This is an LFI episode and LFI is now part of PassivePockets.
Iโm excited to have Chris Seveney with us. He brings over many years of real estate experience to 7EInvestments and has been actively buying and selling mortgage notes since 2016. This conversation was mostly about those notes. Chris, welcome to the show.
Jim, thanks for having me. Iโm excited to be here.
The first question I always ask is, whatโs your journey? How did you get into real estate? More specifically, how did you get into notes? If you can tell us how you got here, that would be great.
Stepping back into real estate was what I went to college for. I went for Civil Engineering. In my senior year, I made a little bit of a switch because I was thinking I was going to be more on the design side when I realized designing bridges for the rest of my life or something didnโt seem that fun. I flipped over to construction management in my last year as part of the Civil Engineering program. I got into that. I was working for a general contractor for about ten-plus years until you get into your mid-30s and get burnt out from working six days a week. I went over to the dark side, which was with a developer. It was the first thing I was working on with a developer.
He said, โWhatโs in your own portfolio?โ I said, โNothing.โ He said, โWe got to change that pretty quick.โ He goes, โHave you ever heard of the 40/40/40 rule?โ I said, โWhat the heckโs a 40/40/40 rule?โ He goes, โYou work 40 years for 40 hours a week to only be able to afford about 40% of the lifestyle you were living.โ I was like, โWhoa.โ That opened up my eyes and made me laugh because we used to have a 40/40 club of 40 home runs and 40 stolen bases back in the day. I started buying some rental properties, my wife and I. We were doing the BiggerPocketsโ BRRRR strategy. We had kids, and it was too overwhelming, especially being in the Washington, DC, area of the amount of cash you need.
My wife and I decided, โLetโs stop it for a little bit.โ Me being an entrepreneurial, I was going on BiggerPockets. First, I saw tax lien, so I started playing with those a little bit but realized it was boring to me. There was nothing behind it. Thereโs a strategy, but not compared to when I found note investing, which weโre going to talk about. Once I found out you could do note investing, I was a little upset because I didnโt realize this business even existed. I knew there was private lending, but not this side of note investing. Thatโs my journey through that process.
Thatโs interesting. I havenโt heard the 40/40/40 rule before, and it is so true. With 40% of your living expenses, no one wants to live like that. You work these 40 years of a long career and realize when you get there, โMaybe Iโm not there.โ
Thankfully, my father worked for a school system, so he had a pension, but how many people do you see nowadays in their mid-60s who did very well throughout their careers but all of a sudden theyโre like, โI still canโt retire comfortably?โ
Maybe the ones that have to go back because the market tanks or whatever, and now youโre a Walmart greeter or whatever the clichรฉ is. You see it. Thereโs no way to go. Notes are what got you out of the 40-hour work week in that place that you were. How did you figure out notes? I was digging around BiggerPockets. I was a turnkey investor, and I finally found what Iโm passionate about, which is passive investing. You found what youโre passionate about is notes. How did you find that? How did you jump from the BRRRR or the tax liens and figure out, โNotes is for me?โ
I left my full-time job to do notes, but I was doing it for 4 or 5 years. I was working while doing notes. What attracted me to notes was several things. One is you can do it from anywhere as long as you have an internet connection. You can do it anytime during the day. Youโre not competing against people like a property comes on the market, and you got to get your offers. Notes levels that playing field because youโll get a list of assets for sale, and they say, โWe need bids by Friday. Itโs in a week.โ Itโs not like youโre running out there and you donโt have time, and then you miss the boat. That was one of the key factors.
You can do it anywhere at any time during the day. I could work my day job and spend time with my kids and my wife if she goes to bed earlier than I do. I used to call myself the midnight to 2:00 investor. Late night, I was doing my entrepreneurial โside gig.โ Thatโs what drove me. Plus, I come from a family where when I was growing up, my parents adopted four kids who were from a bad family. Iโve always liked to help people or try and help people.
With note investing, you have that opportunity to work with people because youโre buying loans at a discount to try and keep them in their house if they want to, in proverbial, play ball. If theyโre willing to work with you, you can work with them in most instances to try and keep them in their homes. Weโll talk more about notes, but one of the things that I think most people donโt realize with note investing is investors, a lot of times, will go to try and foreclose on these assets to try and get the property, but itโs much more profitable at the end of the day to keep the people in their homes.
[bctt tweet=โWith note investing, you can work with people because youโre buying loans at a discount to try and keep them in their house if they want to. โ via=โnoโ]
Letโs dive in here. What are notes? Itโs a mortgage on somebodyโs house. Talk to us about the notes and the different kinds of notes, and give us an overview from the start.
Like you mentioned, when people buy a house, typically, people are not paying cash for that house. There are two documents they sign. Most people, even myself, always thought they were the same. You sign a note and a mortgage or a deed of trust. They are intertwined together. The difference between the two is the note is the IOU. The note says, โJim, Iโm giving you $100,000, and youโre going to pay me $600 a month for the next 30 years at 6% interest.โ Itโs the IOU. The mortgage is the teeth behind it. The mortgage is that legal document that says, โJim, if you donโt pay Chris, Chris has the right to go after the property as collateral.โ
Thatโs the difference between a note and a mortgage, but theyโre intertwined because theyโre always hand-in-hand together. If you get a car loan, itโs typically secured, but thereโs unsecured debt, which is credit cards. Mortgages and notes are secured. There are different types which are first position and second position. The best way to think about it is youโre in line. You want to be first in mind, meaning that if that person stops paying, youโre the first one to get paid. With the home equity line of credit, you see a lot of people getting those now because theyโve built up so much equity. Those are inferior to your first mortgage, so those are called seconds. Another name, as I said, is a line of credit.
With notes, thereโs performing where people are paying. Thereโs also nonperforming, where loans are typically 90 days or more delinquent. One thing I want to mention about that is most people think like, โI missed a mortgage payment. Theyโre going to come to throw me out.โ Most of our borrowers are behind by 3, 4, 5, or 6 years. Itโs not like if somebody misses a payment, weโre foreclosing on them. With the laws nowadays, you canโt even do anything to the borrowers at least 90 days past due. I wanted to throw those out there as well the difference between a performing and a nonperforming loan. We primarily focus on the nonperforming side.
You mentioned that the second mortgage, the home equity line of credit, is inferior to the first. Can you explain exactly what that means, that itโs in the second position?
Letโs say I lent you $100,000. Letโs say your house appreciated $150,000, and you go out and take a $25,000 line of credit. Now all of a sudden, something happens, values decrease, and plus, you didnโt take care of the property. Letโs now say that the propertyโs only worth $90,000 and gets sold at a foreclosure sale. Itโs not like each person gets a percentage. Itโs like, โThere was $150,000. We get $90,000.โ Weโll split it or give people percentages of things. Itโs like if you and I went in and bought something, paid $10 apiece, and sold it for $8, weโd each get $4 and lose $1 apiece.
This is the first position. We get all of that money, and once theyโre satisfied or paid off, if there are additional funds, it goes to whoโs next in line. If there are not any funds to go to that person, like the second line of credit, they get completely wiped. They lose everything. The second line of credit or seconds has a much higher risk when youโre investing in them, especially in nowadays economy, where I think most people agree that houses are starting to get a little soft.
You talked about performing and nonperforming. Can you dig into that a little bit and why one is maybe better than the other as an investor? Can you explain those a little bit more?
It depends on your business model and your risk. With performing loans, the borrowers pay every month. As a passive investor, thereโs a lot less work that is involved. I will tell anybody that if youโre investing in notes or even private lending because technically, youโre originating a note, itโs passive but active. You still have to do work. I donโt want people to think that itโs just like, โI donโt have to do anything.โ The only time Iโd say you pretty much donโt have to do anything is when youโre investing in a fund, in which you have to do all that due diligence upfront. On the performing side, you hear the term mailbox money, where people start paying, and youโre getting that payment every month.
Your returns are typically lower. If youโre buying performing loans that at one point in time had some delinquencies or poor credit, you might see returns between 8%, 10%, or maybe 11%. It might be able to get into that double-digit range. With nonperforming, you got somebody who hasnโt paid for three years. Youโre buying that loan at a substantial discount, probably like $0.50 on the dollar. We typically now pay $0.40 to $0.60.
A few years ago, we were probably paying $0.30 to $0.50. Pricing has gone up because inventory levels on distressed notes have gone down. People ask, โHow do you make money on something that isnโt paying?โ That goes back to where that mortgage comes in handy, where you can enforce the mortgage by filing a complaint against a borrower to say, โPay up. Letโs work out a deal, or we will have to look toward redeeming that property through foreclosure or other means.โ
Why would a lender sell a performing note? Sometimes I get a mortgage, and it gets sold off, and I have another servicer. I understand getting the nonperforming notes off the books, but why would you sell a performing note?
It depends. A lot of investors who we buy from and funds look to balance their portfolios. For us, we like to keep between 30% and 40% of our portfolio performing and 60% to 70% as non. If those balances start getting up to 50/50, we may try and liquidate some performing and get some cash in to buy additional nonperforming assets. It could be for fund balance or portfolio balancing. It could be they just need cash for something else. Some investors also might be looking at a multifamily deal or another type of deal.
Itโs easiest to liquidate performing assets because there are a lot more people who are interested in a performing asset than there is a nonperforming assets. A lot of people think, โThere must be a problem with it.โ There are many different reasons why people sell things. You may have a good rental property in your portfolio that has been an awesome rental for you, but it might have capped out its value, for example, or you have another deal you want to go to, so itโs like, โLetโs sell this asset to use those funds elsewhere.โ
When you have a nonperforming note, the goal is to rehab that to make it performing. How do you go about that? What are the steps that you take to make it a performing note again?
One of the keys to investing in nonperforming notes is your team around you. In my company, we donโt physically call the borrower and try and work something out. The first line of defense is whatโs called a loan servicer. Thatโs a company that collects the payments. Lo and behold, whoeverโs reading who has a mortgage, youโre paying a loan servicer. It could be owned by your bank or lender.
Typically most of them are third parties that they โwhite labelโ for your bank. Theyโre the first line of defense. Theyโre collecting payments but also doing that initial reach-out. Theyโre trying to get on the phone with the borrower and work out some type of payment plan agreement like forbearance. There are a lot of terms. Itโs basically trying to work out some type of agreement to get them paying again. Thatโs the first line of defense.
If they canโt get through or canโt work something out, the next line is an attorney. Weโll use an attorney who will first send whatโs called the demand letter, which is a letter demanding payment. A lot of times, that is where the rubber meets the road because when people arenโt paying, a lot of times, they wonโt answer the phone, and the letters they get in the mail from their servicer, they probably donโt even open them because theyโre like, โAnother statement. Let me just throw it away.โ
Once they see something from the law offices of XYZ, theyโll be like, โI better open this.โ That starts the process where theyโll usually call the attorney at that point in time. Thatโs when we usually start seeing it. We have that attorney send that letter earlier on. We give the servicer 30 to 60 days to try and make communication. If they donโt, weโll usually have the attorney send that letter.
Whatโs the process when you buy a nonperforming note? Itโs someone elseโs problem, you bought a problem, and now you got to fix it. Is that where you start to give the servicer 30, 60, or 90 days to figure it out and start on the attorney? If this is a deal thatโs six years, and they havenโt paid their mortgage, are you jumping right to the attorney?
By law, you have to give the individual 30 days. Once a loan gets sold and transferred to a servicer, thereโs a 30-day period where a borrower can technically dispute it. If they dispute the debt and you had that letter sent, you have to reply to that letter and start to process it all over again. We usually wait for 30, 45, to 60 days. This blows my mind, and this will probably blow your mind too. People canโt fathom this because a lot of investors know every single asset they own and so forth and can tell you what color paint is on the walls. With a lot of these funds, theyโre buying thousands and thousands of loans. The cost to manage a $500,000 loan and a $50,000 loan is exactly the same.
Itโs the same servicing cost, foreclosure cost, everything. They focus on the top tier of the most-priced loans. Iโve had loans where they literally sit in a draw, and nobody has reached out and contacted. Nobody has even tried to contact them for years. All of a sudden, Iโve had loans where the servicer picks up the phone and calls and is like, โIโve been trying to figure out who to send my payment to. I didnโt know where to send it because a loanโs been sold many times.โ Another one we see a lot is bankruptcy. In Chapter 7 bankruptcy, the borrower technically doesnโt owe you the money anymore. Theyโre thinking, โI get a free house.โ Thatโs not the case. You donโt have to pay it anymore, but the lender can now take the house, or you work out an agreement.
A lot of times, the borrowers just think, โI donโt have to pay.โ After that happens, the servicer canโt contact the borrower because what do they call them for? They donโt owe them any money legally because the debtโs wiped. Youโre forced to start legal. A lot of times, some of these companies will look at it and be like, โWeโre not starting legal yet.โ It sits. Iโve had in the last year three occasions where Iโve had our attorney reach out to the borrowerโs attorney that was in Chapter 7 and said, โDoes your borrower know that they donโt owe the money, but if they want to keep the house, they got to work out a new payment plan on that old loan?โ and theyโre like, โLet me get in touch with them,โ and they do. Lo and behold, we work out new agreements.
We can work with them on the late fees and some of this other stuff a lot of times because itโs part of negotiations with them to get them paying. It blows my mind that there are a lot of loans out there. Iโll mention this too. Thereโs a nationwide bank thatโs one of the largest banks in this country that when the COVID came through, there were certain loans you could foreclose on and certain ones you could not. They ceased doing anything because they couldnโt figure out which loans they were allowed to foreclose on and which ones they couldnโt. Weโre talking about one of the largest banks in the country.
Thatโs incredible. I still have trouble understanding how someone can go 3, 4, 5, or 6 years and not pay their mortgage. This is going to sound bad. How long can I stop paying before someone comes after me? I thought, like you said, a month or two if I donโt pay my mortgage, someoneโs coming to take my house. Whatโs the average length of time a note is nonperforming?
It depends on the investor. The typical process can be anywhere from 6 months to 18 months is what foreclosure would take. There are two types of states. There is a judicial state, which means you have to go through the court, and there is a non-judicial state. That means you donโt have to go through the courts. Believe it or not, 90% of them are broken up by red versus blue states without getting into political dissension, except for California, which is a state that isnโt too bad. Youโd think it would be based on how it liens. New York, for example, takes five years. You go down to Georgia, and youโre 60 days. You can see the big gap.
It really depends on the lender itself and if they are managing that file. What happens is they get six months behind, they get that demand letter, and itโs like, โLet me work something out.โ Youโll work out some type of payment plan over a six-month period. 2 to 3 months go by, and they make 2 to 3 payments and stop paying again. Itโs like, โLet me try another plan or whatever.โ
The question is, how many times when that plan do you give them and then all of a sudden, next thing you know, theyโre 10 or 12 months behind, then enough is enough sometimes where they have that repeated process of not being able to pay? It blows my mind sometimes how long some of these loans have gone 3, 4, or 5 years sitting there. The longest one now we have in our portfolio goes back to 2011, which was the last time the borrower made a payment.
There are a few things I like about note investing. My favorite thing other than it gives you a nice return is itโs one of these things where you can help people and make money at the same time. You said your goal is to keep people in their homes. How does that work when youโre rehabbing a nonperforming note to make it performing? What negotiations do you do? How do you keep them in their homes, so they donโt get foreclosed on?
Hereโs an example of a deal we reached with a borrower. The mortgage was from 2012. The balance on loan was about $80,000. They were paying about $900 a month. Itโs a woman whose spouse passed away. She had a loss of income that was helping contribute. We were able to acquire that loan for about $50,000 is what we paid. Thatโs $0.62 on a dollar. The borrower was about 15 to 18 months behind roughly if I recall. We reached an agreement with the borrower to re-amortize the loan. I donโt think weโve ever increased an interest rate on a borrower. Typically, you donโt also increase the payment. The goal is to try and lower the payment.
We dropped that $900 payment down to $700 a month of what the borrower could afford. It doesnโt make sense sometimes to be like, โIโll drop it from $900 to $850,โ and the borrower says, โI canโt afford that.โ If the borrower canโt afford it, youโre just wasting time. To let people know, time is very important. Time is money in note investing. You want to try and come to some type of resolution ASAP because time is money. We dropped the payment down to $700 and did whatโs called a forbearance plan, which is weโre basically pausing any legal action and giving her a trial payment plan of, โIf you make this over this $700 over six months, weโll modify the loan, which means weโre permanently going to change the loan to that lower payment.โ
What that does is it gives us flexibility during that trial payment period. If they falter, the old term still applies. If they were to falter, we could still say youโre eighteen months behind. If I modified the loan first, thatโs starting over, so Iโd have to wait 90 to 120 days until they fall behind again. Thatโs one way we help people by taking those past two sometimes and rolling it into the end of the loan. In many instances, weโre typically taking that principle and interest payment and trying to knock that down because the borrowers canโt afford it.
A lot of times, thereโs a reason why. They may have temporarily been laid off, got sick, or had a family lost. We try and paint that picture when weโre reviewing these loans and have them under due diligence to try and understand what that problem is. At that point in time, weโre already working like, โWhatโs our exit plan so we can run our numbers off of that exit plan to make sure the numbers still do work for us as well?โ
You can lower the payment on that loan because itโs not an $80,000 loan to you. Itโs a $50,000 loan because you bought an $80,000 loan for $50,000. Thatโs where you can make your money still. Itโs a win-win. The person stays in their home, and you make money.
One thing Iโll mention to people who read this, too, is to remind people weโre not buying the house. Thatโs a question we get asked a lot. โYou own the property.โ No, we donโt own the property. Weโre just the lender. Weโre stepping in. Iโll use Wells Fargoโs name as an example because everyone knows who they are. Instead of you paying Wells Fargo every month, youโre paying Seveney Investments every month. You donโt call Wells Fargo to fix your roofer and unclog a toilet.
Interest rates are increasing, and inflation is here. Uncertain times are coming. No one knows whatโs going to happen. As interest rates rise, what does that do to this industry of note investing? Are there going to be more nonperforming notes? If thereโs an economic downturn, is that good for note investors? I know itโs not good for everybody, but is it good for note investors because more loans will go bad? Is it bad for not investors because you have some loans that will go bad, most likely? Is it both?
Itโs going to be both. There will be loans that we had that were performing that most likely will go into default, which happens all the time. Whether a good economy or bad economy, stuff happens to people all the time. Thatโs part of it. Itโs interesting because we get asked this question ten times a day, especially from investors looking to invest with us. The interest rate now, where itโs at from a note perspective, is somewhat interesting because weโre not originating new loans. Itโs not like we originated a loan six months ago at 4%, and now, all of a sudden, itโs at 7%. We canโt sell that, or weโre selling it at a bigger discount.
As you said, with the inflation and the loss of jobs, we will see more distressed borrowers. Weโre at an all-time low in history for the number of people who have defaulted on their loans. Weโll get back to normal. Weโre not going to get to 2008. Personally, I donโt see that happening. When that happens, itโs a supply-demand business. If supply goes up, thereโs probably a little less demand because more investors have gotten out over the last few years because of the lack of inventory. Weโll start to see pricing like that loan I just mentioned, that $80,000 note we paid $50,000 for. Forty-five years ago, I probably wouldโve paid $40,000 for that loan. Itโs probably going to go back to somewhere probably in between where itโs not $50,000. Itโs probably $45,000.
The benefit of that is it also helps us a little bit. It gives us more flexibility in working out with some of these borrowers. At the end of the day, if you have to foreclose on the property, itโs usually not in the greatest condition. You have to clean it out, pay the agent, and foreclose all that process. Youโre losing probably 25% of that value during that time. Whereas if I can keep them paying and get a nice double-digit return on it, itโs that win-win. By more delinquencies, will it help us? Yes. It might give us a little better returns, but it also gives us the ability to also work more with a borrower where instead of $700, maybe I could go to $650, where in the past, I couldnโt.
Our community Left Field Investors, is passive investors, and weโre always looking for new opportunities and new asset classes. We believe you have to vet the sponsor first and the deal or the asset class or the market. How does someone vet an operator like you? How do we know that you know what youโre doing? How do we build that trust? Aside from developing a relationship, what are some of the questions we should be asking note operators?
Iโm an investor as well. Weโve put together Questions You Should Ask Any Sponsor. Itโs on BiggerPockets. You can download it. The first question I always ask people is, โSend me a sample of your monthly or quarterly report and a sample like a balance sheet or financials that you provide to investors.โ Thatโs the first thing I always ask. With this being done, thereโs in the news in a different industry a balance sheet came out about a billion-dollar company filing bankruptcy. The balance sheet was a joke, I guess. I looked at it and chuckled. The first thing I typically ask is, โShow me what you send people.โ If the person canโt show you anything, that should be a red flag. I like to think I treat peopleโs money like itโs my own.
The only way to do that is to watch it like a hawk, have your books done, have a balance sheet, and have the reporting out to people. Show people how you do that. There are some websites out there. I know a lot of people use Verivest, for example. The interesting thing is I tried to get on Verivest, and because of the type of fund we have because we have a Regulation A plus offer, which has to go through the SEC, versus the Regulation Ds, which are exemptions, Verivest told me like, โWe donโt take Regulation A offerings. Youโve already gone through the SEC.โ I was like, โOkay.โ Itโs a good marketing thing to have people say, โIโm Verivest verified.โ
Iโm just using them as an example, but I know other fund managers who have gone through them. The balance sheet is the first one. There are the typical common questions of, โAre you currently being sued?โ Try and get a background check on somebody. Have they ever filed for bankruptcy? PACER is a site where all the bankruptcy filings are all public, so you can look up people to see if theyโve ever filed for bankruptcy. I recommend you always pull some type of background check or skip trace on anybody. A lot of passive investors in real estate have owned rentals at one time. Think about the amount of due diligence you do on that renter who may be paying you $1,000 a month, and youโre looking to give somebody $100,000. A lot of people do more research on that renter than the person they gave the money to.
[bctt tweet=โAlways pull some background checks or skip a trace on anybody. โ via=โnoโ]
That is a great point. Youโre absolutely right. Talk about your fund. I know itโs different because it is Regulation A. Also, thereโs some difference in taxing. Whenever I do note investing or private lending, I like to do it out of a non-taxable account, like a self-directed IRA or something like that, because you have to pay taxes on this stuff. There is a depreciation and some other benefits. You guys have an interesting outlook or interesting setup on that. Can you talk about that?
First, I have to give the standard caveat. I canโt give you tax or financial advice and all that fun stuff. Iโve run other funds in the past and also owned notes in my portfolio. Itโs the dreaded ordinary income K-1. If the fund were to take on any type of debt, then you get the UDFI/UBIT type stuff. When weโre going through this, originally, weโre looking at a restructure, which we couldnโt do, or itโs not tax-beneficial to do a REIT because REITs are meant to be passive where weโre buying distress notes. Iโve spent an entire weekend reading Tax Code on REITs and had to throw it out. We end up doing a C corporation, which everyone knows what a C corporation is.
By doing that, it should allow anyone investing to A) If youโre using an IRA, avoid any UBIT/UDFI because itโs a C corp. Weโre paying that corporate tax rate as part of the distribution. Weโre absorbing that tax. The other half is youโre a shareholder in the company, so itโs like youโre buying Apple stock, Google stock, or any other stock where if you hold it for a certain period of time, youโre at that dividend rate versus that ordinary income rate. I joke to people that we start at $500 investment minimum, and itโs non-accredited or accredited. We tell people, โIf you have an eighteen-year-old kid, they can throw $500.โ
Weโve done videos to show 8% at a dividend rate is better than 10% at a 37% bracket. For investors, if they invest more, they can get up to a 10% return, which is better than the typical 12% that a lot of people will see on the hard money side. Weโre getting too much in the numbers, which is tough to understand over an interview. My point is people should look at the structure. You look at the net, not the gross.
[bctt tweet=โPeople should look at the structure because you look at the net, not the gross.โ via=โnoโ]
Thatโs a great point. I donโt believe you can get this, but you talk to some financial advisors and say you can get 8% to 9% returns on your stocks or mutual funds. Maybe you can, but when you have to pay tax on it, are you better off at 7% in a real estate deal where youโre not paying any taxes? The same thing here is you have to factor in taxes because thatโs the biggest eroder of wealth. Itโs neat that youโve built in a lower taxable situation for notes because, in the past, it was either notes in your self-directed IRA or you donโt do notes because you donโt want to get taxed on it. This allows people to get into the lower tax rate. That seems like a pretty good deal. The last question I always ask is, what is a great podcast you listen to? Give me the name of yours, and you canโt pick that one.
Ours is the Creating Wealth Simplified Podcast. I like to listen to the All-In Podcast. Another is Tribe of Millionaires, which is part of a group called GoBundance. That is another good podcast as well. Those are pretty much the two. I jump around a lot. Lately, Iโve been doing a lot more YouTube stuff than I have been on the podcast side of things. Iโm going to take some time off, and Iโll be hanging out by a pool because weโre heading to somewhere much warmer than the Washington, DC, area and listening to some other podcasts.
Thatโs awesome. Thank you for those recommendations. Have a nice trip and enjoy the warm weather. If people want to get in touch with you, whatโs the best way they can do that?
They can go to our website, which is 7EInvestments.com, or email me at Chris@7EInvestments.com. You can go on Google and google Seveney Mortgage Note Investments. Youโll find us there as well.
Thank you very much for being on this. This was great. It was good learning about notes and trying to understand this asset class, so we appreciate you.
Thanks for having me on. People, if you have questions about note investing or anything, feel free to reach out. Weโre always happy to provide people with some information and feedback on things. We donโt sell any courses or anything like that. Weโre always happy to answer questions that people have.
Thank you very much, and have a great day.
Thanks, Jim. Everyone, thanks for reading.
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I learned a lot about notes in that conversation with Chris. I also learned some other stuff. I love the 40/40/40. You work for 40 years, 40 hours a week, and end up with 40% of your living expenses as what your income is. I donโt like that, but it was an interesting way to look at it. As part of Left Field Investors, a lot of peopleโs goal is to make that 40 years and 40 hours a week optional because you have other income streams. That was neat to hear him say that. Another thing about the note and the mortgage is I do private lending, and thereโs always a mortgage, a promissory note, and a personal guarantee.
I always get confused about what does what, but he did a good job explaining where the note is basically the IOU and the mortgage is where the collateral is. Thatโs where the hammer comes down if you donโt pay. If you donโt pay, the mortgage comes in, cleans you up, and takes care of you. I like these investments because, as Chris said, the goal is to keep people in their homes. In real estate, weโre trying to provide safe places to live or work. There is a lot of community benefit and benefit to society of being in real estate.
Note investing is one of the places where it is the most visible because you buy a note thatโs not performing, and instead of just evicting the person, you work with them and try to get them to stay. Itโs a win-win. The homeowner wins because they get to stay in their house, and theyโre maybe paying a little bit less. The note holder wins because theyโre converting a nonperforming note into a performing note. Even the original bank wins because they write off that original note that they werenโt going to get paid anyway, so theyโre done with it and can move it off their books.
Itโs a way that you can invest and make money and also help people, which is always something that I like to do. Talking about screening sponsors and asking for reports, this is basic, but a lot of times, we donโt do it. โWhat do you send your investors every month or every quarter?โ Ask for one of those. โIโd like to see one before you invest.โ Why would you not do that? As Chris said, people spend more time vetting the tenant thatโs going to move into their rental thatโs going to pay them $1,000 a month, maybe. They spend more time vetting that than they do to a sponsor where youโre going to wire them $50,000 or $100,000. It makes sense. Ask all the questions. Donโt be afraid to ask. If you donโt get the answers, move on. There are plenty of people in this business and plenty of operators that are high quality and communicate well, and you can build relationships with those people. I love hearing that from Chris. Thatโs all we have for this time. Weโll see you next time.
Important Links
- 7EInvestments
- BiggerPockets
- Questions You Should Ask Any Sponsor
- Verivest
- PACER
- Creating Wealth Simplified Podcast
- All-In Podcast
- Tribe of Millionaires
- Chris@7EInvestments.com
About Chris Seveney
Christopher Seveney brings over 25 years of real estate experience to 7E Investments and has been actively buying and selling mortgage notes since 2016. During this time, he has acquired over 500 notes with UPBs in excess of $25 million in over forty states. Prior to investing in mortgage notes, Chris built a multimillion-dollar portfolio of assets through new construction and rehabilitation of existing properties in his own portfolio along with having managed over $750 million in new construction in his 25-year professional career.
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