Thursday, July 7, 2011

How to make money in Philippine Bank-aquired Assets

Although the non-performing housing loans held by Philippine banks is on a downward trend, based on the data from bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP), but the total value of these repossessed properties by the banks is still worth P9.7B to date form P12.97B as of Dec. 31 last year, a shard decrease by more than 25%, which is good news to the industry.

However, this P9.7B inventory is still huge, and it is presents a lot of opportunities to investors who want to make money in disposing these bank-acquired assets. Banks, by nature of their business, in most cases are always motivated to sell these assets because they Non-Performing Loans (NPL) become a liability to them, and banks are usually required by the BSP to spare the same amount of liquidity (money) equal to the amount of their NPL as reserve money, meaning they can't loan that out to their borrowers, thereby decreasing their ability to make money out of their own money! That's why they want to dispose of these assets (liability is the more appropriate term because these properties are depreciating over time and the banks absorb the depreciation cost).

STARTING FROM THE BASICS 
Just like in any honest-to-goodness business, you need to find your target customers and make them aware that you have a nice product that will better address their need. That's Marketing & Selling! I always believe that any business should deal first with the Customers in mind.

You also need to have a good grasp of pricing your goods in such a way that your target market will race against each other to get hold of your product while you make money in the process. That's Value Engineering! Designing a good cash flow pattern is also crucial in maximing the value that you can get out of the product (will expound on this later).

And once you have the interested buyer of your product, and now writes the check and signs the Sales Documents, then that's it.

Foreclosed Assets and bank-acquired assets are two different types of assets. Foreclosed assets are those house & lots that were recently foreclosed or repossessed by banks in either a year past or less. If you are going to invest on these assets you may have to wait until the mandatory 1-year redemption period is over. This will tie up your money because the title cannot be transferred from the borrower's name to the bank's name until that period has lapsed with no pending court cases.

You can however still make a lot of money from Foreclosed Assets but I will discuss it separately because it's totally a different route. I would suggest that you focus on Bank-Acquired Assets because you can make a fast turnaround with it.

HOW TO DO IT
Let me just share here the simple steps how to make good money from bank-acquired assets:
  1. Find your potential customers by dropping a visit to established brokers. Active selling brokers usually advertise their services all over town. Find out what their buyer exactly wants (floor and lot size, number of bedrooms, toilets, parking space, amenities, price range and location, among others); establish a good rapport with them by discussing the desired commission rate and schedule of release(s); and get their commitment to help you dispose of your potential inventory.
  2. See the Manager of the Asset Management Group of the target banks and ask for a complete list of their acquired assets. They will usually give it to you in printed form but it helps to have a handy, virus-free USB for easy downloading. The list usually includes the description of the property, the location, and bank's selling price.
  3. Find out from among the list which properties come close to what your prospect buyers want, and ask the Manager to schedule an ocular inspection. While on the trip, squeeze as much insider information from the bank representative as to how much discount does his boss approve in terms of price percentage.
  4. When on location, take as much pictures of the house, in and out, and zoom on those leaking roof, worn-out ceilings, peeled-off paint and wall papers, etc so that you can capitalize on these issues when you ask for a discount. And this will also help your memory is estimating the cost of the needed repairs.
  5. Always ask the neighbors their inputs on the peace and security of the area, flood history, availability of public transport, water supply, proximity to hospital, market, schools, malls, etc; selling price of the latest house sold in the area, etc.This info will definitely help your judgment.
  6. Assuming that you eyed some of these properties, start working with your numbers by answering the following questions: (a) How much is the fair market value of the property after the repairs? You can easily answer this question by taking the shoes of the buyer.; (b) How much is the estimated cost of repairs? You might need to seek assistance here if you are not familiar with this part; (c) How much money will I gain out of it?; net of the cost of the house, the repairs, commission and income tax?
  7. If you are comfortable with your estimated net gain, discuss the matter with your broker, show her the pictures (just the nicer ones!) and describe to her the repairs you will undertake to make the house like new, how much you are selling it, etc.
  8. Then make a formal offer to the Bank, usually discounted at 30-40%, pay a reservation fee of P10-50T, and the 10-20% down payment spread over 6-12 months, depending on how you designed your target cash flow.
DESIGN YOUR CASHFLOW
You can actually do this with almost no cost to you if you happen to be lucky. Here's the scenario: Say the bank's list price for the house is P750T and the approved discount is only 30%, so that's P750T - 25% = P525T. Assuming that the cost of the repairs is P200T, so that's P525T + P200T = P 725T. And assuming that the prevailing selling price in the area for the same house & lot is at P1.7M, just be content by selling it lower than that, say at P1.5M; and your agreed sales commission rate is 8%, so that's 8% x P1.5M = P120T commission.

Based on the above, your net gain would be P1.5M - P525T acquisition cost - P200T repair cost - P120T comm = P655T or a profit rate of 43%.

But if you require the Buyer to pay P50T non-refundable reservation fee, this will already cover the reservation fee you paid to the bank; and if  the Buyer agrees to pay you the required 20% down payment (10% cash down = P150T upfront, remaining 10% over 3 months = P50T/month cash inflow) so that means you will have P150T cash on hand which covers for your P200T worth of repairs. But why spend that money if you can get the needed materials on 30-60 days credit from the hardware store. So practically your repairs and monthly downpayment to the bank, which is 20% of P525T = P105T is actually funded by your Buyer and the hardware store.

Once the house is ready and your Buyer got a pre-approval for bank loan to cover the 80% balance (80% x P1.5M = P1.2M), then you can now execute a deed of assignment of the contract in favor of the bank and once the loan is released, the Bank will retain the P420T which is the 80% balance of the P525T after your full DP, and release to you the remaining P780T (that's P1.2M - P420T = P780T).

YOUR RETURN ON INVESTMENT
Going back to our numbers again: Your total expenses paid is P425T (that's P105T DP to the bank, P200T repairs, and P120T sales commission to your broker); while your total receipts is P1.08M (that's P300T as DP from Buyer, and P780T from Buyer's net housing loan proceeds).

You now have P1.08M total revenue - P425T total expenses = P655T. But because your cash outflow was financed by your Buyer and the hardware store, so practically you made P655T and spent practically nothing for it (or should I say your minimal expenses were immediately reimbursed by the Buyer's reservation fee and downpayment).

In finance parlance, your Return On Investment (ROI) is P655T divided by zero for investment = infinity.

So how is that for a start? You might as well decide to head home from your high paying and very demanding overseas employment and do this very rewarding business. Making P655T from nothing is equivalent to receiving a monthly salary of P55T overseas.

What if you were able to have this kind of transaction repeated every quarter, so that's like receiving a salary of P218,000 a month overseas, or an equivalent of US$5,070 monthly. You will be definitely better off than OFW ship captain who risks his life away from the family!

There are a lot of opportunities here in the Philippines. One just have to grab them.


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Wednesday, July 6, 2011

Can the common Filipino help improve the Quality of Education in the Phils?

High school class under the tree (photo from Philstar)
We have seen in the news, carried by both local and foreign media, that there are many of our poor students in many of our poor barangays, and even in several places in the Metro Manila, where Filipino students either hold their classes under the shed of trees or in dilapidated classrooms with broken desk chairs and worn-out writing boards.

And if they happen to have these classrooms, 70-90 students are cramped in a classroom that is designed for a capacity of 30 students. We have been aghast to see these scenarios every time right before class opening every June.

I wonder how we can change the situation radically. Is there any hope for a better future for these Filipino students whom the future stability and progress of our country rest?

THE CRYING NEED FOR CLASSROOMS, CHAIRS AND TEACHERS
Currently, there are 41,995 barangays all over the country. Many of these barangays have no classrooms even for the elementary graders, while a large number of them have dilapidated classrooms. To put at least 6 classrooms complete with boards and chairs, and fund the salary of the teaching staff, the Philippine government will need the following:

Classroom:  41,995 bgys x 6 classrooms @ P400,000/classroom:
                                                                                               = P100,788,000,000.00
Chairs:  41,995 bgys x 6 classrooms x 30 chairs @ P150/chair:
                                                                                               = P    1,133,865,000.00
                                                                                       Total   P101,921,865,000.00

Teaching Staff:  41,995 bgys x 6 teachers @ P18,000/teacher x 13 months:
                                                                                              = P58,960,980,000.00/yr

THE NATIONAL GOVERNMENT APPROACH
If we rely on the government alone, the most possible scenario is they borrow the P101.92 Billion to be able to provide all the 251,970 classrooms and 7,559,100 chairs all in a year. But because it is a borrowed sum it will surely carry an interest rate of at least 3% a year assuming this is a soft loan.

The annual interest cost alone at 3% of P101.92B is P3,057,655,950.00 excluding the payment for the principal loan. This P3.057B annual interest is the equivalent of 7,644 new classrooms. That amount can pay the total annual salary of 13,066 teachers already!

So why waste that amount just to pay for the annual interest when we actually have a better alternative. if only we decide to do it.

THE FILIPINO COMMON FOLK BAYANIHAN APPROACH
I always believe that the Filipino race has the collective economic power that we always fail to harness. That power has been in dormancy for years - and our failure to exercise it has postponed the progress and prosperity of our nation for so many decades already, so much so that Vietnam and Cambodia are now overtaking us.

How can we do it? Our current population is now at 94,013,200 living Filipino souls, rich and poor. Let me help you see how the numbers work to our collective advantage, if each one of us take ownership of this dream and contribute our share:

251,970 rooms worth P100,788,000,000.00 ÷ 94,013,200 Pinoys = P1,072.00 per head
7,559,100 chairs worth P1,133,865,000.00 ÷ 94,013,200 Pinoys   = P     12.06 per head
                                                                                             Total     P1,084.06 per head

This P1,084.06 per head is just P90.33 per month, or P3.01 per day! If each one of us, rich and poor, do it dutifully, we will have built all of these classrooms in just a year!

Now, the next concern to tackle is the salary of the teaching staff which is P58.96 Billion a year for all these new classrooms. Well, we now know how to do the math.

The salary of 251,970 new teachers is P58,960,980,000.00 per year is just P627.15 per Filipino per year, or just P52.26/month or P1.74 per day.
So para maitayo po ang mga classroom at mga silyang ito kailangan lang mag-alay ang bawat Pilipino ng tig P3.01 bawat araw sa loob ng isang taon. Mas mahal pa po ang stick ng sigarilyo na kung saan si Mr. Lucio Tan lamang ang nakikinabang.

At para tuloy-tuloy na ganadong magturo ang mga bagong guro sa bawat classroom na ito, kailangan natin mag-ambag ng tig-P1.74 kada araw taon-taon para tuloy-tuloy ang kanilang mabuting serbisyo bilang mga ulirang guro sa ating mga anak.

Sa pamamagitan ng simpleng paliwanag na ito, hindi na siguro tanong kung kaya ba natin ito. Ang dapat na tanong siguro ay, KAILAN BA NATIN SISIMULAN ITO?

Can we still allow the modern world to pass us by? Can we still afford to postpone the properous destiny of our nation?

Just contact me thru email for any reaction.

Tuesday, July 5, 2011

A window of opportunity for OFWs in the Energy Business


OFWs who are aspiring to be entrepreneurs can now take advantage of the economic benefits of the country’s Downstream Oil Industry Deregulation Law.

Aspiring OFW entrepreneurs can now apply for low-cost loans from the Department of Energy, through its Gasoline Station Lending and Financial Assistance Program, up to P10 Million or 80% of the total business cost, the remaining 20% being the venture capital equity.

This increase is designed to make it more accessible and affordable to our OFWs who want to venture into putting up a gasoline outlet or an auto LPG station. The loanable amount was increased from the original P5M payable in seven years.

This business loan program offers a fixed rate of 6% per annum and payable within a maximum of 10 years, with a grace period of 6 months that is enough to build the necessary infrastructure or store outlet and marketing. After this 6-months grace period, the first monthly installment becomes due.

OFW individuals or groups who qualify for this program are required to complete the training program run by the Department of Energy to prepare the aspiring OFW entrepreneurs for the rigors of owning this type of business to ensure their success and ultimate active contribution to our local economy.

I would encourage everyone who is interested to avail of this Program to apply as a cooperative because you can maximize your economic benefits through income tax exemptions being a cooperative as provided for in Republic Act 9520 known as the Philippine Cooperative Code of 2008. Inquire from the Cooperative Development Authority how to qualify for such incentives and download related information and forms to be filled up.

For further details of this Lending and Financial Assistance Program, please check DOE’s Department Circular No. DC2011-03-0005 of March 2011.


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