Lavar Ball’s Bluster Won’t Sell Your Rental Home
“Ex-UCLA freshman LiAngelo Ball has no chance that he’ll be drafted in June — and that was true before his shoplifting incident in China. ‘He’s not on any of our scouting lists — even the extended lists,’ one GM told ESPN.”
Adrian Wojnarowski (ESPN Senior NBA Insider)
“Gelo is the best two-guard in the draft on the fact that he can shoot better than anybody in the draft. He’s stronger than anybody in the draft.”
Lavar Ball (father of LiAngelo Ball prior to the NBA Draft where LiAngelo was bypassed by all 30 NBA teams in both rounds of the draft)
Sometimes fathers get carried away with how good their sons really are at sports. And based on how outspoken Lavar Ball is, it is no surprise how bullish he was on his second son’s, LiAngelo’s, ability on the basketball court.
Many people dislike Lavar Ball because he is brash and speaks his mind. He said he could beat potentially the greatest player in the history of the NBA, Michael Jordan, in a one-on-one game in his prime. He is an unabashed, vocal supporter of himself and his sons. And his sons definitely have basketball ability, though at differing degrees.
His first son, Lonzo Ball, was the second overall pick in the NBA Draft by the Los Angeles Lakers last year. He proved to be the real deal. He excelled in college for his one year at UCLA and had a promising rookie year in the NBA. Some NBA scouts thought he was the best prospect coming into draft- an elite passer and competitor.
LiAngelo followed his older brother and also enrolled at UCLA on a basketball scholarship. Unfortunately, he was arrested in China during a preseason trip with his UCLA teammates, and was suspended. He later dropped out of school when the suspension did not go away. He never played in a college game.
Lavar thought it was still a mistake that all the NBA teams passed on the chance to sign LiAngelo. And he blasted them. But the NBA scouts really have one job- to find the best players they can to help their organization win games. And they unanimously agreed LiAngelo just wasn’t good enough.
Sometimes this type of scenario pervades rental home sales, especially rental homes that have been tenant-occupied for many years. Landlords see other homes that sell near their rental homes and immediately slot theirs at the highest sales price.
Sometimes it’s justified. However, often it is not. The rental home is just sometimes not comparable. Tenants have lived there and may not have taken care of the home. The landlord might not have made any improvements to the home since it had become a rental and now it is dated with older parts (appliances, flooring, paint, etc.). This is when the dearth of ongoing home investment can catch up.
And that’s fine. I get it. No one wants to spend money. We hope that the house is good enough to sell “as is” too.
But buyers know what they like. And when they enter a home that is priced at the top of the market and doesn’t compare to the updated and lovingly cared for homes also for sale, they will pass without making an offer. And the home will sit on the market- unsigned like LiAngelo.
Despite Lavar’s bluster, the proof is in the pudding. Is LiAngelo a good enough basketball player to compete and star in “The League”? Is the rental home in good enough condition to catch buyers’ eyes and make them want to make the biggest investment in their lives for it? Is there a “WOW” factor or is everything just plain?
We all want quick, high-priced sales. But if the rental house can’t pass like Lonzo, it’s time to either lower price expectations (YMCA league?) or pay the money to make improvements to get to league standard.
Can your rental home walk the talk?
Happy Landlording!
Learn MorePutting Your Vacant Rental Home on the Market? 3 Steps To Be Prepared
The news has been all positive for home sellers. And some of you have been ready to sell some of your rental homes for the last 5 years!
The thought equation about selling your rental home looks like this:
Desire to Sell + Rapidly Improving Market + Now Vacant Rental Home = Time To Go To Market?
That is the big question. If the answer is “I think so!”, here are the next steps.
Talk to your property manager and have them run some comparables on your property. If it is determined that you have the room (difference between your rental home’s value and loan balance) to walk away from a sale with a profit (or an acceptable loss), you may decide you want to make a go at it.
If this is your situation, how do you prepare? Here are 3 easy steps:
1. Make sure you have the needed liquidity (cash) – Part 1: You’ll need to fix up your home to market standards. This may include a new paint job, new carpet, professional cleaning, and any other needed repairs.
2. Liquidity- Part 2: You should have a minimum of 4 to 6+ months of mortgage, HOA dues, lawn care, and utility payments at your disposal so everyone still gets paid during this time of vacancy. Unfortunately, you won’t have a tenant making the payments for you while it’s vacant on the market.
3. Decide what your boundaries are:
A. What is the lowest price you are willing to sell for (your property manager can help you factor in what your selling costs are)?
B. How long are you willing to wait to sell it before going back to the rental market?
Once these 3 criteria are considered and you are comfortable with them, it is time to go to market and trust the marketing prowess of your property manager. Then a new equation emerges:
Fixed-up home + Competitive Price + Funds Necessary to Execute the Sales Strategy = Sales Success!
Selling a rental home is a process that takes time and money. Successful execution depends on having the necessary resources and patience to see it through. Good luck!
Brett Furniss is President & Owner of BDF Realty (Charlotte Residential Property Management), the trusted real estate advisor for Charlotte landlords, managing single-family homes, Uptown condos, and town homes in the Charlotte-Metro Area. BDF Realty’s services include property management, home fix-ups, and home sales, including Rent-To-Sell (“When You Need a New Solution to Sell Your Home”). His newest book is A Real Estate Agent’s Complete Guide to Representing Rent-To-Own (Lease Option) Tenants (Delight Clients, Fill Vacant Homes, and Earn $2,250* Upfront! (*Minimum!) which is available on-line now.
Learn MoreSelling Your Rental Home With 24’s Villain, Habib Marwan
I was watching an old episode of 24 last night (Season 4 for fellow aficionados) and was intrigued by the moves of Habib Marwan, the terrorist leader. In order to distract Jack Bauer and the Counter Terrorist Unit (CTU), he proposes to trade captured CTU agent, Jack Bauer, for the teenage son (Behrooz) of known terrorists, Dina and Navi Araz.
Marwan actually has no use for Bayroos, but CTU doesn’t know that. The trade’s main purpose is to distract and slow down CTU from figuring out the next stage of his nefarious plan (stealing a stealth bomber and blowing up of Air Force One with President Keeler). He wants them to waste their time and resources going after the wrong lead trail with the Behrooz-Bauer exchange. The purposeful misdirection almost works…
I see this misdirection, though unintended, in home sales sometimes. As a home seller, you don’t want to distract and slow down potential buyers for your rental home! Like Marwan, you must decide who your real target is and focus. Marwan never wavered on his priority on taking down Air Force One. He used misdirection to achieve his main goal.
However, don’t use misdirection when selling your rental home! To avoid this, the decision must be made on whether to target owner occupants or investors; going after both (especially when the facts on your home won’t support a good selling proposition to one of the parties) is a waste of time and resources. CTU didn’t have time to track leads to find Marwan AND conduct the exchange for Jack Bauer. This misaligned strategy cost President Keeler his life and was a major intelligence failure.
How do you know whether you want to target an investor or an owner occupant as a buyer for your rental home? The correct strategy to utilize hinges on the answer.
Here are a few questions to ask to determine the appropriate strategy to use:
1. What is the ratio of the monthly rent versus the asking price? In Charlotte, investors ask for anywhere from .008 and up. To get this number, divide the rent by the home price. Ex: On a home for sale for $100K and a rent of $995/month, the ratio is .00995. A ratio near .01 is excellent. A ration closer to .005 – .006 will make it tough to sell to a cash-flow investor. For homes, subtract the monthly HOA dues (or annual dues pro-rated per month) from the monthly rental amount; this usually significantly lowers the ratio and is why many investors shy away from townhomes and condos.
2. What type of discount can be offered on the home? If it needs to sell for full retail, the owner occupant buyer is the way to go. If there is room to discount the home off of retail price, it may be a good candidate for an investor.
3. How much money can you afford to put towards fixing the home up? If it is a lot, then you have the option of fixing up the home nicely and asking for full retail price. If the funds are not available, investors are flexible on repairs if the deal on the home is enticing in terms of cash flow ratio (#1) and discounted off of retail price (#2).
4. Is there a tenant currently in the home? If so, this is a good candidate to sell to an investor and save the holding costs of vacancy. It costs nothing to have a home on the market while a tenant is in it, though there are some logistical issues for showings.
So, the ideal selling conditions per buyer type…
Investor: good cash flow ratio, home discounted, limited repairs done, tenant in property
Owner-occupant: poor cash flow ratio, full retail price, fix-up completed, empty house
Once it is determined who the ideal buyer is for your rental home, the marketing should flow from this decision. So…
Investors: offering your home at local investment clubs, ad verbiage including “signed lease and expenses log provided” in the listing as well as other pertinent investment factoids, posting on real estate investment websites, informing property managers and Realtors who know investors looking to acquire rentals that your home is available and a good deal
Owner-occupants: MLS and other marketing a typical Realtor would provide
Having an aligned strategy to your target market will save money and in Marwan’s case, take American lives! Fortunately for US citizens, Jack Bauer is good at focusing on his target (Marwan) as well…
Brett Furniss is President & Owner of BDF Realty (Charlotte Residential Property Management), the trusted real estate advisor for Charlotte landlords, managing single-family homes, Uptown condos, and town homes in the Charlotte-Metro Area. BDF Realty’s services include property management, home fix-ups, and home sales, including Rent-To-Sell (“When You Need a New Solution to Sell Your Home”). His newest book is A Real Estate Agent’s Complete Guide to Representing Rent-To-Own (Lease Option) Tenants (Delight Clients, Fill Vacant Homes, and Earn $2,250* Upfront! (*Minimum!) which is available on-line now.
Learn More“Will You Buy My Rental Homes Now?” Big Buyers Say, “Yes, But…”
The media is abuzz with news of springtime in the housing market! Headlines trumpet:
Sales And Average Home Prices Are On The Rise Again!
Bidding Wars Are Back!
Good times appear to be back in real estate land and you will soon see your local Realtors rolling around in the hottest and newest automobiles again (we don’t use the lowly term “cars”- that’s recession terminology). Real estate school enrollment is up and the housing market is sizzling.
And you’ve been holding on to your rental properties tightly, making the repairs, paying down the loan, and living the ups and downs of your tenants’ employment statuses for the past 6 years. It’s been tough, but now it is time to get rewarded, right? Based on news reports, it is time to sell your rental homes and make some dough.
Or is it? As always, that depends.
The homes that are in bidding wars where buyers are making above asking price offers are typically in high-price, highly desirable areas, which are not where most rental homes are (it’s OK- those homes are tough to get to cash-flow on a long-term basis anyway). But what about the average rental homes that we hold in our portfolios? Can we sell them now?
One type of buyer that is very active in the market now says, “Yes, but not for the price you want. But not so off the mark that you won’t consider our offer.”
This type of buyer is the big institutional investors (Big Buyers) who are invading the local real estate markets armed with tons of cash. They employ some real estate agencies to find affordable homes for sale, send lowball offers (typical haircut of 30% from what I’ve seen), and snap up the ones that accept.
I view this positively. Besides the obvious disadvantage of below asking price offers, they bring a lot of advantages. They pay all cash (it’s so nice when financing snags doesn’t crush deals in the last minute), close quickly, don’t ask for closing costs, and don’t ask a lot of questions. They are really easy to work with; the deals happen rapidly and easily. The only real question is if the price is acceptable to both parties.
So how does this work in practice? Here are 3 examples on 2 houses we listed for sale (some details have been changed slightly):
House #1: On market for $89K
First big buyer (BB #1) offers $55K
We counter at $94K
BB #1 doesn’t dignify our counter offer with a response
BB #2 offer on house #1: $70K
The same day we receive word we have another offer coming in
We inform the BB #2 of the other offer and ask if they would like to submit their best and final offer
BB #2 responds that $70K is their final and best offer
We let them know the other offer was accepted and theirs was declined
House #2: On market for $105K
BB #3 offers $85K
We counter at $104K
BB#3 comes up to $90K
We counter at $100K
They come in at $95K final offer
Offer accepted at $95K
The BB’s are looking to accumulate properties and are not looking to nit-pick on repairs. Sure, if something is majorly flawed, they will ask you to fix it and/or cancel their offer. But the small repair requests that are typically negotiated by owner-occupants aren’t asked for; the BB’s just fix it up themselves. As stated previously, when the price is agreed upon upfront, the deals typically fall into place easily.
To sell or not to sell? That is the question. But, for average rental homes, be thankful it is now an option!
Brett Furniss is President & Owner of BDF Realty (Charlotte Residential Property Management), the trusted real estate advisor for Charlotte landlords, managing single-family homes, condos, and town homes in the Charlotte-Metro Area. BDF Realty’s services include property management, home fix-ups, and home sales, including Rent-To-Sell (“When You Need a New Solution to Sell Your Home”). His newest book is A Real Estate Agent’s Complete Guide to Representing Rent-To-Own (Lease Option) Tenants (Delight Clients, Fill Vacant Homes, and Earn $2,250* Upfront! (*Minimum!) which is available on-line now.
Learn MoreCharlotte Property Management Monthly: Should I Even Bother to Try to Sell My House in this Market?
This is a question that I was posed on a call last week. For property managers, this is a no-brainer, right? It’s like any buying question to a salesperson in any industry:
Question from prospective client:
Do I need a haircut?
Barber:
Absolutely.
Question from prospective client:
Do I need insurance coverage for (fill in the blank)?
Answer from insurance agent:
Absolutely. If your family’s (fill in the blank) is important, it would potentially be devastating to live without it.
Question from potential client:
Can my house sell in this market? It didn’t with the past 2 real estate agents I used.
Answer from real estate agent (straight faced without blinking):
Absolutely! My team has a 10-point marketing plan that can sell any house in any market*!
* With a nominal 50% price reduction
So back to the original question:
Should someone even bother to try to sell their house in this market?
My answer:
It depends.
Depends on what?
You should try to sell your home if you:
1. Are living in the house and don’t have to move
2. Have a clean tenant who is amenable to showings
3. Have a unique house (be honest!) that is desirable in any market
4. Are able to afford to price the house competitively (aka on the low end)
5. Are willing to gamble and eat the rent every month and wait for a buyer who might or might not come
My answer to not bother putting the house on the market for sale is under the following conditions:
1. There are several foreclosures and short sales active in your home’s subdivision
2. You can’t afford to or don’t want to drastically discount your home price
3. The home is vacant and #3, #4, and/or #5 above don’t apply to you
4. Neighbors’ homes that are priced around the level you want to sell yours for are sitting
The simple truth is that the buy & sell real estate market is continuing on a sharp downtrend with no end in sight, while the rental market is on a sharp uptrend. Everyone still needs a place to live, but the banks are not willing to lend to less than perfect borrowers. This leads to a surplus of rental and rent-to-own tenants, and a dearth of buyers. So the question is if it is better to go fishing at the small pond stocked with thousands of fish or the big pond with 25?
Whether it still makes sense to list your home for sale really depends on your answers to the questions above. Truthfully, for most people, the best financial option is to stay put in their home. But going straight to the rental or rent-to-sell market is best for people who are:
1. In a time crunch
2. Need to move
3. Can’t or don’t want to afford 2 mortgage payments
Often, it just doesn’t make sense to put the home on the market for sale. It’s an exercise in futility and costs a good deal of money. It’s like asking out the head cheerleader to the prom when you know you are going to wind up going with Suzy next door anyway. You might as well cut to the chase and save yourself the time, expense, and effort.
That being said, one size never fits all. Determine what criteria above fit your situation and act accordingly!
Brett Furniss is the President & Owner of BDF Realty (“Charlotte’s Most Innovative Property Management & Investment Company”), and Rent-To-Sell Realty (“When You Need a New Solution to Sell Your Home”) which specialize in rent-to-own (lease options) and rent-to-sell homes. His newest book, A Real Estate Agent’s Complete Guide to Representing Rent-To-Own (Lease Option) Tenants (Delight Clients, Fill Vacant Homes, and Earn $2,250* Upfront! (*Minimum!)
Learn MoreCharlotte Property Management Weekly: Mr. Smith’s Appointment Implies Real Estate’s Future is in Rent-To-Own & Rent-To-Sell
“Since they collapsed into conservatorship in September 2008, Fannie and Freddie have received $151 billion in taxpayer assistance. More will certainly be needed.”
“If this Mr. Smith goes to Washington as head of FHFA (Federal Housing Finance Agency), he will face a monumental challenge at a crucial time: how to protect taxpayers from even greater losses incurred by Fannie and Freddie.”
(Gretchen Morgenson in this week’s NY Times)
So, it looks like NC’s own Joseph Smith, Jr. will be tapped to run the FHFA. Big deal! Somebody’s got to do it, right? And when you’re looking for employment, the government seems to be the only people hiring, so it’s a logical step for him.
Who is this guy? I really have no idea. He’s been in the papers recently due to this appointment; all of the articles about him say that he has a reputation as “friend and rugged defender of the taxpayer.” I pay taxes so that sounds okay to me.
He is taking over an agency that is losing roughly $6B A MONTH over the past 27 months! Obviously, this agency has to be part of the government because after the first $18B loss quarter (or $72B loss year), it would be tough to keep his job in the private sector.
Anyway, what does his appointment mean? Let’s play his first day on the job out.
The first thing Mr. Smith does on his first day of work is ask his new secretary where the bathroom is and how many vacation days he has a year (everyone knows you can’t ask this in the interview!). The second thing he does is call his top guys and ask them how the heck they are losing so much taxpayer money. Their answers probably can be succinctly summarized into one statement, “We guaranteed a lot of bad loans to people who were not qualified enough to have them.”
Mr. Smith rubs his chin and says, “So, going forward, we should probably start only guaranteeing loans to more qualified people, right?” As his top lieutenants vigorously nod ascent and genuflect, he dismisses them from the room. “Sorry fellas, gotta go. It’s time for me to take it street-side and hug some oppressed taxpayers.”
His lieutenants quickly gather and surmise that “more qualified” probably means that Mr. Smith is saying FHFA needs to require “higher credit scores and down payments for loan applicants.” They pat themselves on the back for this revelation and scan the Washington Post to see what new DC restaurants would be good for lunch.
Back on Main Street, “more qualified” means a lot more people won’t be able to get loans to buy homes. It also means that a lot more people won’t be able to sell their homes (it takes two to tango, right?). And, furthermore, it means that real estate agents need to get used to doing even less brokerage business.
So all real estate agents need to pick up their equipment and go home? Hardly! Consumers still need to be able to transact real estate; the last time I checked, people are still marrying, divorcing, transferring, investing, having kids, sending kids into the real world, etc. They need to be able to acquire and dispose of homes.
The opportunity for real estate agents in the next few years will be placing potential buyers (who can’t get a loan now) into homes they will buy when they qualify for one; this means setting up rent-to-own (aka lease option or lease purchase) transactions. On the same token, it means opening up listings of vacant homes to rent-to-own tenants (also known as “rent-to-sell”).
Mr. Smith will be doing everything he can to stem massive loan losses. He is implicitly communicating to the real estate community that rent-to-own and rent-to-sell transactions will be the way to help customers achieve their goals over the next few years.
Will you change your business accordingly?
Brett Furniss is the President & Owner of BDF Realty (“Charlotte’s Most Innovative Property Management & Investment Company”), and Rent-To-Sell Realty (“When You Need a New Solution to Sell Your Home”) which specialize in rent-to-own (lease options) and rent-to-sell homes. His newest book, A Real Estate Agent’s Complete Guide to Representing Rent-To-Own (Lease Option) Tenants (Delight Clients, Fill Vacant Homes, and Earn $2,250* Upfront! (*Minimum!)
Learn MoreCharlotte Property Management Weekly: Do You Want Rent-To-Own With That Rental Home? CAN YOU AFFORD TO MISS OUT?
Oh, the joy of the successful up-sell! Ask a simple question many times to many customers and make a ton more money! This is what all corporations pine for:
- McDonalds: “Do you want fries with that?”
- Amazon: “7 more dollars and get FREE shipping!”
- Dominos: “Order 2 pizzas at regular price and get free cheesy bread!”
Mix in a little doubt from a good salesperson and if gets even better!
- Meineke: “Sure, you could wait to replace your brake pads for another few months, BUT IS YOUR FAMILY’S WELL-BEING WORTH TAKING THAT CHANCE?”
- Bank of America: “Sure the market has been awful. But with your money sitting on the sidelines, COULD YOU STOMACH MISSING OUT ON THE BIGGEST STOCK MARKET JUMP IN HISTORY?”
- John’s Learning Center: “Yes, your child is doing well in school and is up to his grade’s reading level now. BUT WITH GLOBAL COMPETITION FROM INDIAN AND CHINESE CHILDREN, SHOULDN’T YOU BE ADDING TUTORING HOURS FOR LITTLE JIMMY INSTEAD OF SCALING BACK?”
The same tactics can be utilized in the rental home space.
You can up-sell your renter with: “Is this a house you might want to buy in the future? Do you want to lock into a rent-to-own arrangement and start building equity now?”
And then add a little doubt with: “Yes, it will be tough getting a loan in the next year or two, but what about after that? DO YOU WANT TO MISS OUT ON BUILDING UP A DOWNPAYMENT AND CLOSING COSTS NOW VERSUS THROWING YOUR MONEY AWAY JUST RENTING FOR THE NEXT TWO YEARS?”
“Up-selling” and “creating doubt” are not dirty sales terms; they are the backbone of successfully providing customers with the options they need to fulfill their personal goals. Ever been happy about being up-sold (like when the waiter in Paris told you to try their delicious signature dessert?)? Or happy about someone planting a seed of doubt (“You may want to re-think buying that computer. It graded really poorly in “Consumer Reports.”)?
Let’s look at the facts:
Many people want to rent, but even more people want to own! The banks just aren’t cooperating for most people currently.
And most property owners in this economic environment, who are renting out their homes, are open to selling them; at least that is what the feedback I’ve been getting from clients. I mean who couldn’t use a little more liquidity these days?
Up-selling and casting doubt on the customer’s current situation creates value, rather than detracts from it. And when more value is created, more revenue can be earned!
YOU WOULDN’T WANT TO MISS OUT ON MAKING MORE MONEY HELPING YOUR CUSTOMERS MORE, WOULD YOU?
Brett Furniss is the President & Owner of BDF Realty (“Charlotte’s Most Innovative Property Management & Investment Company”), and Rent-To-Sell Realty (“When You Need a New Solution to Sell Your Home”) which specialize in rent-to-own (lease options) and rent-to-sell homes. His newest book, A Real Estate Agent’s Complete Guide to Representing Rent-To-Own (Lease Option) Tenants (Delight Clients, Fill Vacant Homes, and Earn $2,250* Upfront! (*Minimum!)
Learn MoreCharlotte Property Management Weekly: Are You Practicing Insanity with your Home for Sale?
The definition of insanity is to do the same things over and over again and expect a different result. Is this what is happening with all the vacant homes still being listed for sale (that shouldn’t be)?
Learn MoreCharlotte Property Management Weekly: What’s the Difference Between “Rent-To-Own” and “Rent-To-Sell”?
Another popular question I hear from prospective clients is:
PC: “What’s the difference between rent-to-own and rent-to-sell?”
Us: “There is none!”
Learn MoreCharlotte Property Management Weekly: Better to Rent or List Your Home for Sale? 3 Question Litmus Test
This seems to be a FAQ these days. As a property manager in Charlotte, we get many calls from people asking themselves this question.
I didn’t think there was a one-size-fits-all answer to this, but I was corrected. It just seems to come down to who you ask.
Learn More