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Posted

100% sell and invest. The costs stack up fast, the insurance hits hard, and holding a place you never plan to use just drains your money for no reason.

 

I had a similar property and I sold it through Cash Offer Kentucky because I wanted a clean exit and a fast payout. It cut out the stress and let me put the money into something that actually grew. If you want the simplest path, that kind of direct sale makes everything easier.

Posted
23 hours ago, mizuki777 said:

100% sell and invest. The costs stack up fast, the insurance hits hard, and holding a place you never plan to use just drains your money for no reason.

Thank you.  I did!  I received more than asking and now the money is invested.  Happy Ending. Being a Landlord, much less someone running an AirBnB, would have driven me nuts.

images?q=tbn:ANd9GcTvwLxYPFl0a-WU5V5SHZ5

Posted
2 hours ago, Rod Hagen said:
On 2/26/2025 at 10:33 PM, hungry4darkmeat said:

Gods not making any more land 

I was rereading the posts this morning and had missed this line 🙂

New land is created every year around the globe.  But who owns it?:

WWW.PUNCTUALABSTRACT.COM

Tens of thousands of tons of molten rock have flowed into the Pacific Ocean, hardened, and created new...

 

 

Posted (edited)

“Keep or sell” isn’t a one-dimensional question to me. Returns from real estate come from a mix of cash flow and appreciation—those are the only two variables that matter.

In my view, as an investment,  right now housing is something to hold, not something to buy, unless it’s a truly special situation. Inflation favors tangible assets, and rents should rise over time as inflation pushes incomes higher. That said, post-pandemic valuations are still elevated in most markets relative to the cash flow a new purchase can realistically generate.

When I evaluate deals, I frustrate my realtors because I focus on a single metric: cash-on-cash return. I don’t care what “market cap rates” are or what owner-occupied comps suggest. For me, real estate is just one alternative among many investments, each with its own balance of risk, cash flow, and appreciation potential. Real estate tends to be risky, high-maintenance, and illiquid—so I need to be paid a premium for taking that on.

A current example: I’m looking at a property in New Orleans’ French Quarter—about 240 years old. Buyers from California purchased it in 2015 for ~$700k and spent three years renovating it into three rental units. They listed it last year at $1.2M and have since dropped the price below $800k. I told the realtor my number would be closer to $500k.

Why? Gross market rents are only around $70k/year, while insurance and property taxes alone run ~$22k/year. After management, maintenance, vacancies, and reserves, the risk-adjusted return doesn’t come close to what I can earn in a boring CD—with none of the headaches.   I’m not advocating CD yields…but I want something considerably higher from real estate. 

Edited by PhileasFogg

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