All Topics / Help Needed! / vendor finance help needed
hi everyone
I have a property in Calbooture (QLD) I wish to get off my portfolio.
I am looking at offering it to the tenants (which I have not approached as yet)
They have been in the property several years, and have made it their home. (a good selling point)
However it is heavily negatively geared, and had very little capital growth (yes victim of fatalistic investing as Steve would say)
so to maximise my return I am looking at vendor finance.
I do not wish to pursue this as an investment strategy. and not looking at getting involved in the nitty gritty
I am looking to employ someone to help set up the transaction, including legal documents and advice on approaching the tenants;
anyone who can point me the right direction of an experienced and qualified person would be appreciated
Thanks
Ritchie
Are you licensed to offer such form of credit terms ?
Cheers
Yours in Finance
Richard Taylor | Australia's leading private lender
I have the following skill and knowledge, and license in regards to vendor finance
1. little or
2. very little
3. most would say none.
hence I am looking at employing an "experienced and qualified person" to facilitate the transaction
I am examining if this is a viable exit strategy for this property.
This appears to be a way to maximise my return on a bad investment choice.
Cheers
Ritchie
Employing someone won't get you out of being licensed as you are the one offering the credit terms.
Cheers
Yours in Finance
Richard Taylor | Australia's leading private lender
Thanks Richard,
Is this likely to be a major road block/barrier? or is it a registration and approval process?
Can you point me in direction of where I can find information on criteria I need to meet to become licensed?
Cheers
Ritchie
Hi Richard
Since Ritchie isn't looking to make VF his main business, but rather looking to use it to sell one underperforming property, would he need a credit licence himself, or could the JV partner hold the credit licence??
ChrisA1
Persistence is 'to keep on keeping on, no matter how hard the going may be'
https://www.asic.gov.au/asic/ASIC.NSF/byHeadline/Credit%20licensing
Cheers
Yours in Finance
Richard Taylor | Australia's leading private lender
Thanks Richard,
Clarifies or confuses the situation as I read that if you did under 5(?) transactions a year, then it wasn't regarded a business and therefore you didn't need to hold a credit licence as such. Possibly the rules have tightened.
ChrisA1
Persistence is 'to keep on keeping on, no matter how hard the going may be'
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