Tag Archives: rental yield

How to Maximize Your Property’s Rental Yields

When I raise my rental income, I do it with my eyes closed. The minute I look in my tenant’s sad, watery eyes, I end up feeling like a war criminal. Or maybe I’m just lying, and won’t admit I’m a spineless wuss who backs off when they threaten to “leave and set fire to this dump”. (Hint: I go there with a fire extinguisher). But both ways suck, so how do you maximize your rental yields?

So for another $500 a month, the front door will actually lock?

The Three Methods

There are three methods for a landlord to maximize rental yields.
These are:

  1. Raise Rental Income (Difficult)
  2. Decrease Vacancies (Somewhat challenging)
  3. Decrease Overheads (Easiest of the three)

The third method should be constantly reviewed. You want to be keeping overheads down all the time. Here’s some pointers on each of the three:

1. Raising Rental Income

There’s plenty of ways to raise rental income.  Exactly zero of them are easy.

It usually involves high capital expenditure, because it means splurging on upgrades and extras. And there’s no guarantee what the returns will be. Some ways to raise rental income are:

Just Raise the Rental

Straight up ask the tenants for more money. Because you’re in this to make money, not friends.

Before doing this, check rental rates in surrounding properties. You might get away with charging more than other landlords, if you have the right justifications. But frankly, even charging 10% more is a major challenge. Getting money from tenants is like pulling teeth from a live tiger.

If you don’t have time to research and bargain, consider getting a property agent to do it for you.  At the very least, get them to run a rental appraisal.

Interior Design

The right renovations could raise rental income. But this is hard to quantify. I can’t tell you, for instance, that marble counter-tops will raise your rental income by $X per month.

Most renovation packages cost about $30,000. If the designer has an unpronounceable or vaguely French name, it’s probably triple that. So even if renovations do raise your rental income, it might be a while before the rent covers the design costs.

I asked property investor Charlie Sng about renovations:

“You can raise your rental income by providing a fully furnished unit. So go for an inexpensive design, one that provides all the tables, chairs, cupboards and whatnot.  But don’t go overboard. No point paying $100,000 for a top designer, because there’s a cap to how much rent you can charge. I think a lot can be done with $20,000.”

Charlie says a “nicer” unit could have higher rental rates; up to 10% higher than surrounding properties. But again, no guarantees.

Upgrade to Match Tenant Needs

Protip: Avoid tenants who use words like “splatter-proof”.

You can do this if you know your tenants’ demographic (e.g. Are your tenants mostly students in a nearby University? Expat white collar workers? Blue collar workers?)

Try to include features that demographic will appreciate. Property agent Marcus Seet says:

“Students tend to appreciate things like Wi-Fi or cable channels. Retirees not so much. So if I know I have good catchment for that demographic, I might consider bearing the cost of such things.

In the last unit I rented out, the owner left his Xbox and games library there for the student tenant, which was much appreciated!

I might be able to charge higher rental rates, which more than compensates for the small extras. At the very least, it might reduce vacancies.”

2. Decrease Vacancy Periods

Vacancies create huge dents in rental yield. Fortunately, these aren’t common in Singapore; we’re land scarce, so most landlords have hordes of prospective tenants.

But some people, you know…they can’t find a heat stroke in a desert. So these methods are for them:

Lower the Rent

It might seem paradoxical. But let’s put it this way:

Say your property’s rental value is $4,500 a month, but you can only get tenants at $4,000 a month. Maybe nearby construction work lowered its value. So you lose $500 a month, and that sucks.

But if you insist on charging the full rate, and get no tenants, you’re losing $4,500 a month. A single vacant month would do more damage than nine months of undercharging. So while it hurts to lower the rent, it’s worse if you don’t.

Brace yourself for the occasional need to do it.

Maintenance is Key

Never skimp on maintenance. Charlie Sng explains why:

“I can tell you that if a place looks like the dog house, even if you lower the rent tenants will not want it.  If I offer you cheap rent, but the place is run down, the taps are rusty, the toilet is disgusting… will you take it? If you are like most tenants, you will say forget it, I rather spend more and be comfortable. They have to sleep there you know! I find the most important things are the front door, working power outlets, the air-con, and simple cleanliness. Every year I will re-polish the surfaces, and I don’t allow for any cracked tiles. If you don’t spend to maintain, you won’t even have tenants. What rental yield?”

Charlie adds that older resale flats, despite their good location, tend to have higher maintenance needs. Newer units require fewer replacements and upgrades.

If you’re renting out a condo, you’ll need to evaluate the management committee.

3. Decrease Overheads

The lower your home loan repayments, the higher your rental yield. You might consider refinancing into a cheaper home loan, especially if you foresee vacancies or drops in rental value.  Another way to lower overheads is to control maintenance costs.

For example, using paint instead of wallpaper: If the wallpaper peels, and you can’t find something similar, you’ll have to strip it all off the walls and lay a new pattern. With paint, it’s cheap to paint over peeling patches.

Likewise, using wider tiles can mean less grouting (the spaces between tiles) to clean. For more such information, raise your maintenance concerns to a contractor or an Interior Designer.

Source : Yahoo

 

Alexis@Alexandra hits $1,806 psf in sub-sale

When Alexis@Alexandra was launched in early 2009 by EC Prime, a joint venture between boutique developers Fission Group and Yi Kai Group, all the units were snapped up within three days.

Average prices then were between $850 and $1,100 psf, which were considered high for the area. The apartments were mainly of the shoebox variety, with typical one-bedroom units measuring 388 sq ft and two-bedroom apartments starting from 527 sq ft. Such units were priced in the $420,000 to $840,000 range, which proved attractive to homebuyers because of their affordability. Purchasers of the 293 units at Alexis, a six-storey residential block sitting on a commercial podium, are expected to receive their keys soon, as the Temporary Occupation Permit (TOP) is expected to be issued this month. The condominium is considered to be a significant shoebox development, and one of the first to be completed. It will also prove the viability of shoebox apartments as an investment, according to property consultants.

Located along Alexandra Road, the freehold Alexis is within walking distance of the Queenstown MRT station. There were three sub-sales at the development between April 17 and 23, based on caveats lodged with URA Realis. Two of them were for one-bedroom units of 388 and 398 sq ft, while the third was for a 1,033 sq ft, two-bedroom duplex apartment. The 398 sq ft, one-bedroom unit, which is on the third floor, changed hands for $700,000 ($1,758 psf).

This is a 60% increase from its original transaction price of $442,000 ($1,110 psf) in March 2009. The other one-bedroom unit, at 388 sq ft, was also sold for $700,000 ($1,806 psf). The seller had paid $443,000 ($1,143 psf) for the fourth floor unit in March 2009 and hence saw a capital appreciation of 58%. The $1,806 psf achieved for the unit is close to the all-time-high of $1,808 psf achieved in January this year, when 398 sq ft unit was sold for $720,000.

Meanwhile, the 1,033 sq ft, two-bedroom duplex apartment, which is on the sixth floor, changed hands for $1.52 million ($1,471 psf). This is the second time the unit has changed hands in a sub-sale. The previous transaction was in August 2010, when it was sold for $1.29 million ($1,248 psf). The first buyer paid $1.07 million ($1,038 psf) for the unit when it was launched. The majority of the buyers of Alexis, even in the secondary market, continue to be those with HDB addresses.

This is in line with a March report by Nomura Research that says those with HDB addresses make more than 50% of buyers of such shoebox apartments, with the majority buying for investment. Lynda Lim, a marketing director at ERA Realty, reckons one-bedroom apartments at Alexis could fetch a monthly rental of $2,000, or $5 to $6 psf.

The monthly rental for a master bedroom of an HDB flat in the Alexandra area, near the Queenstown MRT station, is already $900 to $1,500,” she says. Tenants who have expressed interest in Alexis’ shoebox units are mainly students and single expatriates from the US, Europe, China, Indonesia and India, observes Lim. Based on the current transacted prices and rental rates, the gross rental yield for shoebox units at Alexis works out to 3.4% per annum, instead of the 5% to 6% that investors expect. The yield could come under further pressure with increased competition as new supply enters the market next year, says Lim.

In the neighbourhood of Alexis, further down Alexandra Road, is the 775-unit The Anchorage, a freehold condo developed by Frasers Centrepoint. The property is integrated with Anchorpoint, which features F&B outlets and shops, and is also directly opposite IKEA. Built 15 years ago, the units at The Anchorage are large, with studio apartments starting from 818 sq ft, two-bedroom units from 1,044 sq ft, three-bedroom units from 1,378 sq ft and four-bedroom units from 2,077 sq ft. Given its large apartments, The Anchorage has traditionally been popular with expatriate families, says Lim.

Recently, a 1,765 sq ft, three-bedroom unit was sold for $2.15 million ($1,218 psf). The last time the unit changed hands was in 2003, when the economy was in the doldrums. It was sold for just $970,000 ($549 psf). According to rental listings in propertyguru.com.sg, three-bedroom units at The Anchorage have asking rentals of about $5,000, or $2.80 psf per month. “Due to the units’ generous size, the monthly rentals are higher than those at Alexis but lower in terms of rental psf, as Alexis is located closer to the Queenstown MRT station,” says Lim.

Source: TheEdge – 17 May 2012