All Topics / Help Needed! / Property yield
Just read Steve’s book and one of Kiyosakis and just about ready for the first +CF property purchase. One thing I would like to know is where does the 10.4% yield come from. I know the calculation, but why 10.4%. Sorry if this question sounds a bit dumb….[blink]
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Hi Darrin
You take the rent multiply by 52 and divide by the cost of the house. This gives you the gross yield.
What you are aiming for is a gross yield of 10.4%
eg 150*52/75000=10.4% gross yield.Also masquerades as the 11 sec rule. Take the rent, divide by 2, multiply by 1000 and that is what you should pay for the house to give you a gross yield of 10.4%.
eg 150 divided by 2, multiplied by 1000 = $75000Anyway someone may come up with a better explanation.
Also refer to Steve’s book “From 0 to 130 properties in 3.5 Years” p/30-34 where he explains when to use it.
Regards
Hi Darrin
are you asking why 10.4%, if so, its steve’s idea of when a deal starts to look atractive, personally and i’m sure steve agrees, i like a bit better than 10.4%, but in today market thats about as good as it gets it appears. (or is it ?)
regards westan
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Westan
That’s exactly what I was after, why 10.4. I gather the maths was done to get this percentage which then makes the return a bit more attactive.
Darrin, I think it’s just a figure to make sure a property covers expenses. If one is paying interest rates of about 6.5%, then to get 10.4% ought cover all expenses.
For me, it’s an easy way to work with numbers. Muppet gave you the technical way. I just take the property price and then double it for rental yield. So a 50k house should get 100 bucks a week rent; a 75k house = 150 rent; a 100k house = 200 rent etc. The way I do it is not technically correct, but it’s close, and it’s easy on my brain.
10.4 = 104 weeks really… 52 weeks in a year, so double that for yield.
kay henry
Hi Darrin,
This rule is a “rule of thumb” to help you filter the properties you look at and determine what is worth a second look.
As interest rates rise the rule becomes less effective but it is a quick formula to use and a lot quicker than 11 seconds. There is no magic in the rate of 10.4%
If your property passes this test you still have to do your homework to see if it is a good buy.
Cheers
Jeff
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