UK Property Investment Forum & Blog

June 28, 2011

From UK Property BMV Deals to Lease Options Deals

Filed under: General — admin @ 3:20 pm

A prominent BMV Deal Provider Shifts to Lease Options Deals…

In a strategic meeting, we captured the reason for why a BMV deal providers should also start providing lease option deals.

We summarized these reasons as as follows:

1)      The UK Residential Property Market (part of the global economy) has not seen such a downturn since 1929.
2)      Traditional investment techniques such as NMD (No Money Down), BMV (Below Market Value) or Off-plan underperform when there is a lack of capital appreciation.
3)      Because of the credit crunch, banks and mortgage lenders have lowered their required loan to value ratios (on properties) and increased their credit scoring requirements (on borrowers). This means less finance available for property transactions, which in turn continues to drive the overall market down.
4)      Lease Option is not a new concept in the property market. As a simple and old asset acquisition technique, it has been used in residential property transactions in the USA, Canada, Australia, and France for more than a decade. Globally and in the UK, the car financing, commercial property, stock market option trading, and many other good markets use Lease Option deals every day.
5)      Lease Option, by nature, allows flexible transactions and, if well understood, it can address the deficiencies stated in points 1 to 3 to help investors, buyers, and indeed the whole service industry revolving around the residential property market, to preserve their profitability level. This is the WIN-WIN-WIN agreement where everybody truly benefits.

This is how we helped a prominent London-based BMV deal provider initiate a service shift towards Lease Option deals. Whilst we cannot comment on current performances, we can comment on the fact that the company was very grateful to us because they realised that many BMV deal sourcers also initiated their service shift in addition to new companies focusing only on Lease Option deals.

Victor Hugo said, “One can resist invading armies, but one cannot resist an idea whose time has come”.

June 16, 2011

How should you Decide to Purchase a BMV deal?

Filed under: BMV Deals — Tags: , , — francis.emery @ 1:30 pm

How should you Decide to Purchase a BMV deal?

Given the lack of fee consistency and transparency amongst sourcers and dealers who promote properties Below Market Value (BMV), you need to take some basic precautions in your decision-making process before you purchase a BMV deal.

Assuming that you are dealing with a trustworthy sourcer or dealer (this can be a big assumption), you should look at the information in a certain order before making the decision to purchase a deal.

We suggest this order:

1)      The level of discount

2)      The discounted price

3)      The achievable yield

4)      The fees involved, including the conditions to pay the solicitor

5)      Additional information to ascertain the property location and condition

If you have a business plan to achieve a specific amount in your property portfolio balance sheet and income statement, and you keep reviewing this plan on a regular basis, you might also want to review your property acquisition system and procedures.

Your property acquisition procedures starts by the method with which you analyse your deals

Why are we suggesting this order?

All points above are important. However, you use a process of elimination by starting with the financial elements that tell you the most valuable metric. How much discount will you achieve with this deal: 5%, 10%, 20%, 25%, or 50%?

If your business plan dictates that you need a series of deals with at least 20% discount, you should not waste your time spending hours analysing the fee structure or getting a survey done on the property conditions.

Likewise, if you buy a BMV property on finance (let’s suppose you would if you are investing) then the achievable yield is an indispensable metric. Some would argue that it is the first piece of information you should look at. The message we want to convey is that the top 3 elements save you time and can be delegated in order to reduce the amount of deals you get in your inbox to only the most worthy ones.

The top 3 elements are part of your basic deal triage level. All deals must be discarded if they don’t meet your basic deal triage criteria.

Interestingly, we receive frequent reports from many investors and friends who complain that, despite lowering their criteria, they can no longer find a deal that suits their criteria.

Once they’ve applied their basic deal triage level, they find problems with fee levels from greedy BMV deal providers or inaccurate property financial information, which seriously complicates matters, delays completions, adds to transaction costs and, therefore, reduces, if not eradicates, their profit criteria.

After consulting with investors, friends and many deal sourcers, we understood that they all wanted to preserve the level of profitability, despite the current global and protracted financial crisis, and asked us if it was possible to do so.

Consequently, we produced a confidential report for a prominent BMV deal sourcing company based in London. Sorry, but we cannot name this company because we signed a Non-Disclosure Agreement (NDA). However, we can reveal certain details of our discussions and elements of our work because we were commissioned to produce the report and, subsequently, retained control of the intellectual property rights.

Back in October 2009, the most interesting fact was that the director of the BMV deal company finally understood the need to diversify and provide a more modern series of products and services to clientele in order to adapt to, and survive, the current economic climate.

Read our valuable FREE Report:

How do you make £millions shifting from “Below Market Value”

to “Lease Options” Property Deals…?

http://bfr-invest.net/pibwp/from-below-market-value-to-lease-options-property-deals

June 7, 2011

What is a Real Below Market Value Property Deal?

Filed under: BMV Deals — Tags: , — francis.emery @ 7:30 am

A normal Below Market Value (BMV) deal is a property transaction where an investor is supposed to buy a residential property at a significant discount.

For example, a 25% discount on a property valued at £200,000 means that the investor can make a theoretical profit of £50,000 if he is able to resell the same property at its initial value.

The basic figures are as follows:

  • Property Estimated Value (PEV):                                              £200,000
  • Property Purchase Price (PPP):                                                  £150,000
    (25% cheaper that the PEV)
  • Property Projected Resale Price (PPRP):                                £200,000

The theoretical profit is calculated as PPRP – PPP = £50,000

If you are, or was, a seasoned investor receiving hundreds of deals per day, you know that property sourcers or property deal advertisers don’t always use the same terminology to describe the financial information of a BMV or discounted property purchase.

An investor usually has to process a certain amount of information from a property finder or sourcer in order to check “the deal”.

In general, the property deal information covers the following:

  • The level of discount
  • The property location
  • A description of the property
  • Property financial information
    • Current open market value
    • Discounted price
    • Achievable rent
    • Potential or existing mortgage information
    • Fees and legal costs (included or excluded) to complete the transaction
    • Timeline and conditions required to complete

Warning 1: There is no standard or consistent fee structure among BMV deal suppliers across the nation.

Warning 2: Many deal suppliers “repackage” deals received from a primary supplier. Therefore, they act as a deal distribution. In these cases, the investor or buyer cannot determine how fees are distributed between the primary supplier and the deal distributor (or re-packager). Consequently, there is no transparency in the fee distribution in a chain of deal suppliers.

Warning 3: The financial elements in a deal description could be false or, let’s put it this way, they could be inaccurate. The antidote is a requirement that a deal uses “RICS” certified valuations – and bases a discount on the same. This is not an absolute guarantee against false figures, so for your own protection against loss you must know your dealer’s reputation and use your own due diligence methods to ensure that the entire information pack on a deal is trustworthy. We describe our high level due diligence method next.

Read our valuable FREE Report:

How do you make £millions shifting from “Below Market Value”

to “Lease Options” Property Deals…?

http://bfr-invest.net/pibwp/from-below-market-value-to-lease-options-property-deals

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