Easy Real Estate Investing
Many people think real estate investing isn’t easy.
Buying a property and hoping to re-sell it quickly at a gain isn’t a workable scenario in the current business climate.
If you’re looking for long-term appreciation, you can buy a property. You need to purchase it at a reasonable price to allow room to pay for management fees. Or you can manage it yourself. The tenants are the wild card, aren’t they?
In commercial real estate, you run the risk of not having any tenants, if the local market is glutted. And that is the case in many local markets. In residential real estate, you may find yourself doing a fair amount of maintenance. You may worry about finding the right tenant. How do you create a lease? How do you screen tenants so as to find the ones who will stay a long time and keep up your property for you?
You may want to consider a real-estate investment trust (REIT), if you want an investment that is low-maintenance. You buy shares in a REIT fund, which is publicly traded. The fund typically holds commercial property and/or mortgages. The value of these funds may go up when the stock market goes down, allowing you to hedge your bets.
Like mutual funds, REIT funds must levy fees. The fees may cut into your profits, as owner. Instead, perhaps you would like to own a property outright.
What do you think of the idea of investing your money in a single-family house, to be rented out? You can choose the house from a variety of local sunbelt markets, and you can take advantage of negotiated relationships with property managers, insurers, and mortgage originators. All this at just five to 10 percent down on each house.
Using such a system, You can set up an investment with known costs, and then let the tenants pay off the mortgage for you. It’s a great way to start a college fund for your young child. All you will have to do is sell the house in 15 years and extract the equity.
Like this post? Subscribe to my RSS feed and get loads more!

No comments yet