While housing prices are still well off 2008 levels and likely won’t recover for some time, you can make good returns investing in real estate. How?? Buy a foreclosed house and become a landlord.

Purchase these single-family homes on the cheap, on your own or as part of a private partnership investment (it may require you to put up $100,000). Not to be left out. Some publicly traded real estate investment trusts are also eyeing foreclosure plays, a way for you to be a housing landlord indirectly.

Annual rental income typically ranges from 8% to 15% of your investment. That’s a lot better than certificates of deposit are paying, and better than almost all corporate dividend yields.

A Morgan Stanley report notes that by 2016, some 7.5 million homes with a present market value of $1 trillion will be liquidated via foreclosures and short sales. This could expand the total of rental homes in America from the current 20 million to 27.5 million. Morgan Stanley says single-family rental homes operated have yielded annual returns averaging 8.1% since 1990.

Being a landlord is challenging, of course. If your tenants’ furnace goes out in the middle of the night, you need to do something about it. As part of a partnership, though, you have the clout to hire professional managers.

In the August 9th edition of Fortune magazine, Warren Buffett said, “The lower things go, the more I buy.” While he was referring to stocks, growing numbers of investors say the same thing about residential housing.

Institutional investors, “the big money players in the market are starting to jump in. Private equity firm GI Partners, located in Menlo Park, Calif., has a $1.9 billion fund that seeks to become the landlord of foreclosed homes.

To Joseph Dear, chief investment officer of the $237.3 billion California Public Employees Retirement System, acquiring homes after foreclosure or via a short sale (where owners sell at a price that’s less than their mortgage balance) is a promising opportunity.

“If this is done at the right scale and they (money managers) develop efficiencies in processing for the sales — the short sales or the bank-owned sales — and can bring these back to market after they've been rehabbed, this should be a pretty good play,” Dear told a CalPERS investment committee meeting, according to Pensions and Investments magazine. What’s more, he said, “The real returns on rental units, both apartment and houses, are pretty good on a risk-adjusted basis.”

The housing mess is far from over. Just look at the recent data from the Office of the Comptroller on loan modifications: 19.4% of home mortgages modified by lenders during 2010’s fourth quarter were 90 days delinquent a year later.

According to RealtyTrac, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac have about 180,000 foreclosures and the Federal Housing Administration has 32,000. Banks own at least another 600,000 single family homes. At the end of 2011 home ownership had fallen to 66%, its lowest level since 1998. Since people still need a place to live converting yesterday’s foreclosure into today’s rental property may just be the trick to finally stabilizing the market place.

A lot of the foreclosure-play action is on institutional level. The Federal Housing Finance Agency (Fannie and Freddie’s parent), which finances about 75% of the single-family homes in the U.S., is auctioning off nearly 2,500 foreclosed residential properties this month in eight metro areas. They will be offered to institutional investors in bulk (for example, 99 properties in Chicago and 572 properties in Atlanta) and investors must agree to rent them out for X number of years (the number has not been determined).

Conceptually all of these public and private foreclosure conversion programs offering a combination of extremely compelling possible benefits of high yields with sizable profits for investors, stabilization of neighborhoods for homeowners, and a chance to fight blight by government.

While only a few can participate in the mega-deals, there are opportunities available for everyone.

Citations.
1 http://www.pionline.com/article/20120402/PRINTSUB/304029978 [4/2/12]
2 money.cnn.com/2012/02/29/real_estate/Fannie_foreclosure_homes/index.htm [2/29/12]
3 articles.latimes.com/2012/mar/24/business/la-fi-home-rental-20120324 [3/24/12]
4 www.fa-mag.com/fa-news/9855-foreclosures-draw-private-equity-as-us-sells... [1/31/12]

Author's Bio: 

Financial Management Strategies, LLC (FMS) is a Registered Investment Advisory firm in the State of Maryland, providing its advisory services to both institutions and individuals.

Mr. Petiri is the owner of Financial Management Strategies, LLC (FMS) a Registered Investment Advisor established in the year 2000. His nearly two decades of financial experience covers virtually all areas of finance from tax, insurance, stockbroker, personal financial planning and personal banking to corporate credit, business planning and consumer lending.

Mr. Petiri has frequently been heard on WEAA (88.9 FM) as a financial commentator, appeared on WMAR-TV 2 regarding the 2008 & 2009 economic downturn, and MTA Commuter Connections regarding residential land development. He has been interviewed and quoted by the Investment News magazine, written for the Journal of Personal Finance, is a frequent contributor to the IARFC publication, The Register, Popular Finance (of China), and publishes a monthly financial advice column called the Foresight. Mr. Petiri was also quoted in Bankrate.com and currently writes for the Baltimore Examiner. Walid also serves on the Finance Committee of Associated Black Charities and is member of Bethel African Methodist Episcopal Church. He is a devoted parent to his son and daughter.