Real Estate Investor Magazine South Africa March 2014 | Page 30

FINANCE BY KOOS DU TOIT Buy-to-let: financial perspectives To gear or not to gear? I n wea lth creation circles, gea ring or leveraging is - somewhat tongue-in-thecheek - known as “using Other People’s Money”, because that is exactly what it is: borrowing the money required to invest in an asset, using the asset being acquired itself as security for the loan. In real life To illustrate how powerful gearing is in creating wealth, let’s compare two investment scenarios. Scenario 1 Let’s say an investor invests R500 000 directly in an entry-level buy-to-let property, with monthly expenses of R1 450 (rates and taxes, levies, management fees and vacancy buffer) and rents this property out for R5 000 per month, for a total net monthly income of R3 550 (R5 000 income less R1 450 expenses). The annual net (after expenses) income from this property would be R42 600 (R3 550 x 12 months) which translates into an 8.52% return (R42 600 income / R500 000 invested * 100) over 12 months. If the property also increased in value during the year by 8%, this would produce a further R40 000 growth on the R500 000 investment, bringing the total return to R82 600 (net income at R42 600 and capital growth at R40 000) for the year - a tidy 16.52% return in the first year. If inflation at 5% is factored in, the ‘real’ return would be 11.52% in the first year. And, as the rental increases each year and as house price growth recovers, the returns become more even impressive with each passing year. 28 March 2014 SA Real Estate Investor Scenario 2 But what if an investors does not invest R500 000 in the property from his/her own pocket, but rather “gears” the investment, obtaining a R500 000 bond on a property? Of course, the bond would have to be repaid each month but, remember, the property is generating a monthly income, which will cover most of the bond repayment amount. In our example, the bond repayment is R4 661 (based on a 9.5% interest rate over 20 years). As in the scenario above, the net (after expenses) monthly income is R3 550. This means that the investor would have to invest R1 111 per month from his/her own pocket to cover the shortfall between the R3 550 net rental income and the R4 661 bond repayment. So, the investor is not receiving a rental income from the property and is, in fact, investing R1 111 a month from his/her own pocket. But keep in mind that in this second scenario the investor did not invest a R500 000 lump sum from his/her own pocket as was the case in the first scenario. In fact, the total outof-pocket investment over the 12 months by the investor in this scenario is just R13 328, compared to the R500 000 total out-of-pocket investment in the first scenario. A lso remember that this shortfall will decrease each year as the rental increases, and at the end of the third year, this property will breakeven (ie the income will cover all SUBSCRIBE the expenses) and from the fourth year, the property will start generating a monthly profit. The impact of gearing on ROI So what is the impact of gearing on the return on investment? Because the investor sacrifices the income from this property during the first three years to part-cover the bond repayments, the income cannot be included in the return on investment calculation until the fourth year. However, during the first year the property increases in value by 8%, and this will produce a R40 000 return on the R13 328 out o