Gainning Control Of A Commercial Pre-foreclosure

allneedsgurl profile photo

theres a day care facility going into foreclosure, that I would love to gain control before the bank gets it. I know about traditional financing, but dont have enough capital. The property is $1.3M, and I would need close to $200K, which I dont have.



What should be the first steps?



any suggestions appreciated. Thanks.

Comments(6)

  • cjmazur13th April, 2007

    Some option might be

    short sale
    Subject-2
    SBA fund
    buying the note from the bank
    JV w/ someone that has $$

  • commercialking14th April, 2007

    Well, a couple of questions.

    When you say the property is $1.3 million is that the asking price, its value or the amount of the outstanding mortgage?

    Why do you think you need $200,000? Is that the downpayment ( odd amount given a $1.3 million purchase) or the amount the current owner is behind in his mortgage payments or what?

    What do you know about running a day care?

    Why is this facility not able to make its payments? What will you do differently?

  • allneedsgurl15th April, 2007

    $1.3M is the amount paid for in 2001 for the facility according to tax records. My partner ran a successful daycare for several years untila nasty divorce and selling. I am looking at at least $200K for downpayment because I am thinking I would need at least $15% down. the daycare was profitable under formaer ownership. The current owners bought as a n investment, and have no direct involvement in the center. I believe that and never owning a daycare before are the problems. I would be coming in with a background in education and a partner that created a successful daycare already.

    I wanted to have a plan of action before I met with the owners on Monday. I will know more after tomorrow evening.

  • commercialking15th April, 2007

    If the property is near foreclosure you may be able to do a subject-to buy and only come up with the currently delinquent payments.

    Depends in part on how willing the lender is to negotiate, how desperate the sellers are.

  • commercialking15th April, 2007

    Is there some reason you cannot do both?

  • commercialking15th April, 2007

    Every good deal you do improves your ability to do more deals in the future. The only ones that hurt you are over-levered or over-paid for properties.

    Try to tie up the pool hall property for some period with a contract (better) or option. Then find a pool hall operator to sign a lease with you. Use the lease to get the mortgage. Rented property is more bankable than vacant property with a plan.

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