Was that House a Good Investment? The Answer may not be so
obvious
I get asked all the time about housing as an investment, and as
I talk with people it is amazing how differently people look at
it. Forget investment property for the moment and consider how
we should evaluate the investment performance of our own homes.
I am surprised how many people don't know the difference between
"enterprise value", which is the sales price of a home (debt
plus equity), and "equity value", which is what is left at the
end of the day when you sell your home and pay off the mortgage.
In determining whether this was a good investment for you, it is
only the latter calculation that matters.
Most people simply look at how much the value of their home has
appreciated since they bought it, and compare it to what they
paid. Let's say someone bought a home for $500,000 a year
earlier and their neighbor's identical home just sold for
$550,000. Simple math would suggest a potential 10% return in
one year (a $50,000 profit on a $500,000 purchase). This, while
straightforward, is not an accurate calculation for several
reasons.
First, it is critical to factor in transaction costs on the sale
of your home and deduct them from the gross sales price to see
how much of the sales price you have left. These include what it
might cost you to prepare the house for sale (painting,
landscaping, staging in some cases, etc.), as well as real
estate commissions and other transaction related costs. Let's
say in our hypothetical example our seller would invest $10,000
in sprucing the place up for sale, and the real estate
commission plus other closing costs on the hypothetical $550,000
sale might be another $33,000 (say 6% of the sales price). Thus
that $550,000 sales price results in only $507,000 after these
transaction-related costs, implying a mere 1.4% return ($7,000
profit on a $500,000 purchase price), right? Wrong again.
To calculate your investment return you need to compare your
profit (or loss) to the equity you have invested, not the entire
home price. Let's say you put 5% down to buy the home, which
equated to $25,000. Your $7,000 profit in this case actually
represents a very attractive 28% return on your investment in
only one year. One way smart homeowners can increase their
returns is to appreciate how much the return on their invested
equity can be enhanced by saving say 1% in the agent's listing
commission. In the example above, a 5% sales commission vs. 6%
would have increased our hypothetical seller's return on their
$25,000 of equity investment from the 28% we just calculated to
an astonishing 50% ($12,500 profit on the $25,000 investment).
A couple of basic takeaways from this: First, make sure to
factor in all costs of a transaction. Second, understand the
difference between the aggregate home value and the equity you
have invested in the home, which is what impacts your true
economic return. Third, appreciate the impact sales-related
costs can have on your return. While a $5,000 commission
difference seems relatively insignificant in the context of a
$550,000 home sale, it is VERY significant in relation to the
equity investment in your home, which is the basis of
determining your return on your investment.