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Sorry not quite sure which forum listing this should be under.
I am just trying to work out my future plans, but not quite sure the best route to take. I have an investment property (freehold motel) passive investment conservatively valued at 1.1 million. It has a 400k loan attached to it. It creates gross annual income of 96,000. The lease is in place for the next 30 years but can be sold anytime (assuming I have a buyer in place).
My alternative option would be to sell the motel, pay off the loan and have 700k cash to put into the stock market (I don't want to borrow anymore just to invest). The problem is (and perhaps it is a good problem to have given my financial situation) is that my current employment is only paying 30k a year and I will forever be a low income earner (I am late 30's) given I only want to be in low paid unskilled jobs with no stress or commitment after a stressful 10 years of working putting the motel on the map so to speak.
Should I just keep on with the property I have or look instead towards some high dividend yield stocks? I don't see the property going up much in value. If I had stocks, I'd probably be more interested in the annual return than the long term growth in value of the stock.
What would you if you were in my shoes? Or is this question just too vague?!
Couple of other thoughts
(1) Could the motel ever be knocked off by competition
(2) become obsolete
Could it be sold as a business
If yes to any or all
I personally would sell
Just another angle
No the motel will always hold up in the market it is in. The business itself has been sold but I kept hold of the freehold property itself in my name. The income I receive is just annual rental from the current tenant who is leasing the property.Couple of other thoughts
(1) Could the motel ever be knocked off by competition
(2) become obsolete
Could it be sold as a business
If yes to any or all
I personally would sell
Just another angle
I am not a big risk taker, so perhaps something that tracks the asx 200 rather than picking individual stocks would be a less risky approach? Are there any products which you could advise?can you stomach losing money on the sharemarket?
your 700k could go down significantly
Agreed.
Having all of your capital tied up in one illiquid asset, could become an issue given that you are relying on the income to survive. Having that level of debt may impact your borrowing capacity, should you need to obtain credit in future.
Better to liquidate and spread your capital across a range of assets with better liquidity, and which generate a reliable yield. You can achieve this via the share market.
Hi value collector,Hi,
What are your holding costs? I am guessing you have to pay around $19,000 in Interest, but do you responsible for other outgoings or does the tenant pay them.
Basically the way I would look at it is to compare the cashflow you currently receive from your $700K equity to cashflow you will receive by having that invested in another investment.
Things to think about are.
1, How much income does the equity produce where it is, after allowing for any big capital expences in the future.
2, How much capital will you have if the property is sold after paying Agents fees, legals, Capital gains tax etc.
3, what sort of return will you get in an alternative investment.
4, Would being able to take out some of the capital along the way be useful.
If you weren't going to lose to much of the capital to taxes and fees, I would suggest investing it in an ASX200 index fund, like IOZ.
The reason I would suggest that is that you should earn a franked dividend of around 5%, and both the capital and the dividend should grow over time, you will also have the ability to sell off some of the capital as needed, where as you can't sell of a motel room easily.
Not to mention that you won't have any bills coming I for big upgrades or maintenance as you would with the motel, your risk is spread across 200 large companies rather than 1 single piece of real estate.
If you put the $700K into the index you would earn about $35,000 in tax free dividends (with no further outgoings), and you could sell 2% of the capital each year giving you another $14,000 even with the 2% sale each year you total capital invested should continue to rise.
Will you get to keep all that net income though, or are you responsible for large maintenance, like replacing hot water systems etc, roof etc.Hi value collector,
Thank you for your detailed response. You brought up some good points. As far as the comparison goes, I can only say that I receive around $90,000 a year in rental income. The loan repayments are around $10,000 per year. Once land tax has been paid and assuming I haven’t had to pay for any ‘structural repairs’ which I would be liable for, my income from this commercial property stands at around $75,000. So this would be quite a bit higher than your estimated income of $35,000 plus $14,000 from sale of capital (could you elaborate on how this sale of capital would work? I assume this just means selling off 2% of your share portfolio each year?).
Also, you mentioned IOZ as a ASX200 index fund. How many index funds are there that I can choose from. In reality, with 700k to invest, I imagine 500 would be put into an index and 200 into some kind of managed portfolio.
Yes I keep 100% of the net income. All maintenance is covered by the tenant. I am only in charge of major structural repairs, but these ‘should’ covered by insurance. So are you saying the whole $35,000 is tax free? Or just taxed at a lower front (pardon my ignorance, but I haven’t educated myself on the subject of ‘franking’ yet).Will you get to keep all that net income though, or are you responsible for large maintenance, like replacing hot water systems etc, roof etc.
With the asx 200 index, the $35,000 return is yours to keep, not tax(due to franking), no maintenance, no outgoings etc.
can you stomach losing money on the sharemarket?
your 700k could go down significantly
So are you saying the whole $35,000 is tax free? Or just taxed at a lower front (pardon my ignorance, but I haven’t educated myself on the subject of ‘franking’ yet).
Secondly, you mentioned that I could sell 2% of the capital each year which would earn me an additional $14,000 based on my 700k investment. Once again, I am unsure how you get to this figure?
Ideally an investment in both.
You will also be getting expenses and depreciation (building and fittings ) deductions on your tax.
Some will tell you that you can get 7% return and 3% capital growth( just picking numbers) but you have to pick the right stocks.
Are you comfortable with having your investment in stocks vary by 50,000 in a day!!
Also you get rent paid monthly. Share dividends are paid 6 monthly. So if you are relying on it to supplement your income, shares makes it hard.
Thanks value collector for your help on this threadYes, but those are real expenses, that one day need to funded with real cash, so in reality part of the income you are receiving is a capital return, hence why its not taxable, its your own capital you are getting back.
I recommended and ASX index, thats going to be the best option for some one not able to pick their own shares.
..
Exactly the same thing happens in property, you just don't pay attention to it.
If each day you called your real estate agent and asked him to have a purchase contract signed by lunch time, you can beat the price your property would sell at would move around a lot more than $50,000 each day.
But on the days the price was too low, you would just ignore the market and say "My property is worth more", thats how you should act with the share market also.
the index pays 3 monthly.
But all you have to do is have an account that all dividends are paid into, like a big bucket of cash, and then pay yourself a wage weekly.
So it doesn't matter if the dividends, are paid yearly, your wage is paid weekly from your bucket
.
I’m going to dip my feet into trading on an index fund,.
Forget about "Trading" the index, just steadily accumulate the index over time, through all the ups an downs, and just hold it, just like you are holding your property.
don't try and by and sell, just buy, and if the index drops think of that as a good time to get more, intact if you are buying every month, you should want the index to fall, so each purchase buys you a bigger piece of Australian Business.
Here is how the worlds greatest investor thinks about the market going down and how you should react.
watch the first couple of minutes of this video.
Yes I was look8ng to accumulate over time rather than buy and sell. Perhaps I didn’t word my last statement very well. And yes in an ideal world I would be buying gradually in a dropping market. For my situation, I would love a stock market crash next week, but I probably shouldn’t say that too loudly otherwise I might not be too popular in this forum! LolForget about "Trading" the index, just steadily accumulate the index over time, through all the ups an downs, and just hold it, just like you are holding your property.
don't try and by and sell, just buy, and if the index drops think of that as a good time to get more, intact if you are buying every month, you should want the index to fall, so each purchase buys you a bigger piece of Australian Business.
Here is how the worlds greatest investor thinks about the market going down and how you should react.
watch the first couple of minutes of this video.
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