Investing in Foreclosures with Your Self-Directed IRA

by Self Directed IRA Advisor

Did you know that you can maximize your Self-Directed IRA LLC / Checkbook IRA Account funds by investing in foreclosures? If you have money sitting in your account, you could be missing out on one of the best returns you can get on your money - investing in foreclosures. Why is now a good time to invest in foreclosures. Actually, there are three reasons.

Self-Directed IRA LLC / Checkbook IRA: 3 Reasons to Invest in Foreclosures Now

Prices are Low Now: Every real estate investor will tell you that to make money investing in foreclosures, you need to find good deals. What is defined as a “good deal?” A simplistic answer is a good deal is one where you make money. Making money in real estate is all about equity; buying homes that have equity.

Why are so many foreclosures happening right now? Actually, two reasons: a recession and adjustable rate mortgages (ARMs). As ARMs adjust up and more people lose their jobs, more lose their homes. This makes homeowners and/or banks more negotiable on price.

Banks Don’t Want to Be Landlords: Piggybacking off the aforementioned point, banks don’t want to be landlords or property managers. As the market is flooded with more and more properties, banks are trying to sell them off as fast as they can.

Because they usually wind up losing money - in two different ways. First, there’s nobody paying the mortgage when house is sitting empty. This cost banks. Secondly, when a house is in foreclosure, the bank is responsible for keeping it up until it sells. This means hiring contractors to mow the lawn, fix broken windows, clean up and haul away traffic from previous owners, etc. So, they’re quite eager to sell, sell, sell.

Long-Term Gain: Just like in the stock market, investing is a patient person’s game. If you use funds from your Self-Directed IRA LLC account to invest in foreclosures now, when the market is hot again, you’ll be perfectly positioned to reap the gains.

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This entry was posted on Wednesday, June 25th, 2008 and is filed under Finance. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.

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