International Real Estate
Investing Profits
How To Pocket Global Real Estate Investment Profits In The Current Climate
June 25, 2009
Panama City, Panama
PLUS:
- Some Places You Just Don't
Connect With Even When You Really Want To...
- Top Mountain Retirement
Choices In Panama...
AND:
- "All I Needed Was Someone
To Provide Information On What It Is Really Like To Live In A
Foreign Country...Thank You For That!"...
---------- A
Rolls-Royce Lifestyle on a Dodge Dart Budget
Retire in Style
Overseas...and live better than you do now...for as little as $694 a month.
"Beachfront hideaway...elegant, big-city apartment...hillside
vineyard... In the States, it’s only hedge fund managers and their cronies
who can afford an elite retirement like that.
"But overseas today,
you can...and on a middle-class budget. More than 441,000 retirees are
already living well around the world.
I’d like to show you how to join them..."
----------
Dear
Overseas Opportunity Letter Reader,
"It seems the whole world is
watching and waiting for the 'best' deal before making a real estate buy
right now," writes resident global real estate investing expert Lief Simon.
"With few exceptions, global real estate markets have slowed or
stalled. The speculators are mostly out of the game. Investors and the
end-users (people looking to buy a place to live) are in the market but
moving slowly. They are shopping, circling like sharks in some cases,
waiting out the sellers. They're watching for absolute collapse.
"This is all healthy and part of the long-term cycles of global property
markets. The trick is not to wait so long that you miss out altogether.
"A reader wrote this week to say that he likes Uruguay. He's been
shopping in this country for four years and knows it well. It's a buyer's
market right now, he explains. Great deals everywhere for the picking. Still
he isn't buying. Still he's watching.
"I met another reader years ago
at a conference in the Dominican Republic. He was very upbeat on the real
estate market potential of that country. He'd been researching the
opportunities for two years, but he hadn't yet made a move. He was waiting
for 'the' deal and was paralyzed by the fear of making a move only to have
another, better buy surface later. As we got to know each other better over
the course of the conference, it came out that, before the Dominican
Republic, he had been looking in Costa Rica. After four years of research on
the ground in that country, he'd finally decided that the market had passed
him by. Prices had risen too far.
"In both cases, had this reader
bought something within the first months of his research, he could have been
in and out, bought and sold, and realized healthy profits, in less time than
he ultimately invested in research. In the two years from the time when the
gentleman had begun scouting the Dominican Republic and our meeting, the
market had risen 20% to 25% a year. He had, in fact, arrived in the country
precisely at the beginning of a boom cycle, but he'd missed out entirely
because he wanted the best deal.
"It's going to be a while
before most real estate markets see anything like 20% to 25% annual
appreciation across the board again. That does not mean this is not a time
to buy. Many good deals are currently available if you focus your search
and, critically, if you're willing to act.
"True distressed sales
don't generally make it to the Internet. This isn't the place to shop. The
real deals are circulated by word-of-mouth. You have to be in a position to
get the word at the right time. You've got to be connected on the ground. I
call it being 'in a market'--having contacts that keep you informed of
what's really going on, well beyond the Internet or real estate agent radar.
"A colleague in Panama recently made a smokin' distress purchase. He
bought a house in an established community for a 40% discount to current
market pricing. At that price, he isn't worried about a further slide in the
marketplace. He's gotten a good enough deal that it doesn't matter.
"And he has a plan. He intends to invest a little in rehab and believes that
he'll then be able to flip the place for as much as two times what he paid.
Meantime, he plans to live in the place.
"My friend was positioned
in the market and connected on the ground. As a result, he was able to be in
the right place at the right time, and then, very important, he was willing
to make a move.
"This is how you invest in real estate. Bouncing into
a country for a whirlwind tour of a few developments isn't going to provide
you with the best investment opportunities. You can find a great second home
that way, but if you're serious about buying for investment, you've got to
take a different approach entirely. Buying for profit and buying for
personal use are two different agendas.
"If you're buying for profit,
you have to invest the time to get to know a market well enough to be able
to judge when a true opportunity comes your way. You have to do your
homework, and then you have to trust your judgment and let yourself take
action. This is no guarantee that you'll get the best deal, but it is a
strategy for making money over the long haul.
"Generally speaking, I
believe you can find worthwhile real estate investment opportunities in
almost any market if you look hard enough and if you understand the market
fundamentals at work. The days of abundance of opportunity are over. But
that is not to say it's not possible in the current market climate to be an
active and a successful real estate investor.
"Here's where you
should be focusing your search right now:
"In Panama.
Distressed sales in the city aren't common yet, but I believe will become so
over the next six months. This is the time to be positioning yourself in the
market and getting comfortable with the fundamentals at work. Rental yields
remain very good, so if you're looking for cash flow rather than a
buy-and-flip opportunity, investing in a well-priced apartment in a good
location for rental is a great play.
"Outside Panama City, the big
opportunity right now is to bank land. From mountain and river property to
beachfront and lots in struggling beachfront developments, you can find land
in all price ranges with medium- to long-term appreciation potential.
"In the Philippines. Here rental yields are also high. Sales
slowed but may already be picking up again. Resort rentals are a great
opportunity. Land speculation makes sense, as well.
"Property in the
Philippines is priced for the Filipino market. Foreigners can't hold real
estate directly (with the exception of condos). However, there is talk about
the government planning to change this. If that happens, beachfront property
in certain areas will see a big boost. Look at Cebu and Boracay for the
resort rentals. Almost everywhere you can find beachfront lots that qualify
as cheap.
"In Uruguay. Another good place to shop for a rental
buy. Yields are strong in Montevideo (in both the main city and the old
city) and in Punta del Este. You can find distress sales, but as Uruguay,
like most countries in this part of the world, is a cash market, most
sellers don't 'need' to sell. In other words, this isn't a market where I'd
continue to wait and watch. In Uruguay, I'd buy."
Kathleen Peddicord
----------
Continue Reading:
|