Written by Jim the Realtor

August 24, 2009

In April, 2009, the ABC News Nightline show followed as we looked at buying some fixers in Oceanside (links are in the right column under REAL ESTATE VIDEOS).  Here is a follow-up:

61 Comments

  1. Kingside

    cool,

    so if you can hang on and put up with carrying costs for 90 days, I guess the FHA offers come flying in.

  2. Rob Dawg

    Speechless and if you think I’m going to make a comment about creamy puppies you are crazy.

  3. Local Boy

    I have been hearing rumors that conventional lenders have been initiating a 90 day rule (similar to FHA) for re-sell properties–can anyone confirm?

  4. Justabroker

    The old adage of making money when you buy. Good job to their agent at Klinge for finding them five buys already.

  5. Irene

    You cannot sell FHA for 90 days after purchase to discourage flipping. Obviously they bought in April so that does not matter. They did a great job of improving that property but in the future they should try matching the vanity to the bathroom doors. Little things like that drive me crazy. … I know, I know… picky picky…

  6. shadash

    It’s official the bubble is back on…

    To be fair, that house was really well done. Nothing I would offer 300k on but nicely fixed up.

    I feel bad for the buyers that saw everything fixed up and went crazy.

    Oh well.. A fool and his FHA 3% down are soon parted.

  7. Pigpen

    Jim, is the FHA the new toxic receptacle of mispriced risk backed again by the ever present ignorant taxpayer. Does our govt. want to move houses this bad that they are willing to subsidize every mortgage with more and more tax sweeteners.
    When do you as a citizen step back and say my profession is one of the core problems with our country?
    Don’t you wonder if risk is being priced appropriately and dont you worry about the us taxpayer?

  8. OCVulture

    I would of put in a nice stone spa/BBQ and a fire pit in the back and listed it at $299K.

  9. Jim the Realtor

    Pigpen,

    I have a fiduciary duty to my client. If what’s best for my client is to sell a house to a buyer who uses low-down financing, then I am compelled to facilitate that deal.

    I think I do plenty to educate consumers right here, more than most in the business. Are the buyers being egged on by uneducated agents? Maybe, but the agents are welcome to read along here with you all, and I know many do.

  10. Pigpen

    In your opinion is FHA the new govt. sponsored subprime lending machine with Low down payments where most of the risk is on the taxpayer?
    I dont begrudge you as this is a bigger policy morality issue. As a taxpaying renter, I don’t like to see FHA being the only game in town that is likely being GAMED.
    Just disgruntled and frustrated that we don’t seem to learn from bubbles and our govt is desperate to create new ones.

  11. JAP

    Great update video Jim. I tend to look down on flipping and flippers, but they really fixed that place up nicely…

    But Pigpen does make a valid point about FHA loans.

  12. Pigpen

    Jim, agreed you are an honest broker in an asymmetrical risk game with the taxpayer being the patsy. Ask yourself if making almost a hundred grand in 3 months flipping a house to a FHA buyer isnt a bit puzzling?
    I guess our new national motto should be KEEPING US ASSET PRICES UP AT ANY COST.

  13. Jim the Realtor

    Pigpen,

    The FHA loans include a 1.75% vig that the government says will cover losses. So for now the unfairness is to those borrowing via FHA and paying the high fee to cover the few defaulters.

    Of course, when that fund is extinguished I am sure that the taxpayers are next in line.

  14. Consultant

    I don’t begrudge Jim making a living, or these flippers making a flip. I applaud them. I wish we had more agencies like Jim’s.

    What drove me over the edge just about the time my daughter was looking to buy her first home in California, was that “flipping” and the whole cast of supporting players-many with criminal intent and backgrounds-took over much of the real estate profession and the process of buying a home. They corrupted the process and artificially drove up the price of homes (of course none of this would have happened without the intervention of the Fed. Reserve, Fannie/Freddie, etc).

    I’m hoping the good realtors like Jim are able to hang on and make a decent living. I’m confident they will. At the same time I’m hoping the people who have no business anywhere near a real estate contract are driven out of business, or just leave.

    Since we don’t seem to have responsible institutions anymore (govt., associations, etc.) that work to weed out the worst offenders, or put them in jail when it’s warranted, it seems brute, market forces are going to have do the necessary house cleaning in the real estate/home building profession.

  15. Realist

    “As long as you buy right, you can’t lose.”
    Sorry Jim, but I don’t think “you can’t lose” should be in your vocabulary. That’s what everybody believed before the crash!

  16. Nor_SD_GUY

    I would say as far as Doublebubble goes, if we are not down far enough yet, so when are the builders going to start building again, and again what happens when For all practical purposes builders stop building for three years ??

  17. Smithers

    Realist, I have to disagree.

    The expression: “As long as you buy right, you can’t lose” is always 100% correct in hindsight. Betting on the ponies is also a guaranteed way to make money if your horse wins the race.

    The problem is not the flippers (assuming they are honest in/on their paperwork), but the goofball government policy of raising/propping up housing prices through whatever means possible (e.g. interest rate deductions, $8K tax credit, free FHA money, bank bail outs, etc). If the government props went away, housing would be cheaper and more affordable for the people who can least afford it, and flippers would have to pay cash (and some do!).

    There’s little (nothing?) that government cannot F up. Cash for clunker houses!

  18. Art Ecletic

    Irene, I agree with you about the bathroom doors not matching the vanity…it looks terrible. They should have found a way to get those vanities in a similar cherry finish to match. The doors are gorgeous — shame they didn’t think to match all the wood throughout the house to that cherry.

  19. tj and the bear

    Wow, that worked out nicely. More power to Joella and company for doing a good job and getting justly rewarded for it.

    Goes to show that “riding the wave” can be a winning formula even if the wave is a rogue one.

  20. Charlene

    It looks nice – but is it my imagination, or is the kitchen sink “off?” It looks like one of the bowls is in the corner & you’d have to lean over to access it.

  21. Jim the Realtor

    Charlene wins the T-shirt! Did you notice how the camera did a double-take?

  22. Jim the Realtor

    On the doors:

    The cherrywood doors came pre-hung with stainless steel hinges with ball-bearings. John bought 30 of them out of Oakland, and got free shipping to boot.

    How much? $200 each.

    They’re from China.

  23. BAM

    Very educational. Thanks, Jim. Was the original buyer (Joelle) all-cash? With all-cash fixer money? Were their multiple offers on the property when she went in at $165?

  24. JimB

    “Just disgruntled and frustrated that we don’t seem to learn from bubbles and our govt is desperate to create new ones.”

    It’s not just our current Govt, this stuff has been there from the start, well before we were ever thought of as a nation.

    I personally have no doubt SD prices will rise again. But this time the straw will be even thinner.

    They say climbing the top of Everest is like running on a treadmill trying to breathe through a straw.

  25. BottomFisher

    Two smart moves on their part. Buy at the bottom and sell at the top…..all in a period of 4 months. So now the bottom is 300k …how do they repeat this? The banks are watching….and holding back while ‘investors’ bring back the bubble prices for them. Do they buy at 300k now? Oh Oh. Now what? Short lived party me thinks.

  26. JordanT

    There’s certainly value in a properly flipped house. What would a normal home buyer pay to bring those houses into that condition? My guess it would be significantly more than $40K, more like $60-$70K. How many normal home buyers are really qualified to properly manage a large renovation?

    My point is that flipping can be an honest way to make money. During the boom, even a poorly managed flip would make a profit, but my guess is that these people know what they are doing.

  27. Pigpen

    Jim, I am just amazed that a FHA loan with 3% down is sufficient when your buyer just made 50% on a purchase in 3 months. The volatility associated with real estate now is unreal so one would assume wrongly that down payments must be bigger to deal with the volatility in prices.
    I now I am quixotic but one can dream.
    Love the blog.

  28. Jim the Realtor

    P.S. The appraisal came in at $290,000 ($16,000 short).

    I’m glad Larry & Co are putting up the good fight against the HVCC….the flipper comp was $278,000.

  29. sdbri

    shadash, who said they even put 3% down? $8K more than covers that, done and done!

  30. Jim the Realtor

    BAM,

    Yes, three important ingredients at work here:

    Cash Buyer
    Veteran General Contractor
    Sharp realtor

    But the most critical ingredient is investing the time to see properties in person every day for a month or two.

    Lots of people call who have money, and I always ask, do you have the time to invest?

    It’s a tall order.

  31. Jeff

    Seems like a good price on the doors. Can you get the name of the supplier? Or was it a one-off deal?

  32. Jim the Realtor

    He got it off the internet.

    Matt, come on man, that’s my client!

  33. Charlene

    Cool- a T-shirt! Thanks! Yes, noticed the camera double-take, but I still had to make it full-screen and pause to make sure I was seeing it correctly. That stuff makes me nutso.

    Love the blog, videos and comments. It’s all so helpful. Thanks.

  34. tj and the bear

    Jim,

    Can you help it if you have cute clients? 🙂

  35. Knockout

    Great piece! I can really see this story “Housing Bubble Redux” making 60 minutes. You should contact them and tell them what’s going on. You will be even more famous 😉 and it will make an interesting story.

  36. pepsi

    $40k to redo all that and landscape !
    I would kill to have a contractor like that.

  37. JE

    Decent remodel.
    I don’t know Vista that well but it personally would take a lot more than that to make me want to move to Vista and spend 300k. I guess if I could use 8k rebate for down payment and have a non recourse loan I’d have no worries.

  38. Jim the Realtor

    This one is on Leon in NE Oceanside, not far from the back gate.

    Stay tuned though, three of the five are in Vista.

  39. Osidebuyer

    You just made my day.

  40. Dummy

    Home ownership is a function of income. Unemployment is a spyglass into the future of flipping. There will be another downturn in real estate in 2010. Those that are buying now will see their investments depreciate. The bubble is over.

  41. Rob Dawg

    The numbers don’t quite add up. Do you think they really did all that for $40k in 10 weeks?

  42. BAM

    Thanks, Jim. This is so helpful.

    I have everything but the cash! Let me know if you want to float me.

    BTW, I always considered flippers the people (particularly in San Diego) who buy new construction with no upgrades in Phase I of a buildout, never live in it, then sell it 6-12 mos. later to someone when Phase IV comes out and turns a profit on paper just like that. I think Joelle remodeled a crappy looking house, which bettered the neighborhood as a whole, and presumably brought some quality owners in there who will care for the property as well. Plus, most people don’t have the heart or guts to remodel and will pay a premium for someone else to deal with it. I think what she did should not even be called flipping, given the negative context of that word these days. It deserves more respect than that.

  43. Geotpf

    BAM-No, what she is doing is certainly flipping. Buying a house and then reselling it within a short period, while never living in it or renting it out, is automatically a flip. Some flips involve a remodel, some don’t. But the whole point to a flip is having the purchase price plus all costs (including the costs of the remodel) be greater than the later sale price.

  44. Geotpf

    It looks nice – but is it my imagination, or is the kitchen sink “off?” It looks like one of the bowls is in the corner & you’d have to lean over to access it.

    Charlene | August 24th, 2009 at 7:09 pm

    That kitchen sink is certainly in an odd place-I don’t like it. I wondered why it wasn’t under the window.

  45. François Caron

    Despite the placement of the sink, they did a fantastic job on the place. These are truly “good” flippers in that they’ve built up actual value in the place through all their hard work.

    And I agree 100% with the contractor’s viewpoint on bathroom décor. Keep it simple, and don’t overdo it. I still don’t know what you’re suppose to do with a bidet…

  46. UCGal

    Is the buyer ending up with cash in their pocket at closing…

    8k from the feds
    6k back, per the end of the video.
    That’s $14k. They need 3% down, which is $9.18k.

    What am I missing? I’m not at all an expert on FHA loans. I went old school and put more than 20% down on my home. (Pre bubble.)

  47. bubba

    As you can see,the people with money are buying up the deals in SD. I’m afraid the bottom has been reached and those with the cash and good credit are making $$ off of us dummies who are sitting on the sidelines.

  48. Jim the Realtor

    UCGal,

    The $6,000 will just cover the closing costs (loan, title, and escrow fees) plus the “prepaids”, the amount used to set up the monthly tax and insurance impound account.

    But agreed, their skin is thin!

  49. Jim the Realtor

    From Bryce regarding costs:

    Kitchen cabinets are from China; installed and finished with granite tops $4,500 each. But they did 5 homes and John’s a great negotiator. The bathroom cabinets are Ikea.

    I suggested the doors and the tan walls to make the home feel more custom.

  50. Susie

    “P.S. The appraisal came in at $290,000 ($16,000 short).” (JtR)

    The list price was $278K, and the appraisal was $16K short, with the winning buyer offering $300K with $6K back, right? Silly question but who made up the difference?

    And FWIW, besides the $278K list price, I think if you asked all eight buyers (5 VA and 3 FHA and within two days of listing) why they made an offer, it would be the cherry doors (and they didn’t even care that the doors didn’t match the cabinets or realize that the kitchen sink placement was kooky).

  51. keithl

    Awesome sauce!

    Hope they buy the bank owned one on the end of my street and flip it just like this one. I’m sure its cheap cause it is near oside blvd.

    The nearby elementary school just got an official arts designation.

    Great work on the rehab. It came out great.

    If possible please post the name of the door company.

  52. Jim the Realtor

    BAM – I totally agree, they earned it by shopping hard, not overpaying, and doing smart upgrades. Much different than winning the lotto to buy in Phase One.

    But they don’t mind admitting that they are accidental flippers – everyone’s a flipper when a little luck comes their way too.

  53. propertysearch

    On the lower end it all comes down to price. $300,000 homes will be in high demand for a long time. Most people living in this area are paying $1200-$1700 for a 2-3 bedroom apartment.
    A $1700 payment to own a home in San Diego including PMI for barely nothing is a no brainer.
    The flippers got an amazing deal and the house payment is affordable.

  54. Mark in San Diego

    I disagree with others here that this is a new bubble. . .160K seemed like a very good price to buy, and 300K for a nice house in Oceanside seems like a fair price to sell. I believe the “military housing allowance” is about $1600-1800 a month for rent, so even at $600 per hundred thousand on a loan, that would be $1800 a month mortgage payment (likely much less), so that is in the range of affordability for a lot of people, especially in the military.

    As we all agree on this board – the big problem is not in the 200-400K range – a lot of demand there – it is in the over 700K where the market is still tanking.

  55. doughboy

    Jim,

    There is an REO on Valley RD here in Vista below my house that these folks may want to take a look at. Its attracting a lot of lookers.

  56. 306

    Windows, appliances, fixtures, flooring, landscape, labor, etc. It didn’t all come from China. I am surprised 40k would cover it.

  57. daniel

    Doesn’t the 6K back to the buyer inflate the value for comps? I know it isn’t much, but it is an artificial price, no?

  58. sdnerd

    I don’t know what everyone is so worried about.

    When you only put someone else’s 3% down, and have a weeks worth of savings in the bank what could possibly go wrong in this market?

    Who cares if unemployment is going up? It’s not going up as fast!

    Bunch of worry warts, seriously.

    ‘40% have less than a month of savings, while only 20% have 6 months or more. The remaining 40% are in between.’

    http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com/2009/08/34-percent-of-workers-have-one-week-or.html

    BTW, in all seriousness thanks for the video update Jim – interesting to see the results!

  59. ucodegen

    8k from the feds
    6k back, per the end of the video.
    That’s $14k. They need 3% down, which is $9.18k.


    The $6,000 will just cover the closing costs (loan, title, and escrow fees) plus the “prepaids”, the amount used to set up the monthly tax and insurance impound account.

    Sounds like the ‘new’ buyer is yet another flipper.. 100%+ effective financing(and not a good/skilled flipper at that). Wrong time in the season to buy for flipping, you generally want cosmetically bad, structurally good properties to do a flip, and ready to sell at the start of spring-summer.

    The ‘fixup’ is nice, but I would tend to discount several things if I were buying. The kitchen sink is definitely an issue.. and visually weird (probably was a galley kitchen originally). It is also not cheap to fix. To fix it now would mean tearing out some of the new cabinets, relocating plumbing (probably in-floor plumbing because you can only hollow out a certain number of consecutive studs for 2 to 3 inch drain line from the sink). Doing the in-floor work means tearing up the tile and the concrete slab. If the slab is ‘pre-stressed’, forget about cutting into it to relocate the drain.

    The bathroom sinks have me in a quandary. I like the big sinks with high faucets.. but I also like bathroom counter space..

    I would have gone for larger windows in the bedroom.

    At 300k, I think the price is high, but from the sellers aspect, it is a very good deal.

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