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Zero Overhead Real Estate Investing---Right Now
by
Steve Selengut
Real estate investing is not nearly as complicated, financially
burdensome, or time consuming as you might think. In fact, Its easy
to add raw land, shopping centers, apartment complexes, and private
homes to your portfolio without brokers, bankers, attorneys, and
handymen on your payroll. Even better, the zero overhead approach
allows you to blend your real estate investments into your
securities portfolio for ease of management, income monitoring,
diversification, and analysis.
I know you think that the entire real estate market is in a
shambles, and that it is far too dangerous to get involved now, what
with all the nasty uncertainty that has decimated property values.
But where did the real damage take place, and why? Without having
mega millions to work with, or a line of credit that goes around the
block, you can have positions in various forms of Real Estate
without accumulating debt, paying insurance, or leaving your PC---
and you can get it done on the cheap!
All of the basic types of real estate are available through CEFs
(Closed End Funds) and REITs (Real Estate Investment Trusts), and
both can be purchased in the same manner as any common stock.
Additionally, you can own a piece of the action without the big
commitment of time and resources. Finally, you can take advantage of
changes in the real estate market cycle in precisely the same manner
as you can deal with the volatility and fluctuations in the stock
and fixed income securities markets.
CEFs and REITs are obviously safer investments than outright
purchases of shopping plazas, condominiums, and private homes. They
are also considerably less risky than owning the common stock of
individual real estate companies. The size of the numbers may be
less exciting, but the net income and capital gains potential are
comparable on a percentage basis, and the turnover rate can be much
more impressive. Both types of real estate based security belong in
your investment portfolio--- but in which asset allocation bucket?
I've always included REITs and real estate CEFs in the income bucket
of my portfolios because their primary purpose is to generate cash
flow. And, as with any interest rate expectation (IRE) sensitive
security, I expect prices to fluctuate with changing conditions in
several areas: IRE, credit market conditions, economic cycles, stock
market cycles, etc. After a huge rally in any market, investors need
to be more selective than they generally are. Common sense isn't
real common when it comes to investing.
All financial markets, all investment securities, and all economies
are cyclical. Equities, real estate, gold, and pork bellies--- it
doesn't matter. If you buy too high, you will only get lucky if you
know how (not when) to sell, and if you have a plan for doing so. Up
side selling disciplines are scarce in most investment strategies...
pity, they work so well with bargain hunting during crashes.
The income bucket of the investment portfolio is different in both
purpose and content from the equity side. Real estate is an
important diversification tool that may add some pizzazz to an
otherwise boring collection of securities. We don't need to own the
real estate to benefit from both the yields and the cycles. Unlike
other fixed income assets (corporate, government, and municipal
contracts), rents generally rise over the course of time. Mortgage
interest is almost always higher than bonds provide, and we don't
need to be mortgagors or landlords to get a piece of the action.
The speculators whose properties became termite infested as the
latest real estate bubble burst were owners of mortgaged properties
that could neither be sold nor afforded. The other losers were
lenders to unqualified property speculators and, of course, the
wizards of Wall Street who regulators allowed to turn simple
mortgage debt into multi-tiered financial quagmires. Every bursting
bubble produces two things: pain and opportunity. When the going
gets tough, the smart investor goes shopping.
There are dozens of REITs and managed income CEFs that are worthy of
your confidence and attention. Some detailed analysis will reveal
lower than normal prices for higher than usual yields based on
monthly payouts that have not been reduced throughout the tailspin
in the real estate and financial sectors. Read that again--- monthly
payments and higher yields throughout the downturn--- hmmm.
Now don't just run out and buy all of these things you can find, and
stay far away from new issues for all of the usual reasons. Make
sure that you look at a lot of REITs and even more CEFs of various
kinds to get a feel for the levels of income they produce. Most of
these securities are "leveraged" to a certain extent, which simply
means that management may choose to borrow some of the money that
they invest.
Leverage is not a four-letter word when used properly, and (in my
opinion) it is more likely to help your results than it is to hurt
them. But it's always a good practice to stay within the normal
income range, assuming that there is either a risk or a management
reason for the highest and lowest yields, respectively. Be careful
not to create a poorly diversified income portfolio. Bonds,
Preferred Stocks, Royalty Trusts, etc., all deserve income bucket
representation.
The major distinction between the two types of investing needs some
re-emphasis. When purchasing stock in a real estate company (or any
other company), your main objective should be to sell the stock for
a reasonable profit as quickly as possible. You will then select
some other stock and repeat the process. When purchasing a REIT or
an income CEF, you are depending on the managers of these entities
to generate income and capital gains that they pass on to you.
You buy these securities for the income, but always recognize that
you have the bonus capability of selling your shares when they rise
to an acceptable profit level. Similarly, be prepared to add to your
holdings during market value downturns, thus increasing your income
and reducing your cost per share at the same time. The benefits of
this form of real estate investing vs. ownership of the properties
themselves should be clear. It's a whole lot easier than flipping
properties.
So when it comes to Real Estate, think: no attorneys, no debt, and
no maintenance equal no problem.
NOTICE: Investment Reference does not recommend
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Last modified:
June 20, 2008
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