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#1 Real Estate Investing Mistake Of 2005
Over the past few years, real estate investors, hungry for break-even or positive cash flow rental properties, purchased income properties out of state. California investors bought houses in Florida, Texas, and Oklahoma. Florida...

Investing in Indian Real Estate
Indian Real Estate: "Undeniably tremendous!" And, that is the undeniable verdict of a Price Waterhouse Coopers study conducted on the investment environment in terms of Indian real estate. Ever since the Government of India gave its stamp...

Investing in Real Estate: A Second Home in New Zealand
Do you grow tired living in the same place year after year? Perhaps its the nomadic instincts within us that beckons us to move on to new places. To leave the old, familiar grounds and discover new adventures in distant lands. Sometimes the old way...

Investing Tips For Beginners
Investing can be confusing, especially for the beginner. Getting some basic tips can help a beginning investor to make informed choices that fit their needs. Each person has a different goal when investing and that plays a big impact on how you...

Real Estate Investing -- Motivated Buyer?
What's the first image that comes to mind when you hear the term -- motivated seller? You probably think of someone who is desperate to sell his property, as quickly as possible, for well below the market price - right? Well, sometimes...

 
Ten Real Estate Investing Tip


Real estate investing tips tend to be a bit vague, like "invest in the right location," or "make sure the numbers work." Actually, tips like these are important principles to remember. However, since they have been well represented in other articles, I want to share a few more specific tips with you.
1. Listen to the market. The cabinet guy looked to me for a decision. I realized that I knew nothing at all about which cabinets people like, so I asked him which ones others were choosing, and he pointed to one that three quarters of his last forty customers had chosen. That's the one I want, I told him. Why argue with the market you are trying to sell to?
2. Do your own research. The real estate agent might show you only the comparable sales that make the property look more valuable. Do your own research. Some counties have made it easy now, with sales prices online. You can also search any number of sites with MLS listings, just to get an idea about the asking prices of other nearby properties.
3. Partner carefully. When you do a deal with partners, be the money or the management, but not both. Group decisions tend not to work well in real estate, and will cause you much stress. Once you decide on and agree to a plan, step back if you are investing the capital, and let your partner do his thing. Of course, step up and take control if you are managing the project.
4. Negotiate openly. Just ask a seller outright, "What do you want to get out of this?" It is rare that someone is offended by this simple question, and it saves you from wasting valuable time talking about things that don't interest him or her. Once you get a clear answer, you can decide if you can give them what they want, and still get what you need.
5. Invest safely. Investing isn't gambling. There is always risk, but the difference is that the odds are in your favor. If not, you are gambling. This why you shouldn't invest based on continued price increases. There is no guarantee that prices will continue up at any particular rate. Do deals that work even if prices go nowhere, and if values go up, you're that much better off.
6. Run the numbers. It is about the numbers, and if it is income property, it's about one number in particular: cash flow. Whatever the local formulas are, whether gross rent multipliers or capitalization rates or whatever, just be sure that after every last expense you'll have cash flow from the very first month.
Rules, formulas and real estate tips are really just guidelines. Even the rule above about cash flow can be broken if you know that rents can be raised soon, for example. You have to use common sense and learn from experience, and you can't replace good analysis with rules, formulas and real estate tips.

About The Author

Steve Gillman has invested in real estate for years. To learn more, get a free real estate investing course, and see a photo of a beautiful house he and his wife bought for $17,500, visit http://www.HousesUnderFiftyThousand.com.

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