How to make £740 a week from the property crash
 

 

 

‘In which Charlie reveals how to make £740 a week from property without buying, selling or brokering – no investment, and a huge gap in the market thanks to the recession, check this out: CLICK HERE'

 
Hi,
 

The other week I told you about my dispute with my freeholder.

Pleased to say, it’s somewhat resolved. Not until I’d got a solicitor involved however, and my stress levels were bouncing off Saturn.

However, the whole messy affair did have one plus side...

It spurred me to get on with a topic I’ve had on my backburner for ages.

While landlords like mine are trying to exploit me for cash during the recession... how about a way you can exploit landlords in return?

In this case, they’ll actually thank you for it.

Estate agents will go as far as to pay you for it.

I don’t know if you’ve seen this yet, but take a look at this letter from Nick Laight. It tells you how to “make £740 a week from the UK property with zero cash ... even in a falling market and without buying or renting.”

Before you click on the link, please dismiss any preconceptions about making money from other folk’s misery. Don’t panic about investing in property in a rotten market.  

It’s nothing at all like that.

In fact, it’s because the property market has slumped so drastically that this opportunity is possible. This could be one of the few times you get the chance to enter this market.

Anyway, quickly go and see what he says. Come back. Then I’ll talk turkey:

A property opportunity? Not really...

This isn’t one of those “blind” opportunities where you are expected to GUESS what the business is before you spend your money on it (don’t you just HATE those?).

Nick’s letter details exactly what this business is and how the money is made.

What will surprise you is that this isn’t a “property opp”.

You don’t actually invest in property or make money from brokering deals. Instead you make a couple of hundred quid a week without buying, renting or selling a single house. 

There’s no cash up front. You don’t deal with leases, tenancy agreements, contracts or rent collection. You don't have to fix any problems, or source any contractors.

And, if you read my email from the other week, here’s the thing that will make you sigh with relief... you don't have to get involved in any disputes between landlord and tenant

Okay, so that’s what this ISN’T...
 
Here’s what it IS...

How to make £740 from a simple checklist

Home rentals have hit record highs. First time buyers can't borrow enough money to get on the housing ladder because credit has all but dried up. So they rent.

Homeowners who want to (or have to) move find that they can't sell their house in these market conditions – so they rent their place out and then rent OTHER places until they market changes.
 

And many people who DO sell their houses are deciding to rent instead of buy somewhere else.

The upshot is the market is booming. Now here’s where the opportunity comes in...

Every rental property on the market needs what's known as aninventory check’. This isa list of all the fixtures and fittings in the rental property at the beginning of a tenancy.

Whenever a home is let, this list needs to be drawn up before the estate agent takes the security deposit.

Trouble is, most estate agents hate doing this, and many don’t bother, or have the time and staff.

To give you an example, the last flat I rented before I bought a place of my own didn’t have an inventory. I remember writing down my own list to make sure there was no confusion when I left.

Really, the estate agent let my last landlady down by not providing it. I asked quite a few times to get one sorted after I’d moved in.

Eventually they sent someone round to tally up the fixtures. I remember they weren’t estate agents, just people doing the job on their behalf.

So from my own experience I know this is a real going concern.

With a flooded rental market, and not enough people to do these inventories, there’s a gap in the market.

And as you’ll see, it gives you an opening. Estimates in the report start at make £280 per property. In his report Nick explains how to turn it into a going concern and make £740 a week from just four inventory checks.

Up for some good old fashioned moneymaking?

This is a classic part time business opportunity. No internet marketing, no referrals, no technical stuff, no trading, no gambling, no investing, no website required.

It’s based on a real need in a real time of crisis. You don’t exploit anyone’s misery, you’re just doing a checklist as a service for estate agents. 

I’ve seen Nick’s blueprint and this one is really easy-to-follow. You can order a copy for a risk-free look and go through the whole thing yourself before you decide. If you don’t want to give this a go, it’s no problem. Send it back to Nick.

Well worth a look.
 
All the details are here:
 
 
Later alligator
 
Charlie Wright

 

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