Real Estate Investing: Infomercial and Mentoring Scams
By Jeanette Joy Fisher
Flipping through late-night infomercials
recently, I saw two real estate get-rich quick schemes, and I couldn't help but
wonder why people still fall for those old scams? Has anyone really talked a
seller out of his home for no money down with owner financing lately?
Real estate infomercials do great harm to
beginning investors, who waste hundreds of dollars on old
information. Worse yet, those beginners soon get discouraged and miss out on the
true (and profitable) adventure of real estate investing.
One of the most popular late night
infomercial shows tells beginners that it's possible to make a fortune by buying houses with no money down and
then renting them out to cover the monthly payments. It's true that you can buy
a home for no money down, but the requirements include having good
credit, good income, and the home should be owner-occupied.
Rentals don't normally qualify for no
money down financing. Institutional lenders aren't supposed to
make no money down loans on investment properties, and even if you could buy an
investment home with no money down, the monthly payments would generally eat up
the rent.
Late-night scammers also claim that investors can get owners to pay the closing costs,
including the down payment. But when a lender asks where your down payment will
be coming from, saying, "the seller" is not the right answer! Today's sellers
are also fairly savvy, and understand that with no money invested in a property,
a buyer could easily walk away and leave them with a home that's been ruined by
careless tenants.
Another TV program offers a bogus system for
buying houses at ridiculous prices, but think about it: has anyone bought a
home, free and clear, for $345.00 at a tax sale recently? Hordes of investors
flock to the tax sales in the area where I live, bidding up the prices of
foreclosure properties far beyond a few cents on the dollar. It just doesn't
happen.
Today, another real estate investment scam is popular in Southern California.
Here’s how it works: a young person we'll call Charles charged $4,000 on his
credit card to hire a real estate "mentor," after the mentor wined and dined him at a
fancy Beverly Hills restaurant.
In exchange for the fee, the mentor
instructed Charles to find distressed houses by driving around the area and
writing down the addresses of ugly houses in nice neighborhoods. Once Charles
had given him the addresses, the mentor obtained the owner's address and
sometimes a phone number. Then it was up to Charles to call the owners and talk
them into selling their houses for no money down, and carrying the paper,
too!
I met Charles when he called me about buying
a property that my husband and I had on the market for $1.2 million. When I
asked him how such a young man was going to make the payments on $1.2 million
home, he told me that he planned to rent the house out for enough to make the
payments.
As a real estate investor myself, I tried not to laugh at his
naivete, and after talking to Charles and listening to his frustration about
trying so hard to follow his mentor's advice, I offered to help him find a
property, and I'm happy to say that Charles now owns his own home. But he'll
still have to spend years paying off a $4,000 credit card bill.
If you want to make money as a real estate investor, a good first step is to buy your own home,
like Charles did. You can do that for no money down if you have good credit, or
for a relatively little amount of money down if your credit is poor. Once you've
purchased your own home, fix it up and then either sell it or refinance it and
use your profits as the down payment on an investment property.
Don't pay hundreds of dollars for out-dated
methods that may have worked in the middle of last century! They're a waste of
your time and money. Real estate investing is truly a great way to make a
fortune, but you must stick to tried-and-true proven strategies, ones that work
in today’s real estate market.
(c) Copyright 2004, Jeanette J. Fisher. All
rights reserved.
Professor Jeanette Fisher, author of
Doghouse to Dollhouse for Dollars, Joy to the Home, and other books teaches Real
Estate Investing and Design Psychology. For more articles, tips, reports,
newsletters, and sales flyer template, see
http://www.doghousetodollhousefordollars.com/pages/5/index.htm
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