Five Ways to Know
that You've Found a Great Investment
Property
by Dave Peniuk
The Ah Ha's of Real Estate Deals
After our reviewing the responses to our
October newsletter
reader survey (thanks for participating!!), we found
that next to financing your real estate investment, the
next most important thing you want to know about is how to
find (or know you've found) a great investment property.
So, I'm going to take you through what I call the 5 Ah
Ha's of finding a good investment property. I call them Ah
Ha's because you will go "Ah Ha!" when you find a property
with each of these features!
Ah Ha 1: It meets your objectives Making
decisions based on your real estate investing
objectives is the foundation of our strategy, so it
makes sense that the first AH HA is that the property meets
your objectives.
For example, if your objective is to make $200 per month in
positive cashflow you need to go out and find a property that
will produce the money! Usually, it's easier to obtain positive
cashflow from a multi-unit property. It could be a house with a
basement suite (2 tenants - 2 rents), a duplex, a tri-plex, or
a small apartment building with 4 or more units. One of the
easiest and quickest ways to determine if it will cashflow is
using the Gross Rent Multiplier or GRM.
To Calculate the GRM
Asking/Purchase price = $150,000
Monthly rent = $1,100
$150,000/($1,100 x 12) = 11.36 (GRM).
Speaking generally, a property with a GRM of approximately
10 or less will likely produce neutral or possibly positive
cashflow. And this is just a "quick and dirty" way to determine
if a property will cashflow (
you can read more here). You can search through realtor.com
or realtor.ca to find potential properties and some will
include current rents. These rents you can apply to the GRM
formula above to quickly check where the GRM sits. If it's well
above 15, you will not be positively cashflowing. If the
listing does not show rents, you will need to do some
additional research to find out the approximate rents for
properties/units of that size, type, and location. Use
rentometer, viewit, or craigslist to do some comparative
research (these can all be found in our Resources page).
Ah Ha 2: It's in a Growing market
Ok - so the property meets your objective. The next thing to
check is that the market is growing. We've talked about this a
bit before, but searching the local papers for news about new
jobs entering the market (either a new company moving in, lots
of new construction or corporate expansions), learning of new
plans for infrastructure (public transit lines or major
roadways being added) as well as getting some sense of
population shifts are all good things to do to make sure you're
investing in a growing market.
Government websites are also a pretty good source of
information about the area (although the data is usually a year
or two old). Check municipal and city websites along with
provincial or state websites and look for census information
including population, household income, number of children,
number of schools, number of households, average person per
household, etc. The information you really want to see is the
direction these numbers are trending in. Is the area growing or
shrinking or fairly stable? If the trending shows it's growing,
you've likely found another Ah Ha!!
Ah Ha 3: The area is improving or recently
improved
Your objectives will be very relevant to whether you find a
good area or one in transition. If you want a no mess, no fuss
type of property you are likely looking for an established
area. But if you want to chase some potential appreciation or
can't afford the established areas yet, you might be looking
for a neighbourhood that is still having some "growing
pains".
No matter what your objective, we wouldn't advise buying in
the crappy area if it has no signs of hope. Bad areas attract
difficult tenants and your property will likely go down in
value and be impossible to sell later on. Instead, seek an area
that is improving (have no idea where to look? Julie likes to
follow the new Starbucks locations). In these new Starbucks
locations, you will often see plenty of signs of improvement...
people renovating homes, cleaning up yards, government
investment in roads and parks and developers buying land are
just a few.
Another word of caution, just because the area appears to be
improving, does not guarantee that you will make money buying a
property there. However, if you've done your research on the
economy, vacancy rates, population changes and negotiate well,
you will likely have an AH HA property.
Ah Ha 4: You find a professional Property Manager
that is willing to manage your prospective
building
Owning an investment property does not mean you HAVE to have a
property manager. In fact, we don't always hire one. But the
properties where we have professional property management in
place are less stressful and much less time consuming for us. A
good property manager will cost you around 10% of your gross
rent and even up to 1 full month's rent to place a tenant in
your property, but unless you want to buy yourself a part time
job when you buy your property, a good property manager is
worth every penny.
The key to this AH HA is to locate a property manager BEFORE
you buy the investment property. Even if you decide you want to
save some cash and just manage it yourself, it would be wise to
speak with a few PM's to find out if they would manage your
property, determine what their fees are, and what their fees
pay for! Why do you look for a PM even if you are going to
manage it yourself? Well, if down the road you accumulate too
many to manage or you can't take the stress of managing it
anymore or you start to enjoy your time down in Mexico for 2
months per year and don't want to have to always answer your
tenants phone calls... you will want to know that you can hire
a reputable property manager to take over for you!
Don't assume there will be one waiting when you are looking!
The best way to find out about Property Managers is to ask
around. Speak to realtors, lawyers, accountants in the area you
want to invest in, and ask for their recommendations. You can
also search in the Yellow Pages or online. The key is to do
reference checks by speaking with other individuals who are
working with the prospective manager. Want to learn what to
watch out for? Check out our article on Five Ways to Protect
Yourself from a Bad Property Manager.
Ah Ha 5: The vacancy rate in the area is dropping
and/or is sub 5% Our last Ah Ha is really geared
towards the long-term holder of real estate. This type of
investor buys with the intention of renting the property out
for a fairly long period of time. Having a low or dropping
vacancy rate is very important to help keep your place rented
(high demand, low supply), and it also will help your cashflow
and improve your bank financing.
Sure, you can buy a cashflowing property with
a GRM of 5.5, but what if it's in an area with a vacancy rate
of 25%? We have had some Rev N You readers ask about investing
in places like Prince Rupert or Kitimat, BC or Windsor,
Ontario. Well, a quick look at CMHC's reports and you'll see
that the vacancy rates are 14.3%, 23.2%, and 13.2%,
respectively in those areas. As a long-term investor, you have
to try to discern whether those vacancy rates will continue to
be that high or will they drop in the not too distant future?
If you don't see a drop in the vacancy rates coming very soon,
then I would stay away from that area (at least until the rate
drops well below 10%). At the end of the day, you want to hold
properties where the demand for rental units is strong. You'll
experience less vacancy and better rent
rates.
Published November 7, 2008
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