How To Buy Foreclosed Property - YouTube

Channel: Kris Krohn

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What's up friend? Kris Krohn here. And today we're talking about purchasing
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foreclosed properties. I have had some amazing experiences with buying
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foreclosed properties. And I've also had a couple of bad ones as well. So today,
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I'm just going to let it all hang out I'm gonna share it with you and share with
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you your first steps on how to get your hands on a sweet deal.
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So, at the end of this video, I'm actually going to give you my favorite tool for
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how I get my hands on the best for close deals in my backyard and in other places
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around the country. But before I do that, let's just kind of get basic for a
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moment. What is a foreclosure? Foreclosure is basically when someone had bought a
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house, they put a down payment. And they had a 30 year or 15 year long mortgage
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with the bank. And so every month, they should have been making payments to the
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bank. But something happened in their life where they stopped making those
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payments. And banks can be ruthless and unforgiving. Because they've got all this
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money hanging out there. And so if you go long enough without making payments,
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banks will basically say, "Hey, we actually have the legal right to foreclose on you."
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And that means that we're taking the property back. So by the way, if you paid
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the property half down, you're out of luck. We actually get all of the benefits
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that might be left in this or we're screwed with whatever town said we're
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going to pick up. And bottom line is a foreclosure is when a property goes back
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to the bank, the bank is licking its wounds like a kitty cat and is now
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saying, "I got to find a way to now offload this home to somebody else." Banks want to
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get their money. And they know they're not always going to win. They're not
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always the most intelligent how they get rid of these things. And the reason why
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foreclosure is such a buzzword is because often banks will offload a house
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at a big discount just to get it off the books because it's a bad debt that is
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hampering and hurting the ratios on their ability to lend and make money. So,
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if they got a bad deal, they want to toss it to somebody else and that makes an
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opportunity for guys like you and I. One of the first foreclosed properties I
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ever bought turned into like a massive nightmare. I was probably 6 or 7
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deals into my brand-new investing career. And I had bought this house for like
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$297,000. That I believed was worth closer
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to 400 grand. And actually at the time I thought, "I'm going to buy this,
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I'm going to flip it and I'm going to make $100,000. When I bought
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this property, it didn't need a lot of repair but it had actually... It wasn't
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foreclosure. So when I bought it, I thought, "Man, I'm getting a good deal on
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this." But I actually listed it on the market tried to sell it for months. And
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no one would buy it 400,000. So, then I lowered it to 370. No
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one wanted to buy it a 370. Then I lowered it to 350. No one wanted to buy
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it at 350. I lowered it all the way down to $302,000.
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And by the time I sold it, after my closing costs, I actually lost money.
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And I asked myself, "Why did that happen?" I developed a ruefulness. And my rule is
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don't buy properties over the median. Like in your area, there is an average
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level at which people buy homes. And I'm not going to talk about the difference
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between average and median. Let's just actually go with this very basic math.
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Nationwide, the median right now is around $220,000.
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That means that under 220,000 between 180
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and 220 thousand, it represents the most people that want to buy property. But
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when you go over the median, let's call it a $300,000 home like I bought, all of
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a sudden, the number of people that can buy that is much smaller. Take it to the
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extreme. A 10-million dollar home. How many people are in the market for 10
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million dollar home? Like all the sudden you can start counting on fingers. It's
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not in swaths of thousands or tens of thousands of people like there are
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underneath the median. So, that was a lesson that I learned from an awesome
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epic fail. Fortunately, I learned my lessons and I've done a lot of things
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right since then. One of them one of the other foreclosures that I bought was
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this 97,000-dollar home. And the bank had listed it for like 6
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months. And when I actually won the bid on this and it actually bought this
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house, I put about $15,000 work in it. But then I leased it out, I had a killer cash
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flow because when you buy something that far underneath the median, you're going to
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get your highest percentage of cash flow. And so it was a 3-bedroom, 1-bath. Very
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basic house. Kind of old. Built in the 50's. Down by the railroad tracks. Not even the
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nicest part of town. But I eventually, sold that house for
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$180,000. And you know what? I made a sick return on it. So, there
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is a place for foreclosures. They can be done the right way. I've shared with you
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one of my rules. I'm going to share another one right now. I prefer a lease option to
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flipping any day of the week. Putting pressure on a property to have to be
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sold in a short period of time, means that things don't always work out
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the way that you want. If you're going to do a foreclosure, you need to have a way of
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actually verifying the equity that is in it. Which means you've got to get a good
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deal on it. Just because it's a foreclosure, doesn't mean you're getting
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a good deal. You should talk to a realtor and have them perform a CMA --comparable
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market analysis to say, "Hey, the bank is offering it for me at this price. And we
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think it's worth that price." And you need a standard. How much equity do you want
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if you're buying a foreclosure? Because sometimes in hot markets, homes will
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actually sell at or in some weird times even above what they're actually worth.
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You want to make sure that you're locking in the equity that you want. I
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utilize a tool that makes finding properties really easy. In the olden days,
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I would actually contact Realtors and title companies and get a list of
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properties that were foreclosed. But today's technology has changed the game
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and actually makes it super, super simple. I use a tool called propStream. They are
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the world's largest aggregator of public available information. So, when something
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goes to foreclosure, they know about it. If there's a tax lien, they know about it.
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If someone skips a payment, they know about it. If it's listed on the market,
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they know about it. Basically they keep track of and record on every single
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property possible that is in your market place. And what's really cool is that
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they actually provide a service where you pay a small fee a month and you get
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access to everything. Literally you sign up and within minutes, they'll actually
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show you how to actually find all the foreclosures and all the really good
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deals so you can get yourself a really good deal. And the system will also show
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you how to find the people with money that will buy them with you. Which means
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that anybody can go and actually make deals happen regardless of whether you
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got good credit or bad credit lots of money no money. It's actually a very cool
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system. If you click the link below, because I've sent enough people their
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way. PropStream now is actually doing a five day free trial. In 5 days is
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enough for you to make magic happen. It's a tool you're going to want to have
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for life if you're serious about real estate. Because you always want to have
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all the real estate at your fingertips. So, click the link below, get a 5-day free
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trial. And then beyond that, there's a small monthly fee that's a lot less than
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you can get it anywhere else online. Because I am Who I am and I'm one of
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their spokespersons. Because I love investing. I've done deals with PropStream.
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And bottom line is it works really, really well. Boom! Thank you so much for
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watching today's video. Check it out. Subscribe and get a hold of every single
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video. Because I'm either going to teach you the financial psychology of success in
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the game of real estate business in life. Or I'm actually going to be showing you
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very specific techniques tips and tricks that I'm using for crushing it in the
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game of real estate like I have on my last 4,000 deals. So friends, subscribe.
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And if you're ready to take action and want a free tool today to help you find
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really good deals like foreclosures, click the link below. Sign up. It's yours.