Greg Boyd said:
Will,
I just got back from inspecting a manufactured house for a purchase transaction. $175k. Although there are only a few sales in this isolated community in any year, there are enough to show that $175k is not unreasonable.
But, there are tons of recent sales of lots. Some sales only a few weeks old. I just did an appraisal of an almost idential lot just 3 weeks ago. The land value is $60k. Doing a quick CA in my head while I was driving back it adds up to:
$60k for the lot
$30k for the depreciated 1988 Sandalwood MH
$10k for the garage
$20k for foundation, hookups, drive, grading, setting, permit, fees and taxes etc.
$7.5k for decking, minimal landscape, and flatwork
$12k +- for marketing & misc.
$139,500.
Even if you figure 15-20% EP or developer profit for the new MH's in this community, that only adds up to $160,000 - $166,000 max.
Now what?
Greg, first I will answer your question, as best I can. Second and much more important, I will give you some advice, as I have done in the past, and I hope you will remember, even having taken the advice.
The answer to your question, is that you are operating in a very inefficient market. The following assumes all your numbers are accurate and or maxed out in terms of reasonableness, ie garage at $10,000. What you have are: uninformed buyers of manufactured home properties, who don't know their depreciated worth. I would be uninformed if I weren't in the market every day, and maybe am anyway, uninformed sellers of their land, who are selling it to low, and excessive entreprenurial profits and possibly, but doubtful, your over estimation of the comparables condition/depreciation they have suffered. It could be one or, as I suspect, it likely is a combination all of these, but especially the under selling of the lots and over estimation of the MH's value.
Now to my advice. Greg, what you have is a very inefficient market, which is moving upward. You have to remember, that all of the highly profitable opportunities in real estate are because of this inefficiency. What you are saying, Greg, is that you can build this for $127,500($139,500 -$12000) and sell it for $175,000. What this means is that you could make a profit for yourself of $175,000 x .94(real estate commissionat 6%) -$127, 500 or roughly $37,000, which is closer to a 25+% EP, and maybe the real number, assuming all your other factors you have estimated are dead on..
You don't give the marketing time, but if it's say 3 months, you could do 4 of these a year, and make $148,000 per year, probably in your spare time.
Beats the heck out of appraising and much more profitable on an hourly basis.