UK Property Investment Forum & Blog

August 17, 2011

Are lease options new?

In my last post, I explained why ‘Lease Options’ was the best and smartest property strategy in the current market conditions. However, is this a completely new idea or did it already exist somewhere in the uk, unbeknown to us? Well, actually, Lease options have always existed in the uk mainly within the commercial sector and has been used in buying and selling for a very long time, often being used by developers to acquire properties for refurbishment to improve value before purchasing to let out, or to just on sell to other buyers.

 Just because lease options have been commonly used with commercial property, there is nothing to prevent them being used with residential property either. The fundamentals of this financial instrument are identical in both cases. So it gradually evolved within the uk from around 5-7 years back, at first meeting with a lot of misunderstanding, criticism, suspicion and negative reactions from legal entities like solicitors, when it came to getting the legal aspects of the transactions completed. However, as we all know, market conditions began to change, particularly with the near collapse of the financial world, and the property boom, and few mortgage lenders willing to lend unless you had a 40-60% hefty deposit available, and house prices diving to crazy levels. First time buyers were virtually frozen out of the market and rental demands began to soar, in the wake of thousands unable to keep up with their mortgage repayments leading up to so many homes being re-possessed. Suddenly, where previous strategies like ‘buy- to- let’, ‘BMV and ‘no-money down’ began to get more difficult to maintain, Lease Options seemed to flourish and indeed  with a win-win viable option for all, and the most realistic strategy for the times we were living in, many jumped on the band wagon including the government with ‘Right to buy’ or ‘Shared Ownership’ schemes or ‘Rent- to-own’ schemes many property investors started to learn about it, going to courses etc to try to benefit from adapting this strategy to the hard-up investors and first time buyers who could not obtain a mortgage right now. Bringing the situation right up to date, the current global crisis in the economy including the unprecedented downgrading of America’s credit status, and the euro crisis are yet even more factors that can only put more pressure on our housing market in the Uk in the long run. So Lease Options may be here to stay for much longer than we thought….and perhaps become a panacea for many ills.

 Next week we will be exploring in more detail all these different schemes and aspects of lease options that have evolved and are still evolving in the UK house market, and to make sense of what lease options has come to mean to our property investors and buyers alike in today’s challenging world.  

 Till then, ponder on the above thoughts and try to research what on what the people around you perceive of lease options….you may be surprised by what you find!

 Sudeshna Choudhury

August 8, 2011

Creating Positive CashFlow Through Lease Options

Last week we looked at how lease options had the best exit strategies and now we will see why it is the best option in the current market conditions to create positive cashflow for the seller yet most beneficial to buyer at the same time!

Let us assume that you have an investment property which is not performing well cashflow-wise or is in negative equity. You want to sell it but are using special terms to allow you to achieve a specific goal.

You create a ‘vendor terms sales’: The vendor or seller creates the terms and conditions for selling their property to a buyer by using a lease option or an instalment contract. In this, both parties are benefited mutually i. e The vendor gets immediate one-off option fee and regular cashflow option + rent payments per month from the buyer and can later sell at a decent profit when the buyer exercises their right to buy the property, which is also good for the buyer as the purchase price is effectively frozen at the agreed price held for the option term for the buyer, so protecting them against price rises.  

Technically speaking, ‘vendor terms sales’ is when a property is sold to a buyer free and clear of debt. No mortgage encumbers the property when the vendor on sells the property to a new buyer by instalment sale or lease option.

Most landlords have an underlying mortgage on their property. If instead of carrying the mortgage, a landlord contemplates selling his property incurring a [potentially big] loss in a falling market he should use lease options to first improve his property cashflow then sell at a reasonable price rather than being forced to sell [at auctions].

You can create a positive cashflow machine when your buyer exercises their option:

e.g.

10 houses x £350/mth profit = £ 3,500 total monthly cash flow

25 houses x £350/mth profit = £ 8,750 total monthly cash flow

50 houses x £350/mth profit = £17,500 total monthly cash flow.

You can fund new property purchases using the back -end profit that has been released when your buyer exercises their option!

So it starts to get really exciting and lease options is true cash reality!! Next week we will look at if options is new in the uk and how to understand its value in the current economic climate.

All for now, folks!

Sudeshna choudhury

July 4, 2011

What are the exit strategies for Lease Option Buyers?

Filed under: Lease Options — Tags: , , — sudeshnac @ 9:16 am

We have already discussed the various exit strategies of the traditional buy-to-let and cash purchases and most would agree they are good strategies but limited by their very nature of strategy. However, with the lease option strategy,  a whole new exciting way of looking at exit strategies starts to emerge!

For a start, the buyers are in a different category to the normal investor i.e. they are actually ‘renting to own’. At no time are they ever under any pressure to purchase, except from their own personal commitment to actually purchase the house.

Secondly, the Buyer chooses not to purchase after their lease option is over, they can simply walk away. Or they can stay on as tenants if it this is agreeable to the seller. Or they can ask for an extension. In this case, the seller may choose to re-negotiate some or all of the terms such as sales price, length of lease option, and amount of option payments credited towards the purchase. The seller may choose to collect another lump sum option fee and different instalment option fees that may be applied to the sales price of the property.

Therefore, this is what can happen:-

1) If the Buyer chooses to exercise their option; they will apply their option fee(s) paid to date towards the purchase price. They will get a mortgage from a bank, building society or other lender. When a buyer exercises their option, the
seller keeps the option fee(s), the rent, along with their back-end profit

2) If they are unable to get a mortgage or the mortgage of their choice, the seller may consider offering them another lease option agreement on re-negotiated terms.

3) If a buyer chooses not to exercise their option, the seller keeps their option fee and the rent. They would not collect their back-end profit, but they can re-market the property and sell it again on a lease option.

So you can see why Lease Options is the most viable property strategy in the market today and actually has the most flexible and practical exit strategy of them all! Next time, we will look at why this is relevant to cashflow and profitability in helping everyone achieve a win-win situation.

All for now…
Sudeshna Choudhury

May 11, 2009

Protected: UK Residential Lease Options Could Be The Royal Way To Sustainable Wealth Creation

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January 14, 2009

How To Convert Your Buy-To-Let Into A Cashflow Positive Lease Option

It is about time that property investors learn once for all that cashfow investing prevails over capital growth investing.

Many novice landlords and property investors have been persuaded by property consultants, agents, finance brokers etc to pursue capital growth investing rather than cashflow investing.

In a raising market, this strategy makes sense but still bears a great risk, as the investor or the landlord must plan his exit strategy to sell before the downturn arrives.

What distinguishes sophisticated investors from the rest is that their investment strategy always focuses on cashflow first, then capital growth. But the novices have been conditioned to do the contrary, they invests primarily for capital growth, and not so much for cash flow.

This is often why the novice will take such a long time, if ever, to achieve the financial freedom that they wanted from property in the first place.

If your investment property (buy to let) is in negative equity or negative cash flow, do not despair! Even during this economic downturn you still can turn things around and achieve positive cashflow. You can convert your assured shorthold tenancy into a lease option (rent-to-buy or rent-to-own).

Following are the steps on how to do it.

Establish why you shouldn’t sale

If you selling your property in the current market means you have you have to find funds to repay your mortgage then do not sale! Try instead to understand how to get more cash from your property by impleting a lease option agreement.

Determin the five key lease that make a lease options agreement

If you choose the lease option road, you have to determine the five key elements previously discussed:

  1. Your sale price
  2. The upfront option fee (the down payment that reduces the purchase price)
  3. The monthly rent
  4. The instalment option fees (that can also reduces the purchase price)
  5. The option period

You can learn how to determine these five elements and engineer a win win transaction between you and your tenant-buyer. To find out more visit http://www.assuredpositivecashflow.com

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