A Beginner's Guide to Investing in Real Estate
Investing
in real estate is one of the oldest forms of investing, having been around
since the early days of human civilization.
Predating modern stock markets, real estate is
one of the five basic
asset classes that every investor should seriously consider
adding to his or her portfolio for the unique cash flow, liquidity,
profitability, tax, and diversification benefits
it offers.
In this introductory guide, we'll walk you through the basics of
real estate investing, and discuss the different ways you might acquire or take
ownership in real estate investments.
First,
let's start with the basics: What is real estate investing?
What Is
Real Estate Investing?
Real
estate investing is a broad category of operating, investing, and financial
activities centered around making money from tangible property or cash flows
somehow tied to a tangible property.
The
purest, simplest form of real estate investing is all about cash flow
from rentsrather than appreciation. Real estate
investing occurs when the investor, also known as the landlord, acquires a
piece of tangible property, whether that's raw farmland, land with a house on
it, land with an office building on it, land with an industrial warehouse on
it, or an apartment.
He or she then finds someone who wants to use
this property, known as a tenant, and they enter into an agreement.
The tenant is granted access to the real estate, to use it under certain
terms, for a specific length of time, and with certain restrictions -- some of
which are laid out in Federal, state, and local law, and others of which are
agreed upon in the lease contract or rental agreement.
In
exchange, the tenant pays for the ability to use the real estate. The payment
he or she sends to the landlord is known as "rent".
For
many investors, rental income from real estate investments has a huge
psychological advantage over dividends and interest from investing in stocks and bonds.They can drive by the
property, see it, and touch it with their hands.
They can paint it their favorite color or hire
an architect and construction company to modify it. They can use their
negotiation skills to determine the rental rate, allowing a good operator to
generate higher capitalization
rates, or "cap rates."
From
time to time, real estate investors become as misguided as stock investors
during stock market bubbles, insisting that capitalization rates don't matter.
Don't fall for it. If you are able to price your rental rates appropriately,
you should enjoy a satisfactory
rate of return on your capital after accounting for the cost of
the property, including reasonable depreciation reserves, property and
income taxes, maintenance, insurance, and other related expenditures.
Additionally, you should measure the amount of
time required to deal with the investment, as your time is the most valuable
asset you have -- it's the reason passive income is so cherished by
investors. (Once your holdings are large enough, you can establish or hire a
real estate property management company to handle the day-to-day operations of
your real estate portfolio in exchange for a percentage of the
rental revenue, transforming real estate investments that had been
actively managed into passive investments.)
What
Are Some of the Most Popular Ways for a Person to Begin Investing in Real
Estate?
There
is a myriad of different types of real estate investments a person might consider
for his or her portfolio
It's
easier to think in terms of the major categories into which real estate
investments fall based on the unique benefits and drawbacks, economic
characteristics and rent cycles, customary lease terms, and brokerage practices
of the property type. Real estate properties are ordinarily categorized into
one of the following groups:
- Residential real estate investing - These are properties that involve investing in real estate tied to houses or apartments in which individuals or families live. Sometimes, real estate investments of this type have a service business component, such as assisted living facilities for seniors or full-service buildings for tenants who want a luxury experience. Leases usually run for 12 months, give or take six months on either side, leading to a much more rapid adjustment to market conditions than certain other types of real estate investments.
- Commercial real estate
investing - Commercial real estate
investments largely consist of office buildings. These leases can be
locked in for many years, resulting in a double-edged sword. When a
commercial real estate investment is fully leased with long-term tenants
who agreed to richly priced lease rates, the cash flow continues even if
the lease rates on comparable properties fall (provided the tenant doesn't
go bankrupt). On the other hand, the opposite is true - you could
find yourself earning significantly below-market lease rates on an office
building because you signed long-term leases before lease rates increased.
- Industrial real estate
investing - Properties that fall under
the industrial real estate umbrella can include warehouses and
distribution centers, storage units, manufacturing facilities, and
assembly plants.
- Retail real estate investing - Some investors want to own properties such as
shopping centers, strip malls, or traditional malls. Tenants can include
retail shops, hair salons, restaurants, and similar enterprises. In some
cases, rental rates include a percentage of a store's retail sales to
create an incentive for the landlord to do as much as he, she, or it can
to make the retail property attractive to shoppers.
- Mixed-use real estate
investing - This is a catch-all category
for when an investor develops or acquires a property that includes
multiple types of the aforementioned real estate investments. For
example, you might build a multi-story building that has retail and
restaurants on the ground floor, office space on the next few floors, and
residential apartments on the remaining floors.
You
can also get involved on the lending side of real estate investing by:
- Owning a bank that underwrites
mortgages and commercial real estate loans. This can include public
ownership of stocks. When an institutional or
individual investor is analyzing a bank stocks, it pays to pay attention
to the real estate exposure of the bank loans.
- Underwriting private mortgages
for individuals, often at higher interest rates to compensate you for the
additional risk, perhaps including a lease-to-own credit provision.
- Investing in mezzanine
securities, which allows you to lend money to a real estate project that
you can then convert into equity ownership if it isn't repaid. These
are sometimes used in the development of hotel franchises.
There
are sub-specialties of real estate investing including:
- Leasing a space so you have
little capital tied up in it, improving it, then sub-leasing that same
space to others for much higher rates, creating incredible returns on
capital. An example is a well-run flexible office business in a major city
where smaller or mobile workers can buy office time or rent specific
offices.
- Acquiring tax-lien
certificates. These are an esoteric area of real estate investing and not
appropriate for hands-off or inexperienced investors but which -- under
the right circumstances, at the right time, and with the right sort of
person -- generate high returns to compensate for the headaches and
risks involved.
Real
Estate Investment Trusts (REITs)
On
top of all of this, you can actually invest in real estate through something
known as a real estate investment trust, or REIT. An investor can buy REITs
through a brokerage account, Roth IRA, or another custody account of some sort. REITs
are unique because the tax structure under which they are operated was created
back during the Eisenhower administration to encourage smaller investors to
invest in real estate projects they otherwise wouldn't be able to afford, such
as building shopping centers or hotels.
Corporations that have opted for REIT
treatment pay no Federal income tax on their corporate earnings as long as they
follow a few rules, including a requirement to distribute 90% or more of
profits to shareholders as dividends.
One
downside of investing in REITs is that, unlike common stocks, the dividends paid
out on them are not "qualified dividends", meaning the owner can't
take advantage of the low tax rates available for most dividends. Instead,
dividends from real estate investment trusts are taxed at the investor's
personal rate.
On the upside, the IRS has subsequently ruled
that REIT dividends generated within a tax shelter such as a Rollover IRA are largely not subject to
the unrelated business income tax so you might be able to hold them in a
retirement account without much worry of tax complexity, unlike a master limited partnership.
(If
you're interested in learning more about these unique securities, start by
checking out Real Estate Investing Through REITs, which covers
REIT liquidity, equity, how to use REITs to your real estate investing
advantage, and much more.)
Investing
in Real Estate Through Home Ownership
For
all the real estate investing options available to investors, the average
person is going to get his or her first real estate ownership experience the
traditional way: By purchasing a home.
I've
never viewed the acquisition of a home quite the same way most of society does.
Instead, I prefer to think of a person's primary residence as a blend of
personal utility and financial valuation, and not necessarily an investment. To
be more direct, a home isn't an investment in the same
way an apartment building is.
At its very best, and under the most ideal of
circumstances, the safest strategy is to think of a home as a type of forced
savings account that gives you a lot of personal use and joy while you reside
in it.
On
the other hand, as you approach retirement, if you take a holistic view of your
personal wealth, outright ownership of a home (without any debt against it) is
one of the best investments a person can make.
Not only can the equity be
tapped through the use of certain transactions, including reverse mortgages,
but the cash flow saved from not having to rent generally results in net
savings -- the profit component that would have gone to the landlord
effectively stays in the homeowner's pocket.
This effect is so powerful that
even back in the 1920s economists were trying to figure out a way for the
Federal government to tax the cash savings over renting for debt-free
homeowners, considering it a source of income.
This
is a different type of investment, though -- something known as a
"strategic investment." Were the economy to collapse, as long as you
could pay the property taxes and basic upkeep, no one could evict you from your
home.
Even if you had to grow your own food in a
garden, there's a level of personal safety there that matters. There are times
when financial returns are secondary to other, more practical considerations.
Whatever you do, though, don't sacrifice your liquidity to try and build equity
in your real estate investments too quickly, as that can lead to disaster
(including bankruptcy).
If
you are saving to acquire a home, one of the big mistakes I see is new
investors putting their money into the stock market, either through individual
stocks or index funds. If you have any chance of needing to tap
your money within five years or less, you have no business being anywhere near
the stock market. Instead, you should be following an investment
mandate known as capital preservation. Here are the
best places to invest money you're saving for a down payment.
Which
Is Better - Real Estate Investing or Investing in Stocks?
One
of the most common questions I encounter involves the relative attractiveness
of investing in stocks versus investing in real estate.
The short version is that it's somewhat akin to comparing vanilla and chocolate
ice cream.
They are different, and as your net worth
grows, you may even find that both have a role to play in your overall
portfolio. Your personality will also inform your decision, as some people are
more temperamentally geared toward stock ownership or real estate ownership,
respectively.
Risks
of Real Estate Investing
A
substantial percentage of real estate returns are generated due to the use of
leverage. A real estate property is acquired with a percentage of equity, the
remainder financed with debt.
This results in higher returns on equity for
the real estate investor; but if things go poorly, it can result in ruin far
more quickly than a portfolio of fully-paid common stocks. (That's true even if
the latter declined by 90% in a Great Depression scenario, as no one could
force you to liquidate).
That's
why the most conservative real estate investors insist upon a 50% debt-to-equity
ratio or, in extreme cases, 100% equity capital structures,
which can still produce good returns if the real estate assets have been
selected wisely. Billionaire Charlie Munger talks about a friend of his prior
to the 2007-2009 real estate collapse.
This friend, a very rich landlord in
California, looked around at the high valuations on his properties and said to
himself: "I'm wealthier than I would ever need to be. There's no reason
for me to take risks for the sake of more." This friend sold many of his
properties and used the proceeds to pay off the debt on the remaining ones that
he thought the most attractive.
As a result, when the economy collapsed, the
real estate markets were in turmoil, people were losing their properties to
foreclosure, and bank stocks were collapsing -- he didn't
have to worry about any of it. Even as rents dropped due to tenant
financial difficulties, it was all still surplus cash and he was armed with
funds that kept replenishing themselves, letting him take advantage of buying
up the assets everyone else was forced to sell.
Stop
trying to get rich so quickly, and be content to do it the right way. You'll
have much less stress in your life, and it can be a lot of fun.
Some
Final Thoughts on Real Estate Investing
Of
course, this is only the beginning of your journey to understanding the topic,
as we've barely scratched the surface. Real estate investing takes years of
practice, experience, and exposure to truly appreciate, understand, and
master.
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