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Updated 11 days ago on . Most recent reply

Investing in a low CoC ROI - Bad idea?
HI all,
Want to start with thank you to everyone in the bigger pockets community taking the time to read this and provide input...
I'm looking at a property in Oklahoma City in what looks to be a very desirable up & coming neighborhood. Its a 4plex, gut renovated in 2021, A class. Im 29 years old and have 2 other properties where I've typically only invested based on cash flow. As we all know, strong cash flow is hard to find right now. I've shifted my approach to be long term appreciation focused, which lead me to this property. I have the property under contract. Right now, its a 6.51% cap, but only a 1.32% CoC ROI (this is with a very conservative formula: vacancy reserve, property management (although I'll likely self manage to start), maintenance reserve, etc.
Historically, I would hate this deal on paper. But with my appreciation mindset, I like it because I'm buying a great asset in a great neighborhood that will see both rent and property value growth. I believe I can slightly raise rents at lease renewals and get this to a 7.33% cap, 5.09% ROI in the near future.
Also should note that I am looking for turnkey properties only as my W2 job does not give me much time for renovation projects.
Am I making a mistake moving forward with a property that will not see strong cash flow for the next few years? Or is this a good approach as I'm not looking to be financially free immediately, but want to set myself up for that by age 40-45.
I'd really appreciated either the validation to go through with it, or the "wait for a better deal" take so I can weigh my options. Thanks everyone!!
TLDR: Is it worth it to invest in a property producing low cash flow that has strong appreciation upside?
Most Popular Reply

What do you anticipate the appreciation to be? Oklahoma isn't actually known for appreciation. Here are a few questions that might help:
1. What's being developed as far as apartments in the area? If more apartments are being built, then you have more competition, which means you have to compete on price. That lowers your ROI and with a fourplex slows your appreciation.
2. Another factor to consider is loan buy down. Each month you make a mortgage payment, you are creating equity just by virtue of less debt. Is that factored into your calculations?
3. What is the unit mix? For example I recently bought a fourplex where each unit is 3 bedrooms. Rents are low now but overtime I believe I will become the house alternative, which will raise rents quickly.
4. With low cash flow, how does this hold you back from scaling?
5. Are there other options? Base hits work better over the long term than a few home runs once and a while.