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Topic: Analyze Real Estate Investment Efficiency & Explore Alternative Wealth Strategies

🏠 Friday Zoom Session β€” October 31

Topic: Analyze Real Estate Investment Efficiency & Explore Alternative Wealth Strategies

Key Takeaways

  • Use a Schedule E for real estate analysis, not just rent vs. mortgage.

    Many investors unknowingly subsidize tenants by ignoring non-deductible costs (e.g., principal payments) and over-relying on depreciation.

  • Sell inefficient properties to unlock trapped equity.

    Example: A 2.6% return on $500k equity was converted into a tax-free income stream with a 9.6% tax-adjusted equivalent return.

  • The 1% Rule: Gross rent β‰₯ 1% of property value β†’ indicates a strong deal.

    Failing this rule often means poor cash flow and risky dependence on appreciation.

  • Use policy loans for down payments to make interest tax-deductible.

    This converts personal (non-deductible) interest into a business write-off, improving cash flow.

The Problem: Inefficient Real Estate

The Schedule E Reveals True Performance

  • Principal payments are real expenses but not tax-deductible.

  • Depreciation is a tax credit, not a real expense.

  • Result: A property can show a tax loss on paper while the owner is still subsidizing tenants.

Two Rules of Thumb for Efficiency

  1. 1% Rule: Gross monthly rent β‰₯ 1% of property value

    • Example: $200k property β†’ $2,000/month rent minimum.

  2. 4% Net Return Rule: Net annual cash flow β‰₯ 4% of equity

    • Rationale: If less, capital could earn more elsewhere (e.g., in a life insurance policy).

The Lending Impact

  • Banks use 75% of net income + depreciation to assess lendability.

  • A property showing a tax loss can hurt loan qualification.

The Solution: Convert Equity into a Policy

Case Study: Converting a β€œLazy” Asset

Before:

  • Couple (age 67) owned two mortgage-free properties β€” $500k equity.

  • Net Income: $13,000/year (taxable).

  • Return on Equity: 2.6% (taxable).

  • Asset Profile: Illiquid, high-risk (tenants, market), inflexible.

After:

  • Sold properties β†’ funded high-cash-value policy.

  • Income: $48,000/year for 15 years (tax-free).

  • Return on Equity: 9.6% (tax-adjusted equivalent).

  • Asset Profile: Liquid, guaranteed, flexible income.

Policy Benefits

  • Tax-Free Income: Distributions do not raise taxable income β†’ may lower overall tax bracket.

  • Flexible Income: Owner controls amount, duration, and timing.

  • Guaranteed Growth: Contractual guarantees protect principal and provide predictable returns.

Case Study: A Successful Real Estate Deal

The Deal β€” Adam Edwards (Michigan Triplex):

  • Purchase Price: $90,000 (via HELOC)

  • Repairs: ~$30,000 over 6 months (DIY)

  • Total Cost: ~$120,000

The Strategy:

  1. Cash-Out Refinance:

    • Appraised at $159,000 post-repair.

    • 70% LTV refi = $111,300 β†’ recouped nearly all invested capital.

  2. Cash Flow: ~$1,700/month post-refi.

The Exit:

  • Sold after 2 years for $205,000.

  • Total Profit: ~$127,000 (cash flow + sale proceeds).

Key Insight:

A β€œhome run” deal β€” it met the 1% Rule and was purchased at a deep discount, creating built-in equity.

Next Steps

For Property Owners

  • Analyze your rentals using Schedule E to determine true net return on equity.

  • If a property fails the 1% Rule or yields <4% net return, consider selling or redeploying equity into more efficient, tax-advantaged vehicles.

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