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June 4, 2009 by Peter Maclennan Leave a Comment

Tired of Mutual Funds’ Low Returns…

…Then you should read David Shafer’s analysis on why he hates mutual funds.  (HT: Jeff Brown)

There are three reasons:

1.  Diversification sucks.  There I have said it.  There is an open secret in the investment world that diversification is for suckers or at least for folks that will never capture wealth.  You see, mutual funds were invented as a marketing strategy.  After academic finance disclosed you could reduce risk (variance) by diversification, astute Wall Street companies knew they could market this to average folks.  Previous to mutual funds and the idea of diversification the average person felt that investing in the stock market was akin to gambling and shied away from it.  But those folks in Wall Street knew a good marketing opportunity when they see one and ran with it.

Warren Buffet is quoted as saying “Diversification is a protection against ignorance. It makes very little sense for those who know what they’re doing.”

In the video below Buffet recomends applying intensity to your investing strategy to get above average returns.

If you are ready to apply intensity to your real estate investments on your way to Retirement Freedom, call us at (925) 324-8626.

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Filed Under: Real Estate Investing, Retirement Freedom Tagged With: Diversification, Real Estate Investing, Retirement Freedom, Retirement Strategy

May 8, 2009 by Peter Maclennan Leave a Comment

Taking Control of Your Investments

Have you ever been in a car when someone releases the steering wheel?

When I was in the seventh grade, I had a youth leader that was a little on the wild side. His antics endeared him to the guys in the group. He would jokingly try and take corners at double the posted speed. He would also do a “Seat Belt Check” where he slammed on the breaks. If you were not wearing a seat belt, you might end up with a bruise.

On a straight section of the road, it was not uncommon for this youth leader to release the wheel and let the car go where it felt like. As a passenger, you knew that things were completely beyond your control.

Letting Go of the Wheel: Investing in the Stock Market

A wise professor shared with me the reason he had chosen to invest in real estate over stocks and bonds. Control.

He realized early on that he could not control the stock market. For him the stock market involved too much risk. CEO’s, Boards of Directors, and investment fund managers had more control than he did in which direction a stock’s value went from day to day.

The daily decisions that make a companies stock price fluctuate are beyond the control of the individual investor. Marketing, product design, research and development, employee compensation, customer base, and resource allocation cannot be easily influenced by the individual stock investor.

Investing in the stock market resembles letting go of the wheel. You have surrendered control of your money to the whims of the market and management.

For Those Who Like to Drive: Real Estate Investing

Real estate investing is for those who like to take a more active role in their march towards Retirement Freedom.

As the owner of an investment property, you can choose the management team. The management team will be hired and fired based on their performance. The management team answers to you as the property owner.

“Location, location, location,” is the mantra of real estate. Your choice of location will allow you to control your customers (tenants), pricing (rent), and product (house, apartment, etc.).

As in all investing, some things will be beyond your control. Your success will be greatly dependent upon the property’s ability to attract good tenants that pay a fair rent and build wealth for you.

Real estate investing places you firmly in the driver’s seat on your way to Retirement Freedom.

Passenger or Driver?

Which would you rather be, a passenger or a driver?

If you are comfortable with having your investments at the mercy of the market and company management, then stocks may be for you.

For those who want to drive, give Maclennan Investment Group a call at (925) 324-8626.

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Filed Under: Benefits of Real Estate Investing, Real Estate Investing, Retirement Freedom Tagged With: Real Estate Investing, Retirement, Retirement Freedom, Retirement Strategy

May 7, 2009 by Peter Maclennan 1 Comment

Four Benefits of Real Estate Investing

Real estate is an excellent tool to build and accumulate wealth. There are four benefits to real estate that can make it more appealing than other investment opportunities.

Maximizing as many of these benefits as possible will help you on your way to retirement freedom.

Cash Flow Before Taxes

When you own a rental property the goal is for the rent on that property to pay all of the property expenses so that nothing comes out of your pocket. Any income from rents above expenses is cash flow.

Yes, owning real estate does have expenses. If the property is financed, you will owe the lender payments of principal and interest. Uncle Sam wants his cut and demands property taxes. The property will need insurance, it may need repairs over time, and property management. Other possible expenses include utilities, landscaping, accounting, and  legal fees.

Principal Reduction

If your rental property is financed with a traditional mortgage that combines payments of principal and interest, each payment will increase your equity in the property. This is probably best illustrated by the formula below.

Property Value – Loan Principal = Owner’s Equity

All things remaining equal, as the loan’s principal balance is reduced your equity in the property increases.

The benefit is realized when it is time to execute a sale according to your retirement strategy.The sale will realize a higher proceeds for you to roll into your next investment.

Depreciation

The IRS defines depreciation as:

Depreciation is an income tax deduction that allows a taxpayer to recover the cost or other basis of certain property. It is an annual allowance for the wear and tear, deterioration, or obsolescence of the property.

The IRS allows you to deduct wear and tear of your rental property.

This is what might be called a “phantom” expense. The IRS allows you to deduct it from income taxes, although you may never have to actually pay for anything with cash.

This deduction can be used to offset other income. (Disclaimer: You should contact a tax attorney, CPA, or  tax professional to see how this deduction would affect your personal situation.)

Appreciation

The final benefit of real estate is appreciation. Appreciation is the increase in value of a property.

All investments have a risk that they may go down in value. Real estate is no different. The current market proves that.

Jokingly some have said that, “God isn’t making any more dirt.” While it may not be entirely accurate, the prinicple is true.

There is a limited supply of real estate in the world, nation, state, county, city, and school district where you live. Scarcity tends to drive prices higher. Real estate has historically risen in value as a longer term investment.

An Appealing Investment

Investing in real estate has four benefits of cash flow before taxes, principal reduction, depreciation, and appreciation that set it apart from other investment vehicles.

If you are tired of being subject to the whims of the stock market, real estate investing may be for you. Real estate offers you a measure of control over your investments and the outcome of the results.

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Filed Under: Benefits of Real Estate Investing, Real Estate Investing, Retirement Freedom Tagged With: Depreciation, Principal Reduction, Retirement, Retirement Freedom, Retirement Strategy

April 25, 2009 by Peter Maclennan Leave a Comment

Retirement Freedom Defined

Freedom is something that most of us strive for in many areas of our life.

Merriam-Webster defines “freedom” as:

the quality or state of being free: as a: the absence of necessity, coercion, or constraint in choice or action b: liberation from slavery or restraint or from the power of another : independence c: the quality or state of being exempt or released usually from something onerous <freedom from care> d: ease, facility <spoke the language with freedom> e: the quality of being frank, open, or outspoken <answered with freedom> f: improper familiarity g: boldness of conception or execution h: unrestricted use <gave him the freedom of their home>

As the definition states freedom is the ability to do what you want, when you want to.

Now of course there are wise limits on the nature of freedom. I am not “free” to take another person’s property or life. That would be a violation of their freedom to use their own property.

Retirement Freedom

The American Dream entails the dream of “Retirement”. That time in your life when the necessity of a 9-5 job is gone. You are free of the tyranny of a boss, commute, and cubicle.

A good definition of Retirement Freedom is having the ability to invest your time, efforts, finances, and energy into the activities you choose.

This freedom varies from one person to the next. It could be vacations with your grandkids, that cruise to Europe, a home in the mountains, time to serve at your church, or the time to work in your garden.

This freedom is made possible due to the accumulation of wealth you have made during your working years. Your wealth is now working for YOU!

The years of saving and investing have finally paid off, allowing you to live off of the income your investments provide.

The Math of Retirement Freedom

How much do you need to live the retirement you have hoped for?

If you don’t have the luxury of a corporate pension plan, you will need to live off of your investment income alone.

Assume that your investments provide a conservative 5% return per year (for every $100 invested you get $5 of income per year), you will need about 20 times your expected income to live without putting your retirement at risk.

In order to maintain the same lifestyle you currently have, you will need almost 20 times your current income. Multiply your current income by 20.

Here’s some numbers:

  • If you make $50,000/year you will need approximately $1,000,000 of savings at retirement.
  • If you make $75,000/year you will need approximately $1,500,000 of savings at retirement.
  • If you make $100,000/year you will need approximately $2,000,000 of savings at retirement.
  • If you make $200,000/year you will need approximately $4,000,000 of savings at retirement.

This is just to maintain your current lifestyle. That does not include your trip to the Bahamas, the tour of the Holy Land, or the lake house you wanted.

What did you come up with? How many dollars will it take for you to retire?

The Path to Retirement Freedom

But how will you get that place of wealth?

There’s always the stock market. How is your 401k doing these days? Seems like this route is entirely outside of your control. You have no way to control whether the market goes up one day or down another.

You could rely on the government. How well will Social Security benefits allow you to live out your final days with family and friends? Does that allow you to live out your dreams?

The lottery is a possibility, but not very likely.

You have heard about real estate investing, but don’t know where to begin. Your friend owns some rental homes. The ability to control your own investments is appealing.

If this is the case, give Maclennan Investment Group a call at (925) 324-8626. Let us show you another path to retirement freedom.

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Filed Under: Real Estate Investing, Retirement Freedom Tagged With: American Dream, Investment Income, Retirement, Retirement Freedom

April 25, 2009 by Peter Maclennan Leave a Comment

A Walk in Walnut Creek

This morning I walked downtown to Starbucks for coffee. The cool morning air and the quiet allowed me to think and observe as I walked through the center of the city of Walnut Creek.

When you walk by yourself before the hustle and bustle of the day it is amazing what you notice.

Comings …

Walking past the new Cheesecake Factory I realized what a good decision was made by the city leadership to bring Cheesecake Factory to Walnut Creek. As I idled past the outdoor seating, men were spraying down the patio. The chairs were stacked on the tables. The ground was dark with the water on the stone patio.

The fountains in front of the Cheesecake Factory were babbling as water cascaded down their sides. The flame at the top danced in the wind.

It reminded me of Disneyland before the crowds arrive. Things are still fresh. The cafes are clean before the lunch crowds. It is as if you are walking into an alternate reality where messes aren’t made and people always get along.

I also noticed that the old Bombay store had a sign announcing that it had been leased. That must make the propertyowners very happy.

Of course, Neiman Marcus is still in process of coming to the old David M. Bryan location.

and Goings

The Chocolate Cafe is now closed. It must be hard to compete with a national coffee chain and a national dessert restaurant a block away even though you are 30 yards from the theater’ entrance.

Johnny Rockets’ old store is still closed on Mt. Diablo Boulevard. The tables and chairs are still inside but the sign out front has been removed.

A banner hanging from the Longs’ Drug store welcomed Elephant Pharmacy customers. The Elephant Pharmacy filed bankruptcy a few months ago, and has likely vacated their store.

Character of a City

While the shops and retailers in downtown Walnut Creek may change with time, the character of Walnut Creek does not have to change.

The character of a city is shaped by the character of the people that choose to live in a city, more than the character of the retailers in that city.

As long as honest, hard working, family loving, school supporting, community focused people continue to call Walnut Creek “home”, we won’t have to worry about Walnut Creek changing from the place we have come to love.

I think I will continue my Saturday morning walks, if only to get a better sense of the city I call “Home”.

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Filed Under: Contra Costa Real Estate, Walnut Creek

April 24, 2009 by Peter Maclennan Leave a Comment

Bay Area Real Estate News

Here are a couple of items from today’s Contra Costa Times.

First, in Circuits to seafood: New tenants plug into empty buildings the Contra Costa Times shares about the new uses for former Circuit City stores.

A Seafood City Asian market is due to a open in a shuttered Circuit City store in Concord, and another retailer is eyeing a closed Circuit City in Fremont, raising hopes that at least a few empty retail buildings in the East Bay could gain a fresh lease on life.

Second, in Bay Area rents decline, fueled by unemployment we learn:

Housing prices aren’t the only thing that’s falling in the Bay Area. So are apartment rents, but not nearly as much as the hard-hit housing market.

Still, the average asking rent in the nine-county Bay Area during the first quarter for apartment buildings with 50 or more units was $1,556, or a 1.4 percent drop from a year ago, said a report released Thursday by Novato-based RealFacts.

The occupancy rate fell 1.7 percent to 94.2 percent. The average rent applies to all rental units, ranging from studios to three-bedroom townhouses.

The loss of jobs – or the fear of losing jobs – is leading to lower occupancy rates that push down rents.

Deciphering the News

It is encouraging to know that some retailers are willing to expand in the current market. Seafood City is a supermarket for the Asian/Filipino communities.

As rents decline and vacancy increases multifamily values will decline as investors underwrite at lower income values.

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Filed Under: Bay Area Real Estate News, CA Real Estate

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