Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
A broad spectrum of experts believe in the likelihood that automation / AI / robotics will displace a large number of jobs within 30 years. It will happen gradually rather than all at once. As this phenomenon weakens the economy, there will be weaker demand for rentals and housing at today's prices. Subsequently, in 30 years, you will be unable to make positive cash flow from rent during the later years on the mortgage, and will be unable to sell the property at the full purchase value.
Why would this type of disruption have a greater impact on housing than the rest of the economy? If people do not have enough money for housing they will not have enough money for anything else, either. So if my rental would suffer so would my index funds. Just trying to clarify.
Anonymous wrote:
A broad spectrum of experts believe in the likelihood that automation / AI / robotics will displace a large number of jobs within 30 years. It will happen gradually rather than all at once. As this phenomenon weakens the economy, there will be weaker demand for rentals and housing at today's prices. Subsequently, in 30 years, you will be unable to make positive cash flow from rent during the later years on the mortgage, and will be unable to sell the property at the full purchase value.
Anonymous wrote:We've had up to 6 rentals at once, and all had positive cash flows - 4 bought at auction, and 2 were bought but boarded up - and sold 4 during the height of the market. Buy low and sell high. You'll be very glad you invested in real estate. But you can also make some poor choices, so you have to know what you're doing.
The 2 we boarded up were purchased for a $1 in Baltimore city. We sold them to an investor for 30K a piece a few years back.
Anonymous wrote:Can you idiots not read and/comprehend? oP wants to be talked out of becoming a landlord....not interested in all of you gloating out there!
Anonymous wrote:We've had up to 6 rentals at once, and all had positive cash flows - 4 bought at auction, and 2 were bought but boarded up - and sold 4 during the height of the market. Buy low and sell high. You'll be very glad you invested in real estate. But you can also make some poor choices, so you have to know what you're doing.
The 2 we boarded up were purchased for a $1 in Baltimore city. We sold them to an investor for 30K a piece a few years back.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:to people who have rentals:
How much of your own time per week do you spend on your rental(s)? Not op, but this thread is helpful
I have two rentals. The average week I don't even think of them until the check comes in. But then once in a while something will come up and you will have to spend time on them depending on what the problem is. Also, when you are in between tenants is when the biggest time commitment is, because you have to fix everything, clean it up, show it off, and vet tenants. As someone else mentioned, choosing your tenant is key and another factor I have is how long I think they will live there. Longer the better, and I incentive them to stay by keeping rent increases minimal.
Anonymous wrote:It's all about the tenants. Good ones will make your property cash-flow positive, and then it's up to you to manage that via repairs, improvements, etc etc. Your ROI will be in your hands, to make the right decisions, DIY things at times, get a good handyman/electrician/plumber in place etc
Bad ones will bankrupt you if you don't have the cash on hand to outlast them. Tenants have time on their side, all they have to do is wait you out until you finally get the sheriff to come after them. Depending on how savvy they are, that process can take a few weeks or a few months. You need to be able to weather that cash burn, be able to make repairs on the back end, and hold the property vacant until you are able to rent it again.
People say have cash on hand for repairs, unexpected expenses, a month or two of vacancy - that's all assuming everything is normal, and it happens anywhere from 70-95% of the time depending on your unit and area etc.
But the 3-7% of the time it goes south, it really goes south - and that's what you need the cash for, to be able to weather that storm