Increase Your Rental Income Without Increasing Your Rents
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Title: Increase Your Rental Income Without Increasing Your Rents
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Author: John Visser
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Increase Your Rental Income Without Increasing Your Rents
Copyright 2006 John Visser
Many Investors Lose Money On Their Rental Properties.
Sometimes Without Realizing It.
Here is a typical rental scenario:
Mortgage payment going out: $1,100 per month. Rent coming
in: $1,200 per month. This gives you $100 a month in
positive cash flow. Or does it? On paper it looks good, but
if you analyze the big picture and take into account your
entire cost to own that rental property, you are losing
money in a big way. Let’s analyze those costs over a year:
Holding costs. Let’s say it takes three months to find a
tenant for your property - $3,300
Spend marketing dollars to attract a tenant: $500.
Termite treatment: $150.
Landlord’s Insurance: $350.
Cleaning the property after the last tenant moved out: $350.
The water heater went out in February and you had to
replace it: $400. Total mortgage payments for the year:
$13,200. Other costs: $1,750. Total cost of ownership:
$14,950
Rental income of 9 months: $10,800. Net loss for the year:
$4,150. Now the picture looks very different. Even after
your tax deduction of mortgage interest and depreciation,
you still lost money.
How do you fix the problem?
The simplest answer of course is to buy right. This could
mean putting down 20% so that your mortgage is much lower
than the market rent, or it could mean that you need to buy
your rental properties at steep discounts. Putting down 20%
every time you buy a rental property will obviously limit
how many properties you can buy, so the simplest answer
here is the second option of paying less for the property.
The 4 Biggest Reasons For Negative Cash Flow Investment
Properties
1. You paid too much for the property. If your mortgage is
not significantly less than the rent coming in, (and I mean
several hundred dollars a month less), then you paid too
much for the property.
2. You overestimated the rents you can get for your area.
3. The price you paid for the property was too high
4. You should have paid less for the property
If your problem is that you paid too much for the property,
then the rents in your area of course will not be high
enough, and if you overestimated the rents on top of paying
too much, you better have deep pockets or you are going to
face foreclosure. Short of selling the property
immediately, you can:
Increase Your Rental Income Without Increasing Your Rents
I am going to give you a financing strategy here that can
let you cash flow hundreds of dollars per month. But. Like
everything else that sounds too good to be true, it has a
downside. There is a relatively new mortgage product on the
market (Been around for about 6 years), called an Option
ARM. It gives you 4 different ways you can pay it every
month:
Pick a payment similar to a 15 year mortgage (build equity
fast)
Pick a payment similar to a 30 year mortgage (build equity
slow)
Pick a interest only payment (build no equity) OR
Pick the minimum payment (accrue negative equity)
The minimum payment in option 4 can be as low as 1.5%
(calculated like a fully amortized 30 year fixed payment).
If you choose to pay the minimum payment, your payment in
the scenario of this discussion will be $520 per month
instead of $1,100 per month (I’m assuming that taxes and
insurance are escrowed). Now if your rent is $1,200 per
month, you have a positive cash flow of $680 a month on the
same property with the same tenant and you never increased
the rent. Well, that feels a little better doesn’t it?
That may feel good, but here is the gotcha: Your minimum
payment is less than your interest only payment. Since
banks are not in the business of losing money, they will
still calculate the full interest only payment for that
month, they will just be happy to accept your minimum
payment. So happy in fact, that they will take the
difference between your minimum payment and the interest
only payment, and add it to the outstanding loan balance.
So now you owe them more than last month. Ouch.
But wait, that may not be so bad. Why?
You can still pay it like a 30 year or 15 year mortgage and
only use the minimum payment when you have a vacancy. It
will reduce the pain in your wallet when you have to spend
money for marketing in addition to making the payment on
that vacant property.
This is an okay reason for getting an option ARM. But not a
great reason. Why? Because the rate (not the minimum
payment which is fixed for a year), will typically adjust
monthly based on the index it is tied to. If rates are
trending down, this mortgage is unbelievable. Every month
you have to pay less since the interest only payment is
going down, and you have the choice of the minimum payment
in addition to that. If rates are trending up, then every
month your interest only payment will be going up (while
your minimum payment is fixed for a year). When this
happens, this is no fun. By the way, as of May 2006 the
market is trending up.
Since this mortgage can make me cash flow very well every
month, but also has a downside, in which particular
situation should I use it?
Great question. This is the question you should ask on
every mortgage you ever get on an investment property. I
would recommend this loan very strongly under the following
scenario: Your goal is to sell the property in the next two
years or less, and you will owe no more than 80% of the
appraised value of the property on this loan (90% is okay
if you are going to sell in one year or less). This is the
perfect fit for this loan program. Here is why:
You can make the minimum payment every month and enjoy the
maximum cash flow right now. You will incur negative
equity, but since your loan to value is fairly low, it will
not make much of a difference over a one or two year
period. You will have roughly $460 per month of negative
equity for a total of $5,520 after one year, or $11,040 in
two years (Not totally accurate, as your minimum payment
will go up by 7.5% of the PAYMENT, not interest rate, once
a year. But close enough for our illustration here.)
That may sound high, but here is the hidden benefit: that
negative equity is deferred interest. When you sell the
property after one or two years, you can take that
accumulated deferred interest as a tax write off in the
year that you sell the property (check with your CPA on
this since I am not a tax expert and I do not give tax
advice). Since you can time this sale to a certain degree,
you can use this deferred interest deduction to reduce your
total tax bill should you have a windfall profit on another
transaction in the same year. In other words, use the
deferred interest deduction to offset the gain in another
area.
Remember also that you always have the choice of making the
full interest only payment - you don’t have to incur the
negative equity if you do not want to. The beauty of this
mortgage is that it gives you options. Cash flow when you
need it most, but still reducing your balance if you want
to.
The absolutely perfect fit is if you have a high equity
situation and are selling on a lease purchase. That way you
can enjoy the positive cash flow now, and still get a good
profit on the sale. Many investors don’t make money on a
lease purchase during the lease period. They only make
money when the sale happens. In the time between you still
have to put gas in your tank and provide for the family
though, and you need cash to do that. Let’s see how the
math works:
You bought a rehab with hard money, fixed it up, and
refinanced into an Option ARM. You choose to sell on lease
purchase so that the sale will take place at least a year
since when you bought the property, so that you will reduce
your capital gains tax by half, and so the property will
season for mortgage purposes. Since you have to feed your
family in the meantime, you get $680 cash a month in your
pocket while you wait for the big paycheck.
Now multiply this by 5 properties using the above scenario.
Five times $680 is $3,400 a month of positive cash flow.
Can you do with a little extra cash while you wait on the
big paycheck when you sell?
About the Author:
John Visser is a real estate entrepeneur and mortgage
lender. You can join his discussion forum about mortgages
for real estate investors at
www.financingforinvestors.com/
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