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Updated 2 days ago on . Most recent reply

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Mendy J.
  • Investor
  • Albany, NY
22
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73
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What are you guys think about that property?

Mendy J.
  • Investor
  • Albany, NY
Posted

Hey Everyone I bought my first property two years ago. It's located in Linden New Jersey. Nice single-family house. Three bedroom One bath

All of my other properties are nicely cash flowing but this one.

Total monthly payment, including P&I ,Taxes and insurance. Is $4000
Rent- $3500 , First Tenant that I put in 11 days after listing on the market is still there and just extended for another 10 months, Basically zero vacancies .almost no maintenance ( Built the late 19th).

Here's the catch. I bought it for $500,000. It's valued today around $580,000.

Do you guys think I should sell because of the negative cash flow? or should I be happy with appreciation and it’s also expected to continue the appreciation

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Jay Hinrichs
#1 All Forums Contributor
  • Real Estate Consultant
  • Summerlin, NV
66,020
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Jay Hinrichs
#1 All Forums Contributor
  • Real Estate Consultant
  • Summerlin, NV
Replied
Quote from @Dan H.:

I am often the contrarian.   I would also venture my RE investing success is in rarefied air even on this site where a fairly large percentage of posters are millionaires.


I have 2 questions:

1) do you expect the appreciation to continue at a rate significantly greater than inflation?

2) can you absorb the negative cash flow?

Assuming the answer is yes to both then this is a no brainer to keep.

Your monthly appreciation is $80000/24=$3,333/month

Now let’s assume negative $1k/month which is much more accurate than $500/month.   Maintenance/cap ex, pm, vacancy (I recognize you have not had much, but vacancy is a reality), asset protection, bookkeeping, etc.

Here is rough monthly numbers $3.3k (appreciation) - $1k (cash flow) + ~$400 (equity paydown assuming 80% LTV) equals $2.7k/month or $32,400/year.

At 80% LTV you purchased at $100k not including closing costs. This provides a 32.4%/year return (still excluding closing costs).

I am about total return.  Of the sources of total return, the one I value least is cash flow because it is the only source of RE return taxed annually.   In addition, I do not require the cash flow.

A few years ago I purchased a non commercial residential property for $2.35m that had fully occuppied rent of $6k/month.   It was the largest negative cash flow non commercial property I have ever heard of.  Today it has value over $1m above purchase and rehab costs.  I expect the rents this year to exceed $25k/month that would provide modest cash flow.   My return so far is over 50%/year.

Positive cash flow is not required for a property to be an outstanding investment.  Total return dictates the quality of the return.

Good luck


not to mention transaction costs of selling.  and then buying again if thats what they want to do.  time cures a lot of negative cash flow if your in a market with REAL historic appreciation.
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JLH Capital Partners

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