Retirees Should Consider Investing More
in Real estate
©
Shane Flait (2011)
If you’re starting your retirement,
consider your portfolio allocation
strategy – i.e. how to split your money
among different asset categories. You’ll
want investment income to cover living
expenses but you’ll also need long term
investments to maintain your portfolio’s
value against inflation damage. Here’s
why real estate investments can deliver
both of these.
As a retiree, you’re not worried about
job loss. Your pension and Social
Security income is pretty well assured.
And you’ve created a nice nest egg by
your savings efforts over the years.
This makes for stable and assured future
income – the basis for real estate
investing.
It’s no secret that the real estate
market has been declining steadily. This
trend may well continue. But investors
know that while real estate goes through
peaks and valleys its value has always
gone up in the long run – and
substantially so.
Depressed housing prices make for a
buyer’s market. A depressed economy
turns ‘would be’ home owners into
renters. To take advantage of this
scenario, you need to do some thinking
and homework on getting real estate to
work for you.
First, realize the opportunities that
investing in real estate now may bring
you:
-
Historically,
real estate values appreciate over
the long term
-
Good deals are
easier to find when real estate
sales are slow than when markets
start to take off
·
Buyers in slow markets have more clout
to obtain concessions in price,
upgrades, and repairs from sellers
-
You can put your
purchased property to work as a
rental to earn you money now
-
Mortgage rates
are low and you can choose how much
leverage you’re comfortable with.
-
Real estate
carries significant tax-advantages
both as homes and as rentals
Buyers’ markets come around only once
every 15 years, but interest rates are
usually much higher when they do. In
fact, low interest rates present a great
opportunity during this type of market
for those with money.
Although taking risks on the stock
exchange may yield higher returns,
investment property can provide you with
a stable, steady income and a relatively
secured level of return on investment.
When looked at with a long-term view,
real estate investment property is
unlikely ever to lose money. You may
have to pick the right time to sell a
property but as long as you keep looking
at real estate investing with a
long-term view you’ll be hard pressed to
go wrong. Put simply, property is
historically stable; and if you are
prepared to wait it out, you can make
money on it.
If you do your homework when looking for
a property to buy, you can not only
capitalize on a good long term gain but
create some rental income for the
present. Depending on how much you
invest in the property, you can rent it
out to cover your mortgage expense only,
or put more down to produce current
income for your living expenses.
If you’re near or in your 60’s you know
that real estate has increased
enormously over the years. All you need
to do is be able to maintain the
payments on it. In recessionary times,
people who would normally buy a home are
forced to rent. Finding renters is never
a problem – if you’re willing to offer a
good rental price.
With that in mind and the fact that many
about-to-retirees have substantial
savings they need to invest, a retiree
should consider buying real estate and
renting it out. By carrying only a small
mortgage, they needn’t worry about
defaulting, but in fact can look forward
to some current income and sitting back
with confidence about reaping a
substantial long term appreciation in
its value.
Shane Flait is a writer and educator.
See more at
www.EasyRetirementKnowHow.com