Audio
Intro
Comprehensive guidance and numerous forms for real estate investors.
Covers various investment strategies, including wholesaling, retailing, seller financing, and lease options, detailing the agreements and procedures involved in each.
Specific forms like
- purchase and sale agreements,
- land trust agreements, and
- partnership agreements
- along with instructions for their use and negotiation tactics.
Addresses risk mitigation and legal compliance, emphasizing protection of investors’ interests.
Includes a quiz to test knowledge of the material.
Glossary of Key Terms
- Agreement for Deed: A form of seller financing where the buyer makes payments to the seller but does not receive the deed until the full purchase price is paid.
- Beneficiary (Land Trust): The individual or entity that benefits from the land trust and has the power to direct the trustee.
- Binder Deposit: A sum of money given by the buyer to the seller to show serious intent to purchase a property.
- Double Closing: A transaction where a property is bought and then immediately resold to a different buyer by the same individual.
- Due-On-Sale Clause: A clause in a mortgage that requires the full loan balance to be paid when the property is sold or transferred.
- FNMA: Federal National Mortgage Association (Fannie Mae), a government-sponsored enterprise that buys mortgages on the secondary market.
- Garn St. Germain Act: A federal law that exempts certain property transfers into inter-vivos trusts from triggering due-on-sale clauses.
- Inter Vivos Trust: A trust created during the grantor’s lifetime, as opposed to a testamentary trust that is created after death.
- Land Trust: A legal arrangement where a trustee holds title to a property for the benefit of a beneficiary.
- Lease Option: A legal arrangement that allows the tenant/buyer to lease a property with the option to purchase it at a later date.
- Limited Power of Attorney: This document grants someone the legal authority to act on behalf of another person in specific real estate matters.
- Memorandum and Notice of Agreement: A document that is recorded to put a cloud on a title, preventing the property owner from selling to another party.
- Option Fee: A non-refundable payment made by a potential buyer to secure the right to purchase a property at a later time.
- Proof of Funds: Documentation showing that a buyer has the necessary financial resources to close a real estate transaction.
- Quit Claim Deed: A legal document used to transfer real estate ownership from the grantor to the grantee, often within trusts.
- Sandwich Lease Option: A real estate strategy in which an investor leases a property with the option to buy, and then subleases the property with an option to a tenant-buyer.
- Seasoning of Title: The length of time a seller has owned a property. Banks often prefer borrowers with a longer ownership history.
- Seller Financing: A situation where the seller provides financing for the purchase of their property instead of a traditional lender.
- Short Sale: The sale of a property for less than what is owed on the mortgage, with the lender’s approval.
- Subject To: A real estate purchase strategy that transfers the deed to the buyer while the original loan remains in the seller’s name.
- Trustee (Land Trust): The individual or entity that holds legal title to the property in a land trust and acts under the direction of the beneficiary.
- Weasel Clause: Contingencies in an agreement that allows a buyer to back out of a deal for reasons that are vague or subjective.
- Wrap Around Mortgage: A new second mortgage issued when an existing loan remains in place.
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