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Updated about 2 years ago on . Most recent reply

User Stats

73
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217
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Tony T.
  • Real Estate Investor
  • Harrisburg, PA
217
Votes |
73
Posts

New Low Cap Rates = Lower Return on Money; Should We Cash Out into Long-term Stocks?

Tony T.
  • Real Estate Investor
  • Harrisburg, PA
Posted

Hi there, I have recently discovered that the cap rates in my area have gone from 8.5% down to about 5.5% in the past few years! That makes my (debt-free) property worth a lot more.

BUT if cap rates are at 5.5%, that means I'm getting only a 5.5% return on my money/investment! That's low in my opinion! But I realize it's not including yearly appreciation (inflation). So, if inflation got around 5%, then investing in a 10% return stocks would be the same return as rentals except without the time required to manage those rentals.

Since the stock market does around 10% in the long term, I'm considering selling.

Does anyone have any input on such a major shift in investing? It would be an incredibly big step since I have been in multifamily for 25 years. Thanks for any input.

Most Popular Reply

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Henry Clark
#1 Commercial Real Estate Investing Contributor
  • Developer
3,808
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3,806
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Henry Clark
#1 Commercial Real Estate Investing Contributor
  • Developer
Replied

I don't like Dancing, so here goes.

From what I can see you are an investor and not an REI person, even though you own a MF.

Recommend you sell and put your money into Stocks/Bonds or a RE syndication.

You own a fully paid off MF. Thats not REI investing. You're losing lots of money (opportunity cost).

Your comparing Stocks versus REI. There is no comparison in returns or Risk if you're an REI person. Use the magnifying glass and read all of the posts on REI versus Stocks.

Harrisburg looks like a beautiful town.

Did a quick look.  I saw 6 properties (at list price) for sale, that in 1 1/2 years I could make over $1mm profit; plus get my downpayment back.  With anywhere from $200k to $350k cash downpayment.

Actually, looked at Harrisburg on a post about 3 months ago.  You have a lot more opportunities just outside the city, than the above I mentioned.

All of this, in the current interest rate and economic environment. You truly are in a great REI location. I've only seen one other community that I didn't know existed, that was more appealing. Looks like your last BP post was about 2 years ago. Recommend you challenge yourself and look at all of the REI avenues and apply them to your area. If not, Stocks/Bonds and REI syndications are the best bet.

As mentioned above. Forget CAP rates. What percentage is $1,000,000 gain on $250,000 downpayment in 1 1/2 years? Forget cap rates.

  • Henry Clark
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