Savvy investors are getting creative and taking control over the success of their investments. Many are using Self Directed IRAs, some are even taking advantage of the oversupply of opportunity in real estate. They are borrowing against their portfolio and making more as a passive real estate investor or Private Investor. All of this is made possible using a HedgeLoan and becoming a Private Money Lender.
What is a HedgeLoan? In the simplest explanation, it is a loan against your securities. You can get a loan backed by your stocks, bonds, mutual funds and other securities. No FICO scores, no lengthy approval process, loans close in as soon as 48 hours. Check out www.hedgelender.com for more information.
So how can a HedgeLoan increase your portfolio returns by 5-10%? Easy, you be the bank as a passive real estate investor sometimes called a private money lender. You charge a higher rate than you incur and can increase your return on your portfolio by 5-10%. You pay 4-7% and charge 8-15%. Check out the loan comparison guide www.hedgelender.com/ProductComparison.pdf.
So two things must be done, follow the steps here www.hedgelender.com/closing.htm to obtain a HedgeLoan and find a credible real estate investor with a successful track record. Make sure you fund deals at no higher than 70% LTV. The current economy and lending environment has resulted in an oversupply of tremendous opportunities for real estate investors and one of the best times ever to be a private money lender. For questions or guidance on this or more on articles, Guides and information visit us at www.realreturnrealestate.com.
This is a very interesting alternative to using your own funds. But I do have one concern. You mention one of the available securities are those held in an IRA. To my knowledge, you cannot encumber an IRA or other non-qualified retirement plan’s assets as security for a loan. How does this bypass the “no security” rule?
Good catch Rick, there is a ira restructuring loan here http://www.hedgelender.com/solutionsindex.htm. But the investments accepted are free-trading stocks, bonds, mutual funds, federal securities, and stock options. You can research it more at http://www.hedgelender.com.