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Updated over 7 years ago, 08/07/2017
Loan Paydown and Cash on Cash Return
Hi all.
I haven't made the plunge into buying my first property yet, however I'm working hard on the analyze phase. I've spent the last two weeks, at least an hour a day, most days probably 2 or 3, looking at properties and tweaking my analyzing spreadsheet to best show me my ROI.
One thing I haven't heard a TON about (I have heard it, but not nearly as often as CoC) is loan paydown/built equity (which I believe are the same thing? Correct me if I'm wrong). I've been finding properties where I get a CoC ROI usually between 6 and 12% in the area, even with somewhat conservative numbers and a 10% contingency tacked on top of my expenses and that didn't excite me tremendously. What I realized though, was that the tenant(s) would be paying down the loan, which would be cash in my pocket if/when I sell the property.
When I add in the loan paydown, my ROI jumps 10, 15, 20, even 25%, and goes up every year. Granted, this money doesn't help me until the property is sold, however I think it's important to include when looking over a property. I even put this number next to a 7% growth in the stock market to see how it would compare and most properties peak in their difference over the stock market around year 12-15 on a 30 year loan.
Do you include the loan paydown? If not, do you consider it and does it help sway your analysis one way or anther? Let me know your thoughts, and if I'm way out in left field here.