Japan Foreclosed Property 2015-2016 - Buy this 5th edition report!

Over the years, this ebook has been enhanced with additional research to offer a comprehensive appraisal of the Japanese foreclosed property market, as well as offering economic and industry analysis. The author travels to Japan regularly to keep abreast of the local market conditions, and has purchased several foreclosed properties, as well as bidding on others. Japan is one of the few markets offering high-yielding property investment opportunities. Contrary to the 'rural depopulation' scepticism, the urban centres are growing, and they have always been a magnet for expatriates in Asia. Japan is a place where expats, investors (big or small) can make highly profitable real estate investments. Japan is a large market, with a plethora of cheap properties up for tender by the courts. Few other Western nations offer such cheap property so close to major infrastructure. Japan is unique in this respect, and it offers such a different life experience, which also makes it special. There is a plethora of property is depopulating rural areas, however there are fortnightly tenders offering plenty of property in Japan's cities as well. I bought a dormitory 1hr from Tokyo for just $US30,000.
You can view foreclosed properties listed for as little as $US10,000 in Japan thanks to depopulation and a culture that is geared towards working for the state. I bought foreclosed properties in Japan and now I reveal all in our expanded 350+page report. The information you need to know, strategies to apply, where to get help, and the tools to use. We even help you avoid the tsunami and nuclear risks since I was a geologist/mining finance analyst in a past life. Check out the "feedback" in our blog for stories of success by customers of our previous reports.

Download Table of Contents here.

Sunday, April 17, 2011

House for rent in Shimomaruko, Ota-ku, Tokyo

This place is currently not available....currently rented.
I am doing a favour for a guy who purchased my Japan Foreclosed Property report. He has purchased a foreclosed property and wants to rent it out for Y115,000 per month. It is a 2-storey, 2br house in Shimomaruko, Ota-ku, Tokyo. It is partly furnished, with a living room, kitchen, laundry space, bathroom, 2 restrooms and a big balcony facing south. There is a white leather couch, a bed, chairs, chests, a high-end fridge, washing mashine and dryer. The house is located between Shimomaruko Station and the Tamagawa river. Along the nearby rivers, you can engage readily in relaxation and exercise, i.e. running, cycling or play tennis.

The house is close to various stations:
1. Five minutes walk to Shimomaruko Station
2. Sibuya Sta. in 21 minutes
3. Shinagawa Sta. in 21 minutes
4. Tokyo Sta. in 31 minutes
The house is currently under a minor reform, but will surely will be ready by May 2011.
Pets are OK. If you are interested in renting this house in Tokyo you can contact me through my website and I will refer you to the landlord. Anyone interested in buying foreclosed property in Tokyo might be particularly interested in this opportunity for two reasons:
1. This is a foreclosed property so you can get a sense of the commercial returns on renting foreclosed property
2. This landlord would probably be happy to give you advice (aside from the book I am selling) on how to buy foreclosed property in Japan...since he is the embodiment of the opportunities available.
3. Some buyers who have not lived in Japan might want to avail of this opportunity to rent before you buy. The house is well-located close to central Tokyo.

Wednesday, March 23, 2011

Feedback on our Japan Foreclosed Property ebook

Here is some feedback on our Japan Foreclosed Property eBook which I did not list sooner...
“I would be more than happy to help you out for your marketing. I just recently got start in the real estate investment business focused primarily in the USA and one of the question that I routinely ask myself is where do I want to own property? After spending 8 weeks this winter in Okinawa, Japan and absolutely loving it, I felt that a few justifiable business trips to Okinawa a year would be a great perk. So I have start the research process of starting a profitable real estate investment business in Japan, focusing initially in Okinawa”.
“I found your ebook being discussed and bashed on jref.com site which I stumbled upon through a Google search. Being familiar with some people just not understanding a good opportunity when they see it, I dismissed the naysayers and sought to purchase your book. I felt that it would be better to get the information in an organized format that trying to piece it together myself. If you have any information specific to keibai bukken in Okinawa I would love to hear it. Thank you and best of luck in all your endeavours”.
James Boydston
Boydston Enterprises

Okinawa is of course a long way from the Fuchushima nuclear reactor, but it does not escape the perils of tsunamis. This is where is better to be on the West Coast, or in the mountains. The mountains are less susceptible to earthquake damage.

Friday, March 11, 2011

Chinese interest in Tokyo/Japan property

Today's Japan Times documents increasing interest in Japanese property buy Mainland and Taiwanese Chinese buyers. The Chinese property market is fully-valued at the moment, so it is unsurprising that they should show interest. Interestingly, there is little sign that Chinese buyers are very discerning in their acquisitions, as most are inclined to buy high-priced Azubu apartments or ski resort accommodation in Hokkaido.
Many of the investors are buying for diversification, some so their students can study in Japan, and others for business or lifestyle purposes. Irrespective of their motives, clearly there is a growing demand for foreign property from Chinese buyers, and countries like Japan, the USA and the Philippines will feature highly. I would however draw their attention to foreclosed property, which trades at a significant discount to the private property market.
See the Japan Times article here.

NZ Property Guide Philippine Real Estate Guide Japan Foreclosed Guide

Tuesday, February 22, 2011

Equity markets and property opportunities in Japan

The Japanese equity market is offering a lot of promise according to the NY Times. See this article. Japan is a little more dependent on imported oil than other countries. Not a good thing when these is the prospect of a political crisis in the Middle East; and yet Japan's oil consumption per capita is far less than other Western nations, so overall this is not so significant.
Any chance of reform in Japan? Well, its looking less likely, but the market is still cheap. I think the property market looks far better because the government regulation is actually making opportunities, and its an otherwise less regulated market. The yields are high too. One of my favourite old stocks was KDDI. There was another setting up a Wimax network, but I think its since been acquired by KDDI.

Wednesday, February 16, 2011

Business opportunity for foreclosed properties

Many of you living in Japan might be looking for opportunities to stay there, development a business or build an investment portfolio. We have a suggestion for how you might do this. In the main cities of Japan there are a great many 'gaijin houses', i.e. Houses converted into share accommodation. Foreclosed properties subject to lease are perfect for this purpose because you buy the house, renegotiate the lease agreement, and you renovate the house, so its suitable for short term rentals.
Now, the appeal of this suggestion is that I can help you develop a website very cheaply using Filipino programmers who work for my partner. She managed 50 staff at a US call centre in the Philippines, and she is a great project manager. Her team have a range of skills for doing this; sadly no Japanese-speaking skills if you wanted to target this market. You could of course provide the content. The opportunity exists for a person to develop their own string of rental properties, or for some of you to team up. Either way, we are only interested in facilitating the opportunity. We are not business brokers or property agents. Here are examples of the quality of her work - my website and another for no more than $1000. She can set up online payment systems, databases, etc.
Gaijin properties rent on a weekly or monthly basis. Some have a better reputation than others. Clearly land leased foreclosed property are great properties for upgrade to rental properties for these purposes because:
1. They are down-market rentals
2. They are well-located properties
3. They are low-cost property entries - both in capital and (land) rental terms
4. They offer surprisingly good protection for renters. You might want to get free legal advise from your local prefectural office to ensure that the protections applying to tenants apply to business operators of land leases. I have no experience with those issues.

I was planning to do this years ago but I broke off from my Japanese GF, so those plans collapsed. If you are interested in sharing a website with multiple property owners, we can set up a website 'brand' for all concerned, and just collect a fee. Either way, we are interested in helping people get into business, make great investment decisions.

Land leased houses can be bought for as little as $10,000. The question is whether your property has sufficient appeal to foreigners to rent on a medium term basis. Clearly foreigners love cheap accommodation in nice places, even if it is rural, and if its in a depopulation zone, it matters little for Japanese people who cannot find work there. So this is a good opportunity if you find the right property, in the right 'depopulation' zone, which foreigners can use their Japan (East) Rail Pass to visit. That is the packaging you can do. I think the Japanese hinterland has a lot of promise for tourism, whether its specialist tour groups like hikers, skiers, kayakers, etc. You can offer greater appeal of course if you lease out such sports equipment. It might be as easy as finding second hand bikes at a recycling depot. That is what I did. Damned good bike too.
We offer such suggestions in our Japan Foreclosed Guide. It is a very big market.

Monday, January 24, 2011

Renovating a foreclosed home in Kyoto, Japan

It seems there are a few buyers of the Japan Foreclosed Report who are prepared to come out and describe how they are doing it. Understandably not everyone wants to speak. Having said that, the market is huge. We need to remember that Japan did not have an unemployment problem until fairly recently, so unemployment is a potential source of 'fairly new' foreclosures. I think asset deflation would have been a bigger concern for the banks years ago as they sought to clean up their balance sheets. I see in the latest employment statistics that only 65% of new university graduates secured jobs last year - the lowest uptake in decades. We need also to remember the depopulation of rural Japan has resulted in the vacating of properties in those areas. With no tenants, they lie vacant, and are the first assets to be sold off by stressed buyers, who might have ‘over-encumbered’ themselves buying a more expensive 2nd home. i.e. Westerners are accustomed to renovating homes. Japanese people simply tend to build new ones. I don't know why. The old ones are probably not as structural sound, but they work ok by my estimate. It is not the land of financial literacy, so don't expect any of that.

The latest person to give us a description of his experiences buying foreclosed property is a New Zealander married to a Japanese national. He bought a foreclosed house & lot in Kyoto at auction last year. He spent 5 weeks renovating it, presumably whilst holidaying in Japan, since he lives in Auckland. He has placed the property up for auction. He has offered to provide more information, so I look forward to that. Meanwhile, some of his feedback on the Japan Foreclosed Guide ebook:
“The information you supplied was a good indicator of what to expect”.
“I plan to repeat this process this year and purchase a second property”.
"I agree with your opinion that there is great potential in this market which is more than I can say for NZ".
If you are interested in John’s experiences renovating his property, I suggest going to his Japan blog. I also describe my renovation insights in the book, but his were more extensive.

Tuesday, January 18, 2011

Strategy for profiting from leased property

In my last post I described the experiences of a Japanese and foreign national who bought a property on the southern edge of Tokyo. This was a particularly interesting transaction for several reasons:
1. It was a very cheap inner city property
2. It involved the purchase of a 2-storey home on land leasehold

There are a number of reasons why you ought to consider such a proposition. Normally, I would not be particularly interested in leasing land, but this is different...the terms are very good. There are a number of appealing elements:
1. If you are buying a new apartment, you are buying alot of building value, which is destined to depreciate a great deal over coming years. In the case of these buyers, they were paying a nominal Y500,000 (USD5,000) for the 3br house, which if they spent a little money might rent for Y125,000 a month, given its proximity to Tokyo City.
2. They are not paying a huge about for land. Now, owning land in Tokyo might be considered an appealing idea because whilst Japan's population is falling, Tokyo's is increasing, and some areas more than others. The problem as I see it is that those new residences are moving into new high rise apartments, and there is plenty of room for more. Future buildings might even be cheaper to build due to the development of new high strength TiV-based steels. This could greatly reduce the materials needed to construct a home. The old homes will not have the features of the new homes, however given the steep discount in the price of the older homes, its worth considering the 'low-cost' property option. Its a different issue of course if money is no object. You can expect those new 'high priced' homes to depreciate significantly in value.
3. Saving money on capital allows you to place the bulk of your capital in better performing asset classes like gold stocks - and if you are an Australian or New Zealander, than there are few better places than my recommended explorers. ASX gold stocks with upside. Canada, the USA and Britain of course have similar opportunities. Some years ago I projected a gold price of $2400/oz. We are still some way off based on a DowJones/gold ratio of 5.

One of course has to remember that its good to use others money...but remember that does not always hold. Its been good for the last 15 years because of low interest rates. A pertinent issue is your capacity to access those low-interest loans in Japan. This might not be as easy for foreigners. Nevertheless, I would caution against the appeal of these loans because Japan will need to finance its deficits in future, so they are looking at a higher interest rate environment as their savings rate falls and their debts rise.

Today Japan has a public debt of 200% of GDP, requiring a combination of taxation, national income growth (immigration???) and monetary debasement to repay it. That is going to cause a rush into tangible assets like property or a shift of money offshore. I would suggest Japanese accustomed to foreign markets will buy assets in places like Australia, NZ, Thailand and the Philippines. I am surrounded by Japanese retirees as I speak in this apartment complex in Queenstown, NZ.
For most people however, they will more realistically stay in Japan to be close to family. Most will buy property given the high yields. But they have to buy the right property. Apartments are not going to appreciate in value....least of all the over-priced premium property off-the-plan. You are buying a box in the sky. If you are getting a box, better an old box on ground floor, and 30minutes from the city centre. Why?
You might pay as little as Y3,000 for a land lease, having paid just Y6mil for the house. Even if you have to pay Y5,000 per month under a new lease, its a far better deal than sinking money into a high priced modern apartment which can only depreciate. Given the prospects of inflation in coming years, and I think Japan will be as bad, if not worse than the USA and Europe, you will want to hold property. The reason is that Japanese property is not over-valued. It is very cheap, so higher interest rates are not going to compel people to sell. In fact cash savings will be rush into property. What are they waiting for? I have no idea.
The problem is Japanese are buying the wrong type of property. They ought to be buying fringe properties in lifestyle locations, or leaseholds in the inner city. There are issues to consider:
1. The lease term - you want to negotiate with the owner before you buy at foreclosed property tender. Nice to do before....but in fact buyers have rights. Since there is leasehold owing, and the property rights of leasees is solid, there is a good chance to extend the lease....albeit at higher rates. Short of a revolution, this situation is unlikely to be resolved by legislation I think. In any case, the terms are pretty sound.
2. The cheapness of the lease payments - it is staggering that they are as little as Y5,000 and fixed for 20 years. After 20 years of inflation without adjustment (remember they might not expect inflation after 15 years with none), that is quite a financial benefit
3. Your use of the property - What do you do with a leased property if you decide to move to the USA? You have several options: (a) You can sell the land, which might be difficult as people like to own the underlying land in Japan (b) You can rent it out, but that might be more difficult if the house is 46-55 years old. (c) You can negotiate to sell back the lease...the owner might ask you to pay reparations, i.e. money for cancelling the agreement, or more likely to demolish the old house that no one wants to live in. (d) You can turn the place into a 'gaijin house' for people who care little about the quality of the place where they live. This at least requires a strategic long term plan.

Major cities of Japan

資料:各都市の推計人口(ホームページ) Japan's major cities:
札幌市 Sapporo 仙台市 Sendai さいたま市 Saitama 千葉市 Chiba
東京都区部 Tokyo-23 横浜市 Yokohama 川崎市 Kawasaki 新潟市 Niigata 静岡市 Shizuoka 浜松市 Hamamatsu 名古屋市 Nagoya 京都市 Kyoto 大阪市 Osaka 堺市 Sakai 神戸市 Kobe 広島市 Hiroshima 北九州市 Kitakyushu 福岡市 Fukuoka

Cities and towns of Tokyo

競売物件購入 keibai buttsuken kounyu 千代田区 Chiyoda-ku 八王子市 Hachioji-shi 羽村市 Hamura-shi 中央区 Chuo-ku 立川市 Tachikawa-shi あきる野市 Akiruno-shi 港区 Minato-ku 武蔵野市 Musashino-shi 西東京市 Nishitokyo-shi 新宿区 Shinjuku-ku 三鷹市 Mitaka-shi 文京区 Bunkyo-ku 青梅市 Ome-shi 郡部 Towns and villages 台東区 Taito-ku 府中市 Fuchu-shi 瑞穂町 Mizuho-machi
墨田区 Sumida-ku 昭島市 Akishima-shi 日の出町 Hinode-machi 江東区 Koto-ku 調布市 Chofu-shi 檜原村 Hinohara-mura 品川区 Shinagawa-ku 町田市 Machida-shi 奥多摩町 Okutama-machi 目黒区 Meguro-ku 小金井市 Koganei-shi 大田区 Ota-ku 小平市 Kodaira-shi 島部 Islands 世田谷区 Setagaya-ku 日野市 Hino-shi 大島町 Oshima-machi 渋谷区 Shibuya-ku 東村山市 Higashimurayama-shi 利島村 Toshima-mura
中野区 Nakano-ku 国分寺市 Kokubunji-shi 新島村 Niijima-mura 杉並区 Suginami-ku 国立市 Kunitachi-shi 神津島村 Kouzushima-mura 豊島区 Toshima-ku 福生市 Fussa-shi 三宅村 Miyake-mura 北区 Kita-ku 狛江市 Komae-shi 御蔵島村 Mikurajima-mura 荒川区 Arakawa-ku 東大和市 Higashiyamato-shi 八丈町 Hachijo-machi 板橋区 Itabashi-ku 清瀬市 Kiyose-shi 青ケ島村 Aogashima-mura 練馬区 Nerima-ku 東久留米市 Higashikurume-shi 小笠原村 Ogasawara-mura 足立区 Adachi-ku 武蔵村山市 Musashimurayama-shi 葛飾区 Katsushika-ku 多摩市 Tama-shi 江戸川区 Edogawa-ku 稲城市 Inagi-shi

Cities & Towns of Saitama

競売物件購入 keibai buttsuken kounyu 西区 Nishi-ku 北区 Kita-ku 大宮区 Omiya-ku 見沼区 Minuma-ku 中央区 Chuo-ku 桜区 Sakura-ku 浦和区 Urawa-ku 南区 Minami-ku 緑区 Midori-ku Cities (-shi) さいたま市 Saitama-shi 川越市 Kawagoe-shi 熊谷市 Kumagaya-shi 川口市 Kawaguchi-shi 行田市 Gyoda-shi 秩父市 Chichibu-shi 所沢市 Tokorozawa-shi 飯能市 Hanno-shi 加須市 Kazo-shi 本庄市 Honjo-shi 東松山市 Higashi-Matsuyama-shi 岩槻市 Iwatski-shi 春日部市 Kasukabe-shi 狭山市 Sayama-shi 羽生市 Hanyu-shi 鴻巣市 Kounosu-shi 深谷市 Fukaya-shi 上尾市 Ageo-shi 草加市 Souka-shi 越谷市 Koshigaya-shi 蕨 市 Warabi-shi 戸田市 Toda-shi 入間市 Iruma-shi 鳩ケ谷市 Hatogaya-shi 朝霞市 Asaka-shi 志木市 Shiki-shi 和光市 Wako-shi 新座市 Niiza-shi 桶川市 Okegawa-shi 久喜市 Kuki-shi 北本市 Kitamoto-shi 八潮市 Yasio-shi 富士見市 Fujimi-shi 上福岡市 Kami-fukuoka-shi 三郷市 Misato-shi 蓮田市 Hasuda-shi 坂戸市 Sakado-shi 幸手市 Satte-shi 鶴ケ島市 Tsurogashima-shi 日高市 Hidaka-shi 吉川市 Yoshikawa-shi 北足立郡 Districts (-gun) 伊奈町 Ina-machi or ko 吹上町 Fukiage-machi 大井町 Oi-machi 三芳町 Miyoshi-machi 毛呂山町 Moroyama-machi 越生町 Ogose-machi 名栗村 Naguri-mura

Cities &Towns of Kanagawa

競売物件購入 keibai buttsuken kounyu 県計 市部計 郡部計 横浜市 鶴見区 神奈川区 西区 中区 南区 港南区 保土ヶ谷区 旭区 磯子区 金沢区 港北区 緑区 青葉区 都筑区 戸塚区 栄区 泉区 瀬谷区 川崎市 川崎区 幸区 中原区 高津区 宮前区 多摩区 麻生区 横須賀市 平塚市 鎌倉市 藤沢市 小田原市 茅ヶ崎市 逗子市 相模原市 三浦市 秦野市 厚木市 大和市 伊勢原市 海老名市 座間市 南足柄市 綾瀬市 三浦郡葉山町 高座郡寒川町 中郡 大磯町 二宮町 足柄上郡 中井町 大井町 松田町 山北町 開成町 足柄下郡 箱根町 真鶴町 湯河原町 愛甲郡 愛川町 清川村

Cities & Towns of Chiba

競売物件購入 keibai buttsuken kounyu 県計 市計 郡計 千葉市 中央区 花見川区 稲毛区 若葉区 緑区 美浜区 銚子市 市川市 船橋市 館山市 木更津市 松戸市 野田市 佐原市 茂原市 成田市 佐倉市 東金市 八日市場市 旭市 習志野市 柏市 勝浦市 市原市 流山市 八千代市 我孫子市 鴨川市 鎌ヶ谷市 君津市 富津市 浦安市 四街道市 袖ケ浦市 八街市 印西市 白井市 富里市

Cities & Towns of Osaka

競売物件購入 keibai buttsuken kounyu 総 数 府 保 健 所 計 池 田 池田市 豊能町  箕面市  能勢町  豊中豊中市  吹 田 吹田市 茨木摂津市  茨木市 島本町 枚方枚方市  寝屋川 寝屋川市 守口 守口市  門真市 四條畷 四條畷市 交野市  大東市 八 尾 八尾市  柏原市  藤井寺 松原市  羽曳野市 藤井寺市 富田林 大阪狭山市 富田林市 河内長野市 河南町  太子町  千早赤阪村 和泉和泉市  泉大津市 高石市  忠岡町  岸和田 岸和田市 貝塚市  泉佐野 泉佐野市 熊取町 田尻町  泉南市  阪南市  岬町 大 阪 市 堺市 高槻市 東大阪市  

Cities & Towns of Hiroshima

競売物件購入 keibai buttsuken kounyu 県計 広島市 広島市中区 広島市東区 広島市南区 広島市西区 広島市安佐南区 広島市安佐北区 広島市安芸区 広島市佐伯区 呉市 竹原市 三原市 尾道市 福山市 府中市 三次市 庄原市 大竹市 東広島市 廿日市市 安芸高田市 江田島市 府中町 海田町 熊野町 坂町 安芸太田町 北広島町 大崎上島町 世羅町 神石高原町