Fairfield Financial Services, Inc. - Private Money Loans, Lending & Borrowing

The Private Money Broker

Fairfield broker promotion – free iPad UPDATE

October 23rd, 2010

Clay Sparkman
We are sending out this update to amend the rules for he iPad giveaway.  We accidentally left two items out.
We at Fairfield Financial Services (FFS) are pleased to announce our free iPad bonus promotional program AND that we now have sources available to lend with no maximum on commercial loans in all 14 of the states that we service.
Starting Monday, October 25th, we are offering a free promotional iPad to any broker or borrower who submits a loan through FFS that we actually close.
The conditions are as follows:
(1) You must register with FFS by sending an e-mail to inquiries@privatemoneysource.com with “REGISTER” in the subject line and your name, company name, and phone number in the body of the e-mail.
(2) Start date is October 25th, 2010
(3) The end date is November 30th, 2010
(4) A full application (with all items requested by FFS) must be received no earlier than the start date and no later than the end date.
(5)  Only one borrower/broker may be credited with each loan.  That will be the first party that submits the loan directly to FFS.  It is possible that other brokers may get paid for a role in the transaction, but only the party directly submitting will receive a free iPad.
(6)  The minimum loan size for this promotion is $100,000.
(7) You (or your company) must be in full compliance with licensing regulations required for loans of the type submitted for the giveaway in the state in which the property associated with the loan is located.
Who doesn’t want a free iPad, right?  So good luck and get going.
Check out our website for details re our loan criteria, our packaging guidelines, and our process.
www.privatemoneysource.com

— Clay (clay@privatemoneysource.com, 503-476-2909)

Clay is Vice President of Fairfield Financial, a primary source for private money since 1964.  Fairfield is currently targeting loans in OR, WA, AK, CA, CO, ID, FL, GA, ID, MT, NV, NY, OK and TX.  To submit a loan to Fairfield for consideration: http://www.privatemoneysource.com/loanproposal.php

Fairfield broker promotion – free iPad

October 23rd, 2010

Clay Sparkman
We at Fairfield Financial Services (FFS) are pleased to announce our free iPad bonus promotional program AND that we now have sources available to lend with no maximum on commercial loans in all 14 of the states that we service.
Starting Monday, October 25th, we are offering a free promotional iPad to any broker or borrower who submits a loan through FFS that we actually close.
The conditions are as follows:
(1)    Start date is October 25th, 2010
(2)    End date is November 30th, 2010
(3)    A full application (with all items requested by FFS) must be received no earlier than the start date and no later than the end date.
(4)    Only one borrower/broker may be credited with each loan.  That will be the first party that submits the loan directly to FFS.  It is possible that other brokers may get paid for a role in the transaction, but only the party directly submitting will receive a free iPad.
(5)    The minimum loan size for this promotion is $100,000.
Who doesn’t want a free iPad, right?  So good luck and get going.
Check out our website for details re our loan criteria, our packaging guidelines, and our process.
www.privatemoneysource.com

— Clay (clay@privatemoneysource.com, 503-476-2909)

Clay is Vice President of Fairfield Financial, a primary source for private money since 1964.  Fairfield is currently targeting loans in OR, WA, AK, CA, CO, ID, FL, GA, ID, MT, NV, NY, OK and TX.  To submit a loan to Fairfield for consideration: http://www.privatemoneysource.com/loanproposal.php

Less Grumbly – A Follow-up to 'grumblings of a slum lord in the post-bust environment'

October 13th, 2010

This Guest post by Brian Blum, Operating Manager of Maverick Structures LLC,
is  a follow up to an earlier post

Sure, we each have “teams” of lawyers, Realtors, title agencies, finance people, insurance agents, and contractors working with us, but don’t kid yourself – real estate investing is largely an individual sport.  Many investors have neither receptionists to greet them when they show up to work nor water coolers around which to shoot the bull with co-workers.  Besides the lack of regular camaraderie, we don’t get a lot of feedback from others in how we’re doing at our jobs, either.  Whereas W-2 employees get performance reviews, we just get rent checks and mortgage statements.  I frequently feel like no one else understands what I’m going through, so first, let me express my appreciation for all the encouragement I received from my peers, the other players in this life-sized game of Monopoly, on my earlier article, “Grumblings of a Slum Lord in the Post-Bust Environment.”  I pride myself on my logical and critical thinking, as I’m sure do many of you, which is certainly the source of much of my frustration in the face of illogical and reactionary lending policies.  When I wrote my earlier article, it was just a way to get those frustrations off my chest, but it’s been reassuring to know that others can understand and appreciate my pain, and even share some of my perspectives.  It helps me know I’m not crazy.
Thank you also for the compliments on the clarity of my writing and how it explained challenging concepts in everyday layman’s terms.  I’m thrilled that the article was so well-received and that my peers found it entertaining, if not helpful.  I often debate with people who don’t appear to understand the workings of a “market,” and one of my goals in writing the article was to help enlighten them.  Many of them believe that rents would skyrocket without rent controls or that wages would plummet without a minimum wage, whereas you are much more likely to agree that artificial controls worsen the very problems they’re created to solve.
But that’s enough gushing and philosophizing; let’s jump into the epilogue to my earlier rant. …
Congratulations are in order!  …for me!  We finally closed on that six-unit apartment building we were in contract to purchase as a short sale.  (It only took ten months to bring that deal to the closing table!)  We have some minor repairs and maintenance to perform there, and one vacancy yet to fill, but the hard part is finished – any decent managing company could handle the ongoing responsibilities … and we’re giving some thought to formalizing our management company.  When we close on our next building, I’ll have enough “equivalent experience” to permit me to become a NY-licensed real estate broker without having to apprentice as a salesperson, and then we can hire a salesperson to be our in-house property manager.  If we join the association, we’ll even be able to list our own rentals in MLS to save on commissions.
Getting the word out about our borrowing gripes, both through my earlier article and by crying on the shoulders of anyone who would listen, we actually found leads for a few reasonable lenders that may want to work with us.  We also stumbled into an introduction to a private lending consortium that might want equity stakes in our future deals.  Consequently, we’re moving forward on the seven-unit building we mentioned in the last article.  We conducted our inspection last week and my “team” is hashing out the contract terms at this very moment.  I’m much more confident that we’ll actually be able to get financing … but I’m still insisting on a financing contingency, just in case.
The bank that initially denied our application to refinance our two-family house rather than make a counteroffer has surprisingly reconsidered their position.  I’m shocked.  One day I got a denial letter and my application fee refunded, the next day I got phone calls asking for the application fee back, and the next day I got a letter with a counteroffer.  Apparently their left hand doesn’t know what their right hand is doing.  These are also the guys who wouldn’t give me a straight answer as to whether I was employed (70% LTV limit) or self-employed (50% LTV limit), and *surprise*, I’m apparently employed!  I promptly accepted their commitment and hired a title company.  There are a few final due diligence items we have to provide, and we’re hoping to close in 2-3 weeks.  Incidentally, I haven’t sent back the application fee, and they seem to have forgotten about it.  (I hope they’re not reading this…)  Depending on how everything turns out, I may even give them a shot at financing the seven-unit building, too.  …but I still wouldn’t want to own shares of their corporation.
My own bank continues to baffle me.  After accepting that commitment from another bank to refinance the two-family house we own outright, I went back to the lending officer at my bank who didn’t want us using his HELOC as a down payment for a new loan.  I told him we’d use this cashout as the down payment for our next loan, but he still wouldn’t do it, arguing that we’d still be financing the new building entirely with debt, and that his underwriters weren’t comfortable with that.  I can see his point (if I really squint and crane my neck), and the crazy thing is that after debating with him, I honestly believe he can see my point, too.  Our total property value is greater than our total debt, so overall we have a reasonable LTV ratio.  However, since we own several properties, you could juggle the numbers to argue that any one individual property is 100% financed.  Logically, if you want to assign that much of our debt to the one property, it only makes the other properties look proportionally better, but if you then myopically only consider the one property that you’ve made appear over-leveraged by unfairly assigning debt to it, you end up with his underwriters’ concerns.
It’s not just the lenders who are as sharp as marbles, either.  The two side-by-side three-family buildings we wanted seem to have fallen through.  I thought we would have been considered for sainthood for our offer to this seller; he accepted it without a moment’s hesitation.  We wanted both buildings and were willing to pay cash.  He had four different loans that were going to need short sale approval and only two of the six units were rented.  Most people wouldn’t have touched it.  We paid for the inspection and there were no big surprises in the report.  We were all ready to negotiate contracts, but the seller’s attorney advised his client not to accept *any* contract changes we requested … and wouldn’t return my attorney’s calls.  Many of the changes we requested were just boilerplate minutia that we would have been happy to negotiate or concede, but there were a few deal-breakers that we just couldn’t waive.  For one, the two buildings share a common furnace, gas meter, superintendent, and fenced back yard, even though they were two lots.  We didn’t want to end up owning just one of the buildings under any circumstance – both or neither.  We needed each contract to be contingent on the other, and we couldn’t get their attorney to even discuss it with our attorney.  In hindsight, I think there are better deals out there anyway – in fact, my broker keeps sending them to me.
So, that’s it, then – you’re all caught up on our exploits and adventures.  We’re still looking at new opportunities and still trying to streamline and improve operations on our existing ones.  I’ll contact those new leads I got to lenders and mortgage brokers until I find some that want to make loans.  (Hopefully this means the pendulum has started swinging back to center.)  I’ll still consider other options, like private borrowing from friends, relatives, and associates, paying them more on their loans than their banks would pay them for savings.  I’ll negotiate with sellers to try to get them to hold notes on the buildings I buy from them.  I’ll keep my eyes and ears open for other opportunities to finance my investments, and I’ll try to keep my mind open to new ideas.  If anyone reading this is or knows of any banks, brokers, or private lenders who want to work with investors buying multi-family commercial-sized buildings, please contact me!  I don’t want to publish my email address here, but you can find it at http://MaverickStructures.com.
Brian Blum is the founder and operating manager of Maverick Structures LLC, a real estate investment, rental, and management company.  He owns, rents, and manages several pieces of investment real estate, and is always on the lookout for good opportunities, reasonable lenders, and rational partners.  Brian also founded, owns, and operates Maverick Solutions IT, Inc, a technology consultancy and support provider, serving mostly schools, NFPs, and SO/HOs in the New York Metro Area.

Calling all rehabbers, short sale buyers and quick flip artists

October 2nd, 2010

Kris Gillmore and Clay Sparkman
Over the past three years we’ve all watched real estate prices come crashing down, in many cases forcing lenders to foreclose and take back the property.  Although this is a sad misfortune for some, it is a tremendous opportunity for others.  With regard to quick-flip investment property, I have always been of the opinion that the profit is in the purchase, not in the renovation or sale.  And now more than ever banks are willing to unload their inventory at a discount below market value.
To encourage the sale of the growing home inventory, President Obama instituted a short sale program this spring offering small incentives to lenders to accept amounts lower than the principal balance.  It is questionable whether or not this program has actually been effective.  However, now the issue is being further pressurized from a different direction.  With GMAC, JP Morgan Chase, and Bank of America freezing foreclosure or putting selective foreclosures on hold, the game has changed again.  It is my suspicion that this will lead to new opportunities for investment buyers, as banks begin bending over backward in search of a way to extricate themselves from the mess they are in, and this will certainly include any number of short sales that the banks were previously unwilling to consider.
As you know from previous posts, Fairfield Financial is laser focused on doing these types of loans.  Here are some guidelines for what we’re looking for and what we’re generally able to fund.
70% of the ARV – Depending on the area and the strength of the borrower, 70% LTV is our target (including fees).  We hold construction funds in an escrow account, which enables us to loan off the ARV, not the purchase price.
Loan Size – Right now our sweet spot is in the $150,000 – $250,000 range, although we’ll consider loans from $50,000 – $500,000.
100% Financing – Yes, we can finance 100% of the acquisition and rehab costs, assuming that the LTV is appropriate.
Down Payment – We do require that the borrower have some skin in the game for at least the first few loans. Generally speaking, this amount can be as little as 5% down, but it’s really a case by case basis that depends on the property and the strength of the borrower.
Secondary collateral – If a down payment isn’t feasible, we can always consider the use of a second property as collateral. This is another way to put some skin in the game.
Primary Residence – We can consider purchase and rehab loans for personal use in the state of Oregon only. The same terms apply to personal and investment loans.
Term – Typically, these are 12 month deals with no prepayment penalty.  Multifamily rental properties can go up to five years, but these are all on a case by case basis.
Exit Strategy – As always, this is critical. We’re looking for borrowers with a solid exit plan.
Knowledge of local market – This goes hand in hand with the exit strategy. We want to be sure that our borrowers are familiar with the current market trends, and that their plan is consistent with local market activity.
For more information on this matter, please visit the Rehab and Construction loan FAQ on our web site at http://www.privatemoneysource.com/articles/rehabfaq.php.

— Clay (clay@privatemoneysource.com, 503-476-2909)

Clay is Vice President of Fairfield Financial, a primary source for private money since 1964.  Fairfield is currently targeting loans in OR, WA, AK, CA, CO, ID, FL, GA, ID, MT, NV, NY, OK and TX.  To submit a loan to Fairfield for consideration: http://www.privatemoneysource.com/loanproposal.php

Grumblings of a slum lord in the post-bust environment

September 24th, 2010

Guest post by Brian Blum, Operating Manager, Maverick Structures LLC
I’m a real estate investor.  I see opportunities in buildings – and in numbers, and I use those opportunities to create income and equity.  What I do benefits society, but I’m not going to lie to you – I am driven to do it for my own benefit, and society’s gain is a side effect.  Nonetheless, I can’t do it without society – I can’t charge more rent than the market will bear, else I won’t find tenants.
If I find a vacant building, foreclosed, neglected, and being sold off at a discount, I can buy that building, rehabilitate it, and offer it to society as additional housing options.  When I rent an apartment to a family, they have choices.  They could rent an apartment elsewhere, or they can rent mine.  If they choose to rent mine, it’s because it benefits them – it is the best choice being presented to them.  I have helped them by making that apartment one of the choices for them to consider, whereas it did no one any good by being vacant and uninhabitable.  To make that choice available to them requires an investment on my part; I have to see the opportunity.  I have to recognize that the building is being offered at a price that, after repairs, taxes, utilities, insurance, and legal costs, will earn me a profit.  I have to believe that the ratio of risk to reward makes that investment option a better choice for me than other investment opportunities; else I’d be better off choosing another investment opportunity.
If I’m too greedy, some other investor will snatch the buildings out from under me at a higher price, but if I’m too naive, I’ll pay more for a building than I have to, and my profit will be lower.  There’s something of a “survival of the fittest” element at play here, in that stupid investors tend to be out-performed by smarter investors, and that gives the smarter investors more of an opportunity to make more investments.  Even a smart investor, however, can’t possibly be a party to every deal in a geographic area, so there may be multiple investors in a given pond.
If I see a building that another investor has renovated, rented, and is offering for sale, I can alleviate him of his future risk by buying his building from him.  He might have to deal with slow-paying or even non-paying tenants, he might have to repair damages or ordinary wear-and-tear, or he might have to fight with his insurance company if his building is burned to the ground.  I undertake and relieve him of these risks, and in doing so, I create liquidity for him by redeeming his investment and a fair profit so he is encouraged and enabled to reinvest it elsewhere.  He can then buy and rehabilitate another neglected building, making it available to rent, and his motivation is that it will be a profitable endeavor for him, too, else he would make different investment choices.  When I buy it from him, although he has already done all the work to make it inhabitable and profitable, I am still undertaking risks, and I will be responsible for maintenance and management, so I still need to be compensated for my investment.  Consequently, before I will buy his building, I need to determine that the anticipated rent income will more than cover my expenses, and so much so that I will be rewarded for my investment more so than I would be rewarded in other investment choices at my disposal.  He wins, I win, and the tenants win … and the government taxes all parties to it.
Just as I can help another investor with his investment in a property, so, too, banks can help investors playing the property investment game.  Banks pay interest on deposits and charge interest on loans.  Nowadays there are many other ways for a bank to earn money, such as fees and various other investments, but the difference between the interest they charge and the interest they pay is one of their primary sources of income.  If a bank offers too low of an interest rate on savings, they won’t have money to lend, and if they charge too much interest, no one will want to borrow it.  On the other hand, if a bank pays too much interest on savings or charges too little on loans, they will not be as profitable as they could, and they will be out-performed by smarter banks.  Again, “survival of the fittest” comes into play.
Depositors are not, however, the only source of funds for bank loans.  The government also lends money to banks.  When the government lowers that interest rate, it compels banks to lower the rates they charge borrowers (in order to compete with other banks), and that makes borrowers borrow more money.  During the housing boom of the early 2000s, that was a major factor in the low interest rates banks were charging, which encouraged people to buy and refinance homes, and to take out new mortgages.  When the government raises that interest rate, (or when teaser rates expire in anticipation of that rate going up,) banks raise the rates they charge their borrowers, and that is one of the reasons that so many people can’t afford their mortgages today.
But there’s more to it than that.  There are limits to how much the government will lend banks, which is a function of how many funds they have on deposit.  When a bank lends money for a mortgage, they move towards that limit of how much they can borrow, so instead of keeping that loan on their own books and servicing it, taking perhaps 30 years to recoup their money, another government-related firm, Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac, buys those loans from them, replenishing the bank’s pool of funds for lending.  Without Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, banks would run out of liquidity themselves and be unable to continue lending money to new borrowers.  Fannie and Freddie were chartered by Congress to buy loans, bundle them together into “mortgage-backed securities” and resell them to investors.
Fannie and Freddie set guidelines of what terms and debt-to-equity ratios were considered “conforming” loans, but as the market heated up, there was little verification of conformity, and ultimately, loans were made to sub-prime borrowers based on “stated income” or “no documentation,” rather than “full documentation” with “income verification.”  As long as the banks could unload these hot potatoes to Fannie and Freddie, they didn’t care, and as long as Fannie and Freddie could package and resell them to unsuspecting investors, they didn’t care.  Ratings agencies, such as Moody’s and D&B continued to give these mortgage-backed securities high credit ratings, encouraging pension and retirement funds to invest trillions in them, precipitating a disaster for hundreds of millions of average inexperienced investors who simply relied upon their fund managers to make decisions that they hoped would be in their best interests.
When interest rates went up and people started defaulting on their mortgages, the poison had already spread to millions of Americans and even to foreign investors.  Fannie and Freddie, who were chartered and funded by Congress, might have been fine if they had followed their mandates, but while the getting was good, they started drinking their own Kool-Aid; they started stockpiling mortgage-backed securities, investing the money that Congress gave them to perform their job – our tax money – in these poison investments.  When the ratings finally dropped, they couldn’t unload the loans to investors, so they couldn’t replenish their funds, and couldn’t buy more mortgages from banks.  Loan “conformance” guidelines got tougher and banks couldn’t unload their hot potatoes.  This meant that they had no replenishment of funds with which to make new loans.  Without loans, investors and homeowners couldn’t buy properties, and if you’ve ever studied the most basic tenets of economic theory, the principal of “supply and demand” promises that when demand decreases, prices will decrease, too.  Homeowners were now “under water.”  Not only couldn’t they afford the increased interest payments, but their home values had dropped, too, leaving many of them owing more than their homes were worth.
If you could buy a home for $200,000, or continue paying your $300,000 mortgage for a comparable home that was only worth $200,000, what would you do?  Many of them started walking away from their homes and their obligations.  Banks had to foreclose on them, but banks don’t want to be in the real estate management business, so rather than maintain and rent them, banks sell them.  Returning for a moment to basic economic theory, increases in supply also depress prices, so the foreclosure auctions further pushed the economy downward.  Banks were recouping only a fraction of their investments, making it harder still for them to make new loans.
There were a number of other factors contributing to the current economic downturn.  I haven’t even touched on how the crisis affected business loans, and consequently business development.  We can draw a clear line to connect the dots between businesses failing, stock market declines, unemployment, the credit crunch, reduced consumer spending, and a lower GDP.  That, plus increasing gas prices, tax-funded bailouts of banks and auto manufacturers that were “too big to fail,” the soaring costs of our “war on terror” and military actions in Iraq and Afghanistan, and the ballooning of government (most obviously demonstrated by the behemoth Department of Homeland Security and it’s prodigal child, the Transportation Safety Administration), have devalued our currency against other nations.  We could also discuss how inconsistent tax assessment laws and decreasing home values have created a barrage of tax grievances and court cases which have wreaked havoc with many municipalities’ budgets, creating more layoffs, reductions in municipal services (closing fire houses, reducing garbage pickups, consolidating schools, etc)  It’s really something of a “perfect storm” of financial catastrophe.
But that’s enough background – let’s get back to the story about me….  The pendulum has swung back too far; banks have become overly cautious.  They were encouraged by our government to make too many bad loans, got screwed, and now they’re reluctant to make even good loans.  As a real estate investor, that’s a problem for me.
I have three different investment properties in “the funnel” right now, and I can’t afford to close on all of them without help – one or possibly even two, but certainly not all three.  One is a six-family building for which we were waiting for the seller’s bank to approve a short sale; we’ve already lined up financing, and we’re hopefully moving forward with that one.  One is a seven-family building for which our bank just told us they’re not going to be able to lend us more money.  The last is two side-by-side three-family buildings, mostly vacant, which we may be able to buy without direct financing if we can get other ducks in a row.  Let me use these last two investments to highlight why I think the banks have gone too conservative.
If you had $1,000 in a savings account and $1,000 in credit card debt, the math is pretty simple: you have a net worth of $0.  However, if you were earning 1% on your savings and were paying 21% interest on your credit card, at the end of the year, you’d earn $10 but owe $210, so you’d end up with a net worth of negative $200.  From a purely-mathematical perspective, you’d be better off paying down the debt with the savings to maintain your net worth rather than lose ground every year in interest.  The guy who pays it down is clearly the better one at math, and the guy who doesn’t will get himself into worse and worse financial condition every year, probably never understanding why.  Overly-simplified, that’s our problem with the seven-family building.  We had some cash and a line of credit, and we used the cash to pay down the line of credit until we were ready to buy the building.  Now that we’re ready, our bank doesn’t want us to use that line of credit as a down payment for the property that we’re going to purchase with the loan they were otherwise prepared to give us.  Had we held onto the cash and not paid their line of credit down, they’d have no problem with us using that cash as a down payment, even though the end result would be the same debt, but we’d be paying interest on the line of credit in the interim.  Silly?  I think so.  If the property upon which we have the line of credit was a good investment and was sufficient collateral for the line of credit, and if the property we’re trying to buy is a good investment and is of sufficient collateral for the new mortgage, what’s the problem?  They’d apparently prefer to lend money to the guy who is worse at math.  I like my strategy better, but they seem to think they know something that I don’t.  I wish they’d clue me in as to what it is…
To fund the two three-family buildings, we’d be happy to get a direct loan, but after all the problems we’ve had with the new lending guidelines, we’ve instead tried to use equity we have on another property.  We own another small building outright and tried to get a loan against it.  They asked us what we thought it was worth, and we took an intentionally-over-inflated guess, figuring that if we guessed low, they’d never give us more money but if we guessed high, we could always borrow less.  Expectedly, the appraisal came back low, but rather than make a counter-offer, they declined our application.  I asked if we could be reconsidered at a lower amount, and they said they won’t consider another loan application on the same property until six months have passed.  What kind of stupidity is that?  To me, it should be quite simple: we have an asset that we now agree is worth $X, and we’d like to use it as collateral against a loan; the only thing left to decide should be how much debt-to-equity ratio the bank can approve, but instead, they’re just saying “No.”  I got a free appraisal (at their expense) and a refund of my application fee, and now I have to apply for a loan elsewhere.  Does that sound like good business to you?  Would you like to own shares of that bank?  I’m glad I don’t.
I didn’t want to muddy this article up with too many tangents, but there’s another thing that’s bothering me, so while I’m on a rant, let me get this one out, too.  That second bank has different debt-to-equity guidelines for people who are employed (higher) versus people who are self-employed (lower).  I asked which category I was, and I couldn’t get a straight answer.  I have several sources of income: I am employed and paid on a W-2 by a corporation.  I happen to also own that corporation, so when the corporation makes money, I get distributions on a K-1 as a shareholder.  I also earn money on my real estate investments, as reported on a Schedule E, and I have various other securities and instruments upon which I earn interest and dividends on 1099s that I report on a Schedule B.  If I sell stocks profitably, I earn capital gains, also on 1099s, which I report on a Schedule D.  If you’re going to jump to the conclusion that I am self-employed because I own the corporation for which I work, let me point out that lots of IBM and Walmart employees own shares of the corporations for which they work, but you wouldn’t think of them as self-employed.  How do you consider the people who have full-time jobs but also have side businesses DJ-ing at parties or taking photos at weddings?  Are they not, in that capacity, self-employed?  You would argue that those endeavors are but a small component of their income, and that the bulk comes from their regular jobs.  If so, then the bulk of my revenue comes not from my self-employed salary (if you insist on calling it that), but from my investments, so my self-employment revenue is also just a small component of my income.  As hard as I tried, I couldn’t get them to tell me how I’d be considered, so I’d never know how much debt-to-equity ratio to request, and since they don’t always counter-offer, and won’t let me reapply for six months, they’re basically telling me to take my business elsewhere.
There’s just one last thing along this vein that’s bothering me.  My corporation employs one other full-time W-2 employee besides myself.  He’s not a part-owner, so he’s clearly not self-employed.  He’d thus, be eligible for their higher debt-to-equity ratio loan.  If business gets bad, which one of us do you think is going to be fired first?  They’ll lend him more money despite the fact that his income is both lower and less secure!  Madness, I tell you.  I really wouldn’t want to own shares of that bank!
So what’s a real estate investor to do?  I’ll keep plugging away, trying more banks and mortgage brokers until I find some that want to make loans.  I’ll consider other options, like private borrowing from friends, relatives, and associates, paying them more on their loans than their banks would pay them for savings.  I’ll negotiate with sellers to try to get them to hold notes on the buildings I buy from them.  I’ll keep my eyes and ears open for other opportunities to finance my investments, and I’ll try to keep my mind open to new ideas.  If anyone reading this is or knows of any banks, brokers, or private lenders who want to work with investors buying residential multi-family buildings through limited liability companies, please contact me!  I don’t want to publish my email address here, but you can find it at http://MaverickStructures.com.  For one, I can’t wait for the pendulum to start swinging back towards center again.
Brian Blum is the founder and operating manager of Maverick Structures LLC, a real estate investment, rental, and management company.  He owns, rents, and manages several pieces of investment real estate, and is always on the lookout for good opportunities, reasonable lenders, and rational partners.  Brian also founded, owns, and operates Maverick Solutions IT, Inc, a technology consultancy and support provider, serving mostly schools, NFPs, and SO/HOs in the New York Metro Area.

A view from the other side

September 17th, 2010

Clay Sparkman
Over a year ago, well before I started pecking away at this blog, I began blogging about private money and private money issues from the investor perspective.  Naturally this blog is called The Private  Money Investor.
It deals with all aspects of investing in private money loans and hard money loans secured by trust deeds and real property, including promotion, underwriting, risk assessment, loan servicing, and workout/recovery.
The primary target audience for the blog is private money investors and private money brokers who work directly with private money investors, but it may be of interest as well to those who simply want a better view of private money from behind the scenes.
In case you are interested–that blog is here:
http://privatemoneysource.com/blog/
Looking at it now, I see that I’ve have managed to accumulate an archive of 33 articles over the course of this past year.  A little here, a little there … it all adds up.  I post at the same rate over there as I do here, about once a week when I can manage it.  I hope you consider joining us.

— Clay (clay@privatemoneysource.com, 503-476-2909)

Clay is Vice President of Fairfield Financial, a primary source for private money since 1964.  Fairfield is currently targeting loans in OR, WA, AK, CA, CO, ID, FL, GA, ID, MT, NV, NY, OK and TX.  To submit a loan to Fairfield for consideration: http://www.privatemoneysource.com/loanproposal.php

When life gives you lemons …

September 9th, 2010

Clay Sparkman
I recently posted this article on my investor blog, The Private Money Investor. Even though the article is targeted toward investors who put their money into private money loans, I think it is appropriate to post it here.  After all … just look around you … this is where the game is.
I have always believed—and history seems to bear this out—that when the status quo becomes problematic, new opportunities present themselves.   Certainly the real estate economy of the past three years has proved problematic, and so as private money investors we are called upon to seek out those borrowers/investors who have encountered and successfully engaged those new hidden opportunities to create wealth in difficult times.
I would like to present here, by way of example, one real estate investor in particular who has done precisely that.   Mr. X saw opportunity in a Las Vegas real estate market turned upside down.   He assembled a crack team and began buying REO properties at heavily discounted prices from banks.   He used private money, along with his own funds, to buy, rehab, and either quick-flip or hold (depending on the particular circumstances) single family residences and multi-unit properties in the city.
He came to us to help fund his projects, and we have been thrilled to see him perform impeccably on loan after loan, grow his wealth position, and persistently decrease his leverage position (at a time when many real estate investors are doing just the opposite).
Our private money lenders are coming to us and asking for the chance to do more loans for Mr. X.   We just finished closing another 4-plex rehab loan for him and are now in the process of placing a very attractive 10-plex acquisition and rehab opportunity.   By way of illustration, I have provided the prospectus below.

Kristopher Gillmore

Fairfield Financial Services, Inc

3327 SE 50th St, Portland, OR 9706

Phone (503) 319-7294 / Fax (503) 419-4219 / E-mail: gillmore@privatemoneysource.com

REAL ESTATE PROSPECTUS

SECURED LOAN
Purchase and Rehab of 10-plex in Las Vegas, Nevada
Loan Details

  1. Loan Amount: $210,000
  2. Term: 2 yr
  3. Interest Rate: 13%
  4. Monthly Payments: $2,275.33 Interest Only
  5. Security:  Deed of Trust in 1st Position security interest in real property in Las Vegas, NV 89102
  6. Value by Borrower Estimate / Comps is $350,000
  7. LTV by Borrower Estimate / Comps is 60%

Loan Overview
A loan for the purchase and rehab of this property has been requested by Mr. X’s company, xxx, LLC.   Mr. X is requesting $98,200 for the rehab of this property, and will be making a down payment of approximately $16,000.   Mr. X will personally guarantee this loan.
Mr. X is experienced flipping homes and multi-family homes in Las Vegas, and has rehabbed well over 200 properties in this area.   He currently holds 65 properties in his inventory.  38 of these homes are free and clear and all but 2 of his properties are rented and producing income.  Mr. X reports that these properties are for sale or pending renters.
Mr. X has successfully completed four loans with Fairfield over this past two years.  In each of these loans the construction was completed and the properties were listed in under a month.  Both houses were sold and the loans paid in full well before the loans matured and Mr. X has never been late with a payment.  In addition, Mr. X currently has five active loans through Fairfield.  These five loans are on 4-plexes that he is holding as rentals, and like the first four loans.  Each of these rehabs was completed and rented in approximately one month.  Each property has a positive cash flow and Mr. X has never been late with a payment.  To exit this loan, Mr. X will seek conventional financing once renters are in place.  He anticipates that it will take around a year to get this financing in place.
Property
The subject property is 5,500 SF and has 10 units.  There are eight 1 bedroom and 1 bath units, and two 2 bedroom, 2 bath units.  The 10-plex was built in 1956 and sits on a .15 acre lot.
Based on other rental properties that Mr. X owns in this area, he anticipates that property will rent for $4,300 / month total ($400 / 1-bed and $550 / 2-bed).  Mr. X aggressively markets his rentals which are all newly renovated and priced lower than his competitors.
The building is structurally sound, but is in need of cosmetic repairs.  Mr. X has agreed to make all of the repairs to this property out of pocked ($98,200), and will submit one final draw for reimbursement once this property has been completed.
This property is in a prime location, within walking distance from the Las Vegas strip.  It is located approximately ½ mile from the Stratosphere hotel and casino, in close proximity to some high end developments like Allure Towers, Soho Lofts, and Newport Lofts.
Valuation
Comps by Borrower
To determine the completion Value, Mr. X’s partner and realtor, Mr. Y, has provided some recent comps for multi-unit properties.  Based on the price per unit of these comps, location, and expected rents, Mr. X estimates a conservative value of at least $350,000 for this property.
In July 2010, a property inspection was performed for a 4-plex in a similar neighborhood (829 Held Road).  It was suggested by our inspector that a conservative value for this property would be $180,000.  Because these are both multi-unit income properties, the approach used to calculate this value should be similar.  Based on the inspectors estimate of value for this 4-plex, Mr. X’s estimate of $350,000 for a 10-plex seems reasonable.
Income
We were provided with a signed 1003 for Mr. X, which states a monthly income of $30,000.  In addition, he states a net rental income (not including taxes and insurance) of $72,180, and a net worth of $7,258,000.   A copy is provided here for your review
Credit
Mr. X has a mid credit score 575.  His credit score has dropped substantially due to late payments on a Mercedes for which his ex-wife is responsible.  Mr. X said that his name should not be on that anymore and he will look into it.
Market Analysis
There is ample information available for residential market conditions.  By utilizing sites like zillow.com and altosresearch.com, we can see that the residential market has been in decline for the past 2 years.  Altos research.com provides graphs of the average price, price/SF, days on market, and the number of homes on the market.  These graphs are provided for your review.
Most notably, the graph showing the number of homes on the market (and recent reports of a 2nd wave of foreclosures) suggests that increased foreclosures continue to force people out of their homes.  The number of homes on the market has increased by approximately 10% over the past 6 months.
Mr. X states that this downturn in the residential real estate market has been one of the keys to his success.  Mr. X stopped flipping houses approximately one year ago, and started buying rentals.  In this market he’s able to purchase these properties below market value and rehab them quickly, so that they cash flow with hard money rates with minimal vacancy.  The fact that these rentals are newly renovated and competitively priced in a market where more people are renting, has allowed Mr. X to make a lot of money over this past year.
Now that’s some kind of lemonade!

— Clay (clay@privatemoneysource.com, 503-476-2909)

Clay is Vice President of Fairfield Financial, a primary source for private money since 1964.  Fairfield is currently targeting loans in OR, WA, AK, CA, CO, ID, FL, GA, ID, MT, NV, NY, OK and TX.  To submit a loan to Fairfield for consideration: http://www.privatemoneysource.com/loanproposal.php

The ever elusive lender

September 1st, 2010

Clay Sparkman
If you don’t believe that lenders are getting hard to find, read this article from the New York Times:  In Hard Times, One New Bank (Double-Wide).  Kind of scary, huh?
If you are having trouble finding the ever elusive lenders that you need for your particular client transactions and projects, a web based tool known as Lendicom.com may be of interest to you.  The site is geared toward commercial lending (including construction, project, and development loans), and allows borrowers and brokers to sign up and submit specific loan proposals to lenders who have also signed up online.
Brokers and borrowers are able to enter specific commercial loan proposals for matching with the pre-qualified database of lenders.  Upon submission, Lendicom presents a list of matches and close matches, with some basic information regarding the lenders, and the brokers/borrowers may select up to four lenders for automatic submission of their proposals.
Product highlights include:  individual home pages for each user with complete pipeline information pertaining to all loans processed through Lendicom, the ability to manage all outstanding loan programs/proposals from a single location, and the ability to setup whole offices on the system and coordinate the various users.
There are no subscription costs and the service is completely free for borrowers and brokers.  A small fee is paid by lenders on transactions that close (and that is how the site is monetized).
The tool is designed for a wide cross-section of lenders.  Commercial banks, life insurance companies, CMBS conduit lenders, sub-prime lenders, private lenders, and various funds are all accessible with a single submission.
In the interest of full disclosure, I am an officer and a part owner of the company that offers this site.  So consider me biased.
Still, I recommend that you check it out at the link below and see what you think.
www.lendicom.com

— Clay (clay@privatemoneysource.com, 503-476-2909)

Clay is Vice President of Fairfield Financial, a primary source for private money since 1964.  Fairfield is currently targeting loans in OR, WA, AK, CA, CO, ID, FL, GA, ID, MT, NV, NY, OK and TX.  To submit a loan to Fairfield for consideration: http://www.privatemoneysource.com/loanproposal.php

The big stretch

August 22nd, 2010

Clay Sparkman
In a prior posting, I pointed out that one of the primary advantages of private money is that it allows for creative problem solving due to the flexible nature of the beast.  I went on to discuss some of the ways in which one can often make a private money transaction work, on any given project, even when the LTV initially appears to be too high.
In particular, I profiled the following creative scenarios:
(1) We are able to base LTV on the true value of a property, as opposed to purchase price; frequently our savvy investors are able to buy under value and thus this makes a significant difference when establishing true LTV.  (It is kind of like North and True North.)
(2) We are able to base LTV on the projected value of a property when rehab or construction is involved.
(3) We will allow a seller carry back in second position when a buyer is able to negotiate this type of arrangement to his/her advantage. (We frequently lend up to 70% LTV, but may allow CLTV to exceed 100% under certain circumstances.)
(4) We will allow a borrower to pledge other real estate assets as additional collateral to make up for a shortfall in down payment money or earned equity.
And it turns out that I failed to mention one of our most effective tools for bridging the gap when the LTV ratio is running too high. My father has often said that the difference between being able to do a loan and not being able to do a loan is generally our fee. And there was a time when that was too often the case.
Well, we at Fairfield have made a conscious policy decision to not let that happen ever again. Based on the premise that a dollar tomorrow is better than no dollars today, we have decided to carry some or all of our fee (as a small second) any time that this is necessary to make an otherwise good loan fit our LTV criteria.
This is no small thing, as our fee generally runs 5% of the gross loan amount, and our originating brokers (when involved in a transaction) charge anywhere from 1-5% for their part in the loan process; so with combined fees ranging from 5-10% (I never claimed that private money was cheap; I said that it is fast and flexible), and assuming broker cooperation, we are able to stretch 70% LTV to as high as 80% LTV. That is a big stretch and frequently it has made the difference between doing a loan and frankly the opposite of that.

— Clay (clay@privatemoneysource.com, 503-476-2909)

Clay is Vice President of Fairfield Financial, a primary source for private money since 1964.  Fairfield is currently targeting loans in OR, WA, AK, CA, CO, ID, FL, GA, ID, MT, NV, NY, OK and TX.  To submit a loan to Fairfield for consideration: http://www.privatemoneysource.com/loanproposal.php

Top ten things brokers are sick and tired of hearing from lenders

August 17th, 2010

Clay Sparkman
There are some good things happening out there, but these last three years have been tough.  If you are reading this it is because you are a survivor.  And as such, you will have heard it all from lenders who really don’t seem to be very interested in lending any more.  If we didn’t laugh at these things … well, we’d need antidepressants.  So here in the name of a good laugh (if not a belly buster, at least a chuckle), I give you a new top ten list.
Drum roll please…
The top ten things brokers are sick and tired of hearing from lenders are:
10. Actually that was yesterday’s program.  You just missed it.
9. Oh you silly man.  Banks don’t lend any more.  That’s so 2007.
8. Uh, why don’t you come back when you don’t need us so much?
7. Interesting, interesting, right, right … interesting …
6. How about never?  Is never good for you?
5. So how is that loan quest thing working out for you anyway?
4. Remember the Monty Python cheese skit?  Well this phone call is about to remind you of that.
3. This is not one of those situations where “no” means “yes.”  Our “no” you might say is actually a true and authentic “no”.  It is 100% pure and comes with no interpretation required.
2. Look we used to do that lending thing and it didn’t work out so well for us, as you may have heard, soooo … now we just sit around drinking coffee, surfing the web, and playing solitaire all day.
1. Press 1 for a rejection, press 2 for an emphatic rejection, press 3 for a rude rejection …
Also, just for more fun and good times, here is the top ten list I posted on my other blog, The Private Money Investor:  http://privatemoneysource.com/blog/humor/top-ten-loan-offerings-that-you-may-choose-not-to-review/

— Clay (clay@privatemoneysource.com, 503-476-2909)

Clay is Vice President of Fairfield Financial, a primary source for private money since 1964.  Fairfield is currently targeting loans in OR, WA, AK, CA, CO, ID, FL, GA, ID, MT, NV, NY, OK and TX.  To submit a loan to Fairfield for consideration: http://www.privatemoneysource.com/loanproposal.php