- Joined
- Aug 30, 2007
- Messages
- 13,879
[quote user=bizaro86]Since properties are much less fungible and less liquid that shares of stock, an estimate is really the only way to go.
Fair enough. An appraisal is just that: an estimate of a property value at that point in time. It may rise or drop from there - similar to a stock.
However, on average, rents go up with inflation and so do property value ... or faster with some real improvements for the top line such as property upgrades or better customer serice or better marketing or lower vacancies or the expense side such as more efficient heating systems or new windows.
Properties are quite liquid in larger markets if priced properly. They sell quite fast .. say in 2-4 months. It may take a lot longer in smaller markets or if one wants an unrealistically high price.
The key drawback of single family homes (vs. multi's) are:
a) the substantial time commitment, unless you buy a rental pooled condo which takes very little effort if well managed, say hours/year as oppposed to days/month in a self-managed single family house.
b) the fairly high realtor fees on exit (3-4% vs. 20% down or 15-20% of equity or even higher % of profit !!)
c) the 100% vacancy effect if a tenant leaves or doesn't pay, as it can take up to 3-4 months to evict the guy, reno the unit and re-rent it. Thus, have an appropriate reserve.
d) the increasing difficulty (and sometimes inability) to scale beyond 10-12 homes in most cases as banks will not lend anymore.
e) the management inefficiencies when managing multiple properties
Get a return on your green $s but especially on your blue $s ! You can always make more money later, but time wasted is lost forever.
Fair enough. An appraisal is just that: an estimate of a property value at that point in time. It may rise or drop from there - similar to a stock.
However, on average, rents go up with inflation and so do property value ... or faster with some real improvements for the top line such as property upgrades or better customer serice or better marketing or lower vacancies or the expense side such as more efficient heating systems or new windows.
Properties are quite liquid in larger markets if priced properly. They sell quite fast .. say in 2-4 months. It may take a lot longer in smaller markets or if one wants an unrealistically high price.
The key drawback of single family homes (vs. multi's) are:
a) the substantial time commitment, unless you buy a rental pooled condo which takes very little effort if well managed, say hours/year as oppposed to days/month in a self-managed single family house.
b) the fairly high realtor fees on exit (3-4% vs. 20% down or 15-20% of equity or even higher % of profit !!)
c) the 100% vacancy effect if a tenant leaves or doesn't pay, as it can take up to 3-4 months to evict the guy, reno the unit and re-rent it. Thus, have an appropriate reserve.
d) the increasing difficulty (and sometimes inability) to scale beyond 10-12 homes in most cases as banks will not lend anymore.
e) the management inefficiencies when managing multiple properties
Get a return on your green $s but especially on your blue $s ! You can always make more money later, but time wasted is lost forever.