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260-TNGRadio – Craig Hill 1-14-12

Friday, January 13th, 2012

Craig-Hill

Craig Hill

Hard Money Lender for The Norris Group


(Full Bio)

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This week Bruce is joined once again by Craig Hill of The Norris Group. Craig has worked with The Norris Group since the company opened in 1995. Craig has worked with the real estate investors, helping them access money for their deals and trust deed investors who want to get a very safe yield on their money. Prior to working with The Norris Group, Craig was in the hard money loan business for years prior to that; and the expertise he brought with him has proved him valuable to the success of the company.

Today’s radio show focuses on the borrower side of loans. Craig deals with calls all the time and goes through the terms of the loan, and there will be some callers who are connected to the advertisements of 4% and are completely shocked when Craig tells them it will be 12.5%. They do not understand this side of the world at all. However, Craig said these calls usually come from people who have never done it before, so usually whenever Craig gets into a situation like this he tries to ask them how they funded the last deal they did. You really have to establish that this is a different world, and if somebody has been a property buyer for a long period of time, they have a better understanding. Sometimes if you get that person who feels they can do it, it might be best for them to pursue a loan at their bank under a non-owner occupied program. Craig tells them they might be able to get it if they have perfect credit and other things. There are a lot of different ways to handle it, but Craig said The Norris Group usually deals with investors who do this for a living and have an understanding of what the costs are going to be.

The real education is to go ahead and try whatever you think is easier or less expensive because the lending world is really not working very well right now. Bruce worked with a major bank where the manager told him the frustration they have right now where they cannot fund owner-occupied loans inside of 75 days. In the investor world, if you do not have speed, you don’t find deals. They have to be able to close their loans quickly, and they have to rely on the fact that the deal will close. People are always asking how they can save money, so they either try to list the house themselves or find their own money source. People even hold seminars about how people can find their own money, but it is really not that easy. It is not that easy to get trusted with money. You always have to ask yourself whether it is really cheaper or not because there is always something attached to it, including a no answer when you thought you already had a yes. The Norris Group gets a lot of these kinds of calls where someone calls at the last minute and only has three or four days or less and they need to close it. Someone had told them something didn’t perform. It is so competitive out there now, so you have one loan that does not perform then you can forget about doing business with your agent again or anybody that agent knows. You have to see that this was really the cost of not getting a loan as it exceeded far the cost of getting one. It is not easy to watch over the years people going through a process of trust. As a person, to start from scratch is just not a reliable source.

Bruce came through the hard money business first as a borrower of considerable amount of money on a regular basis. He really did not consider the cost as onerous at all; he just needed access to it. With reliability comes the ability to grow. It’s the same way with The Norris Group business as a whole and just like how it is with an investor. If an investor has either his own money, such as a limited amount like $200, they really are working under constraints. Once they have access to somebody who might have, for example $1 million, they can start and tailor their business knowing they have access to $1 million. There is a cost to this, but you also have to look at the benefits of this. The benefits are you can up your marketing and do many more types of projects. It’s like being a construction lender without having a lender. A construction worker has to have some leverage, or he is only going to build ten homes. This has been the same way with The Norris Group; the borrower side has always grown along with the money side because the money side is there and the borrowers need the funds. This is what a hard money lender is.

When Bruce and Craig met, their meeting came about because Bruce was seeing more opportunities than he could personally handle. He had a fair amount of cash and a credit line, and all these were active on free and clear things. He had a chance to go to HUD auctions that were tossing out $.50 deals a half a dozen times per auction. He also had the chance to buy a track of homes at the same number. He looked around and saw how he could not take advantage of it, and this was the start of their meeting. When Bruce and Craig met, this was not the typical loan for a hard money loan business. It almost did not exist, and this was in about 1992 or 1993 when for hard money lenders the rule of thumb was a house was worth what you paid for it. If one next door sold for $100 that was fixed up, then you bought one that was exactly a model-match right next door for $50 or less, then you could borrow $30 or $40 on that one. At the same time, The Norris Group could lend somebody who had never made a payment $60 grand on the other one. When Bruce first came to Craig, he had to fight very hard to get the first few deals through because it was not done that way. Now, in a lot of ways hard money is synonymous with that exact function for investors. Back then, however, it did not even exist.

Bruce said he remembered for one of the properties he bought at a HUD auction that was appraised, they had not discussed what he had paid for it. He asked for it to go ahead and be appraised and would be able to borrow X-amount of percentage on the value. When Craig told Bruce the value, he asked Craig if it bothered him that he would be giving him money back more than he paid. The first thing Bruce thought of was they had a really unique opportunity there and Craig was probably dealing with his type of the world for the first time, and Bruce had access to a lot of dough for the first time. Bruce told Craig he could rest assured and made six payments on the first loans, and all of a sudden it dawned on the owner of the company that they had never had anybody do that prior, so they either understood that Bruce understood it or he was capable more than their other clients had been. This was an important transition for the hard money loan industry because it followed with Craig hoping there were more people like Bruce. Craig spent three or more years until he had all the other loan officers ask him when he thought it was going to be done. Some of them never transitioned into doing that and Craig strictly transitioned into doing only that because he got used to the facts from Bruce and others thinking the process was very efficient. They knew how to make the most happen with the least effort.

Bruce has always been surprised because he remembered thinking when 1995-97 passed and it was the end of the REO world, they were really thinking from where all the deals were going to come from, and they did. The private party purchasing and construction started, and all of a sudden The Norris Group was even busier. Craig said this has been the one important thing that there has always been a niche for good borrowers and private money. If good people are out there doing something and making a profit at it, whether it be buying off private parties or lots when the time is right, there is always an opportunity and a surprise that no matter what the real estate market is like, there is always a space for hard money loans. Bruce is so convinced about this now that he has had the chance to go back and rub shoulders with the people who make decisions in the normal world and see how they view investors. He came back with a self-assurance knowing there will always exist a need for a private loan business because we just make decisions that are common sense, yet the infrastructure prevents this. For example, The Norris Group is not afraid of a home that does not have a kitchen because they have dealt with 1,000 of them and have not been damaged by any of them because they know a kitchen can reemerge for a certain amount of money. In the loan process, they retain the money that would cause a kitchen to show up if the borrower stopped paying. You start putting the pieces of the safety together and think you can make the loan, but it does take private money to fund it quickly and accurately. Bruce does not think we are ever going to have a lot of competition from the other side.

Craig is amazed how much conventional lending will not do. There are so many hoops to go through, and the borrowers The Norris Group is loaning to have wealth and credit. They have everything where you think you can walk in and get any amount of loans you want, and they can’t even get loan #1. Craig received a call from a borrower not too long ago who owned about 4 houses free and clear for about $120-$140,000 each. This is his money he put into them, but the bank will not work with this because they consider it cash out. Craig wondered if he would be a stronger borrower if he leveraged at 100%. Here is somebody with perfect credit with four free and clear houses and the bank will not work with him because they see this as cash out. It does not make sense to him. Somehow this puts him in less of a safe position that he owes, for example, $200 grand at 50% and has $200 grand of liquidity to make sure it gets paid. This is a decision-maker you’re competing with and you think you will be okay. With The Norris Group on the other hand, their response is how quickly they can get their appraiser out there.

Some people are disappointed that there are more hoops than they thought. They attend a seminar and get told that hard money only looks at one thing, and then they go elsewhere like The Norris Group and see that this is not the case. They were not really told what was really going on. Because of the nature of loans and more recent history, Craig said one thing that is very difficult for people to understand is if you are brand new, it is very hard to delicate the whole process and think you are going to have a good result. You don’t even know how to protect yourself. This is the most frustrating thing Craig sees from some of the national seminars because it is almost like they are a part of a group and are dealing with a mentor, while The Norris Group takes a look at the deals and sees they are not deals. The number one thing The Norris Group wants is to make sure people have a deal, or they are going to talk them out of it. Bruce said this is an important thing for people to know that there are companies that are built that way and companies that are not. It has to go through some filters. If The Norris Group is going to make a loan on it, then there is probably a very high success rate for the investor.

There are several filters. For one, you might look at the sheer numbers and say it is not a deal, and then you have an appraiser who goes out with a lot of experience in investing and says that the numbers make sense but it is really a dangerous property for specific reasons. The filter The Norris Group has for people who borrow money from them is second to none. Bruce trusted himself and said he would actually have cause himself if he had found a deal. If someone like Rick Solis had gone out there and told him he really needed to take a second look, then he would. You really cannot put a value on this type of filter, and sometimes The Norris Group will get calls from people who are thinking of buying all cash, and Craig tells them to call him when they have their numbers. If they have something in escrow that they are thinking of doing, then they need to take a quick look at it because it is very easy to see where somebody can make a mistake.

For people who don’t have experience, they really don’t realize how expensive the journey will be, so there are surprises and repairs. All these things start taking away, whether it is a percentage here or there, and all of a sudden a deal at, for example, $.82 on the dollar that seems like it is going to make you a lot of money actually costs you a lot of money. If you get over 75% of what the house is worth in repairs and the purchase price, you are really starting to deal with a very thin margin. Craig will back out everything and start at 100%. He will ask them if they are going to sell it themselves or if they are going to have a commission, because now more people are paying incentives such as 2 or 3% of the closing cost. If you have something and then you have the cost of the loan, pretty soon they can see that what something is costing and being sold for is not leaving anything in the middle. You are going on a 6 month journey, and this is where the experience comes in. You are going to hire a construction crew you have never dealt with, and the odds of this not working out are higher than dealing with one you have dealt with twenty times. Everything that potentially goes wrong in the business is especially likely to occur to the first-time person. For that individual, having a deal is critical. The first step is the person needs to have a deal.

The second most frustrating thing for people is they really are told that they don’t need to have any money or need only a very little money. We are looking at things in terms of the borrower needs to have survivability and a successful outcome. Years ago Craig had a client who had a house and made payments like clockwork, then all of a sudden he stopped making payments. He called in and said he had a specific amount allocated for that, and Craig said it was quite a surprise. This was years ago; so more and more The Norris Group has had the philosophy that the really liquid cash is very important because it gives them survivability to only to protect The Norris Group and their investor, but it really protects their down payment and what they put into the property. It gives them the ability to get out of a situation instead of lose a situation. It is also really a benefit for them to make a monthly payment.

Craig has always been asked if the payments can be included in the loan, and he learned years ago from making an unwise transaction with his baseball cards that once the money was long gone he made payments on it every month. Every time he wrote the check it was a lesson to not do it again. In the same way, if you are making a payment on a property you realize that it is costing you money. Just because you might have payments for six months, you cannot just sit around and wait. You have to take action since the problem is not going to solve itself. The payments are either not a high priority or the borrower has a tendency to not think about making payments. The Norris Group used to do seconds for people so they would not have as much in, although this is something they do not do anymore. They realized that not everyone is disciplined. The Norris Group not only looks at the deals, but they also try to help people be disciplined so they have successful outcomes. You cannot try to do three if your limit really should be one. Stick with the one because you are really going to have a successful result on that one. One of Bruce’s favorite statements Craig has made is, “Lost another loan; made another client for life.” In this case, the client was told the truth they actually needed to hear to see that they now have confidence that they have a backup system they can trust and will not get hurt by their loan officer.

There is almost as many people out there who would thank The Norris Group for not doing deals, talking them out of a deal, or explaining how it works. It is very satisfying because what Craig tells people when he is talking to them is he can tell by their voice when they are a little disappointed, but he tells them he can deal with that. Being a little disappointed right now with Craig telling you no or what is the real deal is much better than the client having a deal three weeks from now where they are going to lose the deposit or having a deal nine months from now where you lost $20 grand. This is going to be a lot more disappointing. The philosophy at The Norris Group is to deal with it as it comes, and people are usually very appreciative of the fact that TNG tries to give them good advice.

Bruce mentioned the home shows and how one of the things he noticed was how frustrating they were because some of the reality was missing. On the show, you are shown a property in the beginning that needs a lot of repair. It’s a perfect opportunity for two investors, but then you come back four months later and they look like they want to get a divorce. Then, the realtor comes back in and tells them what they left out. Going from A to B is an expensive process, and it just shows there are deals that do not fit the level of experience of certain buyers. Craig always tells them when they get their first deal; he tells them they did not find the deal, it found them. There were several people who passed on that deal who were experienced investors, and the newer people need to stick with what they know and what is the simplest process. You have to leave the other things for the other people, and conversely in their group of clients they have a lot of clients who are experienced. They have one right now out in Orange County who is buying a property for $220,000 and are putting about $125 grand into it. This is a very experienced investor, but it is also a niche because not a lot of people are going to be able to accomplish what he is going to accomplish. You have two sides of the scale; one that can tackle these kinds of things, and the newer group that needs to stay away from this. Most often these are the deals that the new people find that other people had passed on originally.

Be sure to visit our website, www.thenorrisgroup.com, for more information on trust deed investing and our loan programs.

For more information about The Norris Group’s California hard money loans or our California Trust Deed investments, visit the website or call our office at 951-780-5856 for more information. For upcoming California real estate investor training and events, visit The Norris Group website and our California investor calendar. You’ll also find our award-winning real estate radio show on KTIE 590am at 6pm on Saturdays or you can listen to over 170 podcasts in our free investor radio archive.

259-TNGRadio – Craig Hill 1-7-12

Friday, January 6th, 2012

Craig-Hill

Craig Hill

Hard Money Lender for The Norris Group


(Full Bio)

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This week Bruce is joined by Craig Hill of The Norris Group. Craig has worked with The Norris Group since the company opened in 1995. Craig has worked with the real estate investors, helping them access money for their deals and trust deed investors who want to get a very safe yield on their money. Prior to working with The Norris Group, Craig was in the hard money loan business for years prior to that; and the expertise he brought with him has proved him valuable to the success of the company.

Bruce said it never ceases to amaze him that their client base keeps on finding deals that keep giving them record years. Craig said it seems that regardless of what you hear out there about there not being any deals, The Norris Group is very fortunate because they have wide enough base of clients that they seem to find enough properties to keep The Norris Group hitting record levels every year. They have an expert base of clients that finds things when most people don’t. Bruce has a feeling next year might be a blockbuster year and that there will be inventory in excess of what they had this year. Craig said for most of his clients, the perception ranges from no deals to a blockbuster year. Their base of clients, both buyers and trust deed investors, will be ready for whichever one it is.

The mood has definitely shifted, but at least now there is a safety in what people think has happened to prices. Craig thinks there is definitely not a huge issue with a large price drop, especially in the inventory with which The Norris Group is dealing. They are dealing in the starter homes, whether it is L.A., Orange County, Riverside, or San Bernardino. It is the lower priced homes. But Craig said people definitely do not see a sharp drop in the prices. This would be hard to imagine because when they deal with one of the long-term loans, it is not uncommon that the rents are 2x the interest payment. This is a 9.9% interest payment, not 4%. You would have to think there would be an interested buyer at some level. It is almost like with the investment side and the trust deed side, it is hard to imagine a real worst case. Craig had talked to a gentleman earlier who talked about how the only real issue is it would go from passive to a little less passive if you ever had a situation you had to deal with, but not something where you have a major loss of funds or would not have 2 or 3 solutions.

Back in 2007 and 2008 was not normal, it was really a Great Depression for real estate. It was hard to not get damaged somewhat in that, but for the ten years prior there are so many solutions, including the client base that deals with the inventory. When The Norris Group has one client that might have an individual problem, it seems to be easily resolved by multiple sources. Since a lot of the buyers concentrate in the same areas, Craig cannot imagine that if somebody were to get a house back or if a borrower was to have a problem that he would have any trouble finding somebody who would either take over the mortgage or take a similar mortgage on a house where it cash flows by twice of what the payment is. The Norris Group has had very few problems, but when they have they have had cooperation from the borrower. It seems like most of the time they are interested in a solution that does not force them to take it into foreclosure. The cooperation The Norris Group has had has been very fantastic.

The easiest case here would be if somebody wants to do a deed in lieu of foreclosure, this makes the process very simple. There have been a couple cases where someone has allocated a sale to another investor that then put the trust deed investor back on track receiving payments. A lot of things really come with the base of the clients that they have. The Norris Group has really grown to become the company it is today, and there are not a lot of people who want to burn that bridge. It is a lot of fun when you are associated with a company that has that reputation. Both Bruce and Craig receive the calls where people tell them they have heard of The Norris Group from so many different directions and want to know what they do. This is a fun phone call for them. The calls are definitely warm if not red-hot depending on how many times they have heard of Bruce Norris and The Norris Group. It is an advantage to take those calls. What is nice is there is no other place you can go to where they are treated the same way.

The concept of loaning money out to someone seems fairly simple. You find someone with a unique situation where normal lenders would not loan on it, so you step in, put up money, and get a higher interest yield. It sounds simple except for when people try to do it themselves. This is when the failure rate is astronomical. This is why they do loans and not situations because the situations are the dangerous ones. Their focus has always been on investors buying properties, so they really focus on doing loans. The people who only lend to people who have a situation, such as someone in foreclosure, currently do not have the ability to pay, or they would be paying. Therefore, somebody steps in and thinks they are protected by the equity and if they give a certain amount, such as $30 grand, then everything will be okay. However, what happens is that $30 grand has a home probably 5 minutes after you give it to them. Now you are dealing with the only security you have, which is the property. You really cannot rely on the borrower to make you good because he really could not make payments before you met him, and now he has all the payments plus The Norris Group’s payment, and the $30 grand did not really solve the problem the way the customer thought it would. If you are protected by the property, then this is a situation where you can be tied up by the borrower with litigation; and this has never been something The Norris Group wanted to do.

The word Craig uses more than anything because it applies to how he feels as an investor is passive. Their group of investors really gets spoiled by the passive nature. When they first started, the investors at the beginning felt like the company was a big warehouse filled with loans. People were asking for loans that were, for example, $200,000 more than what they originally asked. For a long time this may have worked because they were growing as the money base was growing, but then when the market got a little more difficult, they really backed off on the number of loans they did. Unfortunately, this was when clients found out it was not a warehouse, but rather a process. The clients went elsewhere thinking the process would be the same and they were drawing the loans from the same warehouse, but unfortunately this was where a lot of people got hurt. They have had so many people who want to invest, and Craig has had to tell people they will never change their criteria, no matter how many people want to lend money through The Norris Group. It is better for them to be a little disappointed than for The Norris Group to change their process.

What people have to understand is The Norris Group spends no time on negative situations in relationship to a lot of other companies. A lot of companies have foreclosure divisions, and Bruce said he just cannot imagine the stress of this. Earlier in the year, they did have a house that went all the way through foreclosure that was 600-700 loans in the past. This is something Craig can deal with; but when you are dealing with loans from 2 or 3 years ago and you have only had one, then it makes things a little more difficult. As a business model it is very good because they are spending all of their energy on positive things, such as new programs and ways to service people better and fund deals more quickly. It really helps the Norris Group do a better job too because when everyone is making their payments on time, the base of investors who have trust deed investments feel safer to make more quick decisions saying that what they have is just like the one they had originally. Craig said he sometimes wishes he were like the Ghost of Christmas Present when dealing with the new investor and show them how a deal had worked out originally and what they could do this time. Unfortunately you can’t, so it is understandable for new people. Everybody is new at something at some point, but usually with the success and consistency of things, everybody wants to get in and they’re only frustrated by the fact that maybe The Norris Group does not have enough loans for everybody.

Sometimes we get into situations where there are multiple decision-makers, a lawyer, and there was even one incident they dealt with where it was trumped by somebody who had a bad sense about the investment, and the investment they put in has not worked out. You can go a year out and look back to see how you really liked the decision you made. This is one thing that is a hard decision for people because sometimes they just have the wrong perception because hard money for years has been tied to people lending to people in situations Craig had talked about earlier, and it is not real easy for them to separate that somebody may actually have a different process. On the surface, with interest rates are 4% and the Norris Group is loaning at 12.5%, the borrower has to be risky; and his is not. It almost does not make sense. Interestingly enough, you have two groups of people, some who think they can do better with their own money and can get a 15-20% yield, and others who are completely the opposite and are earning under a percent in a CD and when they look at a yield of 9% think the money is being taken to Vegas. Whenever somebody comes into the office, he always shows them a list of all the 9% loans they have. He shows them how they have not had to foreclose on any and only might occasionally have a couple that are 30 days late. It is real comforting to know that on any given day he can have somebody in the office he can show his computer to and not be embarrassed.

Bruce also discussed the time he had the opportunity to speak in front of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac about the safety of loaning to investors. At that time we had a pool of $15 million loans with absolutely no late payments, and he said you could see the look of shock on their faces that there could be a 9.9% interest rate and no late payments. It was so out of the box of their thinking because they were looking at the investor as the risky borrower as opposed to the owner-occupant, and The Norris Group has found just the opposite to be true. This is why they have always pushed the envelope on the yield vs. risk side. They have never been the highest in yield to an investor, but they have always been by far the less risky. Sometimes people ask Craig if he could lend a little less or try to custom-fit the program, and Craig always responds that what they have to realize is this is a very given and take situation because if we want to continue to have the absolute best clients, we have to be on the cutting edge. It has to make sense for both sides, but The Norris Group cannot make it to where it absolutely does not make sense because what happens is instead of getting the A quality borrowers that they are filled with, they have to start fighting for lower than this. They always have to keep the clients they have because this is what makes them successful.

The type of people who always want to chase the higher yield is interesting because Bruce has had the same conversation with them where you finally figure out that they are in fact getting a higher yield and are foreclosing on 50% of their properties while they have 20% of their money active. The active part is really the key because Craig has had conversations with people year by year, and they just cannot pull the trigger. One instance might be the 9% program because it is an 8 year program. They think they are going to be looking at a higher interest rate and more nervous about committing their money. They will call Craig a year later, and he will finally tell them that for two years they have not been getting any yield, so going forward it would really have to obtain a yield. You really can’t take riskier investments or wait for some kind of better yield, especially someone who has wealth already. Sometimes it may not be a good fit for somebody that has to create wealth.

Craig was having dinner with a client recently who had been with them a long time, and she had somebody she knew who came up to Craig and asked him how they could make $1 million. He said he could not tell her how to do it, but if you try to do it you might lose $1 million. Sometimes not everybody is a fit for everybody, so they have really found a nice niche for people who have some wealth and want to consistently build it with very low risk. With the price points we are at right now, we are making loans based on 1990’s prices. Common sense tells all of us that that was before it even went up this last time. If we feel that 1995 was a realistic value, these loans are being made at 60-65% of 1995 prices. All that tells us is historically we would not know what would have to happen for this to make sense and it also does in a second way because the rents are already covering the payment by double. It is one of those situations where the smart money is actually on both sides of the table because the investor, or the person buying the property, is a skillful investor buying something below market by today’s value. However, if you look at the whole picture the investor is buying it with a starting point of half of what it was worth four years ago, and he is receiving a discount and a cash flow. He is making money monthly and buying something below replacement cost where the history says we will probably accelerate in the future. He cannot borrow money through standard lenders because they are not interested in that loan. On the other side, he has the choice of receiving a ten year t-bill that is at 1.9% today, the stock market that goes down or up 300 points every other day based on what happens in Greece, or a 9% trust deed. ]

The Norris Group has some very large commitments from people, who have money managers and overseers, and from talking to these people one year apart Bruce has seen that they are astonished that their yield had performed perfectly. They were warning their client that there is no way that the yield could be so riskless, and then it turned out to be so. The best and most satisfying thing about what The Norris Group does is what they see happen in the long-term. Before going to The Norris Group, Craig was working with a friend and was funding deals with hers and her father’s funds. She told him a story about how she went to her account year after year for 6-8 years in a row. Craig told her he did not know what her investment was but she needed to get out of it because it was too risky. Meanwhile, with her father’s insistence she has also diversified into some stocks, which had netted a 0 yield over the last 18 years. However, by the ninth or tenth year she was told to keep doing what she was doing. It was very rewarding. The Norris Group has a process in place that is second-to-none in picking clients that are worthy of borrowing money.

Bruce and Craig talked about the process and why it was different from other people. The main thing you have to do is rule out people to make sure they are qualified when you get a call from a borrower. The first thing you do is try to establish right away whether or not it is a situation. If it is a situation, then you have to rule that out. Secondly, you always try to find out if it is owner occupied. Most hard money companies will not do owner-occupied loans any longer, so you also look at this. You also have to get an idea and see if they have any experience. The Norris Group really relies heavily on liquid cash because one thing they have found in the business is you really need to have liquid cash because you cannot have a situation where a $10,000 or $20,000 problem throws your whole world upside down. This is probably the most frustrating thing when somebody calls in to borrow, they might have $800 credit but only $10,000 in the bank. You can usually tell by their credit report and what they state their income is to see that it would not take much to flip the whole thing over. This is compared with someone who is a business person who went through a situation 4-5 years ago where he had a bankruptcy and so his credit is not as good. However, he currently has about $200,000 in the bank to back him up. People with better credit don’t like to hear this, but in our world this is a safer bet.

When we make loans, we are actually using common sense and asking ourselves what are the odds that we are going to be paid monthly and get paid back. We are really not guided by any 1,2,3,4 rules. The bottom line is if it really makes sense and it is a good loan, then it can be done. Bruce said that Craig also has kind of a sixth sense in that there are times when he has come to Bruce showing him something that looked good on paper, but he knew there was something about it that he felt uncomfortable with, and he was right. This was probably one of the things that he has always appreciated from the very start, whether it was from a trust deed investor or a borrower. There will be times when he will come to Bruce, and he can just feel that there is something not right. Craig has learned that he if gets that feeling to try to catch somebody in a little bit of a situation where he can tell they are not being up front with him.

Tune in next week for the second part of Bruce’s interview with Craig Hill on The Norris Group Radio Show.

For more information about The Norris Group’s California hard money loans or our California Trust Deed investments, visit the website or call our office at 951-780-5856 for more information. For upcoming California real estate investor training and events, visit The Norris Group website and our California investor calendar. You’ll also find our award-winning real estate radio show on KTIE 590am at 6pm on Saturdays or you can listen to over 170 podcasts in our free investor radio archive.

161-TNG Radio – Christopher Thornberg 2-13-10

Friday, February 12th, 2010

christopher-thornberg

Christopher Thornberg

Principal at Beacon Economics

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This week Bruce is joined by Christopher Thornberg. Christopher is an expert in the study of regional economies, real estate dynamics, and business forecasting. In 2006, he co-founded Beacon Economics which is an  economic research and consulting firm that specializes in real estate markets, local economic development, and public and private policy issues. Christopher has also been part of the Norris Group’s award-winning fundraising series, I Survived Real Estate.

Christopher and Bruce discuss the current state of the market and whether the market is truly experiencing a comeback or is it completely manufactured.  Christopher goes into detail about Bernanke and his current handling of the market.  Government actions has delayed the inevitable and Christopher and Bruce discuss what the different strategies have been and how effective they have been and how much longer we should expect to see these manipulations.

Bruce and Christopher talk about Fannie Mae and FHA and the growing issues with FHA’s portfolio. The Mortgage Bankers Association estimates 20% of the their loan portfolio is in trouble.

A complete transcription of the show coming soon.