moycullen14
Registered User
- Messages
- 17
Hi,
I've have a BTL apartment in a complex of about 50 units in a provincial town - the sort of place that PTSB won't give a mortgage on!
Ignoring the self-flagellation on what a bad investment it has been, I'm starting to wonder what, in general, can be done with this and thousands of similar investment properties in the country.
Briefly, the property produces about €600 gross pcm but when management fees, voids, letting fees, PTRB fees, maintenance, etc are factored in the yield on the purchase price of €190K is about 2% - so far, so bad. The property is well maintained (so far) and rents pretty well - we've had a drop of about €150pm on the rent from the peak but that seems to have stabilised.
The property is virtually unsellable at the moment - I can't make up the negative equity to the bank even if I could get a buyer.
I know 5-6 other investor owners and they, like me, would love to be shot of the properties but can't. Even if the apartments can fund most (some) of the interest on a mortgage, once repayments are factored in, the investment will cost 10-15K pa which landlords just can't afford (I know, I know we should have been aware of the risk, but in Brian Cowan's immortal phrase - 'We are where we are!)
One think that the crash has shown is that PTL on a small scale is not financially viable unless there is massive capital appreciation.
Also, and this is the key here, multiple landlords in an apartment complex is incredibly inefficient and there is a huge risk of default by individual landlords on management fees.
A better model would be if a single entity was responsible for the complete management of the block - from maintenance to letting to actually owning the freehold.
If it was possible, it would be better for all the landlords (about 75% of the owners) could form themselves into a co-op or ltd company, transfer the properties into the company and run it as 'profitable' business with the owners sharing in whatever profits accrue in the long run.
More practical would be for some 3rd party to buy all the leases at whatever knockdown price and run i on some sort of sound commercial basis. This probably couldn't work because of negative equity. A move like this would have to be driven by the debt holders (banks).
Something needs to be done, othewise thousands of perfectly good apartment complexes around the country will fall into ruin as landlords slowly but surely go broke.
I am not advocating a 'save the landlords' campaign, just something that will stop a bad situation getting worse.
Any thoughts?
- M
I've have a BTL apartment in a complex of about 50 units in a provincial town - the sort of place that PTSB won't give a mortgage on!
Ignoring the self-flagellation on what a bad investment it has been, I'm starting to wonder what, in general, can be done with this and thousands of similar investment properties in the country.
Briefly, the property produces about €600 gross pcm but when management fees, voids, letting fees, PTRB fees, maintenance, etc are factored in the yield on the purchase price of €190K is about 2% - so far, so bad. The property is well maintained (so far) and rents pretty well - we've had a drop of about €150pm on the rent from the peak but that seems to have stabilised.
The property is virtually unsellable at the moment - I can't make up the negative equity to the bank even if I could get a buyer.
I know 5-6 other investor owners and they, like me, would love to be shot of the properties but can't. Even if the apartments can fund most (some) of the interest on a mortgage, once repayments are factored in, the investment will cost 10-15K pa which landlords just can't afford (I know, I know we should have been aware of the risk, but in Brian Cowan's immortal phrase - 'We are where we are!)
One think that the crash has shown is that PTL on a small scale is not financially viable unless there is massive capital appreciation.
Also, and this is the key here, multiple landlords in an apartment complex is incredibly inefficient and there is a huge risk of default by individual landlords on management fees.
A better model would be if a single entity was responsible for the complete management of the block - from maintenance to letting to actually owning the freehold.
If it was possible, it would be better for all the landlords (about 75% of the owners) could form themselves into a co-op or ltd company, transfer the properties into the company and run it as 'profitable' business with the owners sharing in whatever profits accrue in the long run.
More practical would be for some 3rd party to buy all the leases at whatever knockdown price and run i on some sort of sound commercial basis. This probably couldn't work because of negative equity. A move like this would have to be driven by the debt holders (banks).
Something needs to be done, othewise thousands of perfectly good apartment complexes around the country will fall into ruin as landlords slowly but surely go broke.
I am not advocating a 'save the landlords' campaign, just something that will stop a bad situation getting worse.
Any thoughts?
- M