Opportunity Knocks: Are you the right fit / or know someone that is?
Real People with Money "Or can raise immediate capital" needed to make real profits!!
50/50 PROFIT SHARE FOR FINANCIAL INVESTORS/ GREAT COMMISSIONS FOR CFO THAT FINDS THE INVESTORS!!
This opportunity is for real investors only, average investment is 50-55% LTV or $70,000 per property for complete renovations and supplies.
· All budgets are broken down into draws after completion of each individual stage. Draws are broken down in 4 stages of $17,500 per stage over a 4-6 week period.
· Average return on investment is 90 – 120 days.
· Average profit per project is $50-60k after all commissions and closing cost.
· 3 exit strategies for each project
· We pay cash for the home, investor secures property with 1st position lien until home is sold
Before Photos of Project Before Renovation (BEFORE)
http://picasaweb.google.com/lh/sredir?uname=triviski&target=ALBUM&id=5361801446690529873&authkey=Gv1sRgCPDMr-Oq74ebBg&feat=email
Current Project Listing After Renovations (AFTER)
Click the following URL to see the listing:
http://matrix.northstarmls.com/de.asp?k=538781XI7JN&p=DE-51938481-846
This is the best blueprint in the industry, and only for real investors or brokers that have real clients. Please respond with full contact information for immediate consideration. Private investors, Hard Money or Private banking institutions or welcome to reply. For the institutions the 50/50 split does not apply but very lucrative points and interest will be made available
Here are the hard stats that justify my offerings to the right people.
As foreclosure filings continue their year-over-year growth of 19 percent in October, REO sale investors may wonder if now is the time to invest or if their investment dollars would be better spent later. Despite the dismal news that foreclosure filings grew 19% compared to a year ago, close inspection indicates overall foreclosures have declined three months in a row.
Some of the hardest hit states - and most popular short sale locations - including Nevada and Florida, actually saw year-on-year declines.
But frankly, I argue that those “declines” are simply because banks are attempting loan modifications that will likely not be successful in the end.
So, what is the real status of foreclosures? Here are a few facts to keep in mind when trying to decide whether to take the plunge now or later:
Highest Foreclosure States as of October 2009:
• Nevada - 1 out of every 80 units
• California - 1 out of every 156 units
• Florida - 1 out of every 168
Highest Foreclosure Cities as of October 2009:
• Las Vegas
• Major Cities Throughout California - several including
Merced, Stockton, Modesto & Others
• Cape Coral/Fort Myers
• Orlando/Kissimmee
Total filings for Q3 of 2009: 937,000 filings...
Total notice of default filings for 2009: 3.8 million excluding Q4.
Number of adjustable rate mortgages scheduled to reset by 2012: 10 percent of all mortgages with the peak occurring in the second half of 2011. Remember, it can take several months to a full year before lenders take a property back.
Number of ARM borrowers that are currently delinquent on their mortgages: 20 percent.
Value of ARM loans due to reset by 2012: $1 Trillion dollars.
While the above information may seem to indicate a wait-and-see approach, it must be weighed carefully against the following information:
Low Reserves: The FHA or Federal Housing Administration announced on November 12 that their insurance reserves had fallen below their congressional mandate to only $3.6 Billion, down a full 72 percent from a year earlier and representing only 0.53 percent of the $685 billion in loans insured by the organization.
Translated to plain language = without intervention it could become more difficult to obtain FHA loans and banks holding high number of FHA insured loans are likely to further increase lending standards to offset the additional risk. Since FHA combined with Freddie and Fannie now underwrite 90 percent of all new mortgages, expect continued tightening of credit terms into the foreseeable future.
Bank Failures & FDIC: While not comparable to the S&L Crisis which eventually lead to the closures of hundreds of small lenders, the 120 U.S. banks that have failed this year have already depleted the FDIC funds; at the end of Q2 2009, the FDIC only had $10 Billion in reserves to "insure" over 4.8 Trillion in deposits...a dismal ratio of only 0.22 percent.
Low Rates: Despite the bad news, interest rates remain near historic lows making it more financially feasible to finance a REO sale for long or short term investment potential.
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