Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm negative 1k/mo total on my three properties Glover park/Logan/clarendon. I have high mortgages bc I bought the properties with almost zero down. I view it as forced savings and I will never sell bc I want to pass the paid off properties to my kid. They are great condos in great locations and in 20 years he can net a comfortable amount and always have the income so he doesn't have to get a "job" just to pay the bills and has more financial freedom to pursue what he is passionate about.
Please think strongly about this. It's character building to get a job and make your own way in the world. It's possible to still find yourself and be able to take care of yourself. BTDT -- sometimes financial freedom can have its own chains. Until I straightened myself out, my trust caused me to basically be a wastrel and layabout who got messed up in drugs (just weed but oh man so. much. weed.) and what's worse was my attitude -- a sense of entitlement and no work ethic. My parents taught me very well and were very attentive, but money comes with its own problems. It took me years to figure my life our because I had the "freedom" to be a total screw up.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:$15,000/month-5 units
What are we doing wrong? We lose $250/month on a townhome in VA.
Sorry mines a little strip mall with 5 units, 3 tenants (in the South). I won it in a poker game so I have no mortgage. I'm no financial genius.
For real? Tell us more about that poker game?
Anonymous wrote:I disagree with the "return on equity" analysis. Rental income is steady and for the most part unrelated to fluctuations in the stock market. My portfolio could drop 20%, but if my units are leased (and my RH is on the Hill - it's never empty), that income still comes in like clockwork. That's worth more than an extra point or two to me.
Anonymous wrote:I'm negative 1k/mo total on my three properties Glover park/Logan/clarendon. I have high mortgages bc I bought the properties with almost zero down. I view it as forced savings and I will never sell bc I want to pass the paid off properties to my kid. They are great condos in great locations and in 20 years he can net a comfortable amount and always have the income so he doesn't have to get a "job" just to pay the bills and has more financial freedom to pursue what he is passionate about.
Anonymous wrote:Asking "how much do you make a month" is sort of the wrong question. The real question to ask would be "what is your return on investment / capital".
For example the previous poster says that they are making $1050/month in a townhouse while another poster is making $300 a month.
That is great, but how much equity do they each have tied up in their townhouses, that is the real question. If the $1050 a month poster owns a $300K townhouse with no mortgage, then they are basically investing $300K a year to make $12,600 a year. The return on investment would be 4.2% That is pretty good.
The $300 a month poster might have a $250K mortgage on a $300K townhouse, so $50K in equity. That is a return of 7.2% on their investment. Which is much better, even though they are making less money each month.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Around $50k true net a year after all expenses and management fees and I have none of my own cash in them at this point.
15 rental properties and about $3.25M in equity.
You only have $50k return on $3.25 million? Surely that money would be better invested in the stock market.
Anonymous wrote:Around $50k true net a year after all expenses and management fees and I have none of my own cash in them at this point.
15 rental properties and about $3.25M in equity.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:$15,000/month-5 units
What are we doing wrong? We lose $250/month on a townhome in VA.
Sorry mines a little strip mall with 5 units, 3 tenants (in the South). I won it in a poker game so I have no mortgage. I'm no financial genius.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:$15,000/month-5 units
What are we doing wrong? We lose $250/month on a townhome in VA.