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Getting out of a bad situation....

Last post 10-14-2007 4:40 PM by ReneeC. 2 replies.
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  • 10-03-2007 3:30 PM

    • ReneeC
    • Top 200 Contributor
    • Joined on 10-03-2007
    • Posts 2

    Getting out of a bad situation....

    Hello! I own a townhouse I can't sell, and am trying to decide among some bad options. I've followed a job to another city and have the house rented after being unable to sell after 9 months on the market last year. The rental hasn't worked out all that well either, due to the long-distance nature of the relationship. I am trying to decide between selling to an investor, working with a property management company to rent the property, or just letting the bank foreclose.

    I owe $85,000, the tax value has fallen to $94,000, and potential realistic selling price without costly repairs is about $88,000. The investors who've looked at it want to pay me $50,000 cash and they'll pay closing costs. If I rent it out, it will cost me $230 per month (difference between my costs and what I can rent it for, plus the property management company costs) plus any potential repairs. It will cost $1000 to $1200 to initiate the relationship with the property management company, plus of course the carry cost of the property if it does not rent quickly (I estimate the carry cost at $1200 per month, including minimal utilities as per the property management company agreement).

    If I sell at a loss, that money is going to come from my 401K.

    What would you do with this situation?!

    thank you!!!

    Renee Callahan
     

  • 10-05-2007 11:24 AM In reply to

    Re: Getting out of a bad situation....

        Very tough decision. Reminds me of the situation many condo owners in Houston and Dallas found themselves in during the late 80's real estate bust in Texas. I remember situations where reporters we wanted to hire couldn't take the job because they would have to declare personal bankruptcy in order to leave their Houston condo. Similarly, some of our reporters wrote hefty checks in order to sell their Dallas condos and take a new position in the Washington bureau.

        Here are your choices as I understand them:

    1) Get closure and take an immediate loss of $35,000 by selling to an investor for $50,000.

    2) Take a chance and hold the property, vacant, for sale. Taking an eventual loss of about $10,000 plus holding costs. (This assumes you sell for about $81,000.) outlays while holding. If it takes 12 months, that would be another $14,400, for a total of $24,400.)

    3) Rent the condo through a management company and lose $230 a month plus vacancy time. That would involve a loss of about $4,000 a year ($2,760 in monthly shortfall. if rented plus one month vacant. The loss, of course, could be greater if vacancy and repair expenses are higher. Even so, it would be more than 8 years before your total loss would exceed what you will lose immediately by selling to the investors.

       During that 8 years you would have a tax deduction in the amount of the loss plus depreciation. Depending on your income you might also be able to continue making contributions to your 401k and you MIGHT benefit from some increase in rentals and condo values.

       If the immediate sale loss was smaller, I would be tempted to take it and have done with it. But it is very large. So I would think seriously about holding the condo and accepting the monthly cash flow drain, knowing that it was no larger than a payment for an inexpensive car. That's easy for me to say, of course, since I don't know your income, credit card debt, or commitments you've made in your new location.

        Good luck.
     

    Scott
     

  • 10-14-2007 4:40 PM In reply to

    • ReneeC
    • Top 200 Contributor
    • Joined on 10-03-2007
    • Posts 2

    Re: Getting out of a bad situation....

    Thank you for the answer, I appreciate it. I've been leaning toward keeping it. The uncertainty regarding potential major repairs and/or lengthy vacancies is a little disconcerting, but we can afford the $230 monthly loss, and as you say, it could be years before that loss gets as large the loss we'd take by selling now.

    thanks again!

    :) renee 

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