Wednesday, April 22, 2009

Leverage

Now would be a good time to talk about leverage. You know, that term that everyone has talked about for so long. It is easy to talk about leverage when everyone is doing well in the market. It is actually a joy to talk about how much leverage you have in the market and how well you have positioned yourself.

But we are just getting to the point where we are seeing a few people out there that understand what true leverage is and what the correct ratios are. For those few out there that have been through this sort of downturn in the market and actually learned from it, this is an awesome time to be a real estate investor.

Consider that if you knew where to look and what indicators to keep an eye out for, you could have seen this coming a mile away. For anyone who has a surplus of cash and is not hemorrhaging right now, it is a buyers market like nothing we have seen in 80 years. I have been saying that THIS is the real opportunity, not the past 8-10 years. This is going to go on for a while too, so don't fret. The key is to understand what your ratios are and to understand the meaning behind the numbers.

One of the worst things we can do as investors is to let the banks tell us what is acceptable and what is not acceptable. Dive into your numbers and look at the big picture, you can still be conservative and make a killing. Too many of us (yes, I have been caught up in it as well) were overly aggressive and we are lucky if we learn from our mistakes.

If we are smart, we can learn and grow our portfolios much larger than before the market toppled. The key is that we have to be disciplined enough to conduct our own debrief analysis to figure out where we went wrong and put personal investing policies in place that we actually adhere to. Discipline, discipline, discipline.

Then focus on gaining leverage. Because if this ever happens again, you will definitely want to be ready for it. Shame on all of us if we let this happen again and worse, if we are not leveraged properly!

Robert D. Cass

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