An Apartment Building Investment
Strategy
With an apartment building investment strategy,
it is possible to make a very large profit from one deal. It
does, however, require a lot of work and possibly a few years
to complete.
If you know what you are doing, buying,
improving, and then selling an apartment building can be one
of the surest ways to make a large profit in real estate. Why?
The size of the investment helps. Making a 10% profit on a million-dollar
property is more profitable than on a $100,000 house. But it
isn't just the size of the deal.
Selling an apartment building isn't like
selling a house. For example, if you paint a house, you'll get
a little more for it because it looks nice. But you are just
guessing at how much value that painting adds. What if you chose
a color that isn't popular? How much does a deck raise the value
of a house? This is not an easy question to answer.
There is a more predictable formula for
raising the value of an apartment building or complex. This is
because the buyers are investors, who look at income more than
new paint. The formula is simple: raise net income, and you increase
value.
For example, suppose investors in your
area expect a capitalization rate of .08. That means that they
expect a net return (before loan payments) of 8% on the purchase
price. If your thirty-unit apartment building generates $120,000
net income annually, they'll value it around $1,500,000 ($120,000
divided by .08). If you can get it to generate $160,000, it will
be worth $2,000,000.
The strategy then is simple (but perhaps
not easy). You find an apartment building that is not being operated
efficiently, buy it at a good price, increase its net income,
and resell it for a profit. If the increase in income is predictable,
the increase in value is.
An Apartment Building Investment
Example
Suppose you find a 40-unit apartment building
for sale. They are all 2-bedroom units renting for an average
of $600, which is below the $675 average for the area. The vacancy
rate has been at 10% for the last year, above the 3% rate that
is more common for the area. You decide that this is because
the place is a bit run-down, and the management company isn't
very quick about getting new tenants in.
There is a community room that is dirty
and generally unused. There are no laundry machines, so tenants
have to go eight blocks to the laundromat. There are only a couple
places that rent this cheap in town, and there are many that
get $750 or more for two bedroom apartments. You can see that
there is potential for improvement and higher rents here.
The gross income for the previous year
was $259,000, and all expenses other than loan payments, came
to $75,000. That makes the net income before debt service $184,000.
Based on the prevailing cap rate in the area of .08, the value
is around $2,300,000. ($184,000 divided by .08). You have been
shopping not just for apartment buildings, though, but also for
motivated sellers. This seller is only asking $2,000,000, and
accepts your offer of $1,850,000.
The first thing you do - before you even
close on the deal - is make a list of every possible way to reduce
the expenses and increase the income. As soon as you close the
deal, you go to work.
Cleaning the property up and doing some
minor landscaping costs just $1,000 or so. You have $2,000 worth
of painting done as well.
The community room is cleaned up, and you
install video games for the kids. They are provided by a amusement
company at no cost to you, and you get half of the income.
The other side of the community room becomes
a laundry room. Again, you opt for an arrangement that gives
you half of the income without any investment in machines a on
your part. It does cost you $9,000 to have the room plumbed and
wired for the washers and dryers, however.
You allow a beverage company to put a pop
machine in the community room for 40% of the gross income.
You spend $13,000 for ten small storage
sheds and rent them out to tenants for $35 per month.
You spend $52,000 for several carports
that will provide one space for each tenant.
You replace every outdoor light with low-watt
fluorescent bulbs, for a few hundred dollars.
You replace the inefficient heater for
the hallways with one that will cut your gas bill by 30%. It
costs you $6,500.
You add fire extinguishers and make other
minor changes to get a better insurance rate. This cost a few
thousand dollars.
You fire the management company and hire
a better one for the same rate.
Tenants are surveyed and repairs and improvement are made as
needed or desired by tenants. This costs another $32,000.
The tenants, of course, were told there
would be improvements. They were also notified that a rent increase
was necessary to pay for these, but that rent would be close
to that of similar apartment buildings. As the leases are up,
you increase rents. You simultaneously start promoting the building
as one of the nicest in the area, to fill those empty apartments.
By the following year most of the apartments
are renting for $700. With the notice of the rent increase sent
to tenants, you included an information sheet showing the rates
at other apartment buildings, emphasizing the ones that were
charging $750 or more. Only a few tenants leave because of the
higher rent. All of the tenants have a nicer place to live. Moving
is a lot of trouble and expense just to go to a place that is
not as nice in order to save maybe $50 per month.
You keep the place for another year before
trying to sell it. This is so that all of the changes in income
and expenses will be fully reflected in the books for a full
year. Your improvements cost around $120,000. Add this to the
original purchase price and closing costs, and you have right
around 2 million dollars into the project.
What does that net income look like now?
Your new and improved apartment building
is now 98% occupied. With rent averaging $700 per month per unit,
the total gross income from rent for the previous year was $329,000.
Your share of the laundry machine income
was $2,400.
The storage sheds were mostly occupied,
and brought in $3,800.
The income from the video games and pop
machine in the community room was $1800.
Total gross income, then, is $337,000.
With the new heater and other changes,
you reduced annual expenses to $65,000.
That makes the net income before debt service $272,000.
At a .08 cap rate, the value of the apartment
building is now about 3.4 million dollars. Because it is in such
perfect shape, however, you list it for sale at 3.7 million dollars,
and by the end of the third year it sells for 3,500,000. Sale's
commission and closing costs total almost $200,000. Since you
had about 2,000,000 into the property, you have a profit of 1.3
million dollars.
Even if you (or your partners) invested
$500,000 originally, that's a great return for three years. It
is also a taxable capital gain, unless you roll it into the next
bigger project. Another alternative is to keep the property,
now that it is probably (depending on the terms of the financing)
generating cash flow after debt service of about $172,000 per
year. That's not a bad return either.
The most important point of this apartment
building investment strategy is to that you make changes that
raise the net income. To make the most efficient changes, you
have to learn how to do the math. However, That is a subject
for another article.
Copyright Steve Gillman. This article was an excerpt from 69 Ways To Make
Money In Real Estate. Want to know the other 68 ways? Visit http://www.99reports.com/make-money-in-real-estate.html