Archive for April, 2009

Investing In Mobile Homes

Tuesday, April 21st, 2009


How To Generate Thousands Of Dollars Per Year Investing In Mobile Homes

By: Kris Koonar

All of us, once in a while, tend to get stuck with a raw deal in real estate investments. While most of us merely have theories and philosophies of real estate investment, only a few have a logical understanding and experience of profitable real estate investment ideas.

Investing in Mobile Homes is a Great option because not only is it economical, but it also has other advantages.

A Fixer-Upper Mobile Home is an Economical Investment Option

You can live in a fixer-upper and repair it at the same time. An additional advantage of investing in a mobile home is that you do not need to pay real estate taxes, as you would for a fixed real estate property. Apart from insurance, you would not be burdened with any other major payments.

In order to give the mobile home the feel of a real home, you could spend a little on designing the interiors to suit your lifestyle. Even if you decide to be a little extravagant in furnishing your mobile home, the cost of refurbishing will still be a lot more manageable and viable than fixing up a fixed real estate property.

After a year or two, when you have saved all the money by not paying the taxes and interest that you would have for a fixed real estate property, you can re-invest it in another fixer-upper mobile home. Then rent the previous mobile home while you stay in the second fixer-upper.

Charge separately for the utilities and the lot rent if you want to generate more cash flow. This way you can earn a good return on your investment within the very first year of buying the second mobile home. You could use the rental income from the first mobile home to repair the second one, while you stay in it at the same time. If you keep repeating the process this way, you would end up generating a handsome amount of liquid cash.

In this manner, you would even get an insight and experience of real estate investments, although on a smaller scale. This repetitive process of buying and repairing a fixer-upper, and then renting it out, can prove to be very beneficial.

While you double the cash flow by carrying out a similar deal over and over, you are also earning a generous rental income by investing a meager amount of money. And if things don’t work out according to your expectations, you always have the option of selling the mobile homes.

If you wish to own a real estate property of your own, but do not have sufficient capital, then investing in a mobile home is the perfect solution for you.

Author Resource: Real Estate Investments are easy with Real Net USA’s process. Using little or even no money down you can own a Real Estate Investment.

Article From RealEstateArticles4U.com

Technorati Tags: Mobile Home Investing, Real estate investing

Trusts Are The Key To Protecting And Keeping Your Assets

Friday, April 17th, 2009


Trusts Are The Key To Protecting And Keeping Your Assets

By : Richard Reichmann

Trusts have been used for hundreds of years for tax savings and estate planning, but few people realize the enormous potential for using trusts for privacy.

In this information age where records of your assets can be accessed via computer, fax and even telephone, you have to take active steps to protect your privacy.

A trust is a private contractual arrangement between several parties for holding, managing and investing assets. The parties to the trust are the grantor (the person creating the trust, also known as the “settlor” or “trustor”), the trustee (the person or entity holding title to the assets) and the beneficiaries (for whose benefit the trust is established). A trust created for one’s benefit is called a “self-settled” trust, i.e., one in which the creator and beneficiary are the same person.

A trust created during the life of the grantor is called an “intervivos” or “living” trust. An intervivos trust can be either revocable (taken back or modified by the grantor) or irrevocable (once created cannot be revoked).

A “living trust,” while technically any trust created during the life of the grantor is a buzzword in the estate planning industry used to describe a revocable, intervivos trust.

The typical living trust is created by an individual for his own benefit. He also names himself as trustee, i.e., “The John Doe Family Living Trust.” Upon his death, a successor trustee is named to hold and manage the trust property (typically his spouse, sibling or a bank trust department).

Although he is the beneficiary during his life, the trust will name his family as alternate beneficiary upon his death (known as a “testamentary disposition”).

One of the main reasons why living trusts are used is to avoid probate. Upon your demise, the assets remaining in your estate are distributed according to the instructions of a Will, or, if there is no Will, according to the rules set forth by state law.

The Probate court is involved throughout the process, adding time, cost and aggravation. The Will is now public record, for all the world to see. If you own assets in multiple states, an “ancillary” proceeding must be commenced in each state.

If most of your assets are owned in trust, these assets are not subject to probate, nor are they on display for the world to see.

The trustee, according to the instructions of the trust agreement, either distributes the assets outright to your heirs (the alternate beneficiaries), or holds them in trust until they reach a certain age. Your trust can hold assets (such as real estate) in multiple states without the need for ancillary probate.

You wouldn’t walk around with a financial statement taped to your forehead would you? So why would you have your most valuable assets exposed to public scrutiny? Owning real estate in your own name is like walking around with a giant kick me sign taped to your back.

In every county in the United States, copies of deeds to real estate are recorded in the public records. Anyone can go down to the courthouse or recorder’s office and look up the owner of any property in the county.

A land trust, a modified form of living trust, will hide your name from the public records. The land trust (also known as an Illinois Land Trust, “Title Holding Trust” and “Nominee Trust”) differs slightly from a regular living trust in that the trustee is a mere nominee. The beneficiaries have the right to direct the trustee as to the acquisition, management and disposition of trust property.

The main purpose for using land trusts is privacy of ownership. No one will know who owns the property but you, your attorney and the trustee.

If the trustee resides in a different state than the property is located, it will be difficult, if not impossible, for anyone to discover the proverbial “man behind the curtain.” If a judgment is entered against you, the lien will not automatically attach to the property, since the title is not in your name.

A personal property trust, like a land trust, is a simple, revocable trust used to hold title to assets. Cars, boats, bank accounts, leases, mortgages, mobile homes, corporate stock - you name it - it can all be held in the name of a nominee.

Anything that can be found on public record is a dead giveaway to potential creditors, contingency-fee attorneys and deadbeat litigants looking to steal your hard-earned fortune. Using a nominee trust to hold title to assets will help keep your financial matters private and discreet in the information age.

A trust, unlike a corporation, is not registered with the state. There are no public records of officers, directors and shareholders.

There are no minutes of directors’ and shareholders’ meetings. The trustee keeps control of the trust records and the identity of the beneficiaries in his file cabinet. A trustee will not reveal this information without a court order.

Revocable, living trusts are “tax neutral,” that is, there is no tax consequence of transferring property into trust. According to sections 671- 678 of the Internal Revenue Code, the property is treated as still being owned by the grantor (the logic is that since the grantor can still revoke the trust, it still belongs to him for tax purposes).

For example, if you owned you rental property in your name and reported on schedule “E” of your federal income tax return, a transfer into a revocable, living trust of which you are the beneficiary would not change your reporting.

Compare this to transferring property into a corporation, which is a separate taxpayer, even if your own all of the stock of the corporation.

As you can see, trusts are simple, yet effective devices for holding title to assets and preserving your privacy.

Author Resource: Richard Reichmann is internationally known as a millionaire maker. He’s a leading consultant in real estate and internet marketing strategies that are profit proven. Subscribe to our FREE newsletter Value $147.00. Instant Real Estate Wealth

Article From: RealEstateArticles4U.com

Technorati Tags: Real Estate Trusts, Tax Planning

Rental or Lease Agreement Details

Wednesday, April 15th, 2009


When Doing Your Own Rental or Lease Agreement Don’t Miss The Details

By: Arnold Hernandez

When renting or leasing rental property you should take into consideration many different factors.

First think about everything that is important to you. You should address everything that is important to you to the smallest of details. For example:

  • Do you care if the tenant smokes ?
  • Do you care if they play loud music at 2 a.m. ?
  • Do mind if they use your apartment for prostitution business?
  • What if they use your property to grow marijuana plants ?
  • Or perhaps they store used motor parts that leak oil and other fluids.

These are big issues for most people, but there are also little ones that may be important to you.

There are also issues which you might not consider, because you think everyone uses common sense. Usually people use common sense, but even those that appear the be normal can have their moments of insanity.

For example a husband and wife team rented an office space that they accidently set on fire after attempting to cook some fish on a BBQ grill. People do not always use common sense, there have been incidents of people dying after using a mixture of ammonia, bleach and other chemicals to clean the bathrooms. I know of one incident where a woman passed out after mixing household chemicals. She was hospitalized and then upon release she went to finish the job and died.

Regardless of whether the property is residential or commercial property the same is true for each when addressing your concerns. The laws differ between commercial and residential property and even within each of these categories there are subcategories. The laws for example may differ between an apartment, a house, a condo, a mobile home, and a boat home. Despite these differences, you can still account for things that are important to you and add them to your lease or rental agreement.

Some people attempt to save money by using pre-printed forms and then add their provisions, or prepare their own lease or rental agreement completely from scratch, but you should consider using an attorney especially if there is a substantial amount of money involved. If you do the lease agreement yourself be sure you say it correctly and avoid any ambiguity.

If there is a chance for a different interpretation than your own, you may have trouble down the road. Write the provisions down and then review it a few days later to be sure they still make sense to you. I have received many phone calls from people in trouble after the fact. The best thing is to do it right the first time, so speak to an attorney first.

If there is a problem during the tenancy, be sure to address it quickly. If you need to evict someone for non payment of rent, do it quickly. Give the three day notice to quit or pay or whatever is required in your particular state. Make sure you dot the i-s and cross the T-s and date and sign every document you prepare correctly.

Unlawful detainers are very detail sensitive and you may have to start from scratch if you make an error.

This could result in an additional moth of lost rental income. If you are dependant on the rental income to make your mortgage payments, you cannot afford to make any errors, so once again hire an attorney, spend the money now, in the long run it will be cheaper.

You should not try and save money by doing everything yourself, unless you are willing to take a loss of several months. Also do not try and save money by hiring a paralegal or someone that prepares documents, they tend to make errors. I have had at least one case where it was started by paralegal, but the mistakes cost the client almost two moths rental income.

For a sample lease agreement visit my website and look at the additional consideration section where I added all the things that where of concern to me.

Author Resource: Free Sample Lease Agreement in Articles Section of San Diego Overtime Attorney Arnold Hernandez

Article From: RealEstateArticles4u.com

Technorati Tags: Rental and Lease Agreements

Homeowner Loans

Monday, April 13th, 2009

Bridging the Financial Gap With Homeowner Loans
by James Copper

One of the smallest, quickest and shortest terms of homeowner loans is referred to as a bridge loan. Compared with other homeowner loans such as first and second mortgages, refinances, home equity loans and debt consolidation loans that use the home as collateral, bridge loans are rare.

A bridge homeowner loan is short term and designed for the purpose of helping a homeowner bridge a cash crunch gap. Hence the name bridge loan. The most common for of bridge homeowner loans is the situation in which someone has bought a new home but has yet to sell their current home. The most common reason for this double ownership is a geographic relocation for a job.

Some homeowners will rent an apartment, condo, townhouse, mobile home or single family home for a short term while waiting for their home to sell. Others, however, see that for convenience, monetary advantage or things like not uprooting their children once again with a third move to a new school, they would prefer the bridge homeowner loans.

Short term rentals can be more costly than the interest paid on the short term bridge homeowner loans.

There is a wide variation on the rates and terms of bridge loans, however, and the origination fees can be quite high. Most bridge loans are written for six months and the collateral used for these homeowner loans is the home that the borrower is attempting to sell.

The problem with these bridge loans, besides the potential high cost, is that homes don’t always sell in six months, and markets and market values can change. Consider, for example, the difference between the market value of a home in the once thriving mining area of Allentown PA where jobs were plentiful and homes in demand.

That same property today may well be worth one tenth of what is was about 40 or 50 years ago. This kind of thing can happen overnight as plants close and industries struggle to survive.

Who would have thought, for example, that there would come a time that 20,000 IBM employees would vacate the Triple Cities (Binghamton, Endicott and Johnson City) area of upstate New York with the close of that original plant, or that Knight Ridder Newspapers would cease to exist?

Before you consider homeowner bridge loans, look elsewhere for funding.

Your best financial bet is, of course, to avoid the two-home ownership situation in the first place. If you cant stay in your current home until it sells, sell other assets such as your boat, your second or third car, or borrow against your 401(k).

You might even consider a temporarily lengthy commute or leave your family in your current home, take an inexpensive rental in your new location and fly or drive home alternate weekends.

There are plenty of homeowner loans that are smart, that are good buys, and that will save you considerable money and may actually make you some money. Debt consolidation loans are an example of the latter. Bridge loans, however, are seldom the best financial deal you can find, and are often one of the worst.

Author Resource: James Copper is a Homeowner Loans Advisor. You can get more information by visiting his site: homeowner loans.

Article From: RealEstateArticles4U.com

Technorati Tags: Bridge Loan, refinance