Quote:
Originally Posted by Vegas69
One of my best buddies is my advisor so he'll set me straight on the logistics. He'll tell me to leave it in there regardless. My thought is to use the money in a venue where I'm extremely experienced vs. a mutual fund that isn't performing, hasn't been performing, and I'm not sold will ever perform. Times change, the market has went up and down since I started investing, it's been a safe investment, not a retirement plan. Where else am I going to get 25% on my money? The compound effect hasn't come into play yet.
My only concern is putting to many eggs in one basket. I just consider low prices and low rates a genuine opportunity. I'm contracting a propert in a GOOD area of Vegas for 109,500. I can rent it for $1050 a month. The mortgage(PITI) is $612 a month. Cash flow $400 a month, principal reduction, and depreciation. Down the road I can realize the residual or 1031. The only fault I can find is if the **** really hits the fan.
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For you, Todd -- it might "pay" you to make a withdrawal of your SEP/IRA and just pay the taxes and penalty on it. I totally agree with you that with your knowledge and ability - you should be buying rentals.
You'll just have to come up with some extra "deductions" to cover the withdrawal to minimize the hit.
No way around the 10% penalty - but that is nothing compared to the opportunity.
There are plenty of investor groups right now that are buying anything and everything they can steal. This is something you should maybe look into - where you're the managing partner and get 51% stake plus "fees" (5% annually) for finding - structuring - managing. The partners buy shares and it's their money that makes up the down stroke and fix up costs and fund the initial pot for repairs etc. Usually the ROI is 7% and their portion of the tax benefits of depreciation. You'd only be limited by how much skin you'd want to put in the game - and the guys I know that do this (we've been doing this since the early 80's - except it's large Class A apartment buildings not houses) won't invest with anyone that doesn't have significant skin in. But look at it this way -- instead of 30K down on one house -- if you have 10% in - you're partners would have 270K in -- so you could buy 10 houses instead of one.
If the shizzle hits the pan "that bad" we're all screwed regardless of the type of investments we have.
Property is an absolute steal right now. We'll likely never have the prices so low, and the financing at ridiculously low rates at the same time. Back the truck up and buy like a pig.
If interest rates weren't so low I'd finance the stuff for you... but the bank will give you cheaper money for a FAR longer term. I bought a building for my brother in law last year and gave him a 6% rate for 5 years with a balloon (that I'll just roll unless he wants out). But that is commercial property which carries higher rates. Rates are like 5.45% on a 3MM 30 year with a 80% LTV. I gave him a 100% plus the build out costs.... just like the old days!