Real Estate
Investments in Rental Properties
All the investment advice columns these days
recommend going back to tradition in investing - you know,
putting your money into gold, real estate investments and such.
They've even been giving advice to people to put their
retirement funds in property speculation. While all this may be
sound advice, people just stumble in finding the right real
estate parcel.
The first thing to ask yourself
when you plan on apartment real estate investments is what
period of involvement you're looking for with the property
you buy. Owning bricks and mortar comes with its own
costs: property taxes, repairs and maintenance. The longer
you own it, the longer you'll have to keep up with its
healthy appetite for maintenance.
Let's say that you hold on to a house for 15
years. Sooner or later, the pipes are going to begin to rot and
need replacing, and the roof will need some work too. The
foundation could run some cracks, and then there could be the
expenses involved in shoring it up. Shorter-term real estate
investments are better this way; if you make a good purchase,
nothing major should turn up in maintenance, and you could
stand to make a good profit if your area received attention
from the town council for civic amenities.
But then again, short-term ownership, while it
can be less costly, can also be less profitable if you are
hoping to collect on rentals or even value appreciation. The
housing market's been quite unpredictable recently; rentals
were overpriced at one point, and then they fell and then
recovered again.
If you happen to snag a property when the
rental market is in oversupply, you could be looking at a good
long wait before your rentals look up again. If you're in the
game for the long run, these things happen to even out. But in
the short run, there are risks. The more important thing is,
how do you find the right building or property to park your
real estate investments in?
There are lots of sneaky ways to go about it.
Some people have 'a guy' they know in the banks, who runs the
department in property loans. When something is going up for
foreclosure and sale, you'll be the first to know. You could
run a wanted ad on Craigslist, or as a last resort, you could
enlist the help of a real estate agent.
One of the best ways getting started with real
estate investments would be to sign up for membership at a
property owners association. The website of the National Real
Estate Investors Association has information on all the local
groups in your area.
Of course, buying property is hell on earth, in
satisfying the banks or anyone else who'll be financing you.
You should only venture into this if your credit is good. And
getting financing for investments in real estate is harder if
you won't be living there. The banks figure that if it's not
your own personal home to live in, you could get careless with
your payments. They ask for bigger down payments, bigger
monthly payments and so on.
But if they see that you have a good backup
reserve of cash to attend to any problems in the building,
leaks, unforeseen repairs, and so on, that will convince them
that you really are in it for the long haul (well, as long as
you want to make it).
People who invest, always have their eye on the
time they will sell their property; they think that that is
when they will make a killing. Well, it is so easy to be all
caught up in how property prices rise, that you could somewhat
neglect what chances you have of bringing the price down when
you buy it.
Property in expensive neighborhoods in large
cities, often sells for far more than what you could get out of
it in rent. That's because the sellers are pricing them to sell
to people who will pay for love of the house, not for an income
they wish to see from it. If you can't really tell the
difference between the two, you're in big trouble.
But if you are a small personal investor
involved in real estate investments because you dream of owning
and running your own property, you might still come away clean
if the property appreciates in value. That can't be such a bad
deal.
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Real Estate
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