Buying and selling real estate is one way to guarantee an interesting business career but it is not without its drawbacks. One of those drawbacks, the significant risk factor, is part of what makes it interesting. But if you can play the game well, you need never become one of the many people who falls under the intense pressure of trying to turn a profit. Sometimes, real estate is as much about trying to find the smallest loss on a deal when the avenues of profit and breaking even are closed off to you.
Whenever you buy a property with the intention of increasing its resale value, you do it with some amount of optimism. The mere thought of If I can get this work done, source the materials and get it to market on time and on budget, then I will make a profit, leaves open three ways that things can go wrong. Maybe the work will not get done as well or as quickly as you had hoped. Maybe the materials will prove harder to source than you had planned for, and as for the schedule well, unforeseen circumstances make fools of us all.
The fact is that sometimes, despite your best efforts, you will see your intended profit begin to shrink and sometimes, it will disappear altogether. It is at this point that you will be tempted to bring everything to a sharp conclusion and just sell for whatever someone will give you. This is a big mistake. If you hold on and set a new, realistic deadline and price you can at least cut your losses, and maybe live to develop again.… [Read More]
Buying real estate is always loaded with questions and variables, and it takes a confident and decisive individual to get it right and make a profit. It can be an even more vexed question for those who are looking to buy commercial real estate. When you are buying and selling a house, the important issue is that you do enough to the property in order to turn a one-time profit. Buying a commercial property is another issue entirely, as you need to ensure a lifelong commercial viability.
There is a Latin phrase caveat emptor which essentially, in English, means buyer beware. The message intended in those two words is that anyone purchasing the item so labelled needs to be careful. The price may look like a steal, but ask yourself before you go any further who is doing the stealing, and who is being stolen from? You may well find that if a deal looks too good to be true, the reason for that may be that it is far too good to be true.
When investing in property, if your goal is to make a profit you have to take into account what kind of profit you want to make. Some people will say that it is easy to make a profit, if by profit you mean a small one. Buying a house cheap, and doing the minimum necessary to renovate it, may well see you make some money on the deal because you have taken a house in disrepair and sold it in a liveable condition. However, there is always the danger that you will find more that is wrong with the house the longer you work on it.
One problem that seems to arise more than almost any other when people try their hand at real estate development is a kind of tunnel vision. This happens when people buy a house with the intention of carrying out work on it, and decide that there is only one way to go with that work theyre going to make the house irresistible to buyers. Having only their own opinion of what constitutes irresistible to go on, they make the mistake of designing the renovation to look like their own dream home.
When someone tells you that there is good money in real estate, they are not going to be telling you anything new. We all know that there is profit to be made there, and no-one will get any medals for breaking the stunning news that it can be a lot of money. What we need to be careful with is when someone describes something as a cant miss prospect. There is no such thing in real estate, and claiming that there is will show someone to be a fantasist.