As soon as you decide what that is I would be delighted to be on the receiving end of your wisdom because I cant decide on a good pension fund other than rental property. I would like to have another option.thewatcher said:There's far more tax efficient ways to set up a pension fund than some overpriced buy to let in a midlands town.
woods said:As soon as you decide what that is I would be delighted to be on the receiving end of your wisdom because I cant decide on a good pension fund other than rental property. I would like to have another option.
Howitzer said:The fact that your pension fund is created tax free whilst you're buying the property (overpriced or not doesn't matter) with your after tax income I would have thought would be sufficient, no? Am I missing something?
I think that a buy to let should be viewed as a pension fund and it has to be financed. You do not expect that your pension will be self financing. There is nothing wrong with having to top it up and unreasonable to expect to get away without having to do so. You just need to get used to the idea.
670 untill rates rise . i'd assume mortgage rates are heading for 5% which would make interest only repayments around 950euro within 18months,where can you get a property for 230k that rents for 950 a month???????? then you have your costs of owning too.The Punter said:The original poster is simply looking for profit. he/she did not mention pension or capital appreciation. The answer is easy but does have risks.
Interest only mortgage is the way to go my friend. A property costing 230k will have monthly repayments of 670. The benefit to this is lower bottom line costs per month. Obviously you dont pay off any of your capital.
bearishbull said:670 untill rates rise . i'd assume mortgage rates are heading for 5% which would make interest only repayments around 950euro within 18months,where can you get a property for 230k that rents for 950 a month???????? then you have your costs of owning too.
woods said:I think that a buy to let should be viewed as a pension fund and it has to be financed. You do not expect that your pension will be self financing. There is nothing wrong with having to top it up and unreasonable to expect to get away without having to do so. You just need to get used to the idea.
woods said:I was suggesting that you can not have something for nothing. It is unreasonable to expect that you can pick up a property and aquire it for nothing by having the rent meet the repayments. You are getting something that will in many years time be as good as a pension fund and you have to pay for that by subsidising the rent.
We have made purchases that have 100% met their repayments but they were all business and someone had to manage them to get the best out of them. I would not dream of expecting that from a rental property. That is living in cloud cuckoo land.
landlord said:The trend is obvious and personally I believe that the window is closing very quickly on Buy to Let property and as I have said before, as soon as you have to supplement your mortgage payments with your own income, your investment is no longer self sustaining and your lifestyle will suffer.
I think that it a mistake to make hard and fast rules and every opportunity should be judged on it's own merits. We once bought a property that generated no income and we bitched a little to each other about it but when we finally sold it we calculated that we had earned £3K per week (and yes that is old pounds and not euro) for every week that we had owned it.Carriglee said:.
For me if an asset is not producing an income in excess of what a deposit account would give you then it is time to ask some serious questions. I think there may be better ways of building short-term and long-term (e.g. pension) income. For this reason, it is now extremely difficult to make Irish residential properties work as an investment.
hey blobert, I'm also quite the fan of the RD/PD series. However I've also kept quite up to date with his columns & website (I think you may not have). It's funny, before reading his books I was bear-ish on property and after reading them I'm *doubly* bear-ish.
He has written an article which caused alot of waves amongst real estate speculators (note I said speculators, not investors) called 'All booms bust' which you'll easily find via google.
As you probably realised yourself, I find the take-away point of his books to be cash-flow. That's it, if you deviate from cashflow you're a pretty much in gambling territory. He refers to properties where the rent doesnt cover the costs as 'junk properties'.
Look at Ireland at the moment.. pretty much every single property in the country fails the RDPD cashflow test - that is truly shocking. Ireland can only defy the laws of economic gravity for so long.
The lessons Ive taken from the books are that the two greatest income generating assets are businesses & property. Right now, property is junk so Im staying away from it (renting, no investment properties) and focusing on building business.
However, I truly believe in the power of the economic cycle and that some day Ireland will have moved from the current 'euphoric' state in property to 'revulsion' (stages in asset boom-bust cycles). And at that time, properties will appear again that can be cash-flowed and thats when I'll become involved in property, not before.
Anyways, eh sorry for the mini-rant thereBut its interesting (and rare!) to see another Irish RD fan.
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