What Schools Will Never Teach You About Money By Robert T. Kiyosaki
Ken McElroy Shares How to Use Debt
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- Tom Wheelwright on Love from the Government
Ken McElroy Shares How to Use Debt
Have you ever wondered why your checking account is free? Banks need your deposits so they can lend money. Banks can’t make money until they have your money to lend. At this point, you have two choices: Use bank debt to make you rich, or use bank debt to make others rich. Chapter Three Unfair Advantage 111 110 Tom Wheelwright on Love from the Government The tax law is a series of stimulus packages for business owners and investors. Nowhere is this more true than for real estate investors. I’m not talking about people who fix and flip real estate. They are not investors. I’m talking about those who buy, improve, and hold on to real estate for long-term investment. As an incentive for investors to buy, improve, and hold real estate, the government gives two primary tax benefits. The first and largest is depreciation. Depreciation is a deduction you receive over time for the cost of the property, whether you bought it with your money or with someone else’s money (debt). Here is how it works. Suppose you purchase a rental property for $200,000, using $20,000 or 10 percent of your own money and $180,000 or 90 percent of the bank’s money. What did you really buy? You bought land worth, say, $40,000 and improvements, including a building, landscaping and fixtures, of $160,000. The government lets you take a deduction, called depreciation, for the wear and tear on the building. If this is a residential property, your deduction is about 3.64 percent per year in the United States. (It’s more in some other countries.) That means that you get a deduction on your tax return of almost $6,000 per year for depreciation ($160,000 x 3.64 percent). Let’s say your cash flow is 1 percent per month on your initial investment of $20,000. That means you will have cash flow of $2,400 per year. With a tax deduction of $6,000, you will show a loss on your tax return of $3,600 per year ($2,400 minus $6,000). This $3,600 loss can be used to reduce your taxes from your salary, your business or your other investments. So depreciation protects your cash flow from taxes and produces an additional tax benefit by lowering your taxes from your other income. And remember that you get depreciation, not only on the dollars you invest, but also on the money the bank loaned. You get a similar benefit called amortization, which refers to your costs of borrowing money from the bank, such as points and loan-origination fees. All along, our strategy was to install new washers and dryers in all the units, which could eventually get us an additional $25 in rent per unit, a total of $86,400 in additional income annually. (Math: 288 units x $25 x 12 months = $86,400). In just three and a half years, we have been able to increase this property’s annual net operating income by over $300,000. The original mortgage has decreased more than $600,000 because we paid the mortgage using the residents’ rental payments during that same period of time. Today, this property is now worth about $20 million. The value is increased because the net cash flow increased. By using good debt and leverage and with just $3.4 million down, this property’s value has increased by over $6 million, nearly $2 million a year. The annual cash flow also increased by over $300,000 and is distributed to the investors. The original business plan was always to refinance using new debt and to leverage and return the original investor equity. In late 2011, we plan on refinancing this property with new debt and leverage with a new $15 million low-interest fixed-rate loan, which will pay off the existing $10 million in loans and leave $5 million to distribute. There is nothing better than returning investors’ money. In this case, if the proceeds are $5 million, we will return not only the original $3.4 million but an additional $1.6 million. Don’t forget the investors also receive a nice monthly cash flow while the money is invested! Once the investors receive their money back in full, their investment in this property will be zero. The “returned original investment” and additional proceeds are tax-free because it is a refinance. In 2012 with a new loan in place, the property will continue to pay out cash flow to all the investors, which will create an infinite return. I do want to emphasize that this scenario was planned from the beginning. Investors using leverage and debt are able to reap the rewards of the increased value on the “loaned” amount. If you use good debt and buy assets that generate cash flow, you can become very wealthy. Chapter Three Unfair Advantage 113 112 S can stand for sales.) As an investor, I must know what kind of ROI the sales person is talking about. Is it 10 percent on cash flow or capital gains, and what are the tax consequences? Am I punished with taxes, or given tax breaks? More importantly, how do I achieve an infinite return (aka “money for nothing” or “printing my own money”)? If you know what you are doing, debt can be an unfair advantage. Download 5.81 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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