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Condo Hotel
Rates of Return, Developers
Give Limited Information
Q: Why is it so
difficult to get information on rates of return when
you invest in a condo hotel?
A: You may not wish to hear my answer
to this, but developers are not permitted to sell
their properties in any way, shape or form that smells
of them selling the "investment." All they
can do is offer the "real estate" and the
"lifestyle."
These are guidelines set by the Securities
and Exchange Commission (SEC), and developers have
too much at stake to risk problems in marketing their
properties.
Therefore, most of them will not provide buyers any
information about expected rates of return, nor expected
occupancies or rental rates upon opening their projects.
In fact, some organizations won't
even allow their salespeople to answer the simple
question, "What is the rental split if I buy
a unit and I place it into the rental program?".
In the cases of a conversion property,
however, the developer can provide you with a rental
history that includes past occupancy rates and rental
prices. You then need to pick up the ball and do the
forecasting yourself.
I know that the math is very important to those people
who are buying a condo hotel primarily as an investment,
so I do wish I could offer precise numbers. Instead,
here's what I tell buyers.
Assuming that you buy a unit in a
property that has a good location, with full amenities,
and a well known franchise with a strong reservation
system, you can expect the unit's rental revenue to
cover the cost of your monthly maintenance, real estate
taxes and all, or at least most of your debt service,
and possibly, give you a single digit return above
that.
From my experience and from everything
that I have seen, read and heard about condo hotels,
the returns that can be expected are in the range
of 2%-7% per annum.
But if you could get just a 2%-3%
return on investment, plus 16% appreciation, which
has been typical of the South Florida market, for
example, for the past five years and counting, now
the condo hotel concept sounds more appealing.
Remember, it's hassle-free ownership.
You're the landlord without any of the "landlordly"
responsibilities. Now the condo hotel concept sounds
more appealing.
Finally, here's the best part. You
get a couple of weeks a year in which you are not
paying $500 a night to have access to a luxurious
five-star vacation home in a premium location. Total
all these plusses up, and you might be looking at
a legitimate 20% return, before factoring in any tax
advantages. If this still does not sound like a sufficient
return, then condo hotels are not right for you.
The above question was submitted via e-mail by
a visitor to www.condohotelcenter.com.
The answer was prepared by Joel Greene, a licensed
real estate broker with Condo Hotel Center which specializes
in the sale of condo hotel units and fractional ownerships
in private residence clubs.
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