Monday, January 25, 2010
Beware 'free' real estate seminars
January, 2010
Mark Weisleder
Special to the Star
How many times have you seen late-night infomercials or advertisements inviting you
to a seminar on how you can become a millionaire by buying real estate with no money
down, even if you have a poor credit history? As with most get-rich-quick schemes,
there is an old saying, "If it seems too good to be true, it is."
Becoming a real estate investor is not easy. It involves careful study as well as being surrounded by a team of professionals to assist with properly evaluating, negotiating, financing and managing your investment. Even with all of this, some very experienced investors have also suffered losses or even bankruptcies when the market unexpectedly turns, as we saw in the last four months of 2008.
Typically, what these no-money down programs attempt, in a two-hour "free"
presentation, is to convince you to attend a three-day workshop in which you'll learn
the "secrets" to become an instant real estate entrepreneur. You are then invited to pay several thousand dollars to attend this seminar, with a promise that you'll make tens of thousands of dollars within 30 to 60 days of completing the program.
Here are some of the methods used to entice you to attend the three-day seminars:
The instructor will usually spend time telling you about all the vacations he is taking now that he is financially secure, and that he has personally purchased several hundred properties in your area using this system.
The main principle is that the seminar will help you find properties in distress that no one knows about where the owners owe more on their mortgage than they can afford.
You will learn how to place advertising in key real estate magazines to help you find
these owners who are in distress.
You will then receive at least 50 to 100 calls from sellers in trouble, either through job loss, marriage breakdown or a death in the family.
These homeowners will be very happy to give you their property if you take over their
mortgage payments, so they can avoid having their credit score ruined for the next 10
years.
Even if you have bad credit, you will still be able to take over an owner's mortgage
without getting approval from the owner's bank.
They will provide you with lenders who will lend you money at high interest rates for a short period of time – usually 30 to 60 days, which is okay because in two months you can re-sell your property and make your first profit.
They have a database of properties in your area that are in a category called "preforeclosure," where the bank is about to take over.
Notice the phrase "pre-foreclosure." That's a term rarely used in Canada, but it's
common in the U.S. Many other principles in these seminars are taken from similar U.S. seminars that have little or no application in Canada.
In Canada, most banks use the power of sale remedy if a mortgage goes into default;
they typically do not use the foreclosure remedy because it takes too long. And we are not experiencing the real-estate meltdowns people are facing in the U.S., because most lenders in Canada have been more responsible than lenders in the U.S.
More than 15 years ago some trust-company mortgages allowed buyers to take over a
mortgage without bank approval, but it's very unlikely you'll find one of those
mortgages today.
In Canada, most lenders will not give you money, even at high interest rates, unless
you can demonstrate you have some equity in the property. So why would owners in
this situation not just sell their properties themselves to pay off their mortgages?
I invite readers to share with me any of their own experiences attending these
seminars.
Remember, if it seems too good to be true, it is.
Email: mark@markweisleder.com. Website: www.markweisleder.com. Mark Weisleder is a
lawyer, author and public speaker for the real estate industry and a regular contributor
to Real Estate News.
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