- Joined
- Oct 10, 2007
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Not necessairly
Many purchase cash flow positive properties with minimal margin of safety... especially post 2004...Rental rates can drop and vacanacies can happen... so those in distressed markets that have properties that lost value can only also be burning through cash from operations from what were once cash flow positivie...
QUOTE (RCrein @ Apr 10 2010, 11:45 PM) I think this is a valuable point to keep in mind. There must be two streams of income for income properties. The first covers your effort to manage the property and should be covered by expenses for Property Management, Repairs and Maintenance and perhaps Snow Removal and Grass Cutting. These expenses are not included when calculating ROI which is the second stream of income that compensates for the use of your capital. So it would seem that if expenses are properly incuded in the property analysis that the ROI is the investment return and can be readily compared to stock market returns.
I`m not sure that investors entire real estate portfolios in the states have gone bad. Some have, more are at risk, but many can carry on. If they bought under an approach similar to the one REIN uses I would think they should still be ok. Even if the current market value of the properties has taken a major hit, properties that cash flow still make money. Have residential income properties taken the same drop as single family homes? I don`t know. If they bought based on cask flow, they should be able to sell based of income still. I suppose commercial buildings are taking a hit on incomes though. If investors are not highly leveraged, they can absorb increased interest rates and vacancies to a fair degree.
The "investors" who got hurt the most were speculators and one could argue that most stock market investments are highly speculative. I am not comfortable with the suggestion of buying stocks just for the sake of diversification. Any economic challenge for real estate portfolios would tend to affect the markets as well.
Anyway just some thoughts for consideration. Regards all.
Many purchase cash flow positive properties with minimal margin of safety... especially post 2004...Rental rates can drop and vacanacies can happen... so those in distressed markets that have properties that lost value can only also be burning through cash from operations from what were once cash flow positivie...
QUOTE (RCrein @ Apr 10 2010, 11:45 PM) I think this is a valuable point to keep in mind. There must be two streams of income for income properties. The first covers your effort to manage the property and should be covered by expenses for Property Management, Repairs and Maintenance and perhaps Snow Removal and Grass Cutting. These expenses are not included when calculating ROI which is the second stream of income that compensates for the use of your capital. So it would seem that if expenses are properly incuded in the property analysis that the ROI is the investment return and can be readily compared to stock market returns.
I`m not sure that investors entire real estate portfolios in the states have gone bad. Some have, more are at risk, but many can carry on. If they bought under an approach similar to the one REIN uses I would think they should still be ok. Even if the current market value of the properties has taken a major hit, properties that cash flow still make money. Have residential income properties taken the same drop as single family homes? I don`t know. If they bought based on cask flow, they should be able to sell based of income still. I suppose commercial buildings are taking a hit on incomes though. If investors are not highly leveraged, they can absorb increased interest rates and vacancies to a fair degree.
The "investors" who got hurt the most were speculators and one could argue that most stock market investments are highly speculative. I am not comfortable with the suggestion of buying stocks just for the sake of diversification. Any economic challenge for real estate portfolios would tend to affect the markets as well.
Anyway just some thoughts for consideration. Regards all.