Probate Without Money

legal information on going through probate without money


That was a search hit I got.

The problem with this question is that you can’t go through probate without money. The deceased’s creditors want cash. The probate court wants cash. Attorneys and anybody else your executor has to hire want cash. Federal Estate tax may be on the way out, but while it’s still here, that final tax form and the cash are due nine months after death. State estate tax is still here in most states, nor is it likely to go away, and the state wants cash, not promissory notes.

Your estate is going to have to get this money from somewhere, and I’ll enumerate the classical alternatives, assuming that the point is not moot. If you die owing more than you have, settling your estate becomes a matter of purely academic interest, because your heirs aren’t getting anything substantial.

Most obvious is to pay for it with money on hand, already in the estate. If you could afford this, you wouldn’t have been running that search.

Also obvious is to have the executor (or other heir) loan the money out of their own pocket. This sometimes happens in the case of someone who’s inheriting a house or other major assets. Sometimes executors take out short term loans for this purpose, also. Be careful – one thing most state laws require is that when you pay a debt for an estate, you must get written proof that you paid it out of your own funds for the settlement of the debts of the estate. On the other hand, if you could do this you probably wouldn’t be running this search.

The next option is sale of assets to pay the debts, taxes, and anything else. This happens disturbingly often, mostly as a result of people who persist in believing that they’re going to live forever. The notable drawbacks of this are two. The minor one is that maybe your heirs didn’t want to sell, and the major one is that they’re not likely to get anything like full price in such a situation. When you have to sell, the ones with the cash drive fire sale-like bargains. Also, the executor has to have the court approve this, which costs money in and of itself.

The next option is to do nothing. If this is what your heirs opt for, the vast majority of the time the court will order any assets there may be sold in order to pay the existing creditors and new assessments caused by your death. Your heirs are likely to get even less money here than the previous paragraph, and the court itself certainly won’t cost any less.

The final option, and likely the best one, is to do what folks who plan ahead do, and have a policy of life insurance in effect. This is one of the reasons why Variable Life, and particularly Variable Universal Life Insurance, beats term life insurance like a red-headed stepchild when you consider the lifelong implications. The proceeds are all leveraged, tax free money, coming to pay your estate’s bills as soon as your executor sends the insurance company your notice of death. Unfortunately, at the time your heirs are running that search, it’s too late for this option. Like most really wonderful financial windfalls, you’ve got to plan ahead to make this work for your heirs.

Caveat Emptor

Mortgage Closing Costs: What is Real and What is Junk?

The easy, general rule is that legitimate expenses all have easily understood explanations in plain English, they are all for specific services, and if they are performed by third parties, there are associated invoices or receipts that you can see.

Let’s haul out the Mortgage Loan Disclosure Statement (California) or Good Faith Estimate (elsewhere), and go right down them line by line. Now, to be certain, it’s the HUD 1 form that’s really definitive, but if it’s not on the earlier form it shouldn’t be on the HUD 1.

Origination is not a junk fee. It can be excessive, but it is a real fee to pay a real service. Relating to this is Yield Spread on the HUD 1, which is what the lender will pay the broker for a loan on given terms. Origination plus yield spread plus line 808 (Mortgage Broker Commission) is what the loan provider makes if they are a broker. If they’re a lender, they make a lot more, and they can hide it more easily. Yield Spread and Origination and Broker’s Commission are disclosed on the HUD 1, while the price on the secondary market is not disclosed anywhere, and if you’re talking to a direct lender, they don’t have to disclose Origination or Yield Spread because there (usually) isn’t any; they are paid directly off the premium the loan sells for in the secondary market. This is why I keep telling people to shop for loans based upon the terms to you. If you evaluate it on the basis of loan provider’s compensation, a broker who has to disclose compensation of $4000 is going to look like a worse bargain that the direct lender who does not apparently make anything but turns around and sells your loan for a $25,000 premium. In this example, the broker’s loan is likely to be about a point and a half to two points cheaper to you, but if you evaluate it on the basis of who has to tell you how much they make, you lose.

Loan Discount Fee is the fee you pay in order to get an interest rate lower than you would otherwise be offered. It is not junk, but you probably don’t want to pay it, as most folks never recover the money they pay to get the lower rate via the lower payments and interest rate charges. I never pay discount points for anything except a 30 year fixed rate loan that I’m going to keep at least ten years. However, without this, your rate would be higher.

Appraisal Fee is not junk. There is an appraiser who needs to get paid for doing the appraisal. Many times this gets marked PFC on the MLDS/GFE, to make it look like a given loan provider is cheaper than they are. Make no mistake, there’s going to be a figure in the range of $400 associated with it eventually, but because it’s performed by a third party, the loan provider can (and often does) pretend it doesn’t exist as part of the charges until you have to pay it.

Credit Report is not junk. It’s not free to run credit, you know.

Lender’s Inspection Fee is usually (not always) junk. You’re paying the appraiser. If you’re smart, you’re paying a building inspector before you buy, and the lender usually makes you do it even if you don’t want to. Every once in a while, there’s a home with a documented pest or structural problem that the owner wants to refinance, and that’s where this comes in as non-junk.

Mortgage Broker Commission/Fee: Is all a part of how the broker gets paid. Around here it’s origination and yield spread, but this could be part of what a broker gets paid. Origination plus Yield Spread plus this line is the total of what they get paid. If these are larger at closing than when you signed up, that’s par for the course most places, unless they guaranteed their fees up front in writing. I do it. I know one other company that does it. Those who are members of Upfront Mortgage Brokers guarantee the total of the items that are their fees, but not the rest of the form. For anyone else, they can and most will change the numbers on these forms within very broad limits (and to illustrate with an example someone recently brought into my office, the difference between one quarter of a point and three points on a $450,000 loan is over $12,000).

Tax Service Fee is not junk, unfortunately.

Processing fee is not junk but it may be negotiable. When it’s imposed by the lender, it’s not. When it’s imposed by the broker, it’s to pay the loan processor, which may be negotiated sometimes. It is a real fee, however.

Underwriting fee is real. Lenders charge it to cover paying the underwriters.

Wire Transfer Fee is real, because it costs money to wire money. If you don’t need it, don’t get it.

Prepaid Interest (line 901) is definitely not junk. This is interest, exactly the same as you’re going to pay every month of your loan.

Mortgage Insurance Premium is not junk but is avoidable.

Hazard Insurance premiums are not junk, either. This money is to put a policy of homeowner’s insurance (or renew an existing policy) on the property.

County property taxes are not junk, either. (Rats.) If you buy during certain periods of the year (e.g. April through June in California), you’ll need to reimburse your seller for property taxes they already paid.

VA Funding fee is charged by the VA on VA loans only. Not junk, but if it’s not VA, it doesn’t have this. As I remember, if you’re 10% or more disabled this can get waived.

Reserves deposited with lender are not junk, either. They will be used to pay your fees as they become due.

Title charges: Settlement or Closing Escrow Fee is a real charge to pay the escrow company. Like Appraisal fee, this is often marked PFC, but something like $500 plus $1 per thousand dollars is common.

Document Preparation Fee is mostly real, and actually the lenders do most of it these days. When the title or escrow company need to do it, they will charge fairly steep rates (I’ve seen $200 for a single sheet document), but you are kind of a captive audience unless you discuss it beforehand.

Notary Fee is to pay the Notary. It’s real. It often falls into the PFC trap, previously discussed for Appraisals and Escrow, but you really do need this stuff notarized. Sometimes you can save some money by finding a less expensive notary, but this can bring up other issues, like getting everyone to the same place at the same time.

Title Insurance is real. If it’s a purchase, there will actually be two policies of title insurance purchased, one for the new owner and one for the lender. This insures against unknown defects in the title of your property, and yes, title claims happen every day. Lenders won’t lend without one. Title insurance is another one of those third party fees that gets marked PFC so that less scrupulous loan officers can appear to be less expensive than their competition.

I’m going to mention subescrow fees here, even though they aren’t preset onto the form, and are not only junk but also avoidable if your agent did their job. The title company charges them because they are usually asked to do work that is, properly speaking, the realm of the escrow company. But if you choose a title company and escrow firm with common ownership, they will likely be waived.

Government Recording and Transfer Charges are not junk. They are charged by the county, and they are not avoidable, nor should you want to. Recording fees and tax stamps (if applicable) are just part of the cost of doing business. Beware of one provider pretending it doesn’t exist while another honestly discloses it.

Additional Settlement Charges. Pest Inspection is the only one on the form, and it is not junk. You want a pest inspection.

Now, you’ll notice that of the permanently etched items on the form, there’s not a lot of junk, but everybody keeps talking about high junk fees. What are these, and where are they?

Well, some of the things that people talk about as junk fees aren’t junk fees. These are fees like Appraisal fee, escrow, credit report, notary, etcetera. These are, incidentally, half or more of the closing costs for most loans. They may have been hidden from you on the initial form, but they’re not junk. They are essential parts of the process, and if you don’t see explicit dollar values associated with them, somebody is trying to lie about their fees by not telling you about all of them.

Nonetheless things that really are junk fees are a real problem, but the reason they’re not among those listed on the form is that the items listed on the form are mostly real. It’s the extra stuff that gets written into the extra lines that you’ve got to watch out for. It is fine and legitimate for a loan officer to write “Total of lenders fees $995” or whatever it is. On the HUD 1, these should be broken out into separate charges, but this way the loan officer only has to remember one number. As long as they add up correctly, no harm and no foul, and it doesn’t make any difference to you whether it’s underwriting or spa visits for the CEO, it’s part of doing business with that lender. What is probably not legitimate is to start writing all kinds of other fees. Miscellaneous fees. Packaging fees. Marketing fees. Legitimate Messenger fees should be something you know about because you need them at the time they happen. But the majority of messenger fees are the title/escrow company trying to get you to pay for daily courier runs that happen anyway. If you choose the right title/escrow combination, you should be able to avoid them in most cases.

It is also a common misconception that all junk fees are lenders junk fees. I don’t impose junk fees on my clients, but even coming into situations other loan officers have left behind, title companies and escrow companies, in general, appear to impose about an equal amount in junk fees with most loan providers.

Caveat Emptor

Looking Beyond The Bubble: What’s Next For Highly Appreciated Markets

(This was originally published in March 2006)

Doing my workout this morning I asked myself what’s next for the real estate market.

The state of the market here locally is that prices are and have been in decline. There is no longer any mystery about whether they will decline, only how much and for how long. One of these days, the Association of Realtors and those pollyannas who preach that you always make money on real estate will admit it.

What comes next? Obviously increased defaults, as short term loans come up for adjustment and people are unable to make the payments, as I’ve said any number of times, and unable to refinance because they owe more than the property is worth. Short sales also increase, as people try to just get out. More Notices of Default means more trustee sales, as well. If the property sells at auction, somebody probably got a bargain. If it doesn’t, the lienholder owns it (subject to senior liens) and that may be even better.

All of these are happening already. Daily foreclosure lists have more than doubled locally from a year ago. Trustee Sales are up, and so are REO’s (Real Estate Owned by those who were originally lienholders). Check, check, and check. All about as surprising as gravity. What I’m trying for here is at least one prediction that has not already come true.

Rates have been rising of late, but there is a limit as to how far they are likely to go, if only because Bernanke and company are very shortly going to have irrefutable evidence of all of the above stuff nationwide. A nationwide economy has a lot of something analogous to inertia. Takes a while to move things in the direction you want them to go. More time, and more effort, than most folks, particularly bankers running our money supply, are likely to realize and sit still for without further pushing, which they have done a bit too much of, in my opinion, by about one full percent on the overnight funds rate. Once things get going in the direction that the Fed has been pushing them for the last two years, they are similarly going to have a lot of momentum built up. Bond investors are going to dry up at attractive rates, and Sarbanes Oxley or no, you’re going to see private companies going public again because it’s the only way they can raise capital at attractive prices, and the flow of public companies going private is likely to mostly stop. (Hard to think of Sarbanes-Oxley as a brake upon economic activity, but in the short term, that’s what it’s likely to prove. CEOs and CFOs are not used to the idea of personal responsibility for corporate activity, and while the cost of private capital is even vaguely competitive with public, private will be their choice. It’s going to take a while for countervailing forces to come into play).

When bond rates rise, so do mortgage rates. When mortgage rates rise, and people can only afford the same payments, prices fall, further exacerbating the price fall that’s already happening. Lenders are already between a rock and a hard place to a certain extent, but it’s going to get worse. Keep in mind also that aggregated mortgage bonds are an attractive investment because of their historical level of security, and even though that’s going to be compromised to a certain extent, rates are going to rise if for no other reason than that is what the money costs. I expect rates on A paper thirty year fixed rate home loans to stabilize somewhere around seven percent, at least for a while. Shorter term fixed rates will be cheaper once the yield curve normalizes. Given the prices things have sold at in highly appreciated markets, this is likely to permanently popularize medium term hybrid ARMs, as saving one percent in interest on $500,000 is well worth the cost of refinancing every few years, and people are refinancing every two years on average anyway. Two and three years fixed is really too short for most folks, but five is probably more than fine.

Here’s another newsflash. I’m not going out very far on a limb here, but a three bedroom single family residence in a reasonable neighborhood here locally is likely never to drop back into the sub $300,000 range again. I’d bet money it’s not going below $250,000. Yes, the market got badly overheated – but not that badly overheated. Furthermore, if past Southern California history is any guide, we’ll lose about 30 percent of peak value, and then start going back up again. No fun if you’re a semi-skilled worker trying to raise a family, but the most likely scenario nonetheless.

Now what’s going to happen to the people who have bought highly appreciated properties who can actually make the payments? Well, if prices fall, they can’t sell for what they bought for until they recover. They don’t want to do that. But they don’t want to be in a negative cash flow situation, where the rent they get from the property doesn’t cover their expenses, if they can avoid it. They definitely don’t want to be in that situation to a larger extent than they can avoid. A $500,000 purchase with a 6 percent first and 10 percent second yields principle and interest payments of $3276, plus property taxes of $520 and insurance costs of $120 per month, means that the owner is out $3916 per month without any repairs or management expense. A monthly rental of $1900 isn’t going to cover that. A monthly rental of $2500 isn’t going to cover that. This is going to put more upwards pressure on rental rates. $2500 is the entire gross monthly income of someone making $14.75 per hour, by the way. But the people feeding the mortgage alligator don’t really care, all they know is that they have to pay the bank so much per month, and set aside so much for the state and the insurance company. This is also going to put upwards pressure on wages, and therefore prices. Inflation kicks into higher gear, which puts more upwards pressure on interest rates. Vicious cycle.

And this phenomenon is going to be part of what eventually helps prices make a comeback. If somebody is feeding the landlord $3000 per month, they’re going to be more amenable to paying it to the bank instead. Especially since they get tax breaks, and most especially because when you buy the property you intend to live in, you take your monthly cost of housing out of the column that says “what the market will bear,” which is subject to changes – and usually increases – and put it into the column that says “this is under my control.” If you buy with a sustainable loan, your monthly payment is going to be under your control forever.

(It is to be noted that even if that $500,000 property loses $150,000 in value the day after you buy it, historical 7 percent per year increases will have you back in the black in about five years, and ahead of a market return on the rent you would have saved in about ten. Thirty years down the line, your net benefit from the purchase as opposed to invest the extra money over the cost of renting and investing the excess in the stock market, will be somewhere between $800,000 to $1,000,000. An almost irrefutable argument in favor of buying a home, if you plan to live there a while. Yeah, it’s no fun being upside down while it happens. But the eventual payoff isn’t exactly chump change, even by the projected standards of thirty years from now.)

Caveat Emptor

What is Real Estate Worth?

One of the most common questions in real estate is “What is this property really worth?”

The easy answer is the same as the deepest, most profound one I can come up with, “Whatever you can get someone to pay for it.” It’s the answers in between that you’ve got to watch out for. The appraised value is simply a guesstimate based upon the sales of similar properties. But there is no such thing as an identical property. A Price Opinion is just a guesstimate based upon what an expert thinks might be an appropriate asking price. Even an accepted offer means nothing if the offerer backs out, changes their mind, or can’t qualify.

Now it’s no secret that some people can get folks to pay more for real estate than others, and others can bargain the price down better. But the bottom line is that if it’s not worth what you paid, why did you buy it? If it’s worth more than you sold it for, why did you sell it? There isn’t a good answer to either one of these questions. It’s worth what it sold for. Period. The only exceptions are when there’s a distress sale, and even then, the answer reads, “Under the circumstances, that’s what the property was worth,” which is remarkably similar (like identical) to what the answer is in all other situations.

This goes for the other side of the coin, failed transactions, as well. Why didn’t you sell to a good offer? Why didn’t you offer more? Because it wasn’t a good offer, or because it wasn’t worth more, to that person.

If you walked up to the average person on the street and offered to sell them a parcel of land on which there’s a home, anywhere in the US, for $5 or $10 or $100 or even $1000, most people would take you up on it sight unseen so long as you could deliver clear title. I can safely say that the average residential property in this country is worth at least $1000 to every legal adult in the country. Why then all of these elaborate rituals of listing contracts and MLS and inspections and offers and escrow and title insurance for the transfer of property?

The answer lies in the fact that sellers want to get the highest price possible. Ideally, they want to find the one buyer who will bid more than anyone else on that particular property, because the property is worth more to them than anyone else.

To find that one perfect buyer is actually fairly rare, in my experience. But you can certainly find buyers willing to pay more than $1000, in most cases. How much more? Well, that depends upon the property and the buyer, how widely and effectively your net is cast and how long you are willing and able to wait. As with all investments, it’s a trade off and sometimes the money you’ll get from a better buyer isn’t worth the money you spend finding them. Knowing stuff like that is part of what I get paid for.

It does you no good to accept the offer of someone who can’t qualify for the loan they need in order to purchase the property. It does no good to make such an offer. How do you tell, as a seller? Make it a part of your counteroffer that the deposit revert to you the day after contingencies expire. That’s not friendly, and it may lose you some potential buyers, particularly in a buyer’s market, but it’s the only way to be sure. Prequalification letters are basically used paper, for all they really mean.

There is nothing wrong with saying, “My property is worth $X” as long as you understand that it’s shorthand for “Similar properties in my area are selling for about $X”. Because your property is never worth $X. Nor are any of mine, Donald Trump’s, or anyone else’s. It’s not worth that unless you sold it for that, and if you sold it, it’s not yours anymore, is it?

People get caught up in the damnedest ego blocks on comparatively few dollars. You put the property up for sale because you wanted something other than that property, right? You’re out there offering money for the property because you think you can make more money with the property than with the money, right? Trying to squeeze too many dollars out of the other side of the transaction can and often does leave you with no transaction. There is a thin line between hard bargaining that gets you a good bargain, and overplaying your hand that gets you left out in the cold.

Don’t get left out in the cold.

Caveat Emptor

The State of Our Educational System

US News has an interesting editorial by Mortimer Zuckerman in their latest issue, having to do with the departure of Lawrence Summers and the downside for Harvard’s students.

It seems that Summer’s celebrated episode of Hoof in Mouth Disease was only a public reason for the faculty turning on them. It seems he wanted the professors to teach, and not just the courses they thought up to coincide with the most recent research, but more basic stuff as well. Furthermore, he was fighting grade inflation. When 91 percent of your graduating class gets honors, honors are meaningless. Particularly when a large portion of the student body was emerging from the undergraduate program ignorant of core subjects.

Does the vast majority of this fight sound familiar? It should. Parents of schoolchildren from kindergarten through twelfth grade are fighting it, and into college for those who continue in public colleges. I’ve got a kindergartner who, I’m convinced, learns more in the hour or so per night my wife and I can devote before bedtime than the seven hours she’s in class. They play around with sight words all day, and we come home and teach her phonics. The math they’re doing is pathetic. They’re still working on counting, and we come home and teach her about how adding is really just about fast counting. In fact, they seem to concentrate on feel good subjects. She comes home with songs about Rosa Parks and Martin Luther King that she sings ad nauseum, but she can’t tell us anything about what they did, nor did she know who George Washington and Abraham Lincoln were and what they did until we took the time to teach her. MLK and Rosa Parks deserve admiration and respect, but let’s get the basics first (I have yet to hear of a high school or lower civics class mentioning General George Catlett Marshall, who in my opinion was probably more important to history than any of the presidents he served. He ran World War II, strategically, then took someone else’s idea of rebuilding our former enemies and sold it to the american public, which was arguably the best investment we’ve ever made as a country. Wikipedia has a good overview, if your school failed you.

My point is this: The schools don’t teach what the students need to know. They teach what the teachers want to teach, what is easy for the teachers to teach. I have heard, secondhand, tales of their children dealing with teachers who are mathematically incompetent – who literally could not do arithmetic without a calculator. This is unacceptable, even in an English teacher. The schools don’t teach rational thought, or methods of evaluation. How can they, when the teachers cannot handle mathematics themselves?

What they have is not an easy job. Those that actually do their job are underpaid. But there are too many that shouldn’t be in the teaching profession at all, and their organizations are doing their best to keep us from improving the situation. And, it appears, the phenomenon touches even the most prestigious of private universities. If the professors will not teach, how are they supposed to be in touch with what the students need to learn? How are they, and not grad students who do the actual teaching, supposed to be better equipped to set academic policy? Why are they not, instead, in a purely research position in private industry? Tell me again why they are receiving a salary from a college? Here’s a hint: It’s not to shelter them from inability to get a grant.

They are paid to teach, and they are paid to teach what the students need to learn. If they won’t do it, that’s called refusal to work, and is grounds for terminating anyone. If they can’t do it, that’s called incompetence, and also grounds for terminating anyone.

If you are getting the idea that the tenure system is out of control, you’re on the right track.

The Perceived Will to Fight

Power = capabilities X interest X will

If any of the elements on the right are zero, power is zero, no matter how strong the other elements. If interest and capabilities to defeat an enemy are great, but will appears weak, then so is power.

He also deals with the differences between actual will and perceived will. If your will is perceived to be weak, you will be forced to fight battles that never would have happened if your will had been perceived to be stronger. Every time something happens to weaken the ability, or the perceived ability, of the United States to respond in an appropriate manner, our enemies are encouraged to launch attacks and fight battles that they otherwise would not.

Is it treason to advocate “cut and run from Iraq”? Not unless you’re being paid to do so. But every time somebody does so, they become a part of the cause why american servicemembers are killed in subsequent attacks, and Iraqis also. This places a very high bar on what I consider – what is – worthwhile criticism of the Iraq war. Of course, those making the criticisms of the war knows that the ones harmed by it will overwhelmingly vote for the other side, anyway.

And just because it’s not treason doesn’t mean scoring cheap political points that get our defenders and Iraqi innocents killed is in any way admirable. Quite the opposite, and I hope that those who say they support the troops will suit actions to words in the voting booth this year, as well as everyone with a friend or relative in the military. It is incorrect to claim that there can be no valid criticism of the war or its handling. But it is also very possible to criticize the war and its conduct without encouraging our foreign enemies, and those who are unable to see the distinction or make the distinction need to be voted out. Such actions will not only improve the quality of the debate, but send a clear message to our enemies that we have the will to carry this through, and therefore save lives because of attacks the enemy is not emboldened to make, and battles that remain unfought.

In short, if you support the troops, don’t get them killed needlessly.

Leverage – Making a Decent Investment Spectacular

One of the concepts I keep seeing without a decent treatment is the concept of leveraging an investment. Real Estate has this like no other investment. You go talk to a bank about leveraging eighty to ninety or even one hundred percent of your investment in the stock market, or the same percentage of a speculative venture, and see what happens. Be prepared for laughter, and they’re not laughing with you. But real estate they will do it. Why? Because it’s land. It’s not going anywhere, and they’re not making any more.



The fact is that real estate has the potential for leverage like no other. This is due to the interplay of two factors. One is the fact that you can rent the property out to pay for the expenses of owning it, and even if you use it yourself, you’re able to save the money you would be paying in rent. Everyone’s got to live somewhere, and every business needs a place to put it. The other, more important factor is leverage, the fact that you’re able to use the bank’s money for such a large portion of your investment. The bank will loan you anywhere from fifty to one hundred per cent of the value of the property. Yes, you’ve got to pay interest on it, but you’re paying that through the rent – either the rent you’d save or the rent you’re getting – and there are tax deductions that make such costs less than they might appear.



Now here are some computations based upon the situation local to me. Suppose you have a choice as to whether to buy a three bedroom single family residence for $450,000 (to pick the figure for a starter home) or rent it for $1900. Let’s even allow for the fact that the home may be overpriced by $100,000. You have $22500 – a five percent down payment. More than most folks, and you would invest that and the difference in monthly housing cost, and earn ten percent tax deferred if you didn’t buy the house. Let’s crank the numbers and see what they say.

Year
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
Value
$450,000
$374,500
$400,715
$428,765
$458,778
$490,893
$525,255
$562,023
$601,365
$643,460
$688,502
$736,698
$788,267
$843,445
$902,486
$965,661
$1,033,257
$1,105,585
$1,182,976
$1,265,784
$1,354,389
$1,449,196
$1,550,640
$1,659,185
$1,775,328
$1,899,601
$2,032,573
$2,174,853
$2,327,093
$2,489,989
Rent
$1,900.00
$1,976.00
$2,055.04
$2,137.24
$2,222.73
$2,311.64
$2,404.11
$2,500.27
$2,600.28
$2,704.29
$2,812.46
$2,924.96
$3,041.96
$3,163.64
$3,290.19
$3,421.79
$3,558.66
$3,701.01
$3,849.05
$4,003.01
$4,163.13
$4,329.66
$4,502.85
$4,682.96
$4,870.28
$5,065.09
$5,267.69
$5,478.40
$5,697.54
$5,925.44
Equity
22,500
-48,406
-17,287
15,999
51,604
89,691
130,432
174,014
220,635
270,509
323,864
380,943
442,008
507,340
577,237
652,020
732,034
817,645
909,249
1,007,266
1,112,149
1,224,382
1,344,484
1,473,009
1,610,553
1,757,754
1,915,294
2,083,904
2,264,370
2,457,532
Benefit
-31,500
-110,236
-94,761
-77,990
-59,828
-40,176
-18,930
-4,021
28,797
55,524
84,333
115,367
148,774
184,712
223,349
264,861
309,432
357,261
408,553
463,526
522,407
585,438
652,869
724,964
802,381
885,736
975,442
1,071,939
1,175,697
1,287,213



The Net Benefit Column is net of taxes, net of the value of the investment account. The cost of selling the property is also built in. Now most people won’t really do this, invest every penny they’d save. I have intentionally created a scenario that contrasts a real world real estate investment where you bought in at a temporary top, with a hopelessly idealized other investment.

There is a potential downside, and it could be big. This is a real risk, and anyone who tells you otherwise is not your friend. Look at the beginning of years numbered 2 through 5 in the equity column. You haven’t gotten your initial investment back until sometime in the fourth year. Look at years 1 through 7 in the net benefits column. You’re immediately down $31,500, due to me assuming it would cost you seven percent to turn around and sell the property. A year later, due to me assuming the bubble has popped, you’re down by over one hundred ten thousand dollars, as opposed to where you’d be in you put it in the idealized ten percent per year investment. There is no such thing, but for the purposes of this essay I’m assuming there is. This is the illustration of why you need to look ahead when you’re playing with real estate – a long way ahead. A loan payment that makes you feel comfortable for a couple of years isn’t going to cut it. You need something viable for a longer term. If you’ll look at projected equity at the beginning of years five and six, it goes between fifty odd thousand and eighty some thousand, assuming you’ve been making a principal and interest payment. You have plenty of equity to refinance there if you need to. If you need to do something in year three, however, you’re hosed. If you’ve been negatively amortizing, you’re hosed. You owe more than the property is worth. The payment adjusts, you can’t afford it, you can’t refinance, and you have to sell at a loss, as well as getting that 1099 love note from the lender that says “You Owe Taxes!”

But now look ten years out. At the beginning of year 11, you have $323,000 in equity, and if you sell at that point, you are $84,000 ahead of where you would have been if you invested that money in the idealized investment I’ve posited. That’s four times your original investment, and I only assumed real estate went up seven percent per year, whereas the alternative investment went up by ten percent per year. How could that possibly be right?

The answer is leverage. That $450,000 was almost entirely the bank’s money. The appreciation applied to this entire amount. But you only invested $22,500. The bank isn’t on the hook for the value; their upside is only the repayment of the loan. If the property goes to a value of $481,500 and then $515,205 (normal seven percent appreciation in two years), then that extra money is yours. Think Daffy Duck shouting “Mine! Mine! All Mine!“. Daffy’s got to pay some money to get the property sold, as real estate is not liquid. The bank gets all of it’s money. The bank always gets all of its money first. After that, however, then the extra belongs only to the owner, not the lender.

The lender gets none of the appreciation. This is all fine and well with them, by the way. They’ve been well paid whether the property increased in value or not. This money from increased value is all yours. This applies even, as in our example, if the property lost value for a while. Yes, if you had had to sell in year two, you’d have been up the creek. But you didn’t; you kept your head and waited until the property increased again. Given that you didn’t, the only numbers that are important are the numbers when you bought it, and when you sold it. The rest of the time is completely irrelevant to the equation, a fact that is true for any investment, by the way. Doesn’t matter if the value is ten times what it was when you bought on paper, it only matters that when you actually sold, it was for a loss. Doesn’t matter if the value goes to zero the day after you buy, and stays there for thirty years. If in the thirty-first year it rebounds to fifty or a hundred times the original purchase price and that’s when you sell, then you really were a genius. Get it? Got it? Good.

So when the property appreciated back to $688,000 and change at the beginning of year eleven, and you only owe $364,000 and change, that’s $323,000 in equity. You’re almost fifty percent owner. Even after you pay seven percent to sell the property, you come away with $275,000, as opposed to a little over $191,000 that you’d have in the idealized but unleveraged investment.

Keep in mind this whole scenario is a hypothetical. Every Real Estate transaction is different. Every property is different, every market is different, and the timing makes a critical difference. That’s why you can’t just call your broker to sell it and get a check within seven days, like you can with stocks and bonds. That’s why a decent agent is worth every penny, and a good one is worth more than you will ever pay us. But properly executed, a leveraged investment pays off like nothing else can, and real estate is the easiest way to make a highly leveraged investment that is stable until such time as it is favorable to sell.

Caveat Emptor

Investing in Second Trust Deeds

From an email:
I’ve been enjoying your blog posts on mortgages. I’ve learned more from you about what to expect than I have from any other source, and I’ve gotten 10 mortgages in my life.

I was reading Larry William’s website this week, and on there I saw one of his newsletters from last summer:
http://www.ireallytrade.com/
http://www.ireallytrade.com/freestuff.htm
the May 2005 Right Stock.

Larry Williams you may be familiar with, he’s written many books on trading.

Anyways, the newsletter talks about buying 2nd mortgage notes as an investment. And that’s something I haven’t seen you write about.

With the softening of the housing market in many areas, and overextended borrowers, I suspect that the market for 2nd notes will be heating up over the next few months and years.

I’d appreciate hearing your views on the opportunities and pitfalls in this area.



Let us consider the efficiencies of the market. The Institutional lenders have economies of scale, underwriting guidelines, and a set checklist of procedures as to how to approve (or decline) loans. They have a system that makes them effective. They can do this because they have enough loans to make it cost-effective, and because of their experience, they know how to price their loans. From advertising to wholesaling to pricing to packaging and servicing, they are set up for efficient service. Lest people think I’m saying lenders are a better place to get loans than brokers, I am not. Quite the reverse is true. But the the vast majority of broker originated loans are with regulated institutional lenders.

What happens if you’re not set up like that? The answer is you’re either more highly priced than they are, or you’re not as profitable. I’ve said more than once that without regulated institutional lenders, every loan would be a hard money loan. So in trying to originate loans, an individual is competing at a disadvantage. Where then, can they make a profit?

The answer is in the loans that the regulated lenders won’t or can’t touch. Now we need to ask ourselves why they can’t or won’t touch them. There are three common reasons. First is there is something wrong with the borrower. Second is that there’s not enough equity. Third is that there is something wrong with the property.

Something wrong with the borrower has several subtypes. Credit Score too low, in bankruptcy, too many mortgage lates, no source of income to pay back the loan. Most of these can be gotten around in one degree or another unless they take place in combination with insufficient equity. Most single problems are surmountable by a good loan officer, providing you’ve got the equity required to convince the bank they won’t lose their investment. You’ll pay a higher rate or higher fees than you would without, but better that than no loan. It’s when they take place in combination that problems arise which break the loan beyond the ability to rescue. And of course, if the property is not marketable in its current condition, no regulated lender will touch it.

What the first category reduces to is increased chance of default. The second category reduces to increased risk of losing money in case of default. The third category, something wrong with the property, reduces to you’re going to get stuck fixing the property if they do default, which means sinking thousands to tens of thousands of dollars into it, above and beyond the amount of the trust deed. Furthermore, both the second and third categories are also at increased risk for default, even if the borrower has the wealth of Midas and the credit score to match.

So let’s consider what happens when something goes wrong. The borrower doesn’t make their payments, and it becomes a non-performing loan. You’re not getting your money. If you need it every month, that’s a problem. Do you know the proper procedure to foreclose without missing any i-dots or t-crossings? If you don’t, your borrower can spin it out a long time. Well, that’s what a servicer is for, but a servicer cuts into your margin, and they get their money every month regardless of whether or not you get paid. This means they’re a monthly liability if the loan isn’t performing. Furthermore, over half the time, some low-life attorney talks the people into filing bankruptcy to delay the inevitable. It’s stupid, and it almost always ends up costing them still more money and making their final situation much worse, but they do it anyway – and now you have to start paying an attorney to have any hope of getting your money.

Suppose the property does go all the way to auction? You are second in line behind the holder of the first trust deed. They get every penny they are due before you get one penny. And if the first trust deed holder forecloses (or the government for property taxes), your trust deed is wiped out. The only way to defend against this is go to the auction with cash to defend your interest. And if the borrower isn’t paying you, may I ask why you think they’ll pay their property taxes or first trust deed? The answer is “they’re probably not.” They are going to lose the property anyway, so why make payments that don’t prevent that?

(There are a lot of details in the foreclosure process. The stuff in the above paragraph should not be taken for anything more than a broad brush child’s watercolor type painting of the process, as including those details would digress too far)

Now, suppose you’re not originating the loan, you’re just buying the right to receive payments, either on an individual loan or a package of loans, after the fact?

Well, can I ask you which loans you think the lenders are selling? If you answered “The ones in greatest danger of default” you get a star for the day! The lenders will either sell them off individually, if there are people inclined to buy, or actually repackage them thusly. The ones that are still performing, and still going according to the original guidelines will go to other regulated institutional lenders in mass packages, but those lenders won’t take these, or if they will, it’ll bring the price of the entire package down by more than it’s worth. So they separate out the dogs before they sell the package. So unless you’re buying them as part of the original loan package, this is what’s happening. Now mind you, there are always those who want the non-performing loans because they know how to deal with them, but they know to only buy the ones with enough equity to cover the loans in case they need to foreclose. Those who specialize also know what these loans are really worth, and they don’t pay full value – usually not even close.

So the aftermarket loans that are available tend to be in danger of default and without sufficient equity to cover if it goes to auction. If you’re looking to lose your money, you’ve just found a very good way. You can also spend thousands of extra dollars trivially trying to defend your interests.

The equity issue is going to assume increased importance as prices in some overheated areas subside. If the loan was underwritten and approved on the basis of a $500,000 appraisal, but now similar properties are only selling for $420,000 and the loans total $450,000, it doesn’t need a genius to understand you’re not in the best of positions. Even if it sells at auction for as much as comparables are going for, you’re still down at least $30,000 plus the expenses of the sale.

Now, with that said, second trust deeds can, if the equity is there, put you in the catbird seat. Suppose there’s an IRS lien junior to you? Our office dealt with a $700,000 property with a $1.6 million lien against it – junior to the $28,000 second we bought. Nobody else could touch that property. The owner just wanted out – he wasn’t getting any money regardless of what happened. He stopped making payments, and we had to step in with thousands of dollars to keep the holder of the first happy. There ended up being a fair amount of money made, although it took some serious cash for a while, because we had to make the payments on the first loan as well as everything else. This is not for the weak of wallet. If buying the Note had taken all of our ready money, we would have been SOL.

There are also all of the standard diversification of investment concerns. If ninety percent of your money is tied up in this deed, that’s a pretty serious risk to your overall financial health. No matter how many precautions you take, some do go sour.

In short, while there is a lot of potential for gain, it’s some serious work to evaluate the situation, and usually some serious work and serious cash to make it work for you when it is right.

Caveat Emptor

Helping Yourself Qualify for a Home Loan

There are a fair number of specific helpful suggestions to make in helping you purchase a home. All of them revolve around the loan. Let’s face it, the loan is far and away the most hypothetical and uncertain part about most real estate transactions. If there is a non-loan related problem, chances are that you really didn’t want to buy that particular property anyway. Most of the time, these problems mean that you would be buying into trouble, and nothing but. Unless you have specialized knowledge in sorting out that particular problem, it’s likely to be more expensive than any money you saved through reduced purchase price.

A poor loan officer can always botch a loan, of course, and even the best may not be able to push it through if you are a marginal enough case. So how do you improve your case standing?

The first thing is to get a credit score above 720. If you’re there already, keep doing what you’re doing. Even if you’re not there yet, it’s easier to improve than most people think, although it takes time. Make all of your credit payments on time, especially any mortgages and rental payments. These are the most important things to mortgage lenders. Note that you make a payment a few days later than it is due, and you may even pay a penalty, but the lender will not report it as late until 30 days later, and that’s when it counts as late to everyone else. In order to qualify for the A paper loan, at the top of the market, the general rule is no more than two 30 day late payments on revolving debts within two years, or one 30 day late on mortgages or rent.

Most lenders want you to have three lines of credit, and a twenty-four month credit history. Not all of them need to be still open, but if you don’t have at least two open lines of credit, a given reporting bureau may not report a score, and if you don’t have two different scores from the three big bureaus, only a few sub-prime lenders will give you a loan. The longer your particular lines of credit are open, the higher your score will be. So if you keep opening new lines of credit, expect your score to be low.

Revolving credit balances should be kept low, less than half of their limit. There is a significant hit if your credit line is more than half its limit, and the higher you go, the worse it is. If you have two $5000 limit credit cards, it is much better to have $1500 on each than $3000 on one and nothing on the other. It make even more difference if you have $2000 balance on each as opposed to $4000 on one. And if you’re one of those people who keeps doing the “transfer your balance to a new card and get zero interest for six months” thing, it will really impact your credit in a negative way, because if your credit balances sum to $8000, that’s usually what the limit on the new card will be, and so you’ve got a brand new credit card that’s maxed out, which is a major hit on your credit.

One of the best ways to improve your credit score relatively quickly is to use your credit regularly but pay it off every time you get a bill. Once per month, charge something small that you know you will be able to pay off when the bill arrives. This may still take some months to improve your score, but better months than years.

The next way to improve your ability to afford a house is not to have any large monthly payments. The best rates are for full documentation loans, where you prove to the lender that you make enough money to be able to afford all of your payments. “A paper” lenders will allow you to have total monthly payments of 38 to 45 percent of your gross monthly income. Some sub-prime lenders will go to 55 percent. If your family makes $6000 per month, this means that total payments can be up to $2700 for certain A paper loans, up to $3300 for sub-prime and still qualify full documentation. This also means that the more income you can document, the more house you can afford.

This number includes not only the amount of the mortgage, but also the property taxes, homeowners insurance, association dues (if applicable), and anything else you may need to pay in order to keep the home, as well as car payments, credit card payments, and any other debts you may have. This means that somebody with other payments of $80 per month can afford a lot more house than somebody with other payments of $900 per month. This should be intuitive, but you’d be surprised how often people don’t realize it.

The final thing that is helpful is a down payment. The larger your down payment, the less you have to borrow. Lending money is a risk-based business. Up to a point, the lower the ratio of loan balance to value of the property will help you get a lower interest rate and more favorable terms, because the bank will be more certain of getting all of their money back. A 5% down payment is better than none. 10% is better than 5%. The first 5% makes the most difference, but every bit helps. Of course the larger your down payment, the less you have left over for other purposes. It seems to be a phenomenon today that people don’t want to risk any more of their own money than they have to, and 100% loans can be done right now, although how much longer that will be the case is anyone’s guess. Still, people who make a habit of saving money are always in a stronger position that those who do not.

Caveat Emptor

Did That Slap On The Back Leave a Knife?

One of the things the place I work does to attract clients is advertise foreclosure lists to our clients. Several times a week, people call and ask for the lists, and we say, “Great! Just come on down, fill out a loan package and an agency agreement, and we’ll get them to you fresh every morning, and when you see one you might be interested in, we’ll help you get it!”

Before the end, over 95% of the people have stopped us, saying they are already working with someone. “I just want the foreclosure list. Can’t I get it?” Well, we pay money for that. Why should we give it to someone who is not our client and has the ability to pay for it on their own? Why didn’t their agent get it for them? (Everyone can get a weekly list for free from the county – but that list is worthless except as a timewaster, because that list is three to ten days out of date and they’ve already been swarmed.) If they want to work the foreclosure market, they should have signed up with an agent who has daily foreclosure lists. They haven’t even found a property they are interested in yet, and already they know their agent isn’t cutting the mustard for their purposes. But they are still stuck with them.

Another trick high margin (“expensive”) people use is social groups. Nothing wrong with social groups and using people you know there, but make certain you’re not paying three or five times the going rate for a loan, and that your agent really knows what they are doing before you sign on the dotted line. Church groups, soccer coaches, scoutmasters – I can’t tell you all of the social acquaintances I’ve rescued people who became my clients from. These predators look at other members of the group as a captive audience. It isn’t so, of course, those people have the option of going elsewhere – it’s just difficult socially, and many of them are unwilling to make the effort.

One of the worst of these is family. Your brother, sister, aunt, or nephew is in the business, and your family makes it difficult not to choose them. “You simply must use your sister Margaret!” Well, if subsidizing Margaret to the tune of two points more than anyone else would get is your cup of tea. Around here, that’s $8000 or so for the average transaction. You are not writing the check for the extra to Margaret directly, but you’re paying her just the same.

Lest I be misunderstood here, there is nothing wrong with using friends, family, members of your social group. Please do check with them. The mistake is not in giving them a shot; it lies in giving them the only chance. That’s what you call a monopoly situation, and the chances of you getting the best possible treatment are horrid. But if Aunt Marge or Uncle Bob know you’re shopping around, they have more incentive to do their best work. If they know you’re not, well I hate to break it to you, but the average person is looking for a bigger paycheck for the same work, and this includes friends, family, and social acquaintances, particularly because you are not the one writing the check, but you will pay for it, guaranteed. The worst mess I’ve ever had to clean up was caused by my client’s uncle, who had been in the business twenty years, and was trying to extort just a little too much money for the deal to work.

On the other hand, when my cousin calls me out of the blue, I can cut him a deal because here is a transaction that I didn’t have to spend time and money on wrestling it in the door; it walked in of its own volition. This is far and away the toughest part of any transaction, and one of the most expensive to any real estate practitioner – getting a potential client into your office. It’s why the “big names” spend so much on advertising nationally, and give their folks half (or less) of the cut a smaller place will give them. (Hint: just like in financial planning or any other service, what’s important is always the capabilities and conscientiousness of the individual performing the service, not the company).

So here’s how you live up to the social expectations. Give them a shot, but not the only shot. If you are looking to buy and they are an agent, sign a non-exclusive buyer’s agreement with them. This gives you free rein to work with other folks as well; just don’t sign any exclusive agreements. Most agents, unfortunately, want to lock up the commission that your business represents and so they will present you with an exclusive agreement. The harder they argue for an exclusive agreement, the more you should avoid them. All an exclusive agreement does is lock you in with one agent. If they are a lazy twit, you either have to wait until the agreement expires, use them for your transaction anyway, or hope you can get them to voluntarily release you. There is no way for you to force them to let you go. I get search phrases like “breaking an exclusive buyer’s agreement” hitting the site every day. The only two ways to break an exclusive agreement are 1) wait for it to expire, or 2) get them to voluntarily let you go. I’ve never heard of the latter happening. So don’t sign an exclusive agreement in the first place. Sign a non-exclusive agreement. This puts all of the motivations for work on your side, where they belong. The one who finds the property you are interested in will get the commission, but they have to work for it, as your business isn’t locked up.

This also gives you an out if Aunt Marge or Uncle Bob doesn’t cut the mustard. You can tell anybody who gets their nose out of joint, including them, that you gave them the opportunity to earn your business, and somebody else did a better job. The other guy saved you money, the other guy found you the property you wanted, the other guy got you a better loan. You wanted to do business with them, but they didn’t measure up. Case closed, and Aunt Marge or Uncle Bob will drop it if they are smart, because the more stink they raise, the more likely it is that another family member, friend, or social acquaintance will pass them by in favor of “Could you give me the name of that guy who helped you?”

The only exception to the non-exclusive buyer’s agreement is if they are giving you a service that you would otherwise have to pay money for. I am not talking about Multiple Listing Service – those are free and plentiful. I’m talking about real time information not available to the general public – like daily foreclosure listings. Our office pays hundreds of dollars per month for that as a way to bring in business. It is reasonable for someone working the foreclosure market thusly to be asked to sign an exclusive agreement, because otherwise there may be no way to determine who introduced you to the property (Lawyer’s Full Employment Act strikes again!)

For sellers, unfortunately, you’ve got to make a commitment to list with one agent. It’s just the way it has to be, economically, in order to get them to commit to spending the kind of money it takes to get a good result. But you can interview more than one agent. What are they going to do to sell your property for the highest possible price? Put it in the contract when you do sign. Everybody can put it in the MLS, and during the bull housing market we had for years, where unless the property was obviously overpriced you’d get multiple offers within a week, a lot of monkeys masquerading as agents made a good living doing that and only that. That doesn’t cut the mustard any more. I work more with buyers than sellers, but there are venues that sell the property, venues that bring people to open houses, venues that generate people looking for the cheap bargain (which you don’t want) and venues that generate people looking for property like yours in your neighborhood (who is your ideal buyer). Especially in a major city, these are all different venues, and the agent who knows which one is which is worth more than you will pay them, and the cheap agent who doesn’t is likely to cost you a lot more money than their cheap asking price saves you.

For loans, I’ve written about this before, but shop around, ask questions of every loan provider you interview, beware of red flags, and stick to your guns. Try and find someone to act as a backup loan provider if you can, and do the work so both loans are ready to go when you need them. If you get multiple volunteers for backup provider, that would tend to indicate that they know that the loan you’re telling them about isn’t real. That’s the question I ask before I volunteer to put in the work of a backup provider. “Could the loan they are telling me about be real?” If the answer is no, I volunteer to act as backup. Every single time, it’s been my loan the person ended up getting. Your prospective loan providers should know the market if they are competent. Make use of that knowledge. And lest you be tempted to quote something at those loan officers that is not real, it’s a self-defeating strategy. Honest loan officers will tell you point blank they can’t do that, while the scamsters are going to get into the spirit of the situation, by which I mean saying anything it takes, no matter how fanciful, to get you to sign up. And those who are knowledgeable about the state of the market always know what is likely real and deliverable, and what likely is not.

Caveat Emptor