09 Mar 2008 03:50:23 | Richard A. Chapo
Owning investment property is a tremendous wealth building
strategy. Thousands upon thousands of individuals have amassed
great wealth by investing in rental properties.
Unfortunately, few investment property owners learn how to
leverage equity in a way that maximizes tax deductions while
creating and locking in equity gains. Instead, they leave
themselves open to price fluctuations in the residential
property market. These fluctuations can wipe out or severely
reduce equity positions in property.
Housing Boom To End?
There is little doubt we are coming to the end of a huge boom
market in residential properties. For the last four years,
properties have appreciated at unheard of rates. The question,
of course, is what happens when the market cools off? Will we
simply see a price plateau or an actual drop in prices? While
nobody is sure, the clear consensus is property owners should
move to preserve equity while they can.
Protecting Equity Gains
Protecting equity gains in your investment property requires
careful planning. This leveraging strategy is fairly simple, but
can sound complex. Please keep in mind this is just an
introduction to the investment property tax strategy. You will
need to contact us to learn more.
The investment property tax strategy protects your equity gains
by separating and leveraging them. The leveraging process is
best explained with an example.
Scenario 1 – Without Tax Strategy
Assume you purchased a rental property in 1999 for $250,000 with
nothing down. As of July 2005, the combination of loan payments
and appreciation has resulted in a gain of $250,000. You have
amassed wealth, but all of it is at risk. If prices drop twenty
percent over the next year, you will lose $100,000 of your
equity in the rental property.
Scenario 2 – With Tax Strategy
We are going to use the same exact scenario. It is July 2005,
you have $250,000 in rental property equity, but all of it is
risk. You decide to implement the investment property tax
strategy and the following occurs.
Our goal is to protect the $250,000 in gain on the rental
property while also maximizing tax reductions. The first step is
to refinance the property with, typically, an interest only
loan. A percentage of the equity gain is taken out of the
property and placed into an equity index insurance product. The
equity percentage is arrived at by determining the payment
amount you can afford on the loan. Typically, it is tailored to
match your current loan payment amount.
Going back to our scenario, what happens if property prices pull
back 20% over the next year? You do not suffer the loss of
$100,000 because the gain is sitting in your equity index
insurance product. Essentially, it is a wash and you have
protected the capital gains while capturing a stock market-based
rate of return.
Ah, but it gets better.
Equity Index Insurance
The investment grade insurance product isn’t just any policy.
Instead, the policy we use is tied to a stock market index. What
if the stock market suffers a loss? Not to worry, this policy
carries a guarantee that you will never lose a dollar, even if
the market crashes. If the stock market did crash, the policy
would simply credit you with nominal growth for the year in
question. In all other years, the policy would grow with the
stock market. On top of all of this, the money in the insurance
product grows tax-free.
So, what has been accomplished? First, you have protected your
rental property equity gains from home price fluctuations.
Second, you have leveraged your equity into two growth channels,
the stock market and appreciating house prices. Third, you have
converted taxable growth [property appreciation] into tax-free
growth [insurance].
With housing markets ready to cool down, this strategy
effectively locks in your profits. Preserving equity gains
should be a primary goal of any investment property owner.
About Author :
Richard A. Chapo is with http://www.businesstaxrecovery.com -
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