Mithras
Active Member
The thing is, you’re advising people (their own decision granted, you are just trying to maximize their return on a chosen investment) to buy a condo to rent out that is generating somewhere (if you’re lucky) 3-4% free cash flow. That cashflow is then taxable as investment income. The rest of the hoped for return is not income return but expected capital returns through price appreciation.
To get that return you are also shouldering financing risk and interest rate risk, cap-ex risk from poorly made condos. You have lease-up risk which with only one asset of maybe a handful is pretty lumpy. Most of all though you have liquidity risk. Should you ned to get out of the investment it takes at least 90 days to unwind if you’re lucky (and assuming an appreciating market). So with house prices going up by what, maybe in this market 4%/annum you’re getting somewhere between 7-8% total return of which 4% is taxable as regular investment income and the other 4% is differed until asset disposition.
OR
You buy units in a multi-family apartment REIT. You have the same exposure to the rental apartment market. You have little to no liquidity risk. Lease-up risk is smoothed by the thousands of rental units under management. You do carry the same interest rate risk though probably can only at best match the CMHC insure financing that the REIT receives. You also don’t have the other costs involved transacting the deal. You pay between $5 flat to maybe $0.025/unit in fees to your broker (depending on order size) as opposed to 5% for broker plus lawyer plus appraisal, mortgage broker etc…
For that you get 3% (on the low end for Boardwalk or InterRent) to 8% (for True North Apartment REIT) in income return through their dividend yield (which is a dividend so taxed on a more favourable basis) and capital appreciation (which for the last 3 months has averaged more than 5% for the multi-family market). Again with no liquidity risk, you can sell in minutes.
That’s a higher return with more of it in a tax enviable position. No liquidity risk and the same exposure to the rental market.
Why am I buying a condo again?
To get that return you are also shouldering financing risk and interest rate risk, cap-ex risk from poorly made condos. You have lease-up risk which with only one asset of maybe a handful is pretty lumpy. Most of all though you have liquidity risk. Should you ned to get out of the investment it takes at least 90 days to unwind if you’re lucky (and assuming an appreciating market). So with house prices going up by what, maybe in this market 4%/annum you’re getting somewhere between 7-8% total return of which 4% is taxable as regular investment income and the other 4% is differed until asset disposition.
OR
You buy units in a multi-family apartment REIT. You have the same exposure to the rental apartment market. You have little to no liquidity risk. Lease-up risk is smoothed by the thousands of rental units under management. You do carry the same interest rate risk though probably can only at best match the CMHC insure financing that the REIT receives. You also don’t have the other costs involved transacting the deal. You pay between $5 flat to maybe $0.025/unit in fees to your broker (depending on order size) as opposed to 5% for broker plus lawyer plus appraisal, mortgage broker etc…
For that you get 3% (on the low end for Boardwalk or InterRent) to 8% (for True North Apartment REIT) in income return through their dividend yield (which is a dividend so taxed on a more favourable basis) and capital appreciation (which for the last 3 months has averaged more than 5% for the multi-family market). Again with no liquidity risk, you can sell in minutes.
That’s a higher return with more of it in a tax enviable position. No liquidity risk and the same exposure to the rental market.
Why am I buying a condo again?