Real estate investment is attractive for several reasons, and while leverage is one of them, it is not the sole factor driving its appeal. Let's discuss various aspects that make real estate investment attractive, including leverage, and provide examples and references where applicable.
1. Leverage:
Leverage refers to using borrowed money to finance an investment. Real estate investment offers the opportunity to use leverage, which can amplify returns. By using a mortgage to purchase a property, an investor can control a more substantial asset with a smaller initial investment. If the property value appreciates, the investor's return on investment will be higher due to the leverage employed. However, it's important to note that leverage can also magnify losses if the property value declines.
Example: Suppose an investor purchases a property worth $500,000 with a 20% down payment ($100,000) and a mortgage for the remaining $400,000. If the property appreciates by 5%, the investor's return on investment would be 25% ($25,000 gain on a $100,000 investment).
Reference: "The Complete Guide to Real Estate Finance for Investment Properties" by Steve Berges.
2. Cash Flow:
Real estate investment can generate regular cash flow through rental income. By renting out a property, investors can receive monthly rental payments, which can be used to cover mortgage payments, expenses, and generate additional income. Positive cash flow from rental properties can provide a steady income stream and potentially increase over time due to rental rate increases.
Example: An investor buys an apartment for $200,000 and rents it out for $1,500 per month. After deducting expenses (e.g., mortgage, property management fees, maintenance), the investor generates $500 per month in positive cash flow.
Reference: "The Book on Rental Property Investing" by Brandon Turner.
3. Appreciation:
Real estate has the potential to appreciate in value over time, providing investors with capital appreciation. Economic factors, such as population growth, job opportunities, and development in an area, can contribute to property value appreciation. While appreciation is not guaranteed, historically, real estate has shown a tendency to appreciate over the long term.
Example: An investor purchases a property for $300,000, and over five years, the property's value increases to $400,000 due to market conditions and local development. The investor can sell the property, realizing a $100,000 gain.
Reference: "The Millionaire Real Estate Investor" by Gary Keller.
4. Tax Benefits:
Real estate investment offers various tax advantages, including deductions for mortgage interest, property taxes, depreciation, and operating expenses. These deductions can lower an investor's taxable income, potentially reducing their tax liability and increasing overall returns.
Example: An investor owns a rental property generating $30,000 in annual rental income. After deducting mortgage interest, property taxes, and operating expenses totaling $20,000, the taxable rental income is reduced to $10,000, resulting in a lower tax liability.
Reference: "The Real Estate Investor's Tax Strategy Guide" by Tammy H. Kraemer.
While leverage is an attractive aspect of real estate investment, it is not the sole reason for its appeal. The combination of leverage, cash flow, appreciation, and tax benefits makes real estate an attractive investment option for many investors.
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User Comments
Silva Snyder
a year ago
You can use leverage in the stock market too. It's called buying on margin. Not that I recommend doing that. You can quickly lose your ass if you don't know what you're doing. Honestly if I I had a million in cash tomorrow I think I'd just throw it in a low cost S&P 500 index fund and call it a day. If the market returned its average 10% a year over time that's $100k a year on average and I could live very comfortably off that. I think this is the only truly passive income.
Ellis Medina
a year ago
Wait until interest rates drop, If/when that happens, youâll have post after post of people wondering why youâd ever buy stocks when you can leverage RE at sub 5%.
Nathalie Hamilton
a year ago
I would love to buy an apartment building where rents triple in 15 years and the property doubles in value. Iâm not sold that is realistic for the next 15 years though.
Thalia Fischer
a year ago
People think too short term. They act like a higher interest rate is a deal breaker because it means a few years are more difficult. Yes, higher rates make it more difficult in the short runâŠ.but you donât have to care that much if you are a long term, 30-40 year investor.
Bell Coleman
a year ago
And what happens if the property doesnât double in value over 15 years, but instead stays relatively stagnant or increases just at the rate of inflation?
Justin Russell
a year ago
Example: Buy a million dollar multi family property. Right now rents, minus mortgage, taxes, maintenance, etc gives a 3 percent cash on cash return. Not so great, right? 15 years later. That 1 million dollar property is worth 2 million, and rents have tripled. Now think about the returnâŠ.. Not saying index funds are not great and real estate is the best investment ever. But too often people look at the numbers of a property right when they buy it, but when you think about what that property will be giving back in 15-20 years, itâs absolutely massive.
Turner Diaz
a year ago
Literally couldn't have said it better myself! 100% agree with all of your points. Only thing I would add is that you can also use your primary home as an investment vehicle - you limit your risk tremendously and have a huge upside. I mean, you have to live somewhere, so you can buy something and fix it up (or just hold) over time and then move out and rent or sell down the line - you only need to hold it for a year - and if you don't like the outcome just stay. The benefit of being able to have your worst case scenario he "whatever, I'll just live here and not pay rent" and the best case scenario being "what a killer investment" is often slept on. No other investment has such a high floor/ceiling combo.
Veronica Howard
a year ago
Couple points: 1.) itâs not that itâs leverage that makes real estate perform itâs that itâs very cheap leverage. You can buy stock on margin, but not with a 30 yr loan thatâs government backed. 2.) the government protects you as a landlord with taxes, write offs, and other regulations. Usually those donât exist in other capital markets. 3.) illiquidity is a feature not a bug. It prevents you from selling at an inappropriate moment when your emotions get the better of you. It also makes, âdeals,â somewhat easier to spot and jump on if youâre enterprising. Similar to buying and selling actual bonds. For instance thereâs no ticker scrolling across cnbc for Boeing debt, you have to be in the weeds and looking at the buy and sell spreads to know if youâre getting a deal or not. 4.) Real estate is very broad. Most people think of real estate investing as buying duplexs with residential mortgages, but you can buy raw land and develop it, fix and flip office buildings, etc, Some of these strategies donât necessarily need leverage for the outsize return. 5.) It really isnât a passive investment. Itâs much more active than buying index funds.
Roberts Caldwell
a year ago
Yes. Real estate is dog shit otherwise. 30+ days to close? Force to pay absurd fees to sell? Having to pay taxes and insurance on unrealized gains? 5% ROI?Variable payout streams on random shit? Full stop payment stream and having to wait 30-180 days before you can restart the stream of income again? Absolute dogshit risk if leverage wasnât in play even with depreciation.
Lancelot Green
a year ago
Youâre not considering any other expenses. You take your rental income minus maintenance, property management fees, insurance, Hoa fees, etc. Then you subtract mortgage interest and depreciation and that number will be what you pay taxes on. Itâs almost guaranteed to be a loss for at least the first couple of years for most investments.