How to Determine if Investing in Real Estate with a Self-Directed IRA is Right for You Carteret NJ

Alternative assets include a wide-ranging group, such as partnerships and private equity. But the largest segment of alternative investments has been, and continues to be, real estate; in fact, almost 60 percent of alternative asset investments are in this category. Investors can invest in condos, rental properties, raw land, commercial buildings and other types of real estate from within a Self-Directed IRA (SDIRA).

Anthony DeVito
ADV Investment Management & Financial Planning

800-732-5031
151 Overlook Avenue
Staten Island, NY
Jeffrey Waters
OFC Financial Planning, LLC

(973) 258-1007
35 Canoe Brook Road
Short Hills, NJ
Diahann Lassus
Lassus Wherley

(908) 464-0102
1 Academy Street
New Providence, NJ
James Gallo
KDI Financial Planning LLC

(908) 464-2011
52 Greenwood Road
New Providence, NJ
Clare Wherley
Lassus Wherley

(908) 464-0102
1 Academy Street
New Providence, NJ
Stanley Ehrlich
S.F. Ehrlich Associates, Inc.

(908) 789-1100
PO Box 2278
Westfield, NJ
Katharina Gschwend
Creative Financial & Divorce Planning, LLC

(908) 665-0022
112 Sherwood Drive
New Providence, NJ
Michael Maye
MJM Financial Advisors, LLC

(908) 665-0330
68 Plymouth Drive
Berkeley Heights, NJ
Eve Kaplan
Kaplan Financial Advisors, LLC

(908) 898-0549
52 Plymouth Drive
Berkeley Heights, NJ
Bradley Rudman
Rudman Cannon Financial Advisors

(212) 461-2292
44 Wall Street, 12th Floor
New York, NY
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How to Determine if Investing in Real Estate with a Self-Directed IRA is Right for You

All our lives we, as investors, have been told to put money away for those rainy days. Today, investors are on the seemingly neverending search for solid investment ideas which produce sound returns with balanced risk. Consequently, advisors are looking for council on a lesser-known and often misunderstood category, alternative assets.

Alternative assets include a wide-ranging group, such as partnerships and private equity. But the largest segment of alternative investments has been, and continues to be, real estate; in fact, almost 60 percent of alternative asset investments are in this category. Investors can invest in condos, rental properties, raw land, commercial buildings and other types of real estate from within a Self-Directed IRA (SDIRA).

Most Americans already have real estate investments, i.e., their home, and most (given the opportunity) may prefer to invest in asset-backed investments over paper-backed investments. Many investors are wondering if today’s retreating real estate market means that the good times are over for real estate, or whether new opportunities will emerge from the wreckage. We believe that it is the latter. Real estate advisors, with whom Trust Administration Services works, suggest that falling real estate prices, combined with increasing inventory, may create new investment opportunities. As prices begin to fall back to earth, the pendulum may swing past center to create oversold conditions, providing opportunities to buy real estate at low prices. Some areas in the United States may already be starting to enter this situation. Consequently, many typical real estate investors are being squeezed out of the market due to the current credit crisis.

This has created a unique opportunity for cash-rich retirement plan investors who are in a position to purchase real estate outright.  Who are these cash-rich investors? Baby boomers. 2007 marked the beginning of the wave of more than 78 million baby boomers that will begin to retire over the next two decades. This group controls more than $14 trillion in retirement plan assets, which will transition from employer-based plans to individual retirement accounts. Many baby boomers have already begun to shift away from traditional equity investments to those that generate income. When you add the factors noted above with the possibility of real estate appreciation, it is easy to see why retirement accounts that invest in real estate are growing in popularity.

Just because you can invest in real estate in your IRA does not automatically make it the best decision for all account holders. Opponents of using a self-directed IRA to invest in real estate suggest that there are specific tax implications foregone by choosing real estate as an investment. First, profits personally made in real estate, if long-term, are taxed at the capital gains rate of 15 percent. When a SDIRA sells a piece of real estate, there are no taxes due at the time of sale. Howeve...

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