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The Lynes’ Roar – August 2009

Author: admin / Category: Newsletter, Ontario Real Estate, Real Estate, The Lynes' Roar
Volume #2 Issue #8 2009

Julia and DanielWow, it is getting hotter and more humid than Orlando in Southern Ontario.  Are you enjoying your summer yet?  The summer days are getting longer and we are navigating to a new focus for our specific region.  We have driven around town to identify decent neighborhoods with good anchors.  We have found the 12+ unit apartment buildings we like.  We talk to the tenants, talk to a few owners, and pull titles on some buildings that we have identified as being buildings we were interested in.  We have talked to a senior planner in the city to get a more solid picture of their budgets and plans.  We have requested traffic counts from the engineering department for a couple of different mixed use buildings we were looking at.  There’s one area we encountered where the whole neighborhood was bad, with undesirable tenants and unkempt yards.  Many American real estate gurus advocate buying properties unseen.  We suggest reconsidering that proposition.

We are grateful for a few of our readers interested in taking assignment deals from us.  Once again, we are here to support each other in our mutual goal to achieve financial freedom.  We are analyzing more and more potential deals.  Anyone who is interested to know more about our projects, please email our acquisitions department.

The Lynes’ Lion Safari Adventure

Daniel intentionally surprises Julia by taking her to the African Lion Safari on their anniversary.  Daniel drags Julia out of bed bright and early and tells Julia not to wear red clothes???  Driving through a few little towns and some farm fields, they arrive to a gate which reads, “Do not leave your windows open, or you will be eaten alive.”  Julia screams out in fear and refuses to enter the two storey tall gate.  Daniel drives through the second gate, laughing like a hyena.  A big sign says, “close your windows and lock your doors.”  Following the small winding trails, their car comes to a sudden halt near a big tree.  Three big baboons jump right up to the windshield and one of them started urinating and defecating on the side mirror.  At a blink, you can see a few dozen of them jumping out from some tree tops.  These animals are quite vicious fighters against each other.Baboons Going to Town on Someone's Car

Here comes a shocked driver with his rooftop luggage container popped open by the curious baboons.  (Wouldn’t they make great customs inspectors?)  The best part is the thrill you get from watching ten elephants forming a bee line by clinging their trunks to tails one after the other; heading down to the lake for their leisure swim.  Well, we will let you explore the ferocious looking lions and other animals yourself.

Daniel’s New Blog

Hey, Daniel is stepping out of his comfort zone by starting a blog.  He takes an article that captivates him and share his opinion with you.  It is only an opinion; you don’t need to agree with a single word he says.

You can read his blog entries by clicking on the archives, ordered by month, on the righthand column of our Website.  If you’re looking for an article on a particular date, you can also click on the day on the calendar object in the righthand column.

If you find something interesting, there is an option on the Website to comment on the particular article.  We’ll stay current with economic developments and industry news in the region, Canada, and the U.S.A. to give you a heads up for any new changes.  We cover off topics such as new regulations affecting the industry, LEED happenings, building industry, economics, retail industry, service industry, toxic materials, and other related issues affecting real estate investment and/or property management.

Bill Bartmann has a Gift For You

We thank Jack Canfield, who emailed us about his friend, Bill BartmannBill Bartmann is most famously known for going from flat broke to becoming a billionaire!  Bill left home and joined a traveling carnival when he was 14 years old.  He became a teenage alcoholic and gang member.  His life changed when he learned to think better of himself and realized his true potential.  He learned how to take his dreams and turn them into reality.  Ultimately, Bill received his GED and eventually graduated from law school.  He went on to build seven successful businesses in seven different industries.

Let’s listen to a billionaire’s “9 Steps to Achieve any Goal.”

The One Little Golden Goose

Julia feels fortunate to have started using credit cards at very early stages of her working career.  At the time, a co-worker graciously introduced her to use dividend credit cards; Julia ended up getting paid dividends annually.  The best side effect was she had built up her credit score, unknowingly.  When you have a good credit score, the credit card companies will mail out extremely low interest rate offers to you.  Would you like to make use of credit cards like a small golden goose?  Some benefits are huge: build up credit line, increase credit score, get paid up to 1% cash back, accumulate air miles to fly free, and get free groceries if you use the President’s Choice credit card.  Needless to say, some investors use it to finance fix & flip single family homes.  Just one small way to build wealth.

A Business Plan is The Start

We are finally writing up our business plan.  Our procrastination!  The real value of creating a business plan lies in the process of researching and thinking about your business in a systematic way.  The act of planning helps you to think through your ideas thoroughly to avoid costly, perhaps disastrous mistakes later.  The most time consuming is in the research part.  The two great helpful sites we have found for drafting a business plan are: Industry Canada and the US Small Business Administration.

The Power of Leverage – Your House

Assets are something that put money into your pocket vs Liabilities which are something that take money out of your pocket.  Is your house an asset or liability?  The answer is No and Yes.  Most of us were brought up to believe that our house is an asset.  Actually, it’s the equity in the house that is the asset portion.  The equity belongs to you.  If you carry a mortgage on your house, the property is technically the bank’s asset.  Yes, your house doesn’t become a true asset until you sell your house and realize the capital gains (convert the equity into cash).  If you understand that, the next question is why not leverage the value of the equity in your house and put it into higher yielding investments?

Most banks currently loan up to 75% of the equity (HELOC) in your house at a rate of around 4%.  Some stock savvy investors then put this money into high yielding funds in the stock market.  Some novice real estate investors would prefer to buy an apartment building to create passive income.  eg. If you own a mortgage free house worth $650,000 in Vancouver, you can use a $400,000 HELOC to buy a decent 8 unit apartment building in Southern Ontario.  If you can rent each unit for $700, based on a 45% expense ratio, you realize a net rental income of $385 x 8=$3,080/month.  After paying a HELOC interest only payment of $1,333/month, you are putting a net passive income of $1,747 into your pocket every month.  Would you see how this would benefit you by turning your house into a money making machine?

“Life is not easy for any of us.  But what of that?  We must have perseverance and, above all, confidence in ourselves.  We must believe that we are gifted for something, and that this something, at whatever cost, must be attained.”

- Madame Marie Curie

Daniel Lynes and Julia Lee

Student Housing – Maestro Realty Advisors Wants No More

Author: admin / Category: Canadian Real Estate

It’s nearly back-to-school time and the last thing Pierre Ferland wants to talk about is student housing.

The chief executive of Maestro Realty Advisors, which is 55% owned by Caisse de depot et placement du Quebec, is leaving the student housing business — tired of the endless challenges of upkeep.

“We have four properties and we are probably going to exit them. We didn’t have a lot of success,” says Mr. Ferland. “We underestimated the management side of that business. It’s students, they don’t really care.”

Think John Belushi in Animal House.

via Fiscally frugal fall ambitions.

Energy Conservation Costs in the Home

Author: admin / Category: Building Industry

Snowmass, Colo.

A quarter-century ago, in the wake of America’s first energy crisis, a young scientist named Amory Lovins came to the Rocky Mountains and built himself a radical house based on a radical idea. The country could save both energy and money, he believed, by combining common sense and unconventional technology.

Mr. Lovins did achieve substantial energy savings, and many of his innovations, from better insulation to multiple-pane windows to more-efficient refrigerators, eventually became familiar fixtures in American homes.

But on the second part of Mr. Lovins’s ambition — saving money — the calculus has been more complicated. The advances that allowed him to create a roomy home with a tiny carbon footprint came with a hefty upfront cost.

via Homely Costs of Energy Conservation – WSJ.com.

Energy Efficiency Report Cards for Commercial Buildings

Author: admin / Category: Building Industry, Canadian Real Estate, LEED Certified Building

Implementation possible by 2010

Commercial buildings in Canada could begin receiving energy efficiency report cards as early as 2010.

The American Society of Heating, Refrigerating and Air Conditioning Engineers ASHRAE is developing an energy rating system that is making headway with federal and provincial governments.

ASHRAE’s Building Energy Labeling Implementation Committee presented its label prototype and the results of a pilot project at the association’s annual meeting in June.

The Building Energy Quotient or Building EQ focuses exclusively on energy use.

It provides an “as designed” asset rating for new buildings based on the components specified in the design, including mechanical systems, building envelope, orientation and day-lighting.

via Group creating energy efficiency report cards for commercial buildings – Daily Commercial News.

Some Canadian construction material costs set to rise – Daily Commercial News

Author: admin / Category: Building Industry, Canadian Real Estate

Based on Industrial Product Price Index information from Statistics Canada, Reed Construction Data-CanaData calculates material construction cost indices – for overall construction and major type-of-structure sub-categories.

The year-over-year change for total construction in May 2009 was -7.9%. This was comprised of residential construction at +1.6%, non-residential buildings at -5.1% and engineering work at -15.7%. Material cost changes may still be sleeping lightly, but there are signs that they are starting to stir.

The residential materials cost index has been essentially flat for the past four years. A heavy weighting in the residential materials index goes to lumber prices. Lumber prices have been on a downward trajectory since early in 2006, which was when U.S. housing starts began their steep descent. In the most recent period, weak Canadian housing starts have had a significant impact on lumber prices regionally. For example, softwood lumber is -12.4% in Ontario versus six months ago and -6.7% in B.C. versus three months ago.

via Some Canadian construction material costs set to rise – Daily Commercial News.

Worldchanging: Bright Green: What Makes a Skyscraper Green?

Author: admin / Category: Building Industry

These days, it seems like skyscrapers are in a race to be the greenest, as well as the tallest. New York City’s Hearst Tower is largely made from recycled steel and uses rainwater for 50 percent of its needs. China’s 71 story Pearl River Tower (pictured below) will soon use wind, sun and geothermal energy to power itself, and even the Empire State Building, one of the world’s oldest skyscrapers, is currently undergoing an energy retrofit facelift to stay in the race.

To be the greenest skyscraper on the block, designers are incorporating cutting edge energy and water saving technologies like helical wind turbine technology, thousands of solar panels, sunlight-sensing LED lights, rainwater catchment systems and even seawater-powered air conditioning. One building awaiting construction is the Burj al Taqa “Energy Tower” (interior pictured below). With a 197-foot roof turbine and 161,459 square feet of solar panels, this 68 story skyscraper, if built, would create all its own power on site.

via Worldchanging: Bright Green: What Makes a Skyscraper Green?.

Worldchanging: Bright Green: Free Parking Isn’t Free

Author: admin / Category: Building Industry

When does a Prius have the same environmental impact as a Hummer? The 95 percent of the time it’s parked.

Most people don’t spend time thinking about parking spaces unless they’re looking for one. But these 9′ by 18′ rectangles of urban real estate have a vast impact on North American communities. They affect the economy, land use patterns, the design of cities and even individual lifestyles.

via Worldchanging: Bright Green: Free Parking Isn’t Free.

Jones Lang LaSalle Boasts 544 LEED APs | GreenerBuildings

Author: admin / Category: LEED Certified Building, US Real Estate

More than 500 Jones Lang LaSalle (JLL) employees now hold LEED accreditation or its equivalent designation, allowing the real estate services firm to meet a goal it set in 2008 six months ahead of schedule.

JLL has steadily been positioning itself as a leader in the commercial green building segment since completing its first LEED certified project in 2003. It launched its Sustainability University in April 2008 to serve as an internal resource to help its global employees earn a variety of accreditations, such as LEED, BREEM, IEMA, NABERS Energy and Green Star.

“One of their first orders of business was to create classes, Power Points and other tools to help existing employees take the LEED exam,” Craig Bloomfield, JLL’s vice president of public affairs, said in a telephone interview.

via Jones Lang LaSalle Boasts 544 LEED APs | GreenerBuildings.

Ontario Realty Corp. to spend $100 million on green office conversion – Daily Commercial News

Author: admin / Category: LEED Certified Building, Ontario Real Estate

The Ontario Realty Corp.ORC is poised to start work this fall on a $100 million greening of a 40-year-old building in downtown Toronto. The retrofit is believed to be one of the largest of its kind in North America.

To be undertaken at the former Sears Canada head office on Jarvis Street, the project will create 455,000 square feet of state-of-the art green office space. A construction manager is expected to be hired by the end of this month.

Toronto’s WZMH Architects has been retained to help design the green workplace.

Schematic design is currently under way.

LEED Gold is being targeted. The project is scheduled to be completed by spring 2011.

via Ontario Realty Corp. to spend $100 million on green office conversion – Daily Commercial News.

Fitch Ratings: Large Hotels Defaulting on Loans at High Rate

Author: admin / Category: US Real Estate

As the commercial real estate market continues its downward decline, a new Fitch Ratings report indicates that large hotels lead loans of concern for U.S. CMBS with eight newly defaulted loans greater than $100 million entering special servicing, according to Fitch’s ‘What’s in Special Servicing’ U.S. CMBS report.

Recent defaults include two hotel portfolios: Red Roof Inn and Extended Stay. Since Fitch’s last update in April, $17.4 billion in Fitch-rated loans have entered special servicing, which does not include the Extended Stay Portfolio, which on its own totals more than $4 billion.

via Fitch Ratings: Large Hotels Defaulting on Loans at High Rate.

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