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Real Estate Investing Growth Hormone

1 - I can do better 2 - Jury's out 3 - Pretty darn good 4 - Splendiferous 5 - Awesometastic (by 2 people)   Your rating: 1 - I can do better 2 - Jury's out 3 - Pretty darn good 4 - Splendiferous 5 - Awesometastic

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Apartments - The Path To Real Estate Wealth 

Look at it this way. Did you get attracted to real estate by the idea of being a landlord, or a project manager who fixes properties up. Not likely. Real estate looked really good to you because it seemed like it was a way to make a lot of money reasonably quickly, that you could actually understand.

Sure there's nothing complicated about the general concept; you buy cheap, renovate, and sell high. When you get in the saddle though there are a lot of choices to make. Like, what particular real estate niche are you going to do. Rehabbing houses? Owning and managing mobile home parks? Flipping notes? Flipping houses? Maybe owning commercial property like strip malls, or office buildings? The list goes on.

Which is going to be your vehicle? Which will you specialize in, if you specialize at all?

When you do choose one as your wealth vehicle, you discover there is a lot of knowledge to master, a lot to be good at.

Given this is the case it's no mystery many investors lose focus and end up making a lot less money from their real estate endeavors than they want. Or if they do make some money they work hard for it. Not what they signed on for.

There are many ways to profit in real estate, but when you beak it down and look at what gives you the greatest leverage to make the most money, with the least risk, taking the least amount of your time to do it, nothing comes close to apartment buildings.

When you out apartments side by side with other real estate profit vehicles, they really don't hold a candle to apartments. Especially the most popular; houses.

Flipping houses is very popular. There are TV reality shows about it, everyone wants to do it. On the face of it, it's very simple, but it's massively over-exposed and as a result wickedly competitive.

Try flipping apartments. Wait ... can you even do that?

Of course you can, it's real estate just like houses are. And what would you rather make; $5,000 from wholesaling a house, or $50,000 from wholesaling an apartment?

Tough choice.

But that's only the beginning. When you hold apartments for the longer term it gets even better. By their nature apartment buildings are multi-family properties, so unlike houses apartments have multiple families getting up and going to work each day to earn money to pay the rent. These multiple families in the one building create one of the greatest benefits of apartments %u2026 economies of scale.

Because your property expenses, and your mortgage are spread out over multiple sources of income from your tenants, the per unit cost of each ends up being lower. So when combined, your multi-unit building generates more income per dollar of mortgage debt (and fixed expense) on the property than a house every could. And the more units in the building the greater you economies of scale.

As a result apartments generate more net income each month than individual houses can ever produce. And because there is much more gross income being produced by an individual apartment building, there is money available to hire professional property management to manage the building.

This is where houses just don't compare any more. Once you have 10 or more houses, even though they may be lease-optioned out to tenant-buyers, you don't have a life any more. The rents you collect from your houses only just covers your mortgages, taxes and insurance, let alone having any left to pay a manager. You are the landlord to those houses and that is that.

And what happens when you have a vacancy in one of your houses? It's you on the hook for 100% of the mortgage payment until you get another tenant-buyer in the house.

Fun.

In your apartment building, a vacancy means your gross income drops a little that month, and your net positive cashflow will be a little less, but it is your property manager's job to fill the vacancy.

When you invest in apartments you are truly an "investor", not a landlord. You manage your managers to increase the income of the property as time goes by.

Another key difference between houses and apartments is how they are valued. Houses are valued by comparable properties, apartments are valued by the income they produce. As you rehab units, fill vacancies, raise rents, you increase the value.

Over time, managing your apartments for maximum income you can increase the value of the property 2-3 times within a few years; something that is rarely possible with a rental house. Besides, which check would you rather receive; $50,000 after 6 years when your tenant-buyer finally cashes you out, or $500,000 after 18 months after getting all your units rehabbed, rents raised, and vacancies filled.

When you take the time to seriously look at the benefits of investing apartments, it's hard to understand why anyone would even want to buy a house ... even one time.

The reason is, of course, fear. A beginning investor can get their head around a house, it's very familiar. The numbers are comfortable.

But seeing themselves as the owner of a building that is worth in excess of one million dollars %u2026 "well, that sounds a little dangerous". It's hard for a beginning investor to identify with. The numbers are not comfortable.

The secret is though, apartment investing is less competitive, lower risk, and dare I say it, easier than buying houses. The same work you would apply to buying a house, applied to an apartment building nets you 10, 20, 50 times more.

Put your misconceptions aside, apartments truly are the surest way to real estate wealth.

Timing The Real Estate Market 

Real estate investing is one of the most popular forms of building wealth. The source of it's popularity no doubt stems from the fact that everybody has bought a house, and if you haven't bought a house you have at least rented an apartment.

So when someone looks at investing in a house or a block of apartments, they have at least had experience with one or the other, allowing a certain level of knowledge about and comfort with the investment.

Add to this the conventional wisdom that real estate prices always go up. Maybe no-one can remember a period when real estate prices went down, maybe they just weren't looking when it last happened.

Well, if you remember the recession of the early 1990's, the Savings and Loan Crisis. the RTC ... you remember that real estate prices do indeed go down. A long way down. And if you have been hearing recently all the talk of "the housing boom", the "real estate bubble", you also know that prices have gone up since then.

Learn about Real Estate Market Cycles

Far from the conventional wisdom that real estate always goes up ... real estate prices are subject to cycles. They go up and they go down, just like stocks. Just like the economy.

Unlike stocks though, houses take longer to sell. If you are caught trying, or needing, to sell a house when the economy is in a down cycle it can mean trouble. At best you'll get less for your equity, at worst you lose your property.

To be in control of your investing you need to know how to avoid being caught in a down cycle. Ideally, you want to buy when the market has hit bottom and is starting to head up again, and then sell just before the market gets totally overheated and begins to crash.

But how would you ever be able to get information about this that was accurate.

In the past it was impossible, which is why real estate was and still is subject to so much rumor and prognosticating about which way the market is going, and why real estate investing is more risky than most want to believe.

But now you can "know" without a shadow of a doubt what the state of your local real estate market is and what phase of the cycle you are in. You no longer have to guess.

Learn more about - Timing The Real Estate Market

Real Estate Investing Market Research Tool 

Shows you appreciation rates of markets based on home sale data

This would have to be the first tool like this for real estate investors. Nothing else quite like it.

Real Estate Investing Research Tool

A brief tutorial that shows how Housing Alerts can help you approach real estate investing strategically and increase profits.

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reggie845frank

About reggie845frank

Hi folks. I'm Reggie, I'm a real estate investor who buys apartments and I've become very interested in everything around market cycles lately. Real estate is good just by itself but add the component of buying in a market trough and selling at the peak ... and you put your profits on steroids.


I find other investors don't seem to be too interested in this when I tell them about it. I don't understand that, but nevertheless I'm trying to show why it's worth it to be interested in and to track real estate market cycles if you are an investor.


I hope you like the lens.

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