Beginner Bulk REO Investing

Posted by | low interest rate | Friday 9 October 2009 8:11 pm

The recession in the U.S. economy has resulted in more foreclosures than experienced by any other generation of Americans. But smart real estate investors are turning these ‘lemons’ into ‘lemonade’ in an incredibly profitable new way.

The new opportunity is known as ‘Bulk REO Investing’ or ‘REO Package Investing’ and it’s a huge opportunity.

The basis of the Bulk REO business is foreclosures, so let’s analyze the foreclosure process now.

You can’t understand Bulk REO Investments without understanding the process of foreclosure.

Mortgage lenders faced with a non-paying home owner send a large volume of threats, warnings and documentation to the borrower who is late. Following a period of time determined by the lender, formal foreclosure proceedings begin. ‘Pre foreclosure’ is the name given to the time between implementation of the foreclosure proceedings and the public auction.

Foreclosure is completed when the defaulted property is auctioned. The lender regains ownership of the property if there are no buyers at auction. This property is then considered to be ‘Real Estate Owned’ by the lender, also known as an ‘REO’ property.

REO properties are usually listed for sale with local real estate agents. But more and more, lenders are selling their REO properties for a greatly reduced price. The trade-off is that the buyer must purchase multiple REO properties in each transaction.

The REO investment packages available today have provided a way to profitably capitalize on the U.S. recession. Bulk REO Investors are most successful when they have a well-established source of funding for their REO packages. Some sources of funding for these transactions are: personal funds, hard money lenders, commercial lenders and non-conventional sources such as private investors and hedge funds. Additionally, one man is becoming very well known in the field of bulk REO investing, and his name is Salvatore Bushemi of Dandrew Partners, a hedge fund in New York.

Why you shouldn’t spend money on software

Posted by | low interest rate | Friday 9 October 2009 8:11 pm

sage accounting software

Cutting your IT budget

I want to help you save Cash and I am never going to ask you for anything in return.

Every year I save a lot of euros by not spending any money on software. I discovered there was a better way as a result of being frustrated by Sage Software being out of my range. I have learned that I can do most of the day to day tasks efficiently using tools that cost me nothing. It amazes me why they dont teach this stuff in business classes. Talk to the wisest and brightest people you know who work for or run a small business and they wont know the facts I share with you in this article.

Do these 3 things right away to start saving money.

* 10 minutes/day search on one term ie free wordprocessor.
* Record your findings using the free service from evernote.com.
* Spend just ten minutes on every day on trying out one of the packages you find.

I would do this exercise for about one month to get a list together and implement all of the software you nedd. To help you get a head start here are some of the tools I have found and use on a regular basis.

Below in the right hand column you will find the software that you probably have purchased or recognize and on the left you will find the software that will not cost you a thing.

Here we go:

Just type the name of the free product to the search engines

One system to manage customers and accounting

salesorder.com pricing: free Sage Software – really expensive and only does Accounting

Creating and writing Documents

Google Docs pricing: $0 Microsoft Office pricing – at least $100

Or

OpenOffice (www.openoffice.org)

Sharing ideas online

Bubbl.us pricing: $0 Mindjet pricing – at least $200

Making videos

Jing pricing: $0 Camtasia Studio pricing – at least $300

Teleseminars

DimDim pricing: $0 AdobeConnect pricing – at least $200/month

My thanks to the Sage Software incident for the inspiration!motivation to blog this and help you out.

More soon…

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