunity.
I tell investors to view it and offer on it. As an investor, you do not care about the neighborhood. You do not care about the color. You do not care about he neighbors.
Almost every variable can be factored into a spreadsheet. DOM, crime rate, carry cost. It really does not matter. It is all numbers. Some things make a property and neighborhood more valuable and some make it less. The same type of property in different areas has a different worth.
If an investor buyer has spent the time to research a property out and take a look, they should make an offer. They should offer on every property they view, provided they have the experience with the potential situation. Caveat being that inexperienced rehabbers should not get in over their heads.
You are going to run into a lot of properties where the seller would never take the offer. You are going to take a lot of low percentage shots. Sometimes, the goalie will fall down. Sometimes he will just throw in the towel. Sometimes he is just holding a place and not playing the game.
You do not know until you fire a shot. Sometimes, when you least expect it, you put the biscuit in the basket.
Rich,
I'm curious. You say as an investor you do not care about the neighborhood, but isn't that something you would look at?
I have been showing a rehab and the investors all asked about the neighborhood. I figured they were thinking resale value...What are your thoughts?