The Complete Guide to Real Estate Finance for Investment Properties: How to Analyze Any Single-Family, Multifamily, or Commercial Property
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| The Complete Guide to Real Estate Finance for Investment Properties: How to Analyze Any Single-Family, Multifamily, or Commercial Property | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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This practical, real-world guide gives investors all the tools they need to make wise decisions when weighing the value and potential of investment properties. Written for old pros as well as novice investors, this friendly, straightforward guide walks readers step by step through every stage of property analysis. Whether you're buying or selling, investing in big commercial properties or single-family rentals, you'll find expert guidance and handy resources on every aspect of real estate finance, including:
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The Complete Guide to Real Estate Finance for Investment Properties covers every aspect of financial analysis as it applies to real estate. Written with novice investors in mind, it covers such topics as the three traditional valuation methodologies used to determine value; understanding finance concepts such as ROR and ROI; and cash flow analysis as it applies to income producing properties.
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| 04-06-08 | 1 | 1\1 |
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The author actually described the valuation of a bank CD as simply dividing the cash flow by the interest rate - a perpetuity valuation! But one does not receive the CD cash flow for eternity. A CD is a single cash flow that requires a simple time-value discounting.
This teaching is akin to describing how the planets orbit the sun based on the theory of electromagnetics, or how a hybrid car runs so efficiently because a little gnome is in the engine turning a handcrank! A complete lack of conceptual understanding. The author also goes on to define "single-family housing" as having 4 or fewer units and "multi-family housing" as having 5 or more units - a definition that is cumbersome at best and downright knuckleheaded at worst. This distinction is important, but it is the distinction between residential (single, duplex, triplex, or quadraplex) housing and commercial (multifamily) housing. Other organization of the book is just poor. For example, in discussing useful financial ratio, the author introduces ratios using the net operating income (NOI) before actually defining the NOI a few pages later. (I won't get into the fact that NOI is introduced as another "ratio", although it's not; it's a dollar value off of the income sheet.) (Review Data Last Updated: 2008-11-30 05:09:21 EST)
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| 03-08-07 | 4 | 1\1 |
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you may want to read this book two or three times to make sure you understand the information. More for an experienced investor with complex formulas. But once you understand them and then apply them they make perfect sense. Anyone thinking of buying multi family or large commercial properties should definetly read this book.
(Review Data Last Updated: 2008-04-07 12:34:53 EST)
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| 02-27-07 | 1 | (NA) |
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I study with this book in my Real Estate Finance class. It's terrible. There is nothing new here. It's only about basic finance but, he changed the terms to look fancier. These new named financial terms are so much confusing. There are also so many errors in this book. Moreover, the author never stops talking about his achievements. I'm so sick of this book. I can't believe that they pick up this book for us to study.
(Review Data Last Updated: 2007-03-08 15:32:11 EST)
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| 03-20-06 | 2 | 26\27 |
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In my opinion, as a non-author, this book is poorly written.
The book gives examples on financial calculations that can be done to determine if a piece of property is a good investment. However, the examples given are either too complex to be meaningful outside of the specific situtation or too simple to gain any understanding. The second section of the book on "case studies", is not made for new investors. The examples involve huge sums of money and very complex situations. Two examples come to mind: One case study discussed buying an apartment complex in an overpriced area, another rambled on about legal trouble he had with a local zoning board. A simpler more straight forward example of properties would be much more valuable. I also did not appreciate the fact that his company is plugged throughout the book. I guess it offers some value in that he has actually experienced the situations in the book but I cannot help but think this book was written only for the benefit of his company and not to eduate the readers. I have read many real estate books written by many successful investor who never mention their company's name. He mentions his constantly. This book may make sense for investors with large cash reserves($500,000+) in that it explains some creative ways to identify ways to improve a property and it is written from real experience, but in general I do not recommend it. (Review Data Last Updated: 2007-02-27 13:06:34 EST)
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| 01-12-06 | 1 | 14\16 |
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I purchased this book with good intentions and have never written a negative review on a book, but I had to go out of my way to make note on this book. Although I can see how others could find value in the book, the author lost his credibility with me after two chapters of me underlining statements he was making that he stated as fact when they were just his opinion. I won't get into every detail, but for example he classifies real estate investors as short-term, mid-term, or long term and then states "the long term investor won't care about purchase price" (what is he talking about?) and then fails to understand the fact a long term investor can capture appreciated gains through monetizing the asset (i.e. the house) through additional equity lines or refinances, rather than state this simple fact which is very important as it would allow a long term investor to avoid transaction costs and tax implications but still receive cash from the appreciation he states the long term investor will hold the home not very leveraged; that is totally untrue many long term investors are highly leveraged and continually borrow against their properties and appreciation. Anyway, not a big deal but atleast he didn't call his book the "Bible to Real Estate Finance" or something like that because it is not. It is a great subject matter and topic and he stated he may be one of the few people to have written a book on this narrow topic for a lay person, but the book lacks a professional polished work; take it for what you can get out of it and question things.
(Review Data Last Updated: 2006-07-07 07:17:15 EST)
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| 05-12-05 | 4 | 57\59 |
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This is a great book, and well worth purchasing if you want to learn about finances for investment properties. It is not all that it could be, but don't let that stop you from using it to get started. All that having been said, here are the things that I had to be careful about: 1) Ten performance measurements and ratios are presented in chapter 6, and they represent the heart of the book. There is little overview of which ones are most importance or how to use or weigh conflicting or offsetting results. 2) The book is heavily centered on spreadsheets, which the author offers to sell to you. Others have criticized the spreadsheets for being locked. I used the book to recreate my own version of the spreadsheets, and the extensive explanations in the book helped, mostly, to make sure that I got the underlying formulas correct. What I noticed, however, is that the book sorely needed a financially sophisticated editor. For example, the spreadsheet on page 193 has an entry for "Expense/Foot." In fact, this entry is none other than the OER - Operating Expense Ratio - that was developed in Chapter 6. Why go to all the trouble to create and define ratios, if you aren't then going to use them. Other parts of the spreadsheets were equally problematic. For example, the Net CF's - presumably "cash flow" - for a 3 year exit only had the receipts for years 1 and 2, and not for year 3. Lastly, the book has nothing to say about (a) maintaining and growing a real estate portfolio of multiple properties as opposed to a single property, or (b) evaluating the relatively new 1031 multiple tenants in common investments that some long time owners are trading into in order to stop being a full time property manager as well as an investor.
(Review Data Last Updated: 2006-07-07 07:17:15 EST)
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| 02-16-05 | 5 | 10\14 |
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I own a small business and used Berges's book to help me analyze two commercial real estate aquisitions for our business's office locations. I felt Berges does an admirable job of giving the reader what he/she needs to know to profit. Not too simple. Not too complex. Just right.
(Review Data Last Updated: 2006-07-07 07:17:15 EST)
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| 11-25-04 | 5 | 30\31 |
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I have read many books dealing with real estate finance and while they all have some merits, this seems to cover most areas sufficiently. The only caveat is do not buy this book if you are going into commercial property because it does not cover triple net leases or any other analysis that might come up with commerical properity. However if you want to learn about returns with single family or multi family buildings, then this is the book for you. Berges other book on multi family buildings is also quite informative.
(Review Data Last Updated: 2006-07-07 07:17:15 EST)
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| 09-11-04 | 5 | 42\45 |
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It's about time somebody wrote a book that really deals with the financial aspects of real estate in an in-depth and informative way. I've seen a couple of other real estate finance books that sell for over $100 that are intended to be used as text books and deal more in the realm of theory. Steve Berges' book takes the theory found in college level text books and simplifies it so that the average person can understand it. He then takes it a step further by showing the reader how the theory can be applied to real world situations by providing actual examples. According to the jacket of the book and some of the comments inside, the author has an MBA in finance and is also an active real estate investor, which suggests to me that he knows what he's talking about.
Since math never was one of my best subjects, I found the step-by-step examples and analysis to be very helpful. Berges covered many topics related to finance including future value and present value concepts, understanding income capitalization, IRRs, ROIs, NPVs, income and balance statements, and much more. All in all, the book was very helpful to me in understanding how to analyze income producing properties such as apartments and commercial buildings. The author did an excellent job in writing about a topic that has been all but neglected by the so-called TV gurus. (Review Data Last Updated: 2006-07-07 07:17:16 EST)
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