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Investing and Your
Portfolio
Since the exponential expansion of products in the 1980s,
investments now come in a bewildering variety. Sorting through
the technical details and balancing the risks against potential
gain of any given mix is a job for professionals. But short of
gaining an advanced degree, the educated investor can still
improve the odds by following some simple guidelines.
Any ethical professional will insist that the first rule of
investing is to diversify your portfolio. Stocks, bonds and
other savings instruments usually form one leg of a many
pronged platform. Generally no more than 30% of available
investment funds should be allocated to any one category.
Direct commodity investing is usually safe only for the savvy
investor who has time to closely monitor the market. Whether
gold, oil, or other hard good, the commodities market forms the
most volatile and risky ventures. Options, commodity oriented
mutual funds and other indirect investments are less risky, but
still far from wise for the average person.
For those who want to include 'paper' in a well-rounded
investment scheme, real estate offers several opportunities.
REITs (Real Estate Investment Trusts), options, property
oriented mutual funds, and other mortgage backed securities are
available in a dizzying array.
REITs are entities that invest in real estate related assets,
such as shopping centers, office buildings, hotels, and
mortgages secured by real estate. REITs fall into one of three
categories. Equity REITs, which invest in or own real estate
and make money for investors from the rents they collect.
Mortgage REITs which lend money to owners and developers or
invest in financial instruments secured by mortgages on real
estate and Hybrid REITs which are a combination of the two. To
qualify, a company has to pay 90% of its taxable income to
shareholders every year and invest at least 75% of its assets
in real estate and generate 75% or more of its gross income
from investments in or mortgages on real property.
Options are an alternative form of offer. A potential buyer
offers a sum, 'an option consideration', in order to
effectively take a property off the market for a period of
time. Option offers generally run anywhere from a few hundred
to a few thousand dollars, but higher or lower amounts are
possible. Some options bind one party only, some are called
'bilateral', requiring each to adhere to contractually
specified conditions. Conditions involve contingencies around
inspections, financing, and always have a time limit.
Every deal is a little different and, of course, if the option
isn't exercised by the specified time limit, the optionee — the
potential buyer — forfeits the money. Risky, but potentially
rewarding, since you've effectively eliminated alternative
bidders. One advantage to the optioner is the time to find a
buyer for the property itself, then selling the option. This
eliminates the need to pay for transactions costs, keeps debt
low, etc. Do your homework, first.
To fill out the other part of your portfolio, nothing beats the
'real' in real estate. Historically, buying and selling real
property, or even long-term owning, has proven one of the most
profitable, least risky investments available. Observe
carefully the words 'least risky'. That doesn't mean 'zero
risk' — there's no such thing in investing. Prices can always
go up or down, relative to other goods and investment
channels.
Be willing to get educated about the market and the law. Make
purchases while minimizing costs like agent fees, repairs,
interest rates, etc. Have sufficient cash and other liquid
assets to be able to hold until the time to sell is right.
Follow these guidelines and you'll never have any reason to
regret making real estate investing a major portion of your
portfolio.
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