Sharestates: The E-Trade Of <b>Real Estate</b> - Business Insider | Real Estate Investing |
- Sharestates: The E-Trade Of <b>Real Estate</b> - Business Insider
- Should You Buy a Home for Your College Student? | Zillow Blog
- Women Breaking New Ground as <b>Real Estate Investors</b>
- Americans have fallen in love with <b>real estate</b> once again - Fortune
| Sharestates: The E-Trade Of <b>Real Estate</b> - Business Insider Posted: 09 Aug 2014 08:31 AM PDT Sharestates A rendering of 345 Lenox Road, one of Sharestates' current public project. Typically investors buy and flip homes, or they invest in real estate investment trusts (REITs), which own different types of properties. But Sharestates is offering both accredited investors and the public a real estate crowdfunding platform that lets them dip as little as $100 into a project. The idea is to bring real estate to the masses. The evolution of the E-Trade of real estate
Walking to class while at NYU, Allen Shayanfekr looked at properties he passed and wondered who owned them. Shayanfekr, the legal adviser and cofounder of Sharestates, also wondered why he and his friends could not pool their money together and own one of those. It occurred to him that the market wasn't accessible. Separately, Wayne Geffen, who is a portfolio manager at First Serve Asset Management, a long/short energy focused fund, and who acts as an adviser to Sharestates, had been working on R-exchange, "an exchange for real estate, the way the New York Stock Exchange is for stocks." In summer 2013, Geffen and Shayanfekr happened to be at a real estate networking event hosted by a mutual friend. Geffen and Shayanfekr hit it off, and Geffen realized Sharestates was already in the "sixth or seventh inning" and decided to collaborate with them instead of pushing forward with R-exchange. Geffen thinks of Sharestates as the E-Trade of real estate. E-Trade was the first platform to aggressively market itself as the platform that opened up trading of stocks, bonds, and other securities to mom and pop investors. Geffen and Shayanfekr wanted to create such a platform for real estate. Real estate is traditionally an illiquid investment. "There's two components to something being liquid, the actual product, and the ability to get to that product," Geffen said. "That's essentially what we want to do. We just want to make an illiquid market open and transparent for retail investors." Regulation-AOne of the biggest hurdles to this is filing a property under Regulation-A: an exemption from SEC registration for securities offering up to $5 million in a 12-month period. Reg-A offerings have to come with a prospectus and can be offered publicly. Each property that Sharestates lists needs Reg-A qualification. Why hasn't this been done before? "It's difficult," Shayanfekr said. The average Reg-A qualification time is about nine months, and some can take as long as 18 months. And once the SEC qualification is done, one must go through state regulators as well.
The site itself is pretty intuitive. After you've filled in some personal information, Sharestates prompts you with some basic questions on the type of property that interests you, the kind of project (fix and flip/ground up investment), your risk tolerance, holding period, and so on. With an account set up, investors can peruse through projects that are still looking for funding. Investors can look at the type of offering (equity offering, buy & hold, private loan), the minimum investment, and the amount of the project that's already funded. And once they have picked a project, they can dig through all the additional data and see if it's right for them. The implications of a failed project are probably among the most common concerns investors could have. And Sharestates doesn't guarantee any projects. "We generally take personal guarantees and security agreements on projects in order to protect investors," Shayanfekr said. "That way, if a project goes south, they're generally in a senior 'lien position.'" "One way we try to hedge investors against losses is through negotiating preferential treatment on returns of invested capital," Shayanfekr said. "For example, the 345 Lenox Road deal requires the sponsor to pay back investors before paying himself. Another way is to be conservative on loan deals and loan on low to moderate loan to value ratios." Investors also need to remember these are illiquid investments. The money in a project will be tied up until it is completed. They can however sell the securities to other investors. Sharestates will inform its network to help the investor look for a buyer. "If you look back historically, the wealthiest people in this country have created and maintained their wealth through real estate acquisition," Shayanfekr said. Now Shayanfekr and Geffen hope to offer that opportunity to everyone. |
| Should You Buy a Home for Your College Student? | Zillow Blog Posted: 22 Jul 2014 01:06 PM PDT
Not so fast. Many issues come along with owning a student rental, and you should really think them through before you get yourself a "tough and expensive" college lesson of your own. Short-term ownershipRule No. 1 of prudent real estate investing: Focus on long-term ownership. The longer the property has to accrue in value, the higher the chances it will be a wealth-building investment for you. How long will your child be in school? Likely only 4-5 years, and then he or she will move on. Are you then going to hold onto the property and rent it to other students each year going forward? Probably not. You'll end up selling the property after only a few years. At a minimum, you won't earn a dime and most likely you'll lose money. Lack of good dealsIt's actually very hard to find a good student rental real estate deal. A "good deal" means it will be cash-flow positive and provide a fair rate of return on your invested capital. Because many people think student rentals are a good money-making venture, and they like to brag about owning one, they drive up the prices and drive down investment returns. If it isn't a good deal from day one, it will probably never be a good investment for you. So pencil out your deal first with conservative estimates of rents and expenses, and if you can't get a fair cash-on-cash return investment, keep your money in other assets or find a rental property elsewhere — preferably in your city — that pays the bills. Hassles of managementWhat's more important: for your child to get good grades and secure a good job coming out of college, or for your child to get a lesson in property management? All real estate has hassles and issues. Do you want your son or daughter worrying about broken pipes, collecting rent and dealing with neighbors instead of studying? What about when the A/C or heat breaks during finals and the tenants/roommates aren't happy? Let students be students. They have enough other stressful issues on their minds to deal with than an overflowing toilet. Summers and insuranceMany student rentals are vacant over the summer, and most insurance expires if your property is vacant longer than 30 or 60 days. So you will need to buy some extra insurance in addition to not collecting any rental income during that period. Most people don't do this and go without procuring the right insurance. You'd better hope nothing happens! The bottom line: Let local property ownership companies deal with the student rentals. It's a lot less expensive and much less hassle for your child to rent someone else's property than for you to handle one on your own. Related:
Leonard Baron, MBA, is America's Real Estate Professor®. His unbiased, neutral and inexpensive "Real Estate Ownership, Investment and Due Diligence 101" textbook teaches real estate owners how to make smart and safe purchase decisions. He is a past lecturer at San Diego State University and teaches continuing education to California real estate agents at The Career Compass. Note: The views and opinions expressed in this article are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the opinion or position of Zillow. |
| Women Breaking New Ground as <b>Real Estate Investors</b> Posted: 05 Aug 2014 03:52 PM PDT Ethan Roberts is a real estate writer, editor and investor. He's a frequent contributor to InvestorPlace.com, and his work has been featured on Money.msn.com and Reuters.com. He was one of five contributing editors to TheTycoonReport.com and has also written for MarketGreenhouse.com and SeekingAlpha.com. He's been investing in real estate since 1995 and a Realtor since 1998. This post is the first in Roberts' ongoing series about women in real estate. Since the early 1990s, real estate investing has become more and more popular as a way for average Americans to gradually build wealth over time. For many years, this type of investing was almost exclusively the domain of men. But in recent years, women are being drawn toward real estate investing as a viable way to ensure that they will have income or appreciating assets in retirement. Today there are even online investing clubs devoted exclusively to female real estate investors. Women have a lot to gain. Real estate investing, with its potentially high returns, offers them an excellent way to boost their income streams throughout their lives. This can be especially important in retirement, considering women are at a greater risk of outliving their savings due to their longer life expectancy, fewer years in the workforce and historically smaller paychecks. Flipping vs. Retailing If one's goal is simply to earn a monthly profit on each wholesale flip, this is a great way to add to one's wealth or create an excellent cash flow for retirement years. However, increasing numbers of women now "retail" the home — referring to the practice of repairing or improving the home's structural and cosmetic flaws in order to sell it as a primary residence for full market value. This takes longer and the process is more involved, but the profit potential greatly exceeds wholesaling. Profits on a retail flip may range from $15,000 to $50,000 or more, depending on the price paid, amount of work needed and the ultimate selling price. Start-to-Sold Strategy When she first began, she knew nothing about the process. But slowly, over time, Leticia has learned much more, to the point where she's able to project manage the entire flip. To date, Leticia has owned and sold six primary residences. She helped design two of them and managed the contractors performing the work. She also does some of the work herself on flips, such as painting and landscaping, as well as ordering and buying materials. Flipping homes isn't just a hobby for her — it's her full-time job, and she uses a "hard money" lender to finance the deals. A hard money loan is a short-term, very-high-interest loan (12 to 15 percent), in which the lender provides about 65 to 70 percent of the after-repaired value (ARM) of the home to the borrower. For example, if a foreclosed home is worth $150,000 after repairs and is selling for only $100,000, a hard money loan would finance perhaps 70 percent of the $150,000, or $105,000. While the investor might have to pay for materials and labor out of pocket, they use hard money loans so they don't have to come up with a 20 percent down payment, as is usually required with other types of conventional loans. The idea is to fix up and sell the home fast so the high-interest loan can be paid back as quickly as possible. Leticia's long-term goal is to achieve financial independence so she doesn't have to return to a 9-to-5 job. She hopes to flip five to six homes per year, and make a $20,000 minimum net profit on each. That can be challenge in itself, given the nature of the property she's buying. For example, hidden plumbing problems have caused her to go over budget on her most recent project, a 1,500-square-foot ranch home in Florida that was a bank foreclosure. "Luckily, I was able to find some great deals on cabinets and granite countertops," she says. "And home values have risen since I bought the home." In fact, within three days of listing the home on the Multiple Listing Service, Leticia received a contract for sale. With a fast contract in hand on this home, Leticia is already looking forward to searching for the next potentially profitable "flip." Leticia suggests that anyone interested in real estate investing "shadow" other investors to see what they do. "Also, read books and have a keen interest in learning everything you can about real estate," she counsels. Next up: Women Build Long-Term Wealth as Landlords This information was originally published on Auction.com, LLC, the nation's leading online real estate marketplace. Founded in 2008, the company has sold nearly $20 billion in assets since 2010. Auction.com has more than 900 employees and offices in Irvine and Silicon Valley, California as well as offices in Atlanta, Austin, Denver, Miami and Newport Beach. Visit us at www.auction.com, or on Twitter, Facebook and LinkedIn. |
| Americans have fallen in love with <b>real estate</b> once again - Fortune Posted: 18 Apr 2014 08:59 AM PDT April 18, 2014, 3:14 PM EDT FORTUNE — As the real estate market recovers, so does America's faith in housing as an investment. According to a Gallup poll released Thursday, a plurality of Americans now think of real estate as the "best" long-term investment, followed by gold, stocks and mutual funds, savings accounts/CDs, and bonds: If one assumes "best" to mean the investment that offers the highest return, then Americans have things backwards. Real estate, on average actually returns very little when adjusted for inflation. Robert Shiller — the economist famous for helping to create the widely cited Case-Shiller housing index puts it like this:
And since 1990, housing has continued to be a middling investment, when you take into account the bursting of the real estate bubble: When adjusted for inflation, the average house has appreciated little since 1987. The picture looks a lot different for the other investments Gallup asked about it in its polls. The S&P 500, for instance, has produced an inflation-adjusted annual return of 6.32% since 1929, while investing in government debt would have returned roughly half that figure. Gold, interestingly enough, has performed pretty well on an inflation-adjusted basis, averaging a 4.12% return per year since the end of the Bretton-Woods monetary order in 1971. If you break down the Gallup data into income groups, the answers are even more revealing. For one, wealthy Americans are more likely to pick stocks as the best investment than any other income group. This makes sense, as investing in the stock market is — as the above data shows — the best way to become wealthy. Secondly, it appears as if people are likely to say investments they own are the "best." According to the Gallup report:
So wealthy Americans are the most likely to understand that stocks provide the best chance for a higher return, but they are also not free of the tendency to think that the thing they are doing (in this case, owning a home) is the intelligent thing to do. Of course, this analysis takes for granted the idea that "best" necessarily means the investment that is most likely to make you the most money. There are, of course, other reasons why people might decide to invest in real estate. While it theoretically might make sense for an investor to rent his home and plow the money he saves on taxes, mortgage interest, and maintenance into the stock market, such a strategy might not work in the real world. First of all, people have limited time: They're going to spend a lot of energy choosing a good place to live, and might not also have the time to wisely manage securities investments too. Secondly, owning a home is a great way to force yourself to save money, as each mortgage payment is something you have to make, lest you risk losing your home. Either way, if you decide to put your extra cash into real estate for these reasons, you should be aware that this is the reason you're doing it. As long as you don't expect your home to make you a lot of money on an inflation-adjusted basis, invest away. |
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