All Topics / Help Needed! / Doing the numbers
Hi all
I just getting a little rusty with doing the calculations and asking for some direction here.
If you purchase a IP at say $200000 and say add 5% for costs that is another $10000 on top so total cost is
$210000When doing the yields etc i noticed the purchase price is used and not the total cost of the property.
How is this worked out then where does the costs eg property stamp duty $10000 sit for the calculations.
Purchase price…..200000
costs…………..10000
Total……………210000 all borrowed interest tax deductiblealternatively
With a LOC deposit of 20%
LOC 20% dep….40000
cost…………10000
total………..50000So the loan for the property would be
160000 interest tax deductible
50000 from LOC the interest would be tax deductible.rent…………….$290pw
Cheers
SGI don’t know where you are looking but I include all costs with the purchase price to determine my own NET yield. Gross yield is calculated before costs.
TMA
http://www.email4money.info
Essential Links
First Home Buyer WebsiteHi Stargazer,
Thanks for your post. I have quickly run your details into Investment Detective on the following basis:
Purchase Price: $200k
Closing Costs: $10k
Loan: $21k @ 7% P&I over 30 years
Rent: $290 p/week (no vacancy)
Rental management: 8%
Rates: $1k
Insurance: $300
Repairs: $500On these assumptions, the software has come back with:
> A gross return of 7.18%
> Budgeted cashflow loss of $4,691.96 p.a.Therefore, this property is better placed for a growth focus rather than a cashflow return. This is particularly true given you are doing 100% financing.
Interesting, if you put down a 20% cash deposit then the negative cashflow remains, but it falls to a shade under $1,500 per annum. Changing the repayment basis to interest only will result in a positive cashflow outcome.
The great power of Investment Detective is that it took me less than 5 mins to do these calcs and what-ifs. Beats mucking around with a financial caluclator. It doesn’t factor in your personal tax situation though.
Have a great day!
Cheers,
Steve McKnight
**********
Remember that success comes from doing things differently.
**********Steve McKnight | PropertyInvesting.com Pty Ltd | CEO
https://www.propertyinvesting.comSuccess comes from doing things differently
Hi
I don’t think it is that far fetched TMA to just use purchase price according to what i have read. I am not saying its the best way.
Simply….Gross Rent/ Purchase Price
So as per our example:
290*52=15080/200000 *100=Gross yield=7.54%Including Purchase Costs
15080/210000*100=7.18%15080 less
pm…8%=1200
rates…2000
=11880/200000=5.94%net
=11880/210000=5.65% netAnother thing if had owned the property for a while are your getting lower yield because the value has gone up. Or is the yield calculated on the purchase price you paid?
Investment Detective looks interesting Steve thankyou.
Cheers
SG
You must be logged in to reply to this topic. If you don't have an account, you can register here.