Real Estate Investing: No Lawyers, No Debt, No Plungers
By Steve Selengut
Professional Investment Portfolio Manager since
1979
BA Business, Gettysburg College; MBA Professional Management
Johns Island, SC, U.S.A.
Sanserve[at]aol.com
www.sancoservices.com
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Real Estate
investing is not nearly as legally complicated, financially burdensome,
or time consuming as you might think. In fact, it is easy to add raw land,
shopping centers, apartment complexes, and private homes to your portfolio
without Brokers, Bankers, Attorneys, and a Rolodex full of maintenance
professionals' phone numbers. Even better, you can blend your Real Estate
investments into your security portfolio for ease of management, income
monitoring, diversification analysis, etc. Without having mega millions
to work with, or a line of credit that goes around the block, you can
have positions in various forms of Real Estate (Commercial, Industrial,
Residential) at the same time, and focus either on Growth Opportunities,
Income Production, or a combination of the two.
If you thought that Real Estate was out of your investment reach because
of limited funds, or minimal personal experience, you were selling yourself
short. All of the basic types of Real Estate Investing are available through
CEFs (Closed End Funds) and REITs (Real Estate Investment Trusts), and
both can be purchased in the same manner as any common stock. And for
me, this has always been their (CEFs and REITs) single most attractive
feature! You can own a piece of the action without the big commitment
of time and resources. You can take advantage of changes in the Real Estate
Market Cycle in precisely the same manner as you can deal with the volatility
and fluctuations in the Stock and Fixed Income Markets.
Real Estate CEFs and REITs are obviously safer investments than outright
purchases of Shopping Centers and Apartment Complexes. They are also somewhat
less risky than owning the common stock of individual Real Estate companies.
The size of the numbers may be less exciting, but the net income and capital
gains potential are comparable and the turnover rate much more impressive.
Both methods (of participation in the Real Estate market) should be considered
as you add to your investment portfolio... but to which Asset Allocation
"bucket"? I've always included REITs and Real Estate CEFs in
the Fixed Income bucket while the common stock of a plain vanilla Real
Estate Company would properly fit within the Equity portion. When adding
Equities of any kind to your portfolio, you should avoid the standard
"Mob Popularity and Greed" model and select only S & P,
B+ or better, rated stocks that pay dividends (regardless of size) and
that are priced at least 20% below their 52 week high. After a huge rally
in any market, I would be even more selective than that from a percentage
standpoint, and I would buy about one-half the normal position to facilitate
average cost reduction later. You must establish a reasonable profit-taking
target on any investment. Real Estate is no exception. No matter what
the investment, Virginia, the longer and stronger the rally, the steeper
and faster the correction is likely to be.
On the Income side of the portfolio, make sure that you look at a lot
of REITs and even more CEFs of various kinds to get a feel for the levels
of income they produce. REITs must pay out a certain percentage of their
earnings, but CEFs may not have the same restriction. I believe that either
can be "leveraged", which simply means that management may choose
to borrow some of the money that they invest. Leverage is not a four-letter
word when used properly, and (in my opinion) it is more likely to help
your results than it is to hurt them. It's always a good practice to stay
within the normal income range, assuming that there is either a risk or
a management reason for the highest and lowest yields, respectively. Be
careful not to create a poorly diversified income portfolio. Bonds, Preferred
Stocks, Mortgages, etc. deserve your attention as well and should be represented.
Monthly income is available and more attractive than any other.
The major distinction between the two types of investing needs some re-emphasis.
When purchasing stock in a Real Estate company (or any other company),
your main objective should be to sell the stock for a reasonable profit
as quickly as possible. You will then select some other stock and repeat
the process. It is likely that you will return to the same companies over
and over again, and you are the manager... any dividend income is gravy.
When purchasing a REIT or a Real Estate CEF, you are depending on the
managers of these entities to generate income and capital gains and to
pass it on to you every month, recognizing that the actual amount may
vary slightly over time. You have the bonus capability either of selling
the REIT or CEF shares when they rise to an acceptable profit level (more
gravy), or of buying more shares to increase your income level. The distinctions
(benefits?) of this form of Real Estate Investing vs. ownership of the
properties themselves should be clear as well.
No attorneys; no debt; no maintenance; no problem.
Steve Selengut:
http://www.sancoservices.com
http://www.valuestockbuylistprogram.com
Professional Portfolio Management since 1979
Author of: "The Brainwashing of the American Investor: The Book that
Wall Street Does Not Want YOU to Read", and "A Millionaire's
Secret Investment Strategy"
Published - August 2006
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