Category Archives: Investment

Thinking of raising your tenant’s rent?

If you are a small time landlord, you will want to read the NYT article about calculating your tenant’s rent. The takeaway is while a landlord may even live in the same house as a tenant and may know their tenant personally, they should still try to keep the rent as close as possible to the market. One owner who happened to purchase his properties years ago when prices were low, passed that savings on to his tenants if they didn’t bother him. Holding on to a good tenant is always wise.

Several years ago, I had a rental apartment on the Upper west side and charged slightly lower than the market rate to rent the apartment quickly which I did. I raised the rent when I could about 2-3% per year to stay close to market rent. Then when the rents decreased, the tenant who always paid on time and never bothered me, wanted to leave to reduce her monthly costs. I asked her how much and she said $150 and I reduced the rent. That saved me thousands of dollars to paint and also money that I would have lost due to vacancy. That tenant stayed 7 years from first lease to when I sold the same apartment.

 

Thinking of buying a Manhattan condo for investment?

If you are thinking of buying a Manhattan condo for investment with the objective to hold for rental income, here is one simple tip that is often overlooked.

In general, after paying common charges and taxes, you will gain an approximate 2% return annual. So an apartment that you acquire for $2 million will yield approximately $40,000 in net income. In some cases, you might have an even lower return.

One type of property that you might consider is an apartment with enough space to add an additional bedroom.  With the right design, you can rent an additional  bedroom/den for a higher income just due to the increase in bedroom count.  I had one listing where they converted the dining room to a 2nd bedroom and as a result we were able to rent the apartment for $4,200 whereas similar size apartments without the conversion were renting for around $3500. This made the return on the apartment based on the current market value closer to 3%.

You will need to see if the layout will allow it. Usually a space will need to have a minimum of 750-800 sqft to accomplish this but it will also depend on the current layout. A dining room or a dining area will be an ideal area to make the additional bedroom as long as there is a window and enough space.

With more people than ever sharing apartments and families remaining in Manhattan, this a nice way to gain an additional rental income and increase your yield on the property.

 

Subway Inn property in contract to Chinese investor

The former home of the dive bar- Subway Inn is reportedly in contract according to Bloomberg, for $300 million. Kuafu Properties LLC will close on the purchase from the World Wide Group in October. They plan to add about 60k sqft of retail space in a ground-up project. The same New York based Chinese firm has also purchased One MIMA Tower, a luxury rental on West 42nd street which it will convert to condos. They are also the purchasers behind the property at East 86th street and Lexington avenue which currently houses a NYSC.

 

Thinking of buying a Manhattan apartment for an investment?

I was reading a recent article and someone commented that NYC property is like a Swiss bank account for investors because it’s considered so low risk and certainly will go up in the future. But where do you buy and for how much? Should you get a loan or pay CASH? Here’s some advice that may help you to decide.

So let’s say you have $1 million just as an example and you want to invest. What are your options assuming you will not live there? Click through for guidelines.

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