I don't believe you when you say you have your bases covered with regards to tax.
You don't pay the bills unless you're trying to hide the income.
H, I don't get your second point here?
I don't believe you when you say you have your bases covered with regards to tax.
You don't pay the bills unless you're trying to hide the income.
I may have a Pat Kenny moment if someone tries to tell me this isn't so. I've heard it all before; "see I have to have the bills in my name because a previous tenant didn't pay / paid too much / ran away with the spoon"H, I don't get your second point here?
Is this the same property as Investment Property #1? If so see below.Rough estimate of value of home: €280,000
Amount outstanding on your mortgage: €180,000
What interest rate are you paying? Tracker (ECB +1.15%).
Outgoings = €950, Rent ( I have it rented out = €950).
Buy out Partner A's 40%. I have assumed that this could be your future home & is perhaps close to your work, perhaps you could comment. You could set this up & rent out rooms under the rent-a-room scheme for a temporary period.Investment Property #1, Value €280,000 (own 60% of this with business partner A), Mortgage €180,000, Tracker (+0.85%) - Monthly Payments (incl bills etc) = €1000, Rent = €950, VERY STABLE tenants.
Let Partner B buy you out. From its value it sounds like a 2 bed apartment or a 3 bedroom house. Partner B is looking to get married in 2010, it may suit him/her too. This could be his future home.Investment Property #2, Value €475,000 (own half of this as co-owner with business partner B), Mortgage €320,000 (only liable for 33% of this, as I provided the deposit for the property purchase).
Sell this within the 6 months while interest rates are still low.Investment Property #3 (in Belfast), Value £230,000, Mortgage £190,000. My monthly payments are about £500, Rent should be about £750, but tends to be average at about £300 due to difficulties finding tenants.
Sell you share in this property to Partner A. Its like exchanging his 40% in Property #1 for your 50% in Property #4.Investment Property #4 (also in Belfast, I own 50% of this with business partner A), Value £180,000, Mortgage £145,000. Outgoings = £400, Rent £450. Tenants are stable.
Pay off any debts using any profits made from disposing of Property #2 to Partner B & selling of Property #3Credit Union Loan of €29,000 (6.5%, paying €325 off it per fortnight, will be paid off mid 2013) - this was taken out to finance modernisation/refurbishments to the houses.
Credit Union Savings of €2300 (2%, have been told I can't use this to pay off some of the loan until loan is much smaller)
Nationwide Loan (in UK) of £4000, paying £70 off this per month, will be paid off in 2013.
I have overdrafts with PTSB of about €8,000
I have overdrafts with Nationwide (UK) of about £3,000
If 0% interest deductibility becomes the norm. I have little doubt in time this will result in rent increase as landlord decide it is not worth renting.
Crystallising losses at the bottom of the market never made sense to me -
canice..you implied we are at the bottom of the market..
In my opinion, if you feel you can tough it out you should....
however, it would seem you are significantly overexposed to one asset class (too late to do anything about that now though)
Nobody knows where property prices will be the next 5-10 years.
Consensus appears to be against property as an asset class at present, a la England in the late 80's 90's - however, 10 years later property prices in England began increasing dramatically again. If prices increase in the future, you never know, in 5-10 years you may be extremely happy that you toughed it out.
Crystallising losses at the bottom of the market never made sense to me - property should be a long term investment - in general, Irish people seem to have forgotten that in the heady days
Think of 10 "unthinkable" things that could "never happen" in the next 10 years and i guarantee 3/4 will actually happen!
I diagree completely with the last post
There is no way to predict 5 years ahead full stop let alone 10.
In addition Extreme events are much more common then percieved in every day life .......
Think of 10 "unthinkable" things that could "never happen" in the next 10 years and i guarantee 3/4 will actually happen!
I have read the Black Swan too you know.
I was thinking this way well before this book which i have not read
This segment has struck a chord with me. If the property will only let for 300 GBP then surely that is the market price/value. Or am I missing something here?Investment Property #3 (in Belfast), Value £230,000, Mortgage £190,000. My monthly payments are about £500, Rent should be about £750, but tends to be average at about £300 due to difficulties finding tenants.
Hello to all. I've a few updates for anyone who is interested. Thankyou for your comments on my situation. All were thought-provoking, some were very useful.
I decided to tough it out and have done reasonably well over the last few months. By developing some free or very inexpensive hobbies (walking, galleries, museums, reading, online gaming, studying... if that qualifies as a pastime!, eating in with friends and family, digital photography, gardening) I've had a frugal but very enjoyable time of it.
Christmas was difficult to negotiate, but I managed to spend modestly and make some of the pressies myself.
I have started giving grinds and taken on another job part-time. These net me about €50 per week - not a huge amount, but vital in my constrained situation.
I now have both houses in the North let out longterm to reliable tenants and am happy to say that I have all but cleared my overdraft debts up there.
Meanwhile I have reduced my southern overdrafts from €8,000 to €6,500. My plan is keep my head firmly down until the summer. By summer I would hope to have my overdrafts reduced to about €2,500. Then a cheap backpacking holiday somewhere sunny and interesting will be mine! By the time interest rates change, I should be on steadier ground. Fingers crossed.