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Posts Tagged ‘investing’

New Year! New Ambitions!

Monday, January 18th, 2010

So firstly … a belated Happy New Year on the 18th of the month, or as my solicitor said on the phone today ‘It feels like Christmas was months away’.

There’s a lot of talk about goal setting at New Year and I for one struggled with that this year. I’m not going to share my new goals here, but I will say … I worried about this for months, and then when they were the last thing on my mind I woke up one morning and instinctively knew what they were.

And I managed to avoid my usual problem – Making them REALLY complicated! Not this time. They have to be easy to track otherwise I get bogged down in following them.

So … onto my property news.

Since I last wrote, I completed on the 2 bed flat I’ve been blogging about for months. This was the longest running transaction ever (11 1/2 months all in!). It was tenanted from day 1 and I’m in the process of discussing quote with builders. I’ve shown 3 round so far – got 1 quote back. Looks quite interesting, except the first disappointing thing … my request for a ‘quote’ has resulted in an ‘estimate’. I don’t think this is a deliberate ploy and is nothing but a minor wording difference, but I still noticed!

While talking to builders I’ve also been pushing through some other deals and it looks like that’s coming to fruition. There’s a deal in Bitterne that is coming together nicely, figures to follow another time.

And while discussing that deal, I got to hear about another … worthy of a blog post all by itself. Check out ‘Rent 2 Own Progress’.

And there’s potentially another deal in the offing. A small block going at a discount because the title is all messed up and a little tricky. Well worth a look! More news as it happens!

Bye for now!

Effective Use Of Capital

Tuesday, November 3rd, 2009

The BBC showed a documentary on Warren Buffett and Berkshire Hathaway last week. It was great. He came across as both down to earth and incredibly insightful. The man would seem to be as big as his reputation (bigger even!).

So, it was amazing viewing. Catch it on iPlayer (if you can find it – I couldn’t).

The BBC presented it as a series of lessons in Buffettology and the one that stuck in my mind is:

‘Effective and Efficient Use of Capital’

We could all do with some of that and it got me thinking that this is, indeed, a key part of any property investors make up (and probably any investor, given what Mr. Buffett says). We always need to be watching where our money is currently invested and deciding if that is the best place for it. Or could we make better use of it elsewhere?

In fact, this seems to be a recurring theme of Mr. Buffett’s that came over in the documentary. I also remember this featuring heavily in Roger Lowenstein’s excellent biography of him. Somehow, the magical Mr. Buffett has managed to persuade many of his business managers to relinquish a large portion of the funds their businesses generate back to him, rather than retaining them in their own business. The thinking being that Mr. Buffett is in a better position to determine how to use the money to get the best return.

And so to my own business: I’ve been aware for a while that I’m not treating my captial with the respect it deserves and this documentary has brought that into sharp focus. How to improve things in the immediate future? And how to do better next time?

The thing is … I have a lucrative refurb project in the pipeline. And it’s been in the pipeline for AGES. Far too long. So I’ve had money allocated to that project and I haven’t used it elsewhere because each month I think ‘Great, this is the month its going to happen’ and somehow time slips by and we don’t get there. And so it is that since December last year right through to November (yes 11 months!) I have had a good chunk of capital languishing waiting to be put to good use on this specific deal. All the while, it’s been earning … well pretty much nothing.

With any luck I’ll be through this particular lesson within a week or two and the money will be hard at work in the new property. Then my attention will turn to the refurb and then to releasing the cash, probably through a loan.

So in terms of the immediate future, I feel I’m at least on the right track.

And next, on to preventing this from happening again? Well here I don’t feel so easy. What to do? Should I be negotiation and agreeing purchases without having the funds available to complete? That sounds risky and a recipe for a quickly ruined reputation. But the alternative is to have the money sitting in the bank while the world takes it’s merry time to exchange and complete on each purchase. Yes, I can do my best to line these up. So that release the equity in my current project co-incides with completing on the next one. But so far that seems tremendously hard. Perhaps that it’s. It’s just hard. But that’s the way things are.

So I’m hoping to get this purchase sorted, and get it turned around fast. Then I can refinance my cash out. And whilst I’m doing that I shall be on the hunt for the next one. Then all I need to do is line them up!

Buying Buying Buying … Next Investment Property On It’s Way

Monday, October 19th, 2009

And so after a glorious 2 week holiday in the US to visit relatives and friends, PropertyBob is back and straight on it.

2 things have happened for me already …

Firstly, we’ve actually made some progress on my mammoth long running flat purchase. The last step in the chain to buy the place (going since January!) is to get buildings insurance in place. No small feat when the property has had subsidence AND the existing insurance has lapsed. But it looks like we’re coming through. Delite Insurance Broker has found with what appears to be a great policy from Nelson Insurance The premium is very reasonable and, better still, the excess for subsidence is the same as on a normal policy £1,000. This means it is far easier to get a regular every day mortgage rather than going to one of those specialist lender’s who fleece you. So … good good good. More on this if it comes off, when I’ll tell you all the financial numbers for the whole deal.

And the second thing … one of my estate agent friends has potentially found me another property. And this one could work out quite nicely. It’s a 3 bed house arranged as 2 flats, still on a single title. The bottom flat is rented out, the top one was being used by the owner’s brother, who recently moved out into council accommodation. So the owner’s looking to sell. Only at the moment it isn’t mortgagable because it is neither a 3 bed house nor 2 separate flats (because they’re not on separate title). All of which suggests to me that we could work something out. He gets the price he wants with no haggling from me AND I’ll sort out the split title problems for him (and pay half the costs!) and I get another property. Still very early days so hopefully I can share more details soon if it goes somewhere.

Buildings Insurance – Dull but Essential

Monday, September 21st, 2009

Hey there guys!

Right I’m going to tackle a dull subject today – Buildings Insurance.

It’s not sexy and it’s not interesting, but it’s oh so important!

Here are the rules:

1. Get it – you need it!
2. Make sure you are covered for the full rebuild cost of the property (that’s not the amount you’d sell it for, it’s the amount it would cost to build – from scratch).
3. Don’t don’t don’t skimp on this. By all means, shop around and get some quotes, but don’t skimp on the cover. It’s not worth it. We all want to sleep at night after all.

The particular flavour of this problem that I’m battling with at the moment is a slightly tricky one.

I’m buying a flat that has had subsidence. It’s been underpinned, which happened a decade ago. And the property looks completely fine now with no signs of any more damage or anything so all is good on that front.

The problem? … The buildings insurance form when the work was carried out isn’t in place any more. This isn’t because they refused to insure or anything like that – it’s just because people are people and sometimes they have more important things to do in their lives. And so the existing insurance lapsed and the new insurer doesn’t know about the subsidence. That is – they didn’t know about the subsidence until I came along trying to buy the flat. So now the new insurer DOES know about it, but they are just a mainstream insurance company and this is a bit specialist so it’s no good.

The solution? … there are a few specialists out there who will sort this sort of thing out. It’s going to cost more money, and you have a bigger excess but such is life – that’s just the way these things go. And that’s what’s going on at the moment. I’m trying to persuade everyone concerned that they need to pay up for this expensive, specialist insurance. And to top that, you have to have a ‘structural engineers report’ written before they’ll even think about insuring the property, and that cost at least £290!!!!

I will buy this flat … it’s been going almost 9 months now, but we’ll get there … Oh YES!

Your Property Deal Ain’t Over Till It’s Over

Thursday, August 20th, 2009

Until your deal is done it’s not a deal and it isn’t done.

Anticipate every problem you can think of, plan for the worst and don’t be surprised if you’re surprised.

Let me explain …

I’ve been doing one particular deal since January. It’s August now and it’s still not done. And once we complete I’ve got a 3 month refurbishment to do. So all in, I’ll be lucky if I get this finished in 12 months start to finish.

Now it’s a great deal and I don’t want to pull out so I can be patient, but boy does ‘being patient’ take a long time! And it takes LOADS more time than I ever imagined.

Guess what’s caused the most recent problem …. yep you guessed it, finance! It’s been going so long my mortgage has expired, and after 2 extensions the lender has lost all patience (and to be honest I can’t really blame them!).

That doesn’t account for the 7 month delay. There have been lots of other reasons, it’s just the latest. But add them all up and it’s pretty costly. I’ve had the money ready for this deal all that time and it’s sat there doing nothing.

I could have bought another place, refurbed it and got a remortgage in the time it’s taken this one so far!

The lesson … don’t ever expect the deal to get done until it actually is. It’s a good job I can afford to wait. And until it’s done, don’t under any circumstance expect the return or any money from it. Don’t expect anything, and never need a deal to go through. That starts to get dangerous!

Don’t forget Commercial Loans!

Saturday, August 1st, 2009

These days it can be hard getting a good buy to let mortgage.

Large deposits, high interest rates and banks that aren’t interested in lending mean it’s getting harder and harder.  And it seems a record number of deals are falling through because buyers can’t get finance.

And so I’ve stumbled upon an alternative that’s looking increasingly attractive.

Commercial loans tend to need high deposits (thouh not always), so in a ‘normal’ mortgage market they’re not so attractive.  But today, when your standard BTL needs a 25% or even 30% deposit, suddenly a commercial loan with a similar deposit could work.  You can get commercial loans at 75% LTV, or for a re-furb project 65% LTV (but you can also borrow 65% of the cost of re-furb as well!).  Rates for these loans are pretty good too, around 3.5% – 3.75% above base.  And with fees around 1.25% it all starts to come together!

Commercial loans aren’t for everyone, and you need to be aware that sometimes they have more strict criteria than regular BTL mortgages, so you could find yourself providing lots of different information.  But not in all cases, sometimes it’s easier.  And these loans can be quite short term but they are definitely worth a look.

My Story: Post 3 – A Property Investor Is Born!

Tuesday, October 14th, 2008

So I was desperate to move house to try and kill my commute.  I had a pretty bold dream – walking to work!

I worked out the best place to do this was from London Bridge and then started looking at flats.  This was in 2004 and property prices were still booming.  My flat had gone up a fair bit, but now I was looking to move to an area FAR mor expensive so any increase was soon eaten up.  I quickly realised I could keep my flat, get a buy to let mortgage and rent it out.  The basics of the deal were:

Re-mortgage Valuation: £275,000

Rental Income: £1200 pcm

Mortgage: £ 965 pcm

I struggled a bit to find the right buy to let mortgage as the rental coverage wasn’t very good.  So in the end I was only allowed to borrow £187,000, for a loan to value of 68%.  But that was enough to pay off my old mortgage and give me something towards a deposit for the new place.  And it made the figures look OK as well, as the interest was kept reasonably low.  But as investments go it really wasn’t much of a winner.

Only getting 68% LTV in a market that commonly gave 85% was pretty rubbish (I even had someone tell me they would give me 90%, until they found out the rental amount).  And on top of that I was paying £1200 a year in service charges.  I remember calculating the yield at 5.1% and reading that a good yield was around 10%.  I was so far off I thought I had done the calculation wrong.  It wasn’t wrong.  The investment just wasn’t very good.  But I thought it was cool!

I was going to be a property investor!

So I analysed the deal and it didn’t look good, but I couldn’t bring myself to part with my first ever flat that I loved so much.  So that was it, I went with the buy to let mortgage and got a new personal mortgage on my new flat.

In the next post, I’ll explain why I’m so suspicious of letting agents and how I took one to court … and WON! :)