Tuesday, October 7, 2014

Make Money Investing For Passive Income

One of the easiest way to generate additional income for yourself is to invest in the stock market. Depending on how much time you spent researching and analysing the stocks of companies, it could be passive or active income. To me, it's still considered passive income as I only have to research on the stocks once and review it every quarterly when the financial results are released. Sometimes there may be other announcements in between but those don't really take up too much of my time.

Most people invest in stocks to sell it off at a higher price and earn a profit. However, there are some other people who invest in stocks for income. This is a slow way to grow wealth but has worked well for many people. Another way to invest for passive income is to buy a property and rent it out. In this way, you receive a monthly income from the rental collected. However, the problem is buying a property is expensive especially in Singapore. If we were to buy a private condominium, the down payment is already 20% which means it could be $200,000 for a $1 Million dollars condominium. How many of us actually have that kind of cash to begin with?

Investing in stocks seems to be a more practical way for a start. So how do we go about investing for passive income?


Beware the temptation of high yields/dividends

When investing for income, we like to see good dividends which translates into high yields on our investment. Imagine if the yield is 10%, every $10,000 invested will give you $1000. It is really tempting to go for high yields. However, as investors who invest for income, even though high yields seems attractive, we should not jump straight into in.

Jumping straight into a high yield stock is like jumping into an ocean without knowing if its water is shark infested. It all seem good from the outside but if we look deeper, there may be dangers lurking ahead. A company which pay out high dividends have to get the money from somewhere. It can be paid from its income or it can be paid from its existing cash.

There are a few questions we need to ask ourselves when investing into stocks for passive income.

  1. Where does the company pay its dividends from?
  2. Are the dividends sustainable? Will the company continue to grow?
  3. What's the trend of its past dividend payouts? Is it increasing or decreasing year by year?

Since we're investing for income, we want that income to be sustainable and even better if its increasing yearly. Look at the company's business structure for clues on where they derive its income. If income is not stable, most likely the high dividends are not sustainable as well. This is especially so for REITS where their income is derived from rental collected.


Be a lazy landlord by investing into REITS

A REIT, also known as a real estate investment trust, has a portfolio of properties which they rent out to collect income. Buying a share of the REIT makes you a shareholder of the many properties that it has. For example, if you buy the shares of Capitamall or Suntec, then you actually become a shareholder and own part of the shopping malls you see at City Hall, Tampines, Jurong, Woodlands and many other parts of Singapore. Some of these Reits have properties in other parts of the world too.

The rental collected is distributed to all the many other shareholders and each will receive a portion of the income according to the number of shares they own. Reits listed in Singapore typically pay a range of 5-8% in dividends. If dividend remains constant, the lower the price you buy a share of the Reit for, the higher the expected dividend yield will be. The best thing is you don't have to manage the property to get the rental. The Reit manages it for you.



Reits own assets which are mostly properties. If we can buy a Reit at its fair value to its asset or better still at a lower value than its asset, then it may be a good investment. Think of it this way. When you're buying a house in this particular estate and you realise the house is selling at 20% cheaper than the neighbour who stays beside you, is it a good deal? Of course its a good deal which should be kept secret from your neighbour when you move in. This is buying at a lower value to its asset.

Therefore, buying a Reit below its asset value is much better than buying above its asset value. If we buy below its asset value, we're buying it at a discount. The net asset shows the total assets a Reit has. Divide this amount by the number of common shares, we get the net asset value (NAV) per share. If a Reit's NAV per share is $1 and we buy it at 50cents, we're buying it at a 50% discount. This NAV figure is mostly provided by the company in its annual report.


Watch debt like a hawk

Debt is a powerful force. We can use debt to buy a penthouse at Sentosa cove and everyone will think you're rich. But in actual fact, you do not have the actual money to own it. Reits also use debt to buy some of their properties. It may not be a bad thing as long as they don't stay it it or leave it vacant. It has to be rented out to other people so they can collect rental every month.

Renting out your Sentosa cove apartment may make you a lot of money but the problem comes when you can't find any tenants to rent it out to. Without tenants, you lose your income and still have to pay the debt (monthly housing loan) every month. If you still can't find tenants and you don't have money any more, you'll be in deep trouble. This is similar for Reits. If they can't find tenants and their debt is very high and they don't have much cash, it'll be like a bomb just waiting to explode.


Passive income for financial independence

In our early days of investing, the dividends received should be reinvested to let your money compound over the years. Once your dividend income (passive income) surpasses your monthly expenses, you've reach financial independence. If you're still working, you can now save 100% of your take home pay and just spend using the passive income. Now, you can choose to work or not to work. Now, you can choose to do the stuffs you're passionate about.

Investing for passive income can make you money for as long as you live. If you buy a property and rent out over the years, you would have got back all your capital after some time and still be able to collect rent as long as there are tenants. If you invest in shares of companies, you also get back all your capital after some time and this company still continues to pay you as long as its still around and listed on the stock exchange. A slow way to grow money but this patience will definitely pay off after a period of time.

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14 comments:

  1. Hi SGYI,

    Nice article. I am also starting to get started with REITs by first understanding the basics.

    Keep up with the great post.

    Cheers!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Hi Richard,

      Reits is a good way to generate passive income but we have to buy at the right price. Its the same with investing in property. Pick the right location and the right price. If price is too high, returns will be lower.

      Delete
  2. Hi, I came across your blog while searching for some financial information. It drew me to read further . Thanks for explaining in layman terms. It makes it simple to understand. I was thinking of getting back to stock investment again but was hesitant because of my past bad experience of burning my fingers. Probably 10 years back. I hope to get some light from you and your blog. Thanks for your well written posts.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Hi Yvonne,

      Welcome to my blog. I did suffer loses too during the European crisis back in 2012 so I know how scary it can be to lose money. It was then that I really started to learn and got myself back up. In investing, we should always invest for the long term. Buy good businesses at good prices and over the long run, we'll all make money. Its slow, it takes patience but its a good and proven way to build wealth.

      Delete
  3. Hi SGYI,
    What are your opinions on Forex investment? I'm currently 18 and doing a part time job, earning a few hundred a mth. This type of investment is long term, but I'm a green horn and don't dare to jump straight into this just yet.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Hi,

      Forex is more of trading, not investment. People mostly buy and sell on a short term basis.

      Delete
  4. Hi SGYI,

    Any advice that you can think of to give to an 18 year old student who has not much of capital to start out with and would like to create passive income ?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Hi,

      At your age, you should focus on active income and accumulating your capital for investment. Planning your career path is important also. If your capital can grow fast enough, creating passive income through stocks investments would have a bigger impact.

      Passive income can come from not just stocks investment alone. It can also come from income from a part time business, income from intellectual property such as books, music CDs and the products you can create. All these need skills and you can start learning it. Take your time to learn and one day you'll realise you have become successful.

      Delete
    2. Do you have any recommendations on what books to read for investing ?

      Delete
    3. You can read this book titled: What your school never taught you about money" by Dennis Ng. It's written in Singapore context so quite easy to understand for most of us.

      Delete
  5. Hi SGYI, thanks for this informative post! So how do one actually start investing in REITs? Many websites and books explain the "Why" and "What" but not "How". It could be good it you tackle the "Hows" too! Thank you~

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Hi,

      Normally for REITs, I look at 2 main criteria. I make sure I buy REITs at a fair value or undervalue by evaluating the net asset value. However, we should not take this value as a whole. Some companies do include their development properties and even over value their properties so I normally will try to buy lower than the net asset value to provide a margin of safety.

      The next criteria is whether the dividends are sustainable? When we invest in Reits, we invest primarily for income.

      Delete
  6. Hello SGYI, i'm new here, just heard about Talk Fusion franchise opportunity, could you give your opinion about it? It's basically an IT franchise from the US but they promote a good stable income. I'm interested to join but could you gave me your insight? Thank you.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Hi Drane,

      My advise is if you're not sure what is the opportunity about, don't go for it. There is no such thing as easy money. If it seems too good to be true then it probably is.

      Delete