Tuesday, October 19, 2010

Housing Slump Offers Opportunity In Apartment-Building Market

   CNBC has a reasonable article on apartment-building investing during the current downturn in real estate. The first paragraph draws the reader in with a small tale of success:

http://finance.yahoo.com/news/Housing-Slump-Offers-cnbc-1220757498.html?x=0&sec=topStories&pos=8&asset=&ccode=
   "The property in Fort Lauderdale, Fla. was originally valued at $285,000. Clint Gordon, a private investor in multifamily properties, offered the bank $50,000 cash-and within 10 days had closed the deal. A few days after that, he began renting it for $15,000 a year.
"Anybody that's getting into this business now, you get a whole lot of return if you're paying cash for properties," he says. "You're just buying them so cheap."

   The company I work for has been investing in various businesses in the past year and I think buying a few apartment buildings might be a workable plan in depressed areas like Fort Lauderdale. Then again, do we really want to be landlords? I mean, landlords have to deal with non-paying tenants, evictions, dirty ass people, property damage, bed bugs, and sabotage. What's going to stop an evil tenant from putting bed bugs in his apartment and then withholding rent until the bed bugs are evicted? I have an active imagination and I can think of a thousand ways a tenant might torment a landlord but I won't post them here. Posting the bed bug evilness was bad enough. 

   So, anyway, we probably won't become landlords anytime soon but it's awful tempting with the knockdown and blowout prices that we've seen in Florida. The economy's going to be roaring back in another few years and buying sometime in the next 2-3 years might be a wise investment.

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