- Nov 16, 2001
- 3,949
- 1,197
Do a little research and you'll see that many companies have already started moving back to Detroit. I know Quicken Loans made a big push a couple years ago to revitalize the city and other manufacturing companies have also used some of the skill already in the city to establish an American presence.The whole rental stuff could work in cities like New Orleans where they have something to bring people there, but literally Detroit has nothing to bring in outsiders thus the rental properties imo will only be for the little people already there AND you aren't going to make killing being that you cant charge too much for rent AND I would think there would be higher than usual overhead cost to maintain the properties compared to other cities.Not necessarily. Market appreciating deals a lot with supply and demand while property appreciating deals with the demand for an area. If people see that values are going up then they're more likely to buy since it will be cheaper in the long run. In an area like Detroit where home prices have been declining for the past 50 years due to people leaving the city, there's not much incentive to actually buy knowing that the money you put down and are paying on the home are going in to thin air. Asset appreciation/inflation ultimately leads to more liquidity in the market because people are willing to buy and sell that asset class. In Detroit, people haven't been willing to buy for decades leading to the decline of everything. If investors are willing to purchase properties, builders will be willing to build new homes too.
It's not like there is anything inherently bad with Detroit. They just based their whole economy on one industry and once that industry moved, so did everyone else who was able to. Any successful city or economy knows you must have more than one product in case times get bad you have something else to fall back on. Investors call this a diversified portfolio.
IMO Renting out properties in the hood of a city that has something going for it is different than renting out properties in a city that is low key a ghost town lol.
No, you won't be able to charge too much for rent, that's true. But considering properties there are dirt cheap you can recover your expenses relatively quickly. A typical breakeven for a rental should be about 10 years in most cases. If your rent can make that back in 5 years, everything after that is gravy and you're coming out ahead after that and can cash flow new properties and let the snowball continue. It's all based on doing it in volume if you can't charge much for rent. Like I said earlier, you can literally buy up blocks of homes for CHEAP. Let's say you pay $50k for a house and rent it out for $500/mo. (Many houses in Detroit could be bought for much less as of a couple years ago when I was managing those REO's). That's about 9-10 years to recoup your $50k, have a paid for property, and come out ahead $400/mo. (saving the extra $100 for emergencies)