BTL vs Shares (Funds) vs Alternatives

BTL vs Shares (Funds) vs Alternatives

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simong800

Original Poster:

2,377 posts

108 months

Monday 28th November 2016
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I am after a bit of insight from the experts if I may! Apologies in advance for the long winded post.

I work for myself, small business with just my business partner and I. Money is fairly good (not sure if it is crude to go into specifics), but we work hard for it. In the office at 7.45am, finish up at 6.45pm etc.Homeowner, 30 y/old, marrying next year, no kids.

We have kept the business small on purpose, the idea of managing people, big overheads etc etc just doesn't interest me, I like being able to just do my job which I had done for years making other people money, but actually doing it for myself. However at some point there needs to be a retirement plan, and I had always thought it would be getting a few buy to lets. The idea of chucking £30k deposit into one a year seemed nice, build up a portfolio, mortgages paid off in 20 years time and retire with a mortgage free portfolio worth x amount generating y amount - easy.

However the more I look into it the more this seems unrealistic for many reasons;

- level of deposit needed, circa 30-40%, and less mortgage products available due to being self employed
- calibre of tenants if buying at £100k would perhaps mean chance of bad tenants are quite high
- new stamp duty/inability to offset mortgage interest for tax purposes
- potential time needed to be dedicated to it, for lower returns than investing the same amount of time into my day job

Currently I have a £20k portfolio of circa 10 funds, this has returned 20% ish over the past year according to Trustnet. I am in a position where I can realistically add say £20k-£40k p/annum to the portfolio. Currently put a nominal £500 p/month into a pension, reason for not contributing more is my intention to not be doing what I do every day until I am 65 or whatever the retirement age at the time is!

I suppose in summary I am trying to ascertain whether I am being short sighted in dismissing buy to let, or whether people feel there is still opportunity out there? It feels like I might have missed the boat on it (wouldn't have been in a position to consider it before now really) but just wanting to sanity check my theory.

And I was also keen to see if I had missed much by way of other alternatives, I suppose the likes of Funding Circle and LendInvest would be interesting for diversity.....

Thanks in advance for any insight.

simong800

Original Poster:

2,377 posts

108 months

Wednesday 30th November 2016
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Interesting comments here chaps, thanks. Many are as I expected and give further food for thought.

I am definitely not hands on and wouldn't have the time or any inclination to do any work myself at all. So any maintenance costs would be a definite factor on a BTL for me. If a wall needed painting there is zero point in me doing it when I could be in the office doing my day job which pays more than getting a wall painted costs if that makes sense. Which I suppose automatically puts me at a disadvantage.

I am in the 40% tax band too which is a big factor.

Ref Stocks and Shares, all my investments are and would continue to be in funds. So someone who knows a heap more than me is picking what the money is invested in, and it is invested across a huge range of companies offering diversity (some big, some small, different geographical areas etc etc). Definitely do appreciate there is still risk here though....

simong800

Original Poster:

2,377 posts

108 months

Wednesday 30th November 2016
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rufusgti said:
Well you will never make 20% in one year on a BTL, but then I suspect with stocks and shares you're just as likely to lose the 20% over another year at some time. As with either though you haven't made or lost anything until you sell.

With that in mind, and this is the way I see BTL. If I put down 30k on a 120k property, I have invested 30k. Yes, I'm liable for the mortgage, but I don't pay the mortgage, the tenants pay that. So the BTL has cost me so far 30k plus buying costs.
In 25 years, let's say the property hadn't gone up in value at all, still at 120k. There has been some on going costs over that period, but it should all be covered by the rent. So again, i'm not paying for that. At that point the mortgage is payed off and your 30k investment is bringing you in a significant income. Or you can sell and pocket the 120k minus selling costs and tax.

I can't answer this as I'm no expert in stocks and shares. But is it possible to put 30k in S&S and pull out 120k in 25 years? I genuinely don't know. I believe there's still going to be costs involved, I also believe it's not quite as stress free as people claim. I don't know anything about the tax implications either so that needs weighing up.

We can't really read the future on either so look at property and S&S over the last 25 years And pick your winner. But remember that even if your BTL has not increased in value even £1 in 25 years, you have still done extremely well. What happens if 25 years in the stock market proves to give you absolutely no profit? You then still just have 30k. Both are extremely unlikely but can you see how to a degree there's less risk with the BTL.

It does depend on your circumstances however. I'm in the building and maintenance industry. It's my day job, so when my BTL needs work it's just more of the day job. It's not a problem, sometimes a chore, but I know building maintenance inside out. I also bought my first BTL at 27, I'm now 36 and I probably won't buy any more. There's no point buying at 60 and hoping to be mortgage free at 85, that's no good. I know nothing about S&S so believe I'd be poor at it. That means paying people to run it. If you're clueless at property you will end up paying people to run and maintain it.

All my BTL costs are covered by rent. I mean every bit. They have cost me the deposits and nothing else. You need to do your homework and make sure rent covers all costs, all the time.
Being in the industry definitely helps, I fear that not being in it is potentially a disadvantage to the extent it almost makes it prohibitive when I actually think about some of the logistics.....thanks for highlighting this.

To answer your question on the performance of the stock market over 25 years, this article here suggests that £50k invested in the FTSE All Share 25 years ago (presumably with all dividends reinvested) would be worth £423k today. Which would be nice!

http://www.thisismoney.co.uk/money/investing/artic...

Doing as much reading as I can on it and I found this article particularly eye opening.

The fact you can now put £20k a year into an ISA (as of April) and have £20k a year invested in stocks and shares (either direct holdings or funds) totally sheltered from any tax is quite attractive.

simong800

Original Poster:

2,377 posts

108 months

Wednesday 30th November 2016
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drainbrain said:
Sorry, I deleted the post you quoted above.

BTL doesn't really work as nicely with leverage just now, unless it's on IO and a gamble on future value, or the leverage is tiny. Definitely now a game best played with a pot of cash. But it's only really in the shortest of terms that it needs carried, not to mention the world of buying and selling letting concerns where there's a tenant already in place.
Yes I was surprised at how high the "price of entry" is now in terms of deposit requirements. Did it always used to be 35-40% needed?

simong800

Original Poster:

2,377 posts

108 months

Wednesday 30th November 2016
quotequote all
drainbrain said:
Not that I'm against capital gain - far from it. But when inflation is built into the calculation then the gains can sometimes feel pretty poor. However, I've had a great few decades in btl and would certainly stick all my eggs in it again given the opportunity. Having said that, I've spent the last few years turning a largish leveraged portfolio (100's) into a small and unburdened one with a plan to reduce to 50 over the next 12 months and use some of the capital to diversify into financing redevelopment.

I'm no longer in the agency business but things seem to be becoming increasingly more negative from that perspective. Everything is becoming hugely overburdened with legislation and regulation. The latest thing in Scotland is compulsory regular checking for Legionella. I mean I ask you….Legionella! An agency now has to drag these things, like EPCertifying , Legionella checking, elec appliance checking etc in-house by having a staff member go on whatever training course is required to be able to carry out these functions which of course are then charged to the landlord. But agents want to market and manage properties, not spend their days (and resources) on fairly futile administration exercises that really are of little or no benefit to almost everyone.

Nice to see England following Scotland into banning the 'scam' type agency expenses. We're now in an era where there's no room for any extra costs in finding accommodation and agents really have to recognise that.
That's some interesting insight, and an impressive portfolio you've built!

When you say financing redevelopment, do you mean lending to builders in return for a share of profits when projects are completed? I imagine the return on this is better than BTL, within a shorter timeframe and with more guarantees?