Wednesday, June 6, 2018

Identify and Target Fertile Neighborhoods for Fast Flip Projects in Charlotte


So you have decided you would like to plunge into your first flip project.  You have your financing in place, a list of contractors you plan to use for renovations, and a solid budget.  But in your first several attempts to get a Charlotte home under contract, you found that you were not the only one seeking a solid flip project.  In fact, with inventories of resale homes very low in the Charlotte area, you were promptly notified by the sellers’ agents that there were multiple offers on each property, and “highest and best” offer on each was due by a date certain.  Gone was the notion that you could offer 10% below the listing price.  In fact, each property you wanted to bid on ultimately went under contract ABOVE the listing price.  Does this mean the time for house flipping has come and gone?  Of course not!

Any business proposition involves risk.  Most businesses have to cope with competition.  Business cycles are as old as free enterprise, and seller and buyer markets ebb and flow over time.  Today’s seller’s market may give way to a buyer’s market next year.  Any business needs to be nimble and pro-active.  The overall goal in a flip project is to resell a home quickly, for a profit.  So what can help us accomplish this goal in any market?

The answer is the fundamental consideration in real estate investing: location.  When looking for a good flip project in greater Charlotte in a competitive “seller’s market,” identify geographical areas—usually by subdivision—and focus on finding a project in one of those communities.  In a market where there are likely to be multiple offers on attractive listings as soon as they enter the market, it is likely that the buyer will have to find a home in fairly “rough” condition and build equity into it with reasonable, cost effective renovations.  But there has to be enough room in any given community for the finished product to worth more than the cost of acquisition + renovations and carrying costs.  The larger and more costly the renovations, the smaller the end profit is likely to be, of course.  So it makes sense to find an area of older homes that may have been reasonably well maintained by their owners, but which are in need of significant cosmetic updating.  I mean a home in which the roof and HVAC may be newer, but the kitchen and baths have not been updated since the home was new in 1962.  This will allow the buyer to concentrate spending and updates more on things that are readily observable—cabinets and counter tops… flooring and bathroom fixtures—and less on things that are less likely to add to the resale value of the home in proportion to the expenditures.

There are communities near Charlotte’s city center in which these homes can be found.  They have become popular with professional flippers, so prices continue to rise—even for the “old original” homes before renovations have been done.  Charlotte has a modern, expanding light rail system to shuttle people between home and its city center (called “Uptown”), and that light rail runs near many of these communities.  A location near light rail is also a big plus.  The finished, updated flip projects are quite popular with younger professionals who work in Uptown, where they might otherwise be attracted to a high rise condominium residence. Such prospective end-buyers who prefer a single family residence, with a small yard for gardening or entertaining, and without the high monthly HOA payments a high rise condo usually requires, can find a tastefully updated small home a very attractive alternative.  And these buyers have the income and budget for a high rise Uptown condo. 

For more information on suggested Charlotte communities in which this strategy has been used successful, please feel free to contact us.  As stated early in this article, the market is constantly changing and a subdivision that worked well with this strategy three months ago may not work so well three months from now.  Our company motto is: “Solid analysis identifies great opportunities.”  There is no substitute for doing your homework.     

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