Daquan
BuSo Pro
- Joined
- Sep 15, 2014
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Let me preface this by saying I've never talked to anyone who does this nor have I read about it. This is coming right off the dome.
I'm thinking about physical products, physical businesses. And real estate is something I see a lot of people talking about, but I don't get it in terms of how the money works out. Let me type out my thought process so you can see how I'm thinking and I'm sure someone can correct it.
Let's play with just one property for simplicity.
You get a loan for $100,000. You buy a $80k home and put $20k into fixing it up and bringing it up to the standards of the neighbors. Now you have no monies but you have tenants.
Let's say the mortgage is $700 a month for 30 years (I didn't do any math, just making up numbers). You are able to turn around and rent it for $900 a month. This means that you are profiting $200 a month before any other expenses. I can get this concept and how it could scale.
Except eventually you'll have a month or two here and there where you don't have a tenant. There went your profit. Someone moves out and you clean. Things break and you fix it. You end up hiring a property manager after you have enough homes and paying him $40k a year.
I just don't see how this pans out. Breaking even seems to be a lucky scenario.
There must be something with just owning the asset, even if it's not liquid or there's a lien on it. I can imagine that you could build up to 20 homes, keep breaking even, and then sell the whole operation to someone who's playing with 200 homes. It'd be like flipping a website. THEN you'd make your profit?
Like I'm saying, where is the ROI coming from?
I'm thinking about physical products, physical businesses. And real estate is something I see a lot of people talking about, but I don't get it in terms of how the money works out. Let me type out my thought process so you can see how I'm thinking and I'm sure someone can correct it.
Let's play with just one property for simplicity.
You get a loan for $100,000. You buy a $80k home and put $20k into fixing it up and bringing it up to the standards of the neighbors. Now you have no monies but you have tenants.
Let's say the mortgage is $700 a month for 30 years (I didn't do any math, just making up numbers). You are able to turn around and rent it for $900 a month. This means that you are profiting $200 a month before any other expenses. I can get this concept and how it could scale.
Except eventually you'll have a month or two here and there where you don't have a tenant. There went your profit. Someone moves out and you clean. Things break and you fix it. You end up hiring a property manager after you have enough homes and paying him $40k a year.
I just don't see how this pans out. Breaking even seems to be a lucky scenario.
There must be something with just owning the asset, even if it's not liquid or there's a lien on it. I can imagine that you could build up to 20 homes, keep breaking even, and then sell the whole operation to someone who's playing with 200 homes. It'd be like flipping a website. THEN you'd make your profit?
Like I'm saying, where is the ROI coming from?