Monthly Archives: September 2007

Kansas Jayhawks Start Conditioning

Sorry I’m off topic, again. But I open up KUSports.com this morning and find conditioning drills have started for the Kansas Jayhawk basketball team. Ahhhhhhh.

Can you smell that?

The basketball season is oh so close. Can’t wait.

Will Brandon Rush be back 100%? Will Missouri improve under Coach Anderson this year? Will KState be a train wreck with the new head coach or a pleasant surprise? Who will win the Big XII? The tourney?

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Filed under Kansas City Sports

The Cost Of A Gallon Of Milk

All I keep hearing about is how great the economy would be going if housing would pick up and we didn’t have the sub-prime debacle. As if housing didn’t carry the economy for a number of years while Greenspan buried his head in his hands pretending not to notice.

Well I have a question for you: Has anyone purchased a gallon of milk lately?

Confession time. I will occasionally help out around the house by purchasing the groceries. But I never pay attention to the prices I just get what I’m told to get and run it through the cash card.

Well Saturday I decided to pay attention and I’m sorry I did. Milk was/is $3.55 a gallon! Now this may not sound like a big deal but my kids drink about 6 gallons a week.

When did milk get so expensive? Heck, when did groceries get so expensive? Maybe it’s not just the ARMs adjusting up. Maybe, because of the cost of our precious oil, everything is shooting up?

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Leave REALTORs Alone!

This is disturbing.

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Drainage Problems & Your Kansas City Rental Property

I’m not sure why a real estate investor won’t take care of their Kansas City rental property but it just seems to me that drainage problems and rental property go hand in hand.

Fixing a basement in Kansas City can be very, very costly. Heck, if you put in a 4″ wall brace every six feet and you have 140 linear feet of basement wall you are going to end up with a bill close to $9,000 for repairs. And that’s if you don’t need any other major corrections…which is highly unlikely.

Some simple things you can do to protect your rental property investments;

  • Water the lawn when there has been no rain for an extended period of time. Especially about two feet out from the foundation. If you think your tenants won’t water because they pay the bill offer them a $25 rent credit to offset their water bill.
  • Make sure ALL downspouts have elbows on them at the water exit. Otherwise it’s like a blasting tube for water during thunderstorms. I’ve seen holes as much as a foot deep dug by the foundation walls. Not good.
  • Add those $15 flexible black pipe extenders to your downspouts to get the water directed to the closest slope away from your rental house.
  • Add dirt around your foundation so that you have a one inch drop away from the house before you have gone more than twelve inches away from the foundation.
  • Avoid buying rental property in Kansas City at the bottom of a hill if there is no berm or drainage systems to direct the water away from or around your rental property.

This list is by no means all inclusive. Nor will it insure that you never have a foundation problem. But it sure as well help keep your negligence from being the doom of your Kansas City rental property. And how much do you think any of those items costs, anyway?

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How Does The Fed Dropping Rates Help The Real Estate Investor?

I was going to be cute or obnoxious here and say that the Fed dropping rates a half point doesn’t really have too much bearing on the long term real estate investor. But that simply would not be true, would it?

But my point would be made, all the same.

There are at least a dozen bloggers smarter than me on the subject of the Fed and it’s relationships to the overall economy. I’m just a Kansas Jayhawk who works with real estate investment property day in and day out.

Interest rates go up. Interest rates go down. Unemployment rates go up. Unemployment rates go down. Vacancies go up. Vacancies go down.

The point? That owning real estate investment property is not a short term deal. (Yes. Yes. I know flipping is. But I’m not talking about that.) It’s finding the RIGHT property that will meet your criteria today. Cash flow before taxes. Expected appreciation. Expected vacancies and rent rates, etc.

Here in Kansas City I really do not see any reason to worry. If you are buying for that 5-7 year trade-in window why get too worried about the daily fluctuations of interest rates? No. I’m not advocating careless disregard. But if you keep waiting for them to drop further you may miss a rental property that was worth thousands more.

Conversely, if you rush to buy an income property because you are terrified rates will go back up at the next meeting you may buy a rental property that would have been better left to someone else.

Follow these headlines carefully. But keep you eyes focused clearly on the goal. Then follow your plan.

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Filed under Personal Real Estate Opinions

Running A Test Here: Nothing To Do With Investing

Copyritin’ Policy– RE Revealed has a style of its own and while most people will be able to tell that you’ve stolen material, others are dense so you mayget away with it for a minute or two. Any text from RE Revealed regurgitated elsewhere is considered a copyright violation and is subject to the guillotine. In seriousness, all material on RE Revealed is considered exclusive intellectual property of each author and any publication of content originating from RE Revealed without expressed written consent from RERevealed.com is forbidden and any reuse will be found. Brief quotations with a trackback to RERevealed.com making the source of the quote clear is permitted. Long story short- we have Violator Sniffing Dogs all over the Interweb and we will find you, expose you and likely sue you for copyright violation. Just move on, pirate!

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Net Operating Income aka NOI

Yesterday I posted a short article titled Do You Like To Play Russian Roulette? And I joked that you don’t want to do a financial analysis of your potential investment properties if you like to live life on the edge.

Of course, I was joking. (Though some didn’t seem to think it was funny based on an email I received.) You do need to do a financial analysis of EVERY property you are considering for your investment portfolio. Every one of them.

Net Operating Income can be the key number when working your financial analysis for these rental houses. How do you determine Net Operating Income (NOI)?

Annual Rent

Vacancies
=
Gross Operating Income

Expenses
=
Net Operating Income

Pretty simple formula, huh? Wait. How do you know what numbers to plug in? It’s critical you know the actual rent values of that rental property AND that neighborhood. It’s critical you can determine the vacancy rate. It’s critical that you know each and every expense.

What expenses should be included? Anything that costs you money to run that home. Insurance, real estate taxes, repairs, HOA dues, management, utilities, advertising, supplies, mileage, signs, miscellaneous. Get the picture?

Once you have all of those numbers (ever heard of a Schedule E?) then you can get down to putting pencil to paper.

Have fun.

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Filed under 4 Benefits of Real Estate Investing, Real Estate Investing