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Is Flipping
Houses Legal?
By Steve Cook
Question:
"Every time I turn around I seem to read something in the
newspaper or see something on the news about unscrupulous real
estate "investors
who are going to jail for illegal schemes involving flipping
real estate.
Is flipping properties legal or illegal?
Answer:
Great, great question. And believe me, it's one I hear all the
time.
The concept of "Flipping Properties" is really one of semantics.
"Flipping" is just another way of saying "buying, and then
selling".
Let me be state very clearly that flipping houses (also known as
buying and selling a home) is not illegal in any way, shape or
form. There is absolutely nothing wrong with buying a home cheap
and then selling it for more then what you paid.
Think about this: If I owned a car lot, I would be purchasing
cars at one price (wholesale) and then reselling them at another
price (retail) -- and hopefully turning a nice profit, right? In
essence, I would be "flipping" cars.
If I owned a Home Depot, I would be "flipping" everything from
power drills to Christmas trees to my customers.
What we're talking about here is capitalism - the free market
exchange of goods and services for valuable consideration. Our
economy depends on it and it's a normal way of life for all of
us. Businesses "flip" goods and services to us that we, in turn,
pay them for. The profit they receive is not unethical.
So what about the "flipping" scandals we hear so much about in
the media?
To put it simply, real estate flipping real estate becomes
illegal when loan fraud is involved. Typically this is because
the resale relies on inflated appraisals, fake documents, sales
to "straw" buyers who represent original sellers, or "phantom"
second loans.
There is absolutely nothing wrong with buying a home, investing
in it (through repairs or just "riding" a good market's
appreciation), and selling the same real estate for whatever
larger value someone is willing to pay. If your buyer wants to
pay you substantially more than market value, and they have the
means to pay you, then it's their choice, plain and simple.
Flipping Playstations ®
Let's look for a moment at the video gaming phenomenon. When the
latest gaming system comes out, people will pay insane, crazy
amounts of money just to get their hands on one the day it
launches.
When the Sony Playstation 3 ® was released in November 2006, the
stores sold them for $600, give or take. That's the retail
value. But as is typical for the high-end gaming systems these
days, the initial supply for the PS3 was far outweighed by its
immediate demand, and only a handful of people actually got
their hands on one the day it launched. Most people who were
dying to get one were forced to wait until the next shipment.
However did you realize that a large number of those who were
actually fortunate enough to get one weren't even interested in
keeping it? Instead they went right to the online auction arena
and let the market do its thing.
Did you hear about it? On launch day, when the stores sold the
precious few game systems they had available for the "retail
price" of $600, the buyers were simultaneously "flipping" their
systems on eBay and getting staggering return on their
investment -- anywhere from $3,000 to $10,000 from the hungry
masses of gaming buyers.
Was this illegal? No. Immoral? Unethical? No.
What were these systems really worth? Well the "appraisal" value
(sticker price) was (and is) $600. But the market determined the
value to be in the excessive four figures.
Did the hungry eBay buyers know they were paying a price
substantially higher than the sellers had just paid for the same
system at their local Wal Mart? Absolutely - and they didn't
care.
At that moment, the value of having a game system of their own
on launch day was more important to them than the difference
between the $600 sticker price and what they were willing to pay
online.
In truth, value is not determined by how much something costs to
make or purchase initially, but by what an eager buyer is
willing to pay for it right now in an honest, open marketplace.
Getting back to the point of this, as I said, what people
typically refer to as "illegal flipping" of real estate is
actually just mortgage fraud. But the media has for some reason,
in its glorious ignorance, latched onto the term "flipping" as
the buzz word for describing these scams. This is a sad
disservice to a world of honest, ethical real estate
investors who legitimately flip property for a living.
As a result the media has given real estate investors in general
a bad name, because they aren't focusing on the real problem.
The real problem with "illegal flipping" is when investors,
mortgage brokers, loan officers, appraisers, etc. get together
to create (i.e. fabricate) a better picture of a buyer's loan
package to a lender than that which actually exists. They lie.
They do things such as inflating appraisals, gifting down
payment, drawing up false w-2's, manufacturing pay stubs,
writing credit letters, etc…
The people who do this often do (and should) go to prison.
However real estate investors who are engaged in the legitimate
business of flipping houses (whether as "wholesalers" or
"fix-and-flip" rehab
investors) are actually playing a key (and
under-appreciated) role in stimulating our economy. They
shouldn't unjustly be lumped into the category of "unethical" or
"illegal" just because they invest in quick-turn real estate
flipping.
The bottom line is, if you buy houses at a below-market value,
sell them higher for a profit, and do so honestly, ethically and
without committing loan fraud, then you are not doing anything
illegal. You don't have anything to worry about.
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