Real Estate Investing for Everyone: A Guide to Creating Financial Freedom
By Martin Stone
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About this ebook
Martin Stone
Martin Stone is the coauthor of The Unofficial Guide to Real Estate Investing (John Wiley & Sons, 1999, 2nd Edition, 2003). A graduate of USC with a degree in finance, Marty has built more than 40 multifamily apart¬ment buildings, managed more that 1,000 units, and written and lec¬tured extensively about all areas related to real estate investing over the past 40 years. He is also the managing broker of Buckingham Real Estate Investments and Richmond Financial Services in El Seg¬undo, California. Marty lives with his wife, Lori, in a home he built himself. Feel free to contact him by e-mail at [email protected], or visit the office Web site at . Spencer Strauss makes his living as a real estate broker work¬ing side-by-side with his writing partner, Martin Stone. In that capacity, Spencer has bought, sold, traded, and managed countless buildings and has helped scores of investors get their start in real estate. Besides coauthoring The Unofficial Guide to Real Estate Investing, Spencer also cowrote The Complete Idiot’s Guide to Impeachment of the President (Macmillan Publishing, 1998). He has been featured on television on KABC Eyewitness News, as well as on radio stations KFI and KABC, all in Southern California. Addi-tionally, Spencer’s analysis has been featured in USA Today, the New York Post, the Chicago Tribune, the Long Beach Press Tele¬gram, and the Los Angeles Times. Spencer can be contacted for free real estate advice via e-mail at [email protected].
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Real Estate Investing for Everyone - Martin Stone
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Introduction
Asimple Internet search uncovers more than thirteen thousand books available on the topic of real estate investing. Regrettably missing from the lion’s share of those books are chapters devoted to discussing the reasons to invest—that is, recognizing what the true and long-term financial benefits are to owning income property and then, most important, learning how to use those benefits to fund the kind of life and, ultimately, the kind of retirement you truly desire. Our plan here is to tackle this missing piece of the real estate investing puzzle head-on.
The birth of this book came about from lessons learned in my everyday business as a real estate broker, selling investment property to people like you for more than forty years. The lessons I’m going to share with you here are the same ones my colleagues and I have been preaching to our own clients for all these years. These lessons have helped to create wealth and stability for them, and they can do the same for you too.
Visit any online source or walk into any bookstore and you will see shelves full of titles promising to make you wealthy using this or that system. In fact, lots of books offer sound advice on how to build wealth in many arenas, not just real estate. We concluded that the problem is most books on this subject are offering a road map to riches to people who aren’t committed to the trip.
For many busy working people, saving money and thinking about setting up a plan is the last thing they want to consider. They are pulling in a decent paycheck every week, spending it on bills and pleasure, and because they are young and energetic, they are confident they can keep that train running for as long as necessary. Hopefully, something kicks in—let’s call it maturity
—and they realize what a dead-end merry-go-round they are on. Now, investing a portion of their salary toward a fruitful future becomes a top priority. Better late than never, right? With clients like this, we no longer talk about retirement planning. We focus on investing to find the financial freedom to live their life the way they want to live it.
Statistics show that for almost 95 percent of all retirees, there is no golf club membership, no exciting vacations to be had and, literally, no rest for the weary. Sadly, the blessing of abundance in our country has created a generation of people who believe everything is going to work out just fine in the end. The sad truth is it is not.
Many people spend a good deal of time planning the profitability of the companies they work for yet do nothing to create the same kind of security for their own families. Often it is not until they get the boot because of company cutbacks that they realize it is too late. Or, worse yet, they do not wake up until after they get a gold watch and a round of For He’s a Jolly Good Fellow.
Everyone has read about the golden parachutes that top executives get when they leave major companies. Those executives plan for those parachutes when they start their jobs. In fact, without a guarantee of one on the way out, they refuse to take the position. Now check with the human resources department where you’re working. Did anyone create a golden parachute to help protect you when your tenure is over? Of course not!
The truth is, there is probably the equivalent of a teeny, tiny umbrella set aside for you, if there is anything at all. Two weeks of severance pay for years of service is hardly what anyone would call golden.
And you will get an even smaller umbrella from Social Security. This is not very comforting after a lifetime of paying into the system!
My plan in this book is to show you how to create your own golden parachute via investments in real estate. It can be done. I’ve done it for myself and have helped countless others do it for themselves too.
I will educate you in the same conservative investment techniques that I have espoused to my clients for the past forty years. Here, I will teach you that success in real estate does not take smoke, does not include mirrors, and does not require luck. Rather, success here simply requires a well-thought-out road map. The good news is the nucleus of your road map is now resting in your hands.
Thomas Jefferson said, Most people believe that they’ll wake up some day and find themselves rich.
Jefferson got it only half-right. Eventually people do wake up. Unfortunately, when they do, it is usually too late. My hope is you grab the ideas in this book, couple them with your own dreams and actions, and make something fantastic happen for yourself.
Why real estate?
you ask. Don’t most people invest in the stock market or mutual funds? The answer to that is yes. I disagree that it is a good strategy, but more about that in a later section. The reason I believe in real estate so strongly is it is a basic necessity of life, the others being food, clothing, and shelter. Everyone needs these basics, so by investing in real estate you are banking on something that people will always need. The food and clothing industries do not lend themselves well to passive financing, but the real estate industry does. When I say passive investing,
I mean that you can outsource most, if not all, of the work necessary to manage one of these investments.
For the purposes of this guide I am not talking about single-family houses but about rental property. In most metropolitan areas there is a definite need for rental housing for all the people who cannot afford to buy their own homes. It’s no secret that in those same areas the population grows every year as families add more children, people move in from other areas, and older housing is removed to make room for new housing.
Along with all this demand, most cities, counties, and states are making it tougher every year to build new housing. The codes are getting tougher, the zoning is getting more restrictive, and the costs are increasing at all levels. So, we see a growing demand for housing and less and less construction. All this drives up the cost to buy and to rent. This sounds bad, unless you are in the business of owning a basic commodity that everyone needs and one where competition is slowing down because government is making it tougher to build.
I have made a point of urging my clients to get more involved in managing their own affairs. I advise you to do the same: at least put as much effort into that as you put into your career (where you trade your time for dollars you make to pay the bills). I also understand that, despite all the advances in life, we are busier than ever, so time is precious to us.
I personally own several properties that were built prior to the Great Depression, and they are giving me a great return. I have visited San Francisco frequently, and most of those classic Victorian and Edwardian homes also are from that same era and sell for a huge amount today. My point here is simple: yes, real estate does go through cycles, and you have to be financially prepared for them. We do get through these rough times and things improve, but unlike most businesses, property does not lose its ability to provide housing and therefore consistently provides a return on investment.
The key thing that helps real estate perform so well is the land. As you know, there are millions of acres in the United States and there is nothing on them, so they are virtually worthless. If you look in most major cities, it is just the opposite; there is little or no vacant land. It is actually the value of the land that helps real estate perform favorably. It’s not the structures on top of the land. Older homes are torn down to build newer, larger homes. Antiquated apartment buildings are demolished to build condominiums. The reason is the land alone has become more valuable than the land with the aged structure on it. It is this irreplaceable component of real estate investment that almost guarantees your continuing return.
Several years back I decided to take a hard look at what a career really does to one’s life. Somewhere I had read a very simple statement: Your work isn’t your life.
I can’t tell you what it is that makes us happy, but my guess is that as much as we might like what we do to earn a living, it is still work. Where I come from, they have a saying: The worst day fishing is better than the best day working.
So I decided to have a look at comparing work with vacation, believing that most people do things they really like to do when they get a break. To create this chart, I assumed most people get two weeks of vacation a year and work five days a week for half the year and six days for the balance. I have no doubt that the way the job market is today, most successful people probably work more than eight hours a day and may even skip vacation or save days off for later. Below are a blank chart and an example.
WORK VERSUS VACATION UNTIL RETIREMENT AT 65
________ × 275 = ________ Work Days Left
A
________ × 14 = ________ Vacation Days until 65
A
A = Subtract Your Current Age from 65
Assume You Are 30
35 × 275 = 9,625 Days of Work Left
35 × 14 = 490 Vacation Days
Experience can be a great teacher because it gives you many examples of good and bad decisions, so I hope you won’t repeat the bad decisions. Now when I look back on my life, I am reminded that some of the simplest things I did way back when have had a tremendous impact on my life today. To illustrate what I mean, I imagined how a person’s life might be different today at sixty-five years old based upon several choices that they might have made when they started working in 1977.
If this person had not done any investing for retirement, they would be entitled to $2,687 per month from Social Security. The reality is a tremendous number of people in our country never get beyond depending upon Social Security. So after working forty years, which is about ten thousand business days, $2,687 is all the person can expect as a maximum benefit.
Most retirement programs recommend putting away money every month in a savings account. The chart below will give you a couple of examples of what that might do over a forty-year career, assuming you can earn 5 percent on those deposits.
If you want to see how this works, use this online calculator that shows the growth of a constant amount over time. The interest rate can be adjusted. https://www.thecalculatorsite.com/finance/calculators/compoundinterestcalculator.php
$100 per month for 40 years = $153,973 Actual cash invested $ 48,000
$200 per month for 40 years = $307,211 Actual cash invested $ 96,000
$300 per month for 40 years = $460,449 Actual cash invested $144,000
So that you can compare a real estate investment to the savings account deposit examples above, here is how a typical real estate investment would work. In Hawthorne, California, in 1977, you could have bought a four-unit building for $89,500 with a down payment of $3,200 from an FHA (Federal Housing Administration) loan. Or if you were a veteran, there would have been no down payment required. Today, a similar property is worth $875,000. With the current rents and covering all the expenses, that property would give you $4,150 per month cash flow. In addition, this property would have been paid off ten years before you retired, so in the last ten years it would have produced over $300,000 in positive cash flow.
MY STORY
I remember the day I realized how being poor felt . . . like it was yesterday. I went to the grocery store for my mom when she was ill. We were on welfare and had to buy items with food stamps, and I recall thinking What if some of my friends see me buying stuff with food stamps? What will they think? I ended up walking through the entire store, to make sure