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Updated about 7 years ago, 09/14/2017
Spend more and leverage or spend less and use cash?
I think you will acquire property faster by spending more and leveraging. At the end of the year if you bank your cash flow you are looking at roughly 5k where as if you refi your cash deal it has potential to be substantially more cash to buy another at a quicker rate assuming all goes well with rehab.
- Shawn Mcenteer
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- Cleveland Dayton Cincinnati Toledo Columbus & Akron, OH
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Money is cheap right now & one of the most important reasons one should invest in real estate is to use cheap bank money. I recommend leveraging to build a larger portfolio. This will provide you with a lot of assets come retirement time.
I agree, money is cheap now, so leverage is best. You could do a cash out refi after the cash purchase to pull out most of your money anyways, and you would get that instant equity.
However, I also believe in spreading out your risk. If your total investable money is $60K, maybe spread that across three different properties. Then you're not tying everything up in that one property.
Thanks everyone. That's what I was thinking. It makes more sense to spread it out over more properties even if I spend a bit more on the purchase price.
@Rita Oliva both options work. After renovating the second property, you can refinance out at 75%-80% and then put the money in another deal. That means both of your deals are using the same leverage, the real difference is time and skills. Do you have the time and skills to source the property, perform a successful rehab, and get a good tenant in place, or is that time and knowledge better just bought in the property package?
Good luck @Rita Oliva! Thank you for the real time example ; )
There is no one size fits all.
Very well known investors go lighter on the leverage, and some go all in.
In between 50-75% is the ballpark