Will investors become non-profits?
Tuesday, October 21st, 2008After the housing market crashed, we are now in a period of pointing fingers in order to assign blame. Was it the homeowner’s fault for overstretching his / her abilities? Was it the mortgage banker who made loans that he / she shouldn’t have? Was it the guy on Wall St. who repackaged the bad loans into derivatives that no one could understand? Or was it the investor who rushed into areas like Florida, Nevada and California, flipping houses, banking on price appreciation going up and up, while running up the prices and making real estate unaffordable for homeowners and other investors, and thus forcing them into these exotic loans? Methinks that all of these are the root cause. We all collectively did our part. And some are guiltier than others. But we needed to educated ourselves a bit more, and anticipate these results, including the homeowner.
What concerns me is that our media, which is always overzealous to skew public opinion, places the blame on some parties more than others. And lawmakers have to respond, as their constituents beat themselves into a frenzy. Yet the Wall Street guys get a bailout package, and homeowners don’t get a whole lot of anything. And some states are now passing laws that make it illegal for investors to rescue homeowners in default. For example, New Jersey is looking to pass such a law now. According to the proposed law, it is illegal for anyone other than a nonprofit organization to counsel a homeowner and negotiate for a short sale with a bank. This is just stupid. Homeowners need all the help they can get, in order to get up from under these loans and resetting ARMs. Banks are overwelmed with shortsales and other workouts, and things are slipping through the cracks. Investors who are skilled with foreclosures and short sales are in a unique position to help the homeowner and the bank to deal with this overwhelming situation. Not all investors are honorable, of course. While many investors craft a true win-win all around, some “investors” are true scammers (I put “investors” in quotations, because they are not investing, but rather conning people out of their mone). And now these bad apples, who are in a minority, are screwing it up for everyone els, because for an inexperienced homeowner, it’s hard to tell if the investor is a good guy or a bad one.
But the investors who will survive the real estate calamity of 2008-2009 are a creative bunch. They are setting up non-profits or aligning themselves with non-profits, to help them carry out these deals. Good for them! If an investor can craft a deal that gets the homeowner out of foreclosure without messing up their credit, while keeping the bank from having to take back the house that they don’t know what to do with, there is no reason why this investor shouldn’t profit. Remember, you will always get paid in accordance with the value that you produce.


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