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Rental Market Can Trap Equity and Cost You Big
Kevin J. Daum

This article was originally published in the June 11th, 2004 edition of the East Bay Business Times.

Bay Area real estate is a fascinating investment. It is incredibly forgiving. It allows intelligent people to make foolish, emotional mistakes costing them hundreds of thousands of dollars and still come out looking like heroes. Take for example the case of rental houses in the East Bay. According to public records the number of landlords for Single Family Residences is at an all time high. In Alameda and Contra Costa counties alone, individual landlords own more than 70,000 houses. Many of these people became accidental landlords.

You know the story, Baby Boomers marrying late in life. The young single professional hit 35 and was making good money so she bought her starter house in 1996 for $150,000. It was better than paying all those taxes. Finally, in 2001, she finds the perfect spouse and settles down in their $750,000 dream home. No need to sell the other home since it’s cash flowing and appreciating. Besides, there was plenty of down payment money from the spouse’s home. Now they have a sound real estate investment outperforming their stock portfolio. With low interest rates and a refi or two the $1,750 monthly rent more than covers the $1,200 monthly payments giving the couple extra monthly cash and an investment worth more than $650,000 today

Sounds perfect! So what’s the problem? Nothing if this couple likes throwing away profits and tax benefits worth more than $35,000 each year. Also the return on their $500,000 in equity is a fraction of what they could be getting, if they could get to that money without paying capital gains tax. They would like to do something, but it seems too complicated and not worth all the effort. Besides, the property is still making money. Odd that when a $10,000 mutual fund starts under-performing by 3 percent people move heaven and earth to fix it yet happily throw away 100percent plus earnings on real estate investments. Let me state the obvious: Aside from ethical considerations, there is no advantage to leaving any money on the table with any real estate investment decision.

Here is a different approach:

· Understand Rent to Value (RTV) – Once a property exceeds $400,000 in value the percentage of rent diminishes relative to the value of the property. For example; a three-bedroom, one-bath house selling in Alameda for $675,000 today will only rent for $1,800 a month. By contrast, a $225,000 house near Stockton will rent for $1,300 per month. By selling the Alameda house and buying three rentals in Stockton, the monthly income increases from $1,800 to $3,900 per month. With no additional risk, the annual income increases by $25,200 on the same investment. Some may complain about managing more properties and the inconvenience of the distance but even if you pay for home warranties and a property manager you can still net more than $20,000 for your trouble.

· Use Leverage to Your Advantage – In spite of the fact that we all still hold on to foolish Depression-era wives’ tales that paying off real estate is a good thing; most of us know that leverage is the only sure way to dramatically increase your investment return. The math is simple. A $400,000 rental house free and clear appreciating 5 percent annually, makes $20,000 or 5 percent on your money. If you borrow $300,000 to invest elsewhere, the house now only ties up $100,000 in capital. With 5 percent appreciation still returning $20,000 you are now making 20 percent on your capital investment. If the rent and payments are breaking even, you now have $300,000 of tax-free cash to make additional money. Why would anyone not want to do this?

· Talk to Tax Professionals – This is the part that intimidates people. Most people have heard of using a 1031 tax deferred exchange to sell and buy property but there are rules and timelines that can be confusing. Believe me, it’s worth the education. By refinancing and reselling, you can readjust a $650,000 rental house into a $1 million portfolio and still put $250,000 cash in your pocket. Also you can restructure your interest deductions to make rental income tax free while putting tax-free cash in your pocket.

Of course there are many more tricks in the rental property game. All of this requires time and effort but how many opportunities are there for tax-free yields on secure investments that can exceed 25 percent annually? We live in a place where real estate investments outperform employment income and savings. By talking with knowledgeable Realtors, loan officers and CPAs and taking action, you can easily retire on California real estate in 15 years. That is certainly worth a few conversations and a little research.


About the Author...
Kevin Daum is the Founder and CEO of Stratford Financial Services, a Real Estate finance and education company, founded in 1989. Stratford specializes in Purchase loans, Refinance loans and Custom Home Construction finance and has successfully financed thousands of clients. He is the author of "Building Your Own Home for Dummies" (Wiley), as well as "What the Banks Won’t Tell You." Mr. Daum was an Underwriter for Plaza Savings and Loan and Key Bank of New York. He is an INC 500 CEO and has been listed as one the 40 Most Influential People Under 40 in the San Francisco Bay Area. He is the Global Chair for the Edison Innovation Program with the Young Entrepreneurs' Organization (YEO) and is a founding Board member of the Bay Area Chapter of YEO.

Mr. Daum is a frequent contributor to numerous business publications on the subjects of Real Estate and Small Business leadership and speaks regularly on both subjects. He can be contacted at kevin@stratfordfinancial.com.

 

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