Hi Tassotti,
First of all, in property, whatever the market is doing, nothing is "easy". There are no short cuts, no get rich quick, and no magic fairy dust to sprinkle around to get yourself a cash flow positive portfolio. Property is for serious and committed people who provide a genuine service to their clients (tenants). It takes effort on your part. Property is, and always will be, a mid to long term investment.
Therefore, if you had got involved two years ago, if you had done things well, you would hopefully be two years down the line towards achieving financial freedom!.
With regards to your question about BMV discounts. It's all about the numbers and making them stack. Towards the end of last year I was able to get deals to stack with only a 10% discount. That was because the mortgage products were a lot more favourable than they are now.
When people talk about making very low offers, they fail to remember that a vendor can only take such a massive hit on their property if they have a huge amount of equity in it. In most cases, that would mean that they would have to have lived in that property for a long time or have only had a small mortgage in the first place. With house prices dropping, that "buffer" zone of equity is getting smaller and therefore I believe that there is going to be less and less room for negotiation. Clearly the vendor is unlikely to accept an offer for less than what his property is mortgaged for. You can always have a look on the Land Registry to find out what the person paid for the property originally, and that should give you an idea as to how much they might be willing to negotiate.
If you want to find out how much rent the borrowing will support , you can use this simple calculation:
Monthly rent x 12 divided by the product interest rate, divided by the product rental stress.
With the current mortgage products and high rental stresses, you need to get 25 %+ discounts to get anything close to stacking.
Even if you get something with this discount, you are still going to have to put 10 - 15% of the NET price into the deal as there are currently no legitimate ways of structuring "no money down" deals.
Hope you find this helpful and good luck with your investing career.
Vanessa Warwick
Professional Landlady/collector of bricks/consultant/speaker
www.4wallsandaceiling.com