You can snap up a home for just a few thousand dollars in Detroit these days. But just because a property is cheap, that doesn't necessarily make it a good investment.
Peter Allen with the University of Michigan is equipping local residents with housing investment know-how with the hope that they can go on to revitalize their neighborhoods.
Allen has been teaching a real estate investing course to students in Ann Arbor, Mich., for more than three decades. This summer, 45 miles east in Midtown Detroit, he's dedicating his Saturdays to teaching city residents how to become shrewd investors, too.
"I crammed this [class] into four weeks for you all, and I was a little sleepless last night," says Allen, standing in front of the classroom.
He's a little sleepless because he's throwing a lot of new terms and principles at his class pretty quickly.
His 18 students are mostly middle-aged, African-American community leaders. Allen requires them to target a home in Detroit that they could buy, then to work through the numbers.
Lanita Carter stands in front of the classroom showing repair projections for a 900-square-foot house.
"It needs new floors, the plumbing needs to be fixed, the electricity ... ," she says, rattling off a list of repairs.
Her estimate is $21,000 in total repairs. Carter bought the home last fall for $3,900.
Now, Allen is helping her evaluate whether it'd be worth taking out a mortgage for repair costs, briefly living in it and then eventually renting it out.
"So you've got a mortgage payment of $360, you got a tax bill of maybe $50 a month," he says, running through the numbers.
He adds up a few more figures, then reaches the conclusion.
"You've got a rent of $850 and you've got payments that are no more than $600," he says.
That would leave her earning about $250 a month off of a $4,000 cash down payment. He calls that an excellent rate of return.
Allen estimates that he has taught 3,500 students over 34 years in Ann Arbor. He's now in Detroit because he says he wants to help locals revitalize their own neighborhoods through real estate investing.
"This is the best way — individual, grass-roots, entrepreneurial, house-by-house, skin-in-the-game approach — to neighborhood revitalization than any government program, or city-directed program could achieve," he says.
It's not a get-rich-quick class. It's being offered with help from the University of Michigan's Schools of Social Work and Urban Planning, along with the Skillman Foundation, a Detroit organization that helps schoolchildren.
Allen is volunteering his time and says he'd like to continue teaching in Detroit for another five to 10 years.
"I tell the students the only compensation for me is that when they're finished fixing up a house, they invite me over for dinner," he says.
The students in Allen's Detroit class might be more cautious than the average home buyer. After all, they are taking a class first.
Consider Dana Hart, a woman in her early 40s. We walked around Detroit's North End neighborhood where she rents.
"My father raised me, and he said: 'Dana, you will never own a home. It can always be taken from you by the bank. It can be taken from you by the city. It's not yours,' " says Hart, who has never owned a home.
She's considering going against her dad's advice because she sees property values in Detroit coming back.
"If you don't own property, you have a likelihood of being pushed out," she says. "And I don't want to be pushed out of this neighborhood."
Hart has her eye on a place with boarded-up windows, graffiti and overgrown weeds, but she doesn't see an eyesore.
"I think brick, I think look at the steps and the landings that you can put flowers on. I look at the balcony and I'm like, 'Oh you can sit there and relax,' " she says.
And now she thinks about property taxes, interest rates and the first three rules of real estate, which everyone knows have to do with location.
"I know how to do, you know, walkability scores and such," she says. "These things that add value to that property, not just the property itself."
She's evaluating proximity to schools, parks, grocery stores and public transportation.
There are some things, though, that are hard to predict in Detroit.
I went to the new home of Lanita Carter, who spoke in class. It's a charming bungalow, at least from the outside.
"It was used as a doghouse. So, that's why, you don't want to go in right now," she says from the front porch. "There were literally seven pit bulls inside this home."
You can still detect the faint odor of canine urine wafting out from inside. The dogs were protecting three squatters who were living there illegally.
Back in the classroom, Peter Allen used this as a teachable moment.
"As you look back on that process could you have improved upon it?" he asks Carter.
She says she would've moved faster. "I bought the house in October and they just got evicted last month," she says.
The squatters did a lot of damage in that time, and she eventually paid a bailiff $2,000 to evict them.
Allen asks if it might've been better to offer them $1,000 to get out.
That might seem like a form of extortion, but ultimately, Allen says, it's really just about being a wise investor.
Transcript
ROBERT SIEGEL, HOST:
In Detroit, you can snap up a home for just a few thousand dollars. But just because a property is cheap doesn't make it a good investment. NPR's Jason Margolis reports on a University of Michigan professor who is teaching Detroit residents how to become shrewd real estate investors.
JASON MARGOLIS, BYLINE: Peter Allen has been teaching a real estate investing course to students in Ann Arbor for more than three decades. This summer, he's doing it 45 miles east, Saturdays in Midtown Detroit.
PETER ALLEN: I crammed this into four weeks for you all, and I was just a little sleepless last night.
MARGOLIS: That's because he's throwing a lot of new terms and principles at his class pretty quickly. His 18 students are mostly middle-aged African-American community leaders. Allen requires them to target a home in Detroit, then work through the numbers. Lanita Carter stands in front of the classroom, showing repair projections for a 900-square-foot house.
LANITA CARTER: It needs quite a bit of repairs. It needs new floors. It needs - the plumbing needs to be fixed, electricity.
MARGOLIS: Her estimate - $21,000 in repairs. She actually bought it last fall for $3,900. Allen is helping her evaluate if it'd be worth taking out a mortgage for repair costs and eventually renting it out.
ALLEN: So you've got a mortgage payment of $360. You've got a tax bill of maybe $50 a month.
MARGOLIS: He adds up a few more numbers.
ALLEN: So you've got a rent of $850, and you've got payments that are no more than $600. So you got a $200 dividend left in your checking account every month.
MARGOLIS: Allen estimates that he's taught 3500 students over 34 years in Ann Arbor. He's now in Detroit because he says he wants locals to revitalize their own neighborhoods.
ALLEN: This is the best way - individual, grass-roots, entrepreneurial, house-by-house, skin-in-the-game approach to neighbor revitalization than any government program or city-directed program could achieve.
MARGOLIS: Allen is volunteering his time.
ALLEN: I tell the students the only compensation for me is that when they're finished fixing up a house, they invite me over for dinner.
MARGOLIS: Allen's students might be more cautious than the average homebuyer. After all, they are taking a class first. Consider Dana Hart, a woman in her early 40s. We walked around Detroit's North End, where she rents.
DANA HART: My father raised me, and he said, Dana, you will never own a home. It can always be taken from you by the bank. It can be taken from you by the city. It's not yours.
MARGOLIS: She's considering going against her dad's advice because she sees property values in Detroit coming back.
HART: If you don't own property, you have a likelihood of being pushed out, and I don't want to be pushed out of this neighborhood.
MARGOLIS: She has her eye on a place with boarded-up windows, graffiti and overgrown weeds. She doesn't think eyesore.
HART: I think brick. I think look at the steps and the landings that you can put flowers on. I look at the balcony.
MARGOLIS: And now she looks at property taxes and interest rates and the first three rules of real estate, which everyone knows have to do with location.
HART: I know how to do, you know, walkability scores and such.
MARGOLIS: There are some things that are hard to predict in Detroit, though. I went Lanita Carter's new home, the woman who spoke in class. It's a charming bungalow from the outside.
CARTER: It was used as a doghouse, so that's why you don't want to go in right now.
MARGOLIS: A dog house meaning there were literally dogs?
CARTER: There were literally seven pit bulls behind inside of this home.
MARGOLIS: You can still detect the faint odor of urine wafting out from inside. The dogs were protecting three squatters who were living there illegally. It took a long time for Carter to get them out. Back in the classroom, Peter Allen sees this as a teachable moment.
ALLEN: As you look back on that process, could you have improved upon it? Do you have any advice for the audience?
CARTER: I would've done it faster because I bought the house in October, and they just got evicted last month.
MARGOLIS: The squatters did a lot of damage in that time. She eventually paid a bailiff $2000 to evict them. Allen asks if it might have been better to offer them a thousand dollars to get out. That might seem like a form of extortion, but ultimately, Allen says, it's really just about being a wise investor. Jason Margolis, NPR News, Detroit. Transcript provided by NPR, Copyright NPR.
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