Showing posts with label Commercial Short Sale Lions and Cheetahs and hippos oh my. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Commercial Short Sale Lions and Cheetahs and hippos oh my. Show all posts

Tuesday, June 22, 2010

COMMERICAL SHORT SALES AND THE MARKET OPPORTUNITIES_Short Sale Pro




 

 

YOUR FIRST STEP TO

SHORT SALE WEALTH

http://www.mortgagemod101.com/r426463

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read my comment at 

the bottom of this article.


Will Mark-to-Market Finally Push Distress?

Last Updated: June 22, 2010 02:07pm ET
Welcome to the new face of real estate distress: after a deep recession, with the pain particularly acute in commercial real estate, there are still few viable distressed properties or notes available for sale. In short, the deals that are being done now entail investors, such as DiamondRock, chasing after defaulted borrowers to offer capital solutions.

The pickings are so slim that many investors who had originally thought they would pursue distressed opportunities are beginning to bow out, says Gary Eisenberg, a partner with Herrick, Feinstein. “Potential bidders would underwrite conservative offers and then find themselves losing by an order of magnitude,” he tells GlobeSt.com. ”There is always someone willing to pay more, it seems.”

There are a number of reasons behind this situation, starting with government policies put into place to combat the recession, explains Bruce Prigoff, Partner with Cox Castle & Nicholson. The Troubled Asset Relief Program, for instance, propped up the banks so they could continue to exist without mass closures. Also, the FDIC has placed great emphasis in selling assets through a structured transaction format in which the agency retains a majority of the ownership interests in the loans of failed institutions, coupled with substantial ultra-cheap FDIC guaranteed financing to the venture that acquires the loans in partnership with the FDIC.

Those two developments are unlikely to shift in the foreseeable future. However, a third factor— bank loan accounting rules—will change.

At the start of the crisis, loan accounting rules were changed to permit banks to carve off portions of loans in an A/B Note restructure so that the portion of the loan that could be supported by current cash flow and was not too far under water from a valuation standpoint could be held by the bank as a modified performing loan, Prigoff explains. “This allowed the banks to retain large portions of their portfolios that otherwise would have been classified as nonperforming,” he says.

Now, the Financial Accounting Standards Board is proposing a change to the accounting standards that required banks to book loans at their current market value. The rules are not an immediate panacea—they won’t go into effect until 2013 for the largest banks and 2017 for smaller institutions.

But will their eventual arrival finally lead to the traditional or typical—or, at least, market-priced—distressed deals that opportunistic investors had originally been expecting? Don’t hold your breath, Prigoff advises. “The forces weighing against clearing the cloud over the real estate market through mark-to-market accounting remain very strong…regulatory pressure to move assets of the books of the banks is rumored from time to time, but is not having great effect at this time.”

The concept that the overall economy is going to improve sufficiently to outrun the collapse in the real estate markets and allow the US government and banks to avoid massive losses is the real problem, he says. “Also, continuing to hold most of the real estate loans on the books of institutions with a low cost of capital is designed to minimize the losses that would be incurred if the assets were shifted to investors that have a high cost of capital and high yield expectations. In a market where new financing for real estate assets is scarce, the cost of capital rises dramatically when an asset is moved off a bank’s books into the hands of a third party opportunistic investor, absent bank seller subsidized financing of the purchase. Accordingly, I do not anticipate a major change in US government policy that would bring large numbers of assets to market at this time.”

Integra Realty Resources’ president and COO, Jeffrey Rogers, says more patience is required on the part of distressed investors, some of which are beginning to disband funds set up for this purpose. “Memories tend to be short, but those of us who were around during the RTC days remember that the distressed assets did not begin to flow immediately. There was a process and it took years. This real estate downturn is different in many respects, but it still takes time before distressed assets are flushed through the system,” he tells GlobeSt.com.

He also doesn’t think a change in mark-to-market accounting regulations will have much impact. “First, the proposed rules regulate when a financial institution has to recognize a loss on a loan asset. The institution is not force to sell the asset because it has lost value,” Rogers explains. “Financial institutions could still decide to keep the loans until they increase in value. They will certainly choose this option if the borrower is covering debt service.”

Comments


Posted by shortsaleprollc
Great insightful article. I have seen this trend, by my short sale
competitors which really are of no concern to us as our intention
is always to become the competition, not worry about it.

What this article tells me is it's time now for those of us that
chose to remain in these markets, which we sure in heck
intend to, is to start being surgeons instead of Mash units.
Earl Allen Boek Guild to Short Sale Wealth West Coast
530-549-4476

I intend to raise a couple of hundred million for this effort.
We have already enjoyed some success in this field and
cannot wait to become a real factor in the short sale arena.
June 22, 2010 at 09:13 AM EDT

Thanks For The Visit.  We are looking for agents 50 states
To join us, learn short sales and commercial financing,
help us find and turn over your commercial short sales
to our experienced team of attorney and Phd economist.
just click here and join, no cost or information. Once
you do you'll be given further information on getting
started in your back office. We will be in contact if and
when you get that far.  Earl Allen Boek

http://www.mortgagemod101.com/r426463




Wednesday, April 28, 2010

Commercial Real Estate Investing…Are you a Lion, Cheetah, or Hippo?

Copyright 2010 By Earl Allen Boek  All Rights Reserved
Commercial Real Estate Investing…Are you a Lion, Cheetah, or Hippo?

Last night I watched a very disturbing video on National Geographic
Channel. 

It was so horrible to watch,  there should have been a warning issued
in advance of the showing.   My description of it should be enough
warning to you, not to even look for it on the web,  unless you too,
want to replay those visions over and over in your mind like I’m doing…
even as I write this down.

It was a home movie filmed by tourist somewhere in Africa and it starts
 with a viewing of a pride of lions.  I would say nearly a dozen, then it
zooms in on a mother hippo and it’s baby hippo, tagging along beside
it.

The mother hippo seems in shock and a closer view shows it has been
attacked repeatedly along It’s back and spinal area as it is covered in
blood with chunks missing from it, including the area on it’s blooding
rump behind and underneath it’s tail. The mother hippo appears to be
roaming aimlessly, almost stumbling as it goes. The baby hippo beside
her,  does not even appear to have a mark on it, yet.

Another  closer pan to the pride of lions shows their obvious interest
in the pair of hippos and you realize they are no doubt responsible in
someway for the plight and the shape we find the mother hippo in. 
Luckily for us we are spared the filming of what must have been hours
of multiple attacks and escapes by the mother hippo and it’s young
through the night.  This is confirmed for you as several of the lions get
up from the dirt and  begin stalking the hippos again, then finally
the entire pride joins in the stockings.

Quickly but carefully and mindfully avoiding the huge, hippo
mother’s teeth she flashes and bites out at each attacker,  but the
lions easily jump and avoid any damage to themselves and there
are far too many of them for her to concentrate on anyone of
them for long anyway.  They continue to bite what must be
huge mouthfuls out of the hippo’s  back as they try to destroy
her spinal column  in an attempt to bring the large animal to
the ground, even as she reacts, she still has the presence of
mind, or just in breaded nature, to keep her own body between
the loin attacks and her much smaller hippo baby.

Either one of the hippos might have been able to escape the
lions as the lions concentrate on the other, but neither would
leave the other alone.  It becomes more heart-wrenching to
watch as the mother finally gives up, her huge weight
slamming into the dusty earth,  and then to watch her baby
drop it’s head like a small bull and tries to fend off one of it’s
mother’s attackers, as she lies helpless under the combined
weight of several of the large animals.  The cowardly lion is
actually afraid and jumps away from the baby hippo’s attack
until the little hippo turns it’s attention back to it’s
mother than the coward lion returns and jumps on the baby’s
back from behind it.

Sobs from the tourist and screams from the animals and
gasps from those filming are recorded right along with the
video, as the baby hippos is filmed going down while
attempting to defend it’s mother’s life, finally,  the screen
goes blank.   I’m setting there in shock from what I’ve just
viewed.


Our cameraman then comes on  and tells us all the cameras
on the tour vehicle were shut off voluntarily, at that point,
as it was too horrible to even continue to film the remaining
drama, with all the horrible screams from the baby hippo
And the entire tour group, many crying and in tears,  and
watching the horrible spectacle play out.

Another short video on the same program shows a similar
attack by a smaller group of lions against a cheetah.  The
cheetah, immediately fell on it’s back to protect it’s spine,
as it fought multiple attacks by the lions at once, using
all four of it’s claws and teeth in the process.  Finally the
cheetah, about 1/3rd the size of any of the lion attackers,
actually bit into the lead lion’s face and locked on it with
it’s powerful jaws.  That lion was happy to release and
stop it’s attack at that point, as did the other lions and
the cheetah was finally able to escape, what at first
appeared to be sudden death. The lion stood there with
blood rushing down it's face and chin and a look like
"what the hell just happened here."

Switch To Our Commercial Short Sale Serengeti

 Then it hit me, being in the commercial real estate business
I am meeting “would be, but won’t be associates, who
behave a lot like members of this pride of lions. 

This new breed of businessman (and maybe women too)
the lazy, self indulgent, pride-full, full of themselves,
over confident and under talented, for sure,  in
communication and interpersonal management and sales
skills, lacking I’m sure in other areas as well, which I
refuse to explore in more detail, greedy, pack mentality,
dishonest, bull shitting, selfish,  cowards. (I  reserve the
right to expand on these ideas later.)

Frankly, attempting to work with these “self-proclaimed
lions”  of the RE industry is quickly becoming boring
and rather distasteful to me. Thanks to God I only need
a few good deals to succeed in this business and I'm
not in such a big hurry that I cannot treat my customer,
my associates with a little dignity, class and respect.

I would rather hang out with the cheetahs and work
with the hippos. Let the lions all fight over
their next meal, I don't intend to be it.  Smile.

So the next time Mr. Lion, you check your way too
full plate, notice I'm no longer on your menu.


Thank you. EAB