Kathleen Peddicord - Buying Real Estate Overseas For Cash Flow (And A Better Life)

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Buy real estate overseas to earn cash flow to fund your dream retirement In
, Kathleen Peddicord and Lief Simon explain how to incorporate an investment in foreign real estate into your portfolio for as little as $50,000. With a lifetime of experience on the subjects of living, retiring, and investing overseas, the authors delve deep into this complex topic. Simply put, this book is a practical guide to buying property overseas as a strategy for earning cash flow to fund your dream retirement.
In the book, the authors cover topics as wide-ranging as:
How to build the cash flow you need to fund the retirement you want 8 markets offering the best current cash-flow opportunities How to move money across borders in today’s post-FATCA world Plus: How to run the numbers to evaluate a potential cash-flow investment
includes a breadth and depth of information on the world’s best markets for investing in real estate for cash flow. Its up-to-date information about this investment category puts to bed much of the outdated advice and guidance currently available in published materials.
The authors identify several hot, new markets where currency valuations and market conditions make the purchase of real estate an extremely wise investment decision in today’s volatile investment climate.

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He found a real estate agent and explained his parameters. Today we make buy decisions based on projected rental yields, gross and net. For this first purchase Lief didn't think beyond paying the mortgage.

He spent four months considering dozens of properties and entering the details for each into his spreadsheet. Two-flat buildings never came close to break-even cash flow, though Lief figures he probably could have made the math work for many of the buildings he looked at by increasing his own rent, but he didn't want to do that. Again, his stubbornness paid off (as he likes to point out for Kathleen's benefit). Lief kept active in the market, looking daily at new listings, until he found a property that fit his requirements. It was a building that had come back onto the market after the woman who had signed a purchase contract for it failed to qualify for financing. She was a hairdresser (but not Irish).

The price was good. The location was within the zone Lief had targeted. Most important, the numbers worked. Lief could keep paying himself the same rent and would be able to cover the mortgage even without increasing the rent for the other two apartments.

We met two-and-a-half years later, when, coincidentally, we both were making plans to move to Ireland. We were engaged two-and-a-half months after we met and married two months after that. Then we moved together—Lief from Chicago, Kathleen from Baltimore—to Waterford. The timing was ideal for selling Lief's three-flat. The Chicago market was frothy. He set the price above the going market rate, and the building still sold quickly. He walked away with 80% more than he'd paid less than three years earlier. The leveraged return on Lief's 2% down payment was 3,000%. He had turned $5,000 into $150,000 after closing costs and commissions. And he'd had positive cash flow from rental income every month he had owned the building.

It was an as-good-as-it-gets property investment experience, first because Lief made the buy decision based on cash flow math and second because he was able to leverage the purchase.

Buying with OPM can—as any property investor will tell you—mean an upside, but it comes with risk. It doesn't matter what your property is worth if the cash flow it generates doesn't cover the mortgage. We've known too many U.S. real estate investors who have lost too many properties when market changes collapsed their highly leveraged portfolios.

Even though we've benefited from it, we don't preach the OPM mantra. Twenty-five years of experience across 24 markets worldwide, including the United States, have taught us to respect the fundamentals. We don't buy unless the projected net rental yields translate into cash flow enough to support the investment.

Never Invest for 2% Thinking Appreciation Will Make Up the Difference

After Lief sold that three-flat in Chicago and we made our move to Ireland, we began analyzing Irish real estate markets looking for investment opportunities. At the time (1999), most rental properties in this country were generating net yields of 2% or less. Dismal. But the Irish didn't care. Property values across the country had been appreciating 10% a year or more for years, and the Irish expected that to continue indefinitely.

They were investing and reinvesting using OPM. Banks were lending easily (though not yet at 2005 levels, when 110% LTV mortgages—the extra 10% to cover the “stamp duty” required at closing—were being handed out like chocolate buttons to tykes at Christmas). Investors were subsidizing mortgage payments out of pocket because rents weren't doing the job. They saw it as a sensible ongoing investment in the windfall appreciation they were certain would come.

In 2008, Irish property values fell 50% and more, depending on the region of the country, almost overnight. Most of those 110% LTV-financed properties were returned to the bank. Didn't seem so clever any longer to top-up mortgage payments out of pocket.

Leverage isn't always a good idea and, when investing overseas, it isn't always—or at least not always easily—available. In Part II, we'll detail your realistic financing options, but you should understand as you set out to start and then grow your global cash flow portfolio that OPM isn't always an option. Sometimes that's for the best.

Ignore Gross Returns Because It's Only the Net That Matters

The math is the same whether you're calculating the rental yield for a property in Arizona or Argentina. The expenses, though, can be different, and this is the second critical factor to take into account when projecting cash flow from a property investment overseas. Calculate what your return will be gross and then ignore that figure. Only the net matters.

In Ecuador, for example, the tenant pays the homeowner's association (HOA) fee on top of the rent. Some countries impose a withholding tax on gross rental income when it's paid; you recover any overpayment by filing an annual tax return. And management fees for short-term rentals can range from 15% to 35% and more, depending on the market.

A gross rental yield of 25% sounds great until you calculate the expenses and find that it nets to 3% after backing out management splits, building fees, and other higher-than-typical expenses for that particular property. Looking only at the top-line return, you could dismiss a gross rental yield of 12% that nets to 6% in the same market.

Nondollar Cash Flow Can Fund Local Adventures

The third difference between buying real estate for cash flow in the United States and buying real estate for cash flow overseas is that often the cash flows in a different currency. Like OPM, this is a potential upside and also a potential risk.

In 2015, we went shopping for a rental apartment on Portugal's Algarve coast. After eight years of economic crisis, this country was at a bottom and we perceived turning the corner. After exploring several beach towns and villages, we focused on Lagos, where we toured six properties and liked one in particular for its location, undervalued price, and motivated seller. Our math, based on data from the real estate agent and our own market research, projected a net annual return of 8%. Our general net yield expectation from a rental anywhere is 5% to 8%. We made an offer and proceeded with the purchase.

Other apartments we looked at in Lagos projected as good or better net rental yields and came with similarly appealing price tags. We chose the apartment we did because we agreed we would be happy owning it even if it didn't rent well or at all. When you're buying, rental projections are just that. You don't know what your yield will be until you begin earning it.

The apartment we bought was in the center of the town, on a winding, cobblestoned, pedestrian-only street, with easy access to shops and restaurants, and it had a rooftop terrace with an ocean view. We could use the place for personal vacations, we told ourselves as we stood on the roof looking out at the sea, in addition to or even instead of renting it out. And we did. During the four years we owned the property, we visited four times. During those stays, we withdrew some of the euro cash accumulated from apartment rent paid into our Portugal bank account and used that money to cover our expenses. It was like a series of free holidays in a fifteenth-century town on Europe's sunny southern coast. In addition to vacation mad money, the rental cash flow covered all expenses associated with the apartment and left us with a nice-sized and steadily growing euro nest egg.

The rental return met our 8% projection the first year and hit our 5% to 8% mark each of the four years we owned it, based on the original purchase price. The problem, if you want to call it that, was that markets across Portugal, including in Lagos, appreciated quickly after this country turned its crisis corner. During a visit to Lagos four years after our purchase, a friend in the local real estate industry suggested we think about selling our apartment.

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