Retired Boomers & Seasoned Tenants: Needing People Who Get Things Done
âThe information learned while attending college is meaningless to employers; the college degree itself is the prize. It shows you were smart enough to figure out how to graduate.â
(My late brother, Gregg Furniss)
My wife and I were coming back from a weekend trip recently and stopped in for a âquickâ bite to eat at a roadside Wendyâs. Oh, I was psyched to take down my chocolate Frosty.
We were waiting in line inside the restaurant and started to talk to some older gentlemen behind us. I had my UNC sweatshirt on and they were making some small talk about the upcoming basketball game that night. They were nice guys, probably retired, as they seemed to have no issue with the 20-minute wait.
Me, on the other hand⊠I tried to game the system and quicken things up. I popped out the Wendyâs app on my phone and ordered from there, hoping to just nod at the cashier and pick up our order when we eventually got to the front of the line. But, as it turned out, things didnât pan out as expectedâŠ
Cashier: Welcome to Wendyâs! How can I help you?
Me (smartly): I ordered on the app (and picked up a free large French fry for doing so too) and already paid for it. It should be under âBrettâ.
Cashier: Oh⊠mobile ordering hasnât worked in weeks. Can I take your order?
Me: But I already paidâŠ
Cashier: Oh? Youâll have to figure out how to cancel your order.
Me: It already ran my credit card. How does one cancel the order when the app says itâs already in my âorder historyâ?
Cashier: Not sure.
Me: OK⊠I guess weâll order and pay again (and forfeit the free fries for mobile orderingâŠ)
And when we finally got the food, the order was wrong. From a customer perspective, it was a fail. However, anecdotally-speaking for current retail establishments, this seems to be par for the course due to COVID-related employment shortages.
I thought of those older guys behind me. They seemed to be smart (theyâre UNC fans!) and unemployed. And Iâd argue underutilized. I wanted to make a passionate plea- we need you guys!
When Boomer-bashing became in vogue recently, it was largely unfounded. These guys (and gals) helped build this country. Theyâve got skills weâre sorely lacking right now (especially on the retail front)- they have a track record of getting things done! Every time Iâm getting frustrated trying to buy stuff in person, Iâm thinking I want to fill out an application and help the establishment do things right.
But as a Gen Xer, Iâm in the thick of it.  Iâve got a job, two young kids, and donât have the time to take it on. But our country has millions of unemployed, well-enabled potential workers on the sidelines. We need you, retired Boomers! Help us! Your wisdom and leadership would make a world of difference. Youâve worked for years in different environments and persevered. You could help train up broken places of business and be helping co-workers and society in general. You got things done and we are in a place where we need people to do just that. And it could be fun!
Experience counts. And it counts with rental tenants too.
When looking at rental applications, there are a lot of schools of thought on what to look for to secure the best tenants. We look at credit scores, criminal background, income, employment, and landlord history. But as someone who has done this for a while, landlord history trumps everything. Do they show a pattern of paying on-time and staying around for a while?
For example, if a prospective tenant has rented somewhere for 6 years and has largely paid a comparable rental rate on time, my expectation would be that they would continue to do so in one of our rental homes. Unless there was something completely out of whack in the other screening checks, Iâd take them in a heartbeat. Low credit score? If theyâve gotten the rent paid for 6 years straight, theyâre probably a good bet.
Generally-speaking, most of our owner clients want tenants who are longer term, do small repairs on their own, maintain the property well, and pay regularly. These seasoned tenants typically have rented for years and know how to be good occupants. They ask for help when needed, but understand the game. They take care of their end and we take care of ours. Everyone wins.
As a society, we need good employees. As a property manager, we need good renters. People with a history of accomplishment are valuable.
Happy Landlording!
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Rental Homes: You Break It, You Bought It?
âThe âPottery Barn Ruleâ is an American expression alluding to the policy of âyou break it, you bought itâ or âyou break it, you remake itâ, by which a retail store holds a customer responsible for damage done to merchandise on display. It generally âencourages customers to be more careful when handling property thatâs not theirs.ââ
Wikipedia definition of the âPottery Barn ruleâ
I think every parent has there own story on this concept. My version comes in âHobby Lobbyâ when my young son smashed a glass Christmas vase while âadmiringâ it. I was within a 50-yard radius (which apparently puts me in the âbadâ or âabsentee parentâ category); I heard the crash and prayed no Furniss was involved. I wasnât so fortunate.
The next step was to âfess up to a cashier or store manager. As I searched the available employees up front, I was left with the strategic decision of who to approach:
- The 17-year old (does he look apathetic or one that would stick me with store policy?)
- The middle-aged woman (does it look like she might sympathize/empathize? Or is she the type that makes an example of a parent who prioritizes reading âCalvin & Hobbesâ ornaments over watching his kids on the other side of the store?)
The downside of either was $17.99 + tax and a stern look. The upside was getting off with a warning. I approached the front gingerly and dutifully offered to pay.
âDonât worry about it! It happens all the time!â, the middle-aged woman cheerfully chirped. âChip! Go clean up aisle 5.â The 17-year old gave me a look and grabbed a broom. Mercy won out.
One of the hardest things of being a property manager is the security deposit dispensation after a tenant moves out. Homes are rarely left in perfect shape which leaves the owner paying a bill to get the rental home back in market shape. The question that is left is how much of the bill should the tenant shoulder and how much falls under ânormal wear and tearâ, which is legally permitted.
The problem is that nothing in a house costs $17.99! Things are expensive. Steam cleaning a carpet costs a few hundred dollars; if the carpet needs to be replaced, itâs now in the realm of thousands of dollars. The costs are similar for painting- touch-up can be much less versus a full paint job, but itâs still in the several hundred dollar range.
Very few tenants âfess up and offer to replace the carpet or paint the house after they vacate. In fact, most say that the âplace was like that when they moved inâ and not getting their full security deposit back is nothing short of an injustice. Property managers tend to utilize pictures/videos and tenant-filled out âmove-in inspection reportsâ to document what the home looked like prior to home occupation. These are helpful to ascertain the truth.
Regardless, costs can be high if a home is not taken care of. And if not, there can be a large degree of sticker shock when a tenant receives a bill for repairs that runs in excess of their security deposit. How could this happen?
The components of homes are expensive. And someone needs to fit the bill. The assumption canât be made that the landlord pays for everything short of a wall being knocked down. âNormal wear and tearâ cuts both ways. Abnormal wear and tear is costly and the tenant is legally responsible for it.
It is a win-win when a landlord can return a non-docked security deposit to a tenant- trust me! Then no one needs to shell out funds to repair folks and a house can be turned over for another family to move into; this is the most desirable and profitable outcome for all involved.
But, with rental homes, if you break it, you bought it. It may âhappen all the time!â, but someone has to pay the piper and most home issues are not cheap to fix. Smashing a $17.99 Christmas vase is one thing, but see what the âHobby Lobbyâ cashier says if your kids clip the branches of their $2K âSuper-Deluxeâ Christmas tree.
Happy Landlording!
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Comfort of Old Cars & Non-Perfect Rental Homes: Does Anyone Care?
âChampagne tastes with beer budgets.â
Common real estate agent lament
I drive an old car. And it has lots of miles (almost 300K!). Iâm reminded of this from time to time:
âDude, seriously? Youâre driving that? Donât you want to step things up a little?â
An old friend
âYou thinking about buying a new car soon? I only ask because Iâm looking to buy a car for my teenager and thought you might be interested in selling⊠How does it run?â
Pastor at my church when I saw him in the parking lot
I get it. Nothing looks like success more than a new, nice car. If you want people to think that youâre the âproperty manager to the starsâ, you shouldnât be driving a beater. Realtors especially lock into this mindset. A nice car means lots of closed sales. âYou look good, you feel good, you sell goodâ as the old salesperson mantra goes.
But there are positives to driving a beater. First thereâs an overall peace of mind (if it doesnât breakdown). For example, when I take things out of my car, I donât particularly care if it scratches the paint or rips the seat. When I walk out of the supermarket and someone has dinged my door, Iâm OK. When my young kids spill something in the backseat, Iâm not reading them the riot act. Iâm cool. No worries.
Thereâs also the financial piece. There are no car payments. The taxes are low. Occasional repair bills are taken in stride as they are lower then having a new car. Insurance is lower with a âliability-onlyâ policy. Iâm not worried about additional miles detracting from the value of the car.
Most people donât subscribe to my âpeace of mindâ thinking. They want to look cool. Iâm OK with that, to a point.
I see a similar thought process play out in rental homes. As rental rates continue to rise significantly annually (in the Charlotte-metro area, newly offered rents increased 16.7% from September 2020 to now per CoStar), the tenant income levels needed to support the higher rents also need to rise significantly. But peopleâs incomes are not going up 15%-20%. This is where all the press about the lack of affordable housing comes from. Renters are becoming âseverely cost-burdenedâ where over 50%+ of their incomes are going to housing costs.  Thatâs a huge percentage (which many experts call a crisis).
What has contributed to this crisis? One factor is the decision a landlord is generally left with after their tenant moves out and they are preparing the house for the next tenant. Do they spend a lot of money to make the rental house look great (full paint jobs, new carpet, new appliances, etc.) or do they try to âlet it rideâ (minimal to no touch-up paint, steam clean carpets, entry level appliances, etc.)? I think with all the HGTV housing television shows, many owners decide to fully refurbish their rental homes. By employing this strategy, they are looking to get top rent when it goes back on the market.
This only works when tenants play along. Tenants need to be willing to sacrifice a higher percentage of their incomes for a nicer, updated home.
And they are! Even when they clearly canât afford it.
When some of our clients âlet it rideâ, we accordingly price the house lower. The owner chooses to accept below-market rents to avoid a pricey fix-up bill. They play the long game; every year that goes by, they use the rents to lower their mortgage payment until it goes away (thatâs when the landlord game gets a lot more fun!). And as a bonus for the tenants, they keep more of their money. They also get a lot more leniency on their security deposit deductions as the house is already worn, so any mishaps they inflict on the house arenât so noticeable or costly when they move out.
But many tenants choose not to make this trade-off. âThe carpet is stained! The walls have some scratches! The refrigerator is old!â Um, thatâs why it is priced lower.
Most tenants donât seem to care. Frankly, itâs shocking to me. Iâve expected more tenants to happily make the trade-off for the peace of mind it offers.
Old cars may not look cool, but they may allow for a cooler, more peaceful life. But if this line of thinking has little appeal, I suppose landlords need to give people the housing they want.
Happy Landlording!
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Do You See Property Management Like Michael Jordan?
âSometimes when I consider what tremendous consequences come from little things, I am tempted to think there are no little things.â
(Bruce Barton)
âCatch for us the foxes, the little foxes that ruin the vineyards, our vineyards that are in bloom.â
(Song of Solomon 2:15)
A while ago, I was talking to a family member I donât get the opportunity to converse with very often. It turned out he owned an out-of-state rental property that he was self-managing and he began to tell me about it.
Family Member: So things are going great! I have a long term tenant who makes her $800.00 rental payment like clockwork every month; she even has it direct deposited into my account on the 1st!
Me: (talking): Reliable long term tenants are awesome. Congrats!
Me (thinking): $800 a month? Could that possibly be close to the going rate in this crazily appreciating housing market?
FM: And I donât even have to think about the house. If she needs something repaired, she calls. If not, I never hear from her.
Me (talking): Low maintenance tenants are great. Congrats!
Me (thinking): No on-site inspections ever, not even a heads up from a repair vendor you work with regularly that can let you know if they see something awry? Are the air filters being changed? Animals in the house? Smoking indoors?
FM: And itâs a total win-win relationship! She doesnât use the all the space, so she rents out some of the rooms on Airbnb for extra cash.
Me (talking): I guess that ensures she can make rent each month. Congrats!
Me (thinking): If you are allowing this, are you getting a cut? That seems like a lot of risk as the homeowner for (what sounds like) no compensation. Do you know who is coming in and out of your home? Is there any type of insurance being utilized if a renter is an axe murderer and takes out a few neighbors or starts cooking meth in the house? And is there consideration for all the people rolling through adding additional wear & tear to the home?
When youâve done something as a vocation for a while, your thinking gets warped and can really make you sound like a wet blanket.
I imagine itâs like telling Michael Jordan you put up a shot in a pick-up game at the park. He sees a different game than a weekend player. He might ask:
Where did you shoot from? How much space did the defender give you? Did you jab step?  Was there a lane available to drive to the basket? Where were your teammates? Should you have passed it out instead? What was the score at the time? Who was sliding back on defense to cover your man if your opponent threw a long pass down court off of a rebound? What type of loft did you get on the release of your shot- was there potential for a long rebound? Did you feed the ball to your big man inside first?
Whoa! I thought basketball was supposed to be fun? That sounds like school with an aggressively tense teacher. I mean, do these small details really matter anyway?
I think so. When Iâm flying, do I want my pilot checking the wind direction or knowing what to do if geese get in the planeâs path (kudos, Sully!)? Or if my daughter is going to the doctor, do I want a licensed professional who knows what questions to ask and what tests to run to head off any larger health issues? Of course! One missed detail could bring dire results.
Michael Jordan won six NBA Championships by being detailed-oriented (and really good, of course!). In the same way, itâs imperative to have a property manager who is experienced enough to ask the right questions and be uptight on the details (even if it makes for awkward conversations with family members sometimes).
Happy Landlording!
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Lease Renewals: Lock in the $2.00 NYC Breakfast!
âIf I can make it there, Iâll make it anywhere, Itâs up to you, New York, New YorkâŠâ
âNew York, New Yorkâ by Frank Sinatra
I remember living in New York City (NYC) when I was first out of college. All of the big buildings, happening things going on, the energy, the lights, so many people⊠it was amazing to behold. It seemed like everything that was going on in the news was happening right around the corner from my apartment. It was really cool.
But it was really expensive. Everything cost so much, especially compared to college life. After my first week of work, I went out with some colleagues and offered to buy the first round of drinks- big mistake!
âThat will be $90.00, sir.â
âNo, Iâm sorry⊠There must be some misunderstanding. I only ordered 5 of them and we just got here.â
Weird look. âUm, itâs $90.00 sir.â
(Gulp) There goes this weekâs moneyâŠ
And that was 20 years ago. I hate to see what things cost now.
However, there was one great deal in NYC- the breakfast food trucks. You could get a coffee and a big bagel for $1.00 each. Iâd line up every morning before getting on the subway to lock it in before heading to work. When an apple cost $4.00 at the bodega across the street, this was the way to go (maybe not health-wise, but you couldnât beat the bang for your buck).
I remember one morning being in line behind an obvious tourist who looked like he had just gotten into town. He asked the food truck proprietor how much a cup of coffee was and did a double-take:
â$1.00??? Seriously? Iâve never paid $1.00 in my life for coffee!â
Thatâs when I knew this guy was about to have the worst vacation of his life.
I feel this way about rental rates in Charlotte. I was recently going through our list of tenants with expiring leases and was struck on how much rental rates had gone up, especially those who were coming off of 2-year leases. Rents have been climbing up for almost a decade, but have become more pronounced in the past two years.
As a landlord, this is great. Higher rents equal more profits. The question becomes how much more rent to ask for when existing leases are near their expiration and itâs time to offer the tenant the lease renewal terms. Is the strategy to ask for market rate (probably 10-20% higher) or keep the increase on the lower end (5-10%)?
Generally-speaking (if it is a good tenant), Iâm a proponent of keeping the increase offer on the lower end and trying to keep the tenant in the property. Avoiding all the vacancy costs and keeping the cash coming in is usually the most profitable path, as well as the easiest. I donât like good tenants looking elsewhere as new ones are not guaranteed to work out as well. However, if the tenant still decides to leave, then all bets are off and the house can be re-marketed at the higher market rate.
If I was a tenant in this scenario (once again, generally-speaking) with an offer of a lower than market rental rate on a lease renewal, Iâd also look to stay and try to lock into a 2-year lease. Looking at the competition for rental homes now as well as the higher prices, it should be close to a no-brainer. Itâs a win-win for both the tenant and landlord to keep near the status quo.
So while the New York City nightlife and dining choices are enticing, itâs probably best to enjoy the vacation and relish the $2.00 breakfast combo. Good deals in this market are hard to find, so itâs probably best to lock them in without complaint!
Happy Landlording!
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No 5-Star Reviews? You Took an Oath
âYou took an oath, if you recall, when you first came to work for me. And I don’t mean to the National Security Advisor of the United States, I mean to his boss… and I don’t mean the President. You gave your word to his boss: you gave your word to the people of the United States.â
(Admiral James Greer (James Earl Jones) in Clear And Present Danger)
Â
âBut Jesus would not entrust himself to them, for he knew all men. He did not need manâs testimony about man, for he knew what was in a man.â
(John 2:24-25)
Property management is a funny business. Sometimes you are the GOAT (Greatest Of All Time) and some days you are a goat. Some days youâre told you belong in the penthouse and other days, the outhouse. Itâs like I tell my son weâre going to the pool (yeah!) or to work on his reading (Boo! Bad Dad!). Reactions vary based on the popularity of the decisions made.
We had a tenant who was very happy with a repair we made for her on behalf of the owner. She was so happy, that she went on to Google and wrote us a nice 5-star review. âYou guys are really great. So responsive, Unequivocally good-looking. Manly, yet gentle. Sensitive, caring & responsive. No one better. Wowzers!â (thatâs not a direct quote, but it was something like that, I thinkâŠ) It was a very nice, unsolicited gesture. âJust doinâ our jobs, maâam.â (with the accompanying hat tip and suppressed smile).
But fast forward 3 months later⊠the tenant has another repair request, but it canât be approved. Itâs something the lease says the tenant needs to take care of.  When told of the bad news, there was no effusive praise for our wisdom in enforcing the lease properly. There was mostly silence with a touch of resentment. It didnât taste nearly as good as the 5-Star Google punch she had served us last time. This tasted more like 1-Star lukewarm water served in a dirty ashtray.
And speaking of the 5-Star review, it was gone; she must have taken it down. Remanded to the deep recesses of cyberspace, it never graced our profile again. Its warmth was only with us for a brief season and then- poof- it vanished, nary a goodbye.
âJust doinâ our jobs, maâam?â
Hey, I get it. You like us when we do stuff you want done. And dislike us when we donât. People can be fickle.
At the end of the day, weâd love to be â5-Starâ reviewed every time and do every repair asked for. And weâd love to approve every tenant that applies. But, alas, we took an oath (aka a signed a property management agreement) saying we would represent the clientâs (the homeownerâs) interests. No, this doesnât mean we donât take care of the contractual repairs and impartially view applications, but it does mean that we need to keep in mind who we work for and how they want things done. Owners donât tend to want to pay for unneeded or unwarranted repairs or have tenants with unfavorable past records placed in their rental homes.
At the end of the day, we really do want to please everyone, but we took an oath. âJust doinâ our jobs, maâam.â
Happy Landlording!
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Who CARES About Getting a Good Tenant?
ââŠwhat we do in life⊠echoes in eternity.â
(Maximus (Russell Crowe) in Gladiator)
Itâs been an unsettling time to be in the rental home game for the past year and a half.
Many people (including tenants) lost their jobs or had their incomes affected negatively. This made many tenants late on rent and on the verge of eviction. To stop this, politicians signed the CARES Act (which included an eviction moratorium) which has made it hard (and in some cases, illegal) to evict non-paying tenants. Without rent, landlords are forced to make payments themselves which has put them in a cash-crunch. Itâs been a tough season for all involved.
No one likes evictions. Tenants, landlords, politicians, property managers- itâs failure on some level. But in the world we live in, someone has to pay and be paid for services to continue; we donât live in utopia. So as eviction court cases pile up at the court house (evictions can be filed, just not judged and acted upon) and rent balances swell, what can be done at this point?
The CARES Act also has provided states with billions of dollars in rental assistance. This means that tenants can apply and get free rent and utility money. Weâve had tenants get up to 6 months in funds that was sent to us directly to cover past due and future rents. All the tenants needed to do was to call 211 in the Charlotte-area to be directed to the best resource based on their situation. It seems relatively simple, though with most massive programs, there were hiccups. But weâve seen it work.
However, we also have tenants who choose not to avail themselves of these programs for whatever reason. They might not trust the government, are confused by the information asked for, or just donât want to do the legwork needed to secure the assistance. The situation can seem hopeless and they may feel they might as well ride the process out as the media and politicians give messages that evictions will be blocked indefinitely. They might as well save (or spend) their money now and worry about their housing situation later when they are forced to.
Landlords do not want to be in a position hoping that third parties will âdo the right thingâ someday, while they are left holding things together on the back end.
Going forward, that has placed a greater premium on tenant screening. The bar keeps moving as weâve never experienced a pandemic before which had whole industries in the economy largely shut down. This has affected credit scores, bad debt, and recorded evictions from normally reliable people. So what we see on paper (through credit, criminal, income, and landlord screenings) might not be indicative of future performance.
The important thing to remember is that whoever is placed into a rental house now is with you for the foreseeable future. When the eviction moratorium is lifted, there is going to be a huge backlog of cases. Getting an eviction tried and acted upon may take a really long time. Securing the right tenants takes on an added degree of importance because they will be with you for a while.
Iâd proceed with placing new tenants very methodically. It might not be a good time to cut corners (âHalf the security deposit? Sure, weâll take that.â) or roll the dice on ambiguous applications for a quick tenant placement. A bad decision can last a long time and be very costly in this environment.
It is imperative to really CARE about getting a good tenant presently. Get all the information, take your time, and make an educated determination. Itâs more important now than ever- tenant decisions made today can reverberate for a long time.
Happy Landlording!
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Getting Rental Turns Right the First Time with Perfect Practice
âNever mistake activity for achievement.â
John Wooden (legendary UCLA basketball coach)
A popular maxim says that if you want to be wealthy, keep things old:
- Old Car
- Old House
- Old Wife
When you get things right the first time, it saves a lot of money! Iâd also add âOld Tenantâ to the listâŠ
Itâs also been said that âpractice makes perfect.â Athletic gurus (originally attributed to Green Bay Packers coach, Vince Lombardi) have amended that to âperfect practice makes perfect.â The reasoning is that if poor technique is being practiced, more practice could potentially make one worse.
The same can be said of turning homes for rent (Iâd say selling them too, but it seems like if your house was on fire in Charlotte, it would still receive multiple offers).
It makes sense that the longer a rental home is on the market, the better the chance is that it will rent. More potential exposure equals more showings which would equal more applications and a quicker turn between tenants. More time on the market (practice) automatically equates to better results (perfect). But I donât think that the market always bears this out.
So having a home on the market for rent for a longer time can be sub-optimal? Why?
Most of the time, to increase the days on market, the days are taken from when the rental home is tenant-occupied or while it is vacant and repairs are being completed. This is usually when the house is not in optimal condition. So rental ads are urging people to see a home that isnât in great shape.
This matters for several reasons:
- Great tenants care about the condition of the house. They are very interested in their living environment and value well-kept domiciles. These types of tenants typically return the home in as good or better shape than when they moved in. We really like these meticulous tenants! They usually pay before the 1st of the month too.
- The manner in which the internet home search game works warrants putting out the best product first. Prospective tenants typically set up search parameters and are alerted when rental homes come to market that fit their profile. So when a home is initially put on the market, this should precipitate the biggest surge of showings. If the home is hard to get into (tenant-occupied) and/or looks disgusting (being cleaned and repaired), they will visit and pass on the unit. Or the wrong type of tenants who arenât bothered by the poor condition will put an application in.
- Homes on the market for a long time tend to get stale. People wonder what is wrong with the house when it keeps coming up in searches for months and hasnât been snapped up.
A caveat to this: I donât have a big issue going to market while a home is tenant-occupied (this does not factor in COVID considerations). If the tenant that is there is cooperative with showings, it is essentially free time to market the house. Itâs a great feeling to approve a tenant during this time and time their move-in a week after the current tenant vacates (allowing time to get the home in shape for a new occupant). But #1 above can still apply if the home is in poor shape.
In short, for optimal results, wait until the house is fixed up and at its best, then go to market.   Get the rental house right the first time and practice perfectly!
Happy Landlording!
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Competition is for Sissies: Buy Straw Hats in Uptown Charlotte
âBuy straw hats in the winter because summer will surely come.â
Bernard Baruch
The competition for Charlotte-area homes is relentless from the buy-side. One local statistic really drives home the point: there is currently an 18-day supply of homes for sale (and 120-days worth is considered a healthy market)! Thatâs badly seller-skewed.
And I saw a Linked-In post last week from a member of our local Realtor Association, Jonathan Osman:
There are now more than 13,788 Realtor members in our local association of Realtors⊠and only 1,633 homes for sale in a 7-county region surrounding Charlotte. Happy Monday everybody!
Thatâs a lot of agents and buyers fighting over a few pieces of cheese. And that doesnât even factor in the i-buyers like Zillow, OpenDoor, and real estate investment hedge funds that have non-licensed agents scouring the market for unlisted homes to buy. If they are not consistently buying a large quantity of homes, they are not doing their jobs. Supply versus demand is in full effect- Prices continue to climb! 20-30 offers per listing coming in fighting for attention! Competition is fierce!
But there seems to be a bastion of discounted properties located right in the heart of Charlotte in the 28202 zip code that sit undisturbed- Uptown condos! Theyâre nicely adorned living spaces located in beautiful, tall buildings in what was considered prime real estate. And no one seems to have any interest in them as prices drop. OpenDoor has no current interest and Zillowâs instant offer is at a steep discount to market price.
So why is this packet of Charlotte real estate getting the cold shoulder? I can foster a few guesses:
- âItâs the pandemic, stupid! Everyone is âZoomingâ from home and Uptown (and downtown areas in cities everywhere) are obsolete now. Who wants to live in the City when you can be in your PJâs in the âburbs?â
Rebuttal:
- The suburbs (and home) can enjoy their time in the sun. Cities are still cool and have lots to do. Companies still value in-person collaboration.
- Huge organizations (Bank of America, Wells Fargo, Duke Energy, Carolina Panthers, etc.) donât have billions of dollars in leases and real estate office holdings that are going to sit empty one more minute than they have to. When things are thought to be feasibly safe, doors are opening.
- Hereâs the path to never getting promoted at work: when the Uptown office opens up and the option comes to work from home or go in, take the home option and continue to work by video. All top leadership will be required to be in the office, so your co-workers will enjoy lunching and working closely with the decision-makers in-person. I wonder who gets promoted⊠The person who they laugh with at the water cooler or the person they have to sit through yet another Zoom call with to see and never seems to be around? HmmmâŠ
- Itâs tougher to cash flow condos with high monthly HOA fees and, to boot, rents seem to be lower.
Rebuttal:
- True that on the HOA fees to a point. Just keep in mind a few expenses that HOA fees save owners from paying: buying a new roof, monthly insurance, exterior house maintenance, pest issues, water/sewer bills (when vacant), and the threat of vandalism. The actual hit is lighter than it seems.
- Rents are lower because the demand is not there right now to live in Uptown Charlotte with offices largely closed. But thatâs why investors buy those straw hats in the winter!
- There are a lot of Uptown condos for rent. There have not been any new Uptown condo buildings built in over a decade, but many apartment buildings have been. Thatâs a lot of rental competition!
Rebuttal:
- But the rental price points on the newer apartments are higher (and need to be due to higher land/construction costs when they were built and investment cash flow required for the financial institutions who own the buildings).
- The newness factor has largely worn off and now the older units for rent are on largely equal footing (most with better locations)
- There are not many Uptown units that can actually be owned. To your point, no condo buildings for private owners have been built for over a decade. At some point as renters come back to Uptown, they will want to be owners and have limited supply to choose from.
Competition is for sissies! Investors may want to buy the unpopular Uptown condos now and then wait to reap the benefits in the summer when straw hats are back in vogue.
Happy Landlording!
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Noahâs Ark & Real Estate Investing: Can You Persevere?
Noahâs ark is a crazy story. God tells Noah, some ordinary guy, that He is heartbroken with how sinful mankind has become and is going to flood the Earth and start again. He tells Noah that he is going to spare him, his family, and all the animals if he builds an ark. Noah takes God at His word and builds the ark, gathers the animals and provisions, and loads the ark up.
Everyone knows it rained for 40 days and 40 nights, but Noah and his crew were safe because they were floating on top of this massive amount of water. The lesser talked about part of this story is that they did not walk out of the ark on Day 41 ready to repopulate the Earth; there was way too much standing water (they were floating above mountains, for goodness sake!). They were actually stuck on the ark for over a year before it was sufficiently dry enough to get out on land and walk around.
The childrenâs Bible I was reading my son surmised that it wasnât boring because they had so much to do. They had daily routines to feed and care for all the animals, put out fires (so to speak), and take care of themselves and the ark. Wash, rinse, repeat. If anything was neglected, there were problems. Survival for mankind and the animal kingdom was at stake and duties needed to be carried out diligently or there would be dire consequences. The carrot was that if they kept to the plan, they would be free of the confines of the ark at some point and the whole beautiful world would be waiting for them to enjoy.
It reminded me of real estate investing.
Like the ark, rental homes require constant diligence. They need to be fixed up, repaired, and maintained. Tenants need to be acquired, serviced, and replaced. The mortgage, insurance, and taxes need to be paid. The HOA and government entities need to be catered to. These duties need daily attention; if they are neglected, the financial boat can start taking on water and sinking can become a real possibility.
The carrot of real estate investing is owning the property someday. As it rains (roof needs replacing, tenant evictions, tenants not paying because of a pandemic), it seems like that day is far off. Sometimes it seems like it would be better to abandon the ark and swim without it.
But persevering and waiting for the ark door to finally open to dry land has its benefits. Free cash flow, a higher net worth, and assets that can be liquidated for college tuition or passed on to children are great financial prizes.
But tending the smelly animals is a pain day-after-day (ever try to pick up after 1,000âs of animals?). The lightning is scary. The boat rocks a lot and causes sleepless nights and sea sickness. Some boards on the ark look like they are breaking down. Drowning is a real possibility. Why did I get on this thing to begin with? My friends who stayed behind at least seemed merry before the torrential downpour.
However, amidst the doubts and setbacks⊠there is belief that one day in the future the sun will come out, the water will recede, and the dove will return with a leaf clenched firmly in its beak. The remaining mortgage payments will be made, the appraised home value will be high, and the financial statement will be solid. Landfall will make it all worth it.
Noah persevered and he and his family were rewarded. Hang in there!
Happy Landlording!
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