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Archive for July, 2010

Facebook, The Economy and Real Estate!

Facebook, The Economy and Real Estate!

Today’s blog is more about attitude than real estate, however, it is all intertwined.  The advent of Facebook has really changed things exponentially.  Before I get to that, I want to say something about a friend of mine.

This friend sold a company a few years ago and became a multi-millionaire.  He lives in my farm area (this is a geographical area that I work as a real estate agent) and I have known his family for 8 years now. 

He first called me to pick my brain about real estate and then told me he liked my marketing and my low key style.  Since then, I have helped him lease and buy real estate very successfully.

The other day, we were discussing rental properties and his attitude amazed me.  i told him about a specific property and that if we could get it for $550,000, we would not be stealing it, but it would still be around 6% under the market value.  he told me that was fine and that his father once told him: “Leave a little for the next guy!”

I have since saved that saying on my phone to remind me the leave a little for the next guy.  What does this mean? Well, in real estate it means, take the deal because you will have some extra equity when the market comes back.  However, I like what it means in the bigger picture.  It means be magnanimous like John Rockefeller - remember how he would give people a dime when he met them?  In 1900 a dime was like getting $69 today!

Today, people and governments are trying to find any way to either make or save money.  Unbelievably, California is thinking of legalizing marijuana because it will bring in more money.  What?  Money is not the answer; attitude is.  Have you really looked at what is available at the grocery store today?  Have you noticed the prices?  The basic needs like eggs, broccoli, apples, are very inexpensive and those are the foods we should be eating anyway. 

In 1998, I was still coaching high school baseball and making a transition to real estate.  I was 220 pounds with about 12% body fat and really strong.  I ate every 3 hours and cooked my own meals and took 2 steps at a time. 

Think about where you “were” 12 years ago.  How are you measuring it?  By how much you had in the bank?  By how much your house has gone up?  Take the measurement at a human level.  Think about your habits.  Did you eat more healthy?  Was your attitude more positive?

I think it is time to turn ourselves around by changing our outlook.

Last Friday, I took a day trip to Catalina Island and rented a small boat and anchored it in a little cove and swam around and explored.  The water was 71 degrees and crystal clear.  On the way back, I saw Dolphin jumping out of the water, birds singing, lizards basking in the sun.  Do you know that this happens each and everyday?

“Leave a little for the next guy!”

Now, if you are serious about living and or investing in the greatest area on Earth, go to www.MichaelDunn.com and click on the Search MLS banner and you will see some great opportunities.

Mike

George Steinbrenner and Real Estate!

steinbrenner.jpg 

George Steinbrenner and Real Estate!

A few weeks ago an amazing man, John Wooden, passed away and I was really impressed by what people had to say about him.  Not a single person had anything harsh or derogatory to say about him.  I found this very unusual because there is always someone who has a negative word. 

On Tuesday morning, George Steinbrenner passed away and the memorials were slightly different, but very surprising to me.  I found that George Steinbrenner was an amazing philantrophist in addition to a successful capitalist businessman.

It made me think about how I would be remembered.  I started thinking of how i have treated people.  Have I given to my community?  Have I treated my girlfriends the right way?  Have I worked to my potential?  Have I smiled at people who needed to see a smile? Have I called my parents enough?

By asking these questions of myself, I realized that Steinbrenner transcended baseball and was a supremely loyal man and owner.  Despite an amazing competitiveness, Steinbrenner managed to contribute to society and help others become successful.

 This brings us to Real Estate.  I have asked myself if I am helping others enough with their needs.  I recently research my past clients and noticed that none of them are in financial hardship, or forced to do a short sale.  I am proud of that.  I remember asking my clients at the time they bought the property, “are you sure you can afford this if either the market or your job goes South?”.  This was important to me in many ways.  Foremost, was the future.  I am here to help others for the long-term, not to get a fast buck and spend it just as fast.

As a result, I look for deals in both regular real estate and foreclosures . . . for the long-term.  I think all of us should play Monopoly again and really analyze what we are doing.

Speaking of Monopoly, go to www.NorthwoodPointeIrvine.com and http://www.michaeldunn.com/real_estate/searchMLS.asp and see how you can not only find a great home for your family, but a great investment for the future.

Happy investing.

Mike

Microsoft Bing and Real Estate!

Microsoft Bing and Real Estate!

Microsoft Bing is a new search engine by Mircrosoft that has been aorund for over a year now and ranks as a top 20 search on the internet.  It is alos testimony to the constant effort by Mircrosoft to maintain a presence not only on the internet, but also as a powerful corporation.

I have been in the real estate business for 12 years as a sales person, for 10 years as an owner and for 6 years as an investor and 3 years a sa foreclosure investor.  I am constantlky looking for ways to get more creative to not only help my career, but also to help others create opportunities to increase their net worth.

In todays’s market it is still fair to buy a ‘regular” property; you will still get a good deal.  If you wish to get a better deal, you can submit on a short sale or an REO (aka bank owned) property.  The best deals are foreclosures, but you have to pay all cash.

 Send me an e-mail because I noticed in the past 2 weeks, banks are releasing more foreclosures, especially in the upper end market.

Mike

Real Estate Defaulters!

This is an interesting guest blog:

Biggest Defaulters on Mortgages Are the Rich

LOS ALTOS, Calif. — No need for tears, but the well-off are losing their master suites and saying goodbye to their wine cellars.

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Peter DaSilva for The New York Times

A home in foreclosure in Los Altos, Calif., a city where the median home price is $1.5 million.

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Enlarge This Image

Peter DaSilva for The New York Times

A foreclosed house in Los Altos, Calif., where five such homes were recently set for an auction.

The housing bust that began among the working class in remote subdivisions and quickly progressed to the suburban middle class is striking the upper class in privileged enclaves like this one in Silicon Valley.

Whether it is their residence, a second home or a house bought as an investment, the rich have stopped paying the mortgage at a rate that greatly exceeds the rest of the population.

More than one in seven homeowners with loans in excess of a million dollars are seriously delinquent, according to data compiled for The New York Times by the real estate analytics firm CoreLogic.

By contrast, homeowners with less lavish housing are much more likely to keep writing checks to their lender. About one in 12 mortgages below the million-dollar mark is delinquent.

Though it is hard to prove, the CoreLogic data suggest that many of the well-to-do are purposely dumping their financially draining properties, just as they would any sour investment.

“The rich are different: they are more ruthless,” said Sam Khater, CoreLogic’s senior economist.

Five properties here in Los Altos were scheduled for foreclosure auctions in a recent issue of The Los Altos Town Crier, the weekly newspaper where local legal notices are posted. Four have unpaid mortgage debt of more than $1 million, with the highest amount $2.8 million.

Not so long ago, said Chris Redden, the paper’s advertising services director, “it was a surprise if we had one foreclosure a month.”

The sheriff in Cook County, Ill., is increasingly in demand to evict foreclosed owners in the upscale suburbs to the north and west of Chicago — like Wilmette, La Grange and Glencoe. The occupants are always gone by the time a deputy gets there, a spokesman said, but just barely.

In Las Vegas, Ken Lowman, a longtime agent for luxury properties, said four of the 11 sales he brokered in June were distressed properties.

“I’ve never seen the wealthy hit like this before,” Mr. Lowman said. “They made their plans based on the best of all possible scenarios — that their incomes would continue to grow, that real estate would never drop. Not many had a plan B.”

The defaulting owners, he said, often remain as long as they can. “They’re in denial,” he said.

Here in Los Altos, where the median home price of $1.5 million makes it one of the most exclusive towns in the country, several houses scheduled for auction were still occupied this week. The people who answered the door were reluctant to explain their circumstances in any detail.

At one house, where the lender was owed $1.3 million, there was a couch out front wrapped in plastic. A woman said she and her husband had lost their jobs and were moving in with relatives. At another house, the family said they were renters. A third family, whose mortgage is $1.6 million, said they would be moving this weekend.

At a vacant house with a pool, where the lender was seeking $1.27 million, a raft and a water gun lay abandoned on the entryway floor.

Lenders are fearful that many of the 11 million or so homeowners who owe more than their house is worth will walk away from them, especially if the real estate market begins to weaken again. The so-called strategic defaults have become a matter of intense debate in recent months.

Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, the two quasi-governmental mortgage finance companies that own most of the mortgages in America with a value of less than $500,000, are alternately pleading with distressed homeowners not to be bad citizens and brandishing a stick at them.

In a recent column on Freddie Mac’s Web site, the company’s executive vice president, Don Bisenius, acknowledged that walking away “might well be a good decision for certain borrowers” but argues that those who do it are trashing their communities.

The CoreLogic data suggest that the rich do not seem to have concerns about the civic good uppermost in their mind, especially when it comes to investment and second homes. Nor do they appear to be particularly worried about being sued by their lender or frozen out of future loans by Fannie Mae, possible consequences of default.

The delinquency rate on investment homes where the original mortgage was more than $1 million is now 23 percent. For cheaper investment homes, it is about 10 percent.

With second homes, the delinquency rate for both types of owners was rising in concert until the stock market crashed in September 2008. That sent the percentage of troubled million-dollar loans spiraling up much faster than the smaller loans.

“Those with high net worth have other resources to lean on if they get in trouble,” said Mr. Khater, the analyst. “If they’re going delinquent faster than anyone else, that tells me they are doing so willingly.”

Willingly, but not necessarily publicly. The rapper Chamillionaire is a plain-talking exception. He recently walked away from a $2 million house he bought in Houston in 2006.

“I just decided to let it go, give it back to the bank,” he told the celebrity gossip TV show “TMZ.” “I just didn’t feel like it was a good investment.”

The rich and successful often come naturally to this sort of attitude, said Brent T. White, a law professor at the University of Arizona who has studied strategic defaults.

“They may be less susceptible to the shame and fear-mongering used by the government and the mortgage banking industry to keep underwater homeowners from acting in their financial best interest,” Mr. White said.

The CoreLogic data measures serious delinquencies, which means the borrower has missed at least three payments in a row. At that point, lenders traditionally file a notice of default and the house enters the official foreclosure process.

In the current environment, however, notices of default are down for all types of loans as lenders work with owners in various modification programs. Even so, owners in some of the more expensive neighborhoods in and around San Francisco are beginning to head for the exit, according to data compiled by MDA DataQuick.

In Los Altos, Los Altos Hills and the most expensive neighborhood in adjoining Mountain View, defaults in the first five months of this year edged up to 16, from 15 in the same period in 2009 and four in 2008.

The East Bay suburb of Orinda had eight notices of default for million-dollar properties, up from five in the same period last year. On Nob Hill in San Francisco, there were four, up from one. The Marina neighborhood had four, up from two.

The vast majority of owners in these upscale communities are still paying the mortgage, of course. But they appear to be cutting back in other ways. The once-thriving Los Altos downtown is pocked with more than a dozen empty storefronts in a six-block stretch.

But this is still Silicon Valley, where failure can always be considered a prelude to success.

In the middle of a workday, one troubled homeowner here leaned over his laptop at the kitchen table, trying to maneuver his way out from under his debt and figure out the next big thing.

His five-bedroom house, drained of hundreds of thousands of dollars of equity over the last 13 years, is scheduled for auction July 20. Nine months ago, after his latest business (he has had several) failed in what he called “the global meltdown,” the man, a technology entrepreneur, said he quit making his $9,000 monthly payments.

“I’m going to be downsizing,” he said.

The man spoke on the condition of anonymity because, he said, he did not want his current problems to interfere with his coming reinvention. “I’m a businessman,” he explained. “I have to be upbeat.”