No Money Down Investing With Apartments



http://ApartmentHouseProfitMachine.com Apartment buildings are the most reliable, low risk real estate investments to create large passive income streams and equity growth. One of the best, most little appreciated aspects of them apartment investing is the extent that you can finance them. Because apartment buildings throw off tremendous cashflow there is plenty of income to share with partners who are willing to invest money with you to help you buy the property. A bank will give you 70-80% of the acquisition cost, private lenders will provide you the down payment money for a reasonable return on their investment. Private lenders will also provide you with any and all finds needed for rehab and turning the property around. Apartment buildings are the ultimate investment vehicle for no money down investing.

Comments

  1. Sure thing. Can you send me a private message and let me know what you are after.
  2. Down payment for apartment purchases comes from private lenders. There are billions of dollars in CD's and IRAs getting a 1-2% return, who's owners would be thrilled to get a 6-7% return, which you can easily provide from the cashflow of the property you are buying.
  3. I am a investor from Montreal Canada. I have a team that is looking for multi family. the bigger the better! If you have any that you know of please let me know.
  4. @stonecoldjason Jason, yes CA is down now, and it may take quite a few years to come back. Serious appreciation won't happen again before all the REO inventory has been blown through the system and is back out into private ownership again. There needs to be money flowing through the economy before appreciation happens, and that will take some time. But CA is an attractive place, people will always want to live there. The market will come back.
  5. @TheREIMaverick Thanks Mav. I appreciate that.
  6. Hey, I just wanted to comment on your video....I really like it and I have shared it with some of my firends on some of my social networking sites! NICE!!!!
  7. But you have to educate yourself George, don't just react to what you read in the newspaper. I wish you the best.¨ Ben
  8. Regarding "HOW can R.E ALWAYS APPRECIATE or even 24% one yr?", no market ALWAYS appreciates at 24% a yr, nor did I say that. As I stated in the video, the 88% increase is based on what the building was worth when it was bought, compared to what it was worth after 10 years, then divided by 10 to give you an "aggregate" yearly return. A simple calculation. If you learn about market cycles, buy at the bottom of a market (eg. now) and sell at or near the top, this is not hard to achieve.
  9. And it's still climbing today. We are only learning now how much bogus sub-prime lending went on then by how many foreclosures there are today. It's a disaster, no doubt, and the tax paying citizens around the world are paying the price. But the fact that real estate goes through periods of high appreciation in some markets followed by precipitous drops doesn't make it bad. If you educate yourself about real estate investing it's good, "very" good.
  10. The word was, "get the money out into loans ... whatever it takes." So underwriting was relaxed and every homeowner who had a pulse who applied for a an equity loan, was approved. And the cash FLOWED into the economy, the 2002-2005 r/e boom resulted. When the borrowers' loan procceds were all spent, and they couldn't make their big mortgage payments anymore, the foreclosure rate began to climb.
  11. With no more good credit mortgages available, some bright spark came up with the idea of securitizing bad credit "sub prime" mortgage. "Heck, why not?", one imagines must have been their rationale, "We gotta securitize something!". As a result of this deep sickness that periodically infects Wall Street, billions and billions and billions and billions of dollars were made available to sub-prime mortgage lenders across the country.
  12. The bubble burst when the borrowers on these loans spent all their money and couldn't afford the payments anymore. The loans shouldn't have been made in the first place to high credit risk borrowers, but Wall Street had gone "mortgage securutization mad". They had securitized every good credit risk mortgages they could find and (because securitization makes investment bankers so much money) they were looking for more.
  13. George, the numbers in the video come from U.S. government data on existing home sales. The information is what it is, it's not a matter of anyone lying. Look it up if you want to. Foreclosures always happen. They are happening in mass numbers now because masses of people took out high LTV sub-prime loans who couldn't afford to repay them, during the period of 2002-2005, causing the R/E market to go white hot.


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Duration: 8m 45s

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