QUOTE (J Simmons @ Dec 11 2008, 10:58 AM)

Thanks for the help.
One thing he says which appears to conflict with what I'm finding elsewhere is that rental income is/may be taxable. Everything else I'm finding on this (admittedly from people who want to sell me something) says rental income, or any profits, for that matter, are not taxable, as long as they stay in the IRA.
Here's my situation. I'm 51 years old. After a total financial crash and burn in 2002, I got all the debt repaid and started over in 2006. My employer matches 6% in my 401K, so that's what I contribute there, placing it in the Fidelity Freedom 2025 targeted retirement fund. I've maxed my Roth contributions for 2006, 2007, and 2008, and now have about 15,500 in it. I'm also saving everything else I can, with the intention of buying a small home before July 1, 2009 in order to take advantage of the 7,500.00 tax credit offered by the Mortgage Relief Bill. That home, by the way, is for personal use; I know I can't use a Real Estate IRA to purchase it.
With my Roth, even if I continue to make the maximum yearly contribution, I just don't think I have enough time till I retire to grow it enough. If I take a conservative route, and invest in CDs, even at the great rates I see on long-term CDs, there isn't enough growth. I can get 7 year CDs right now, for example, at returns as high as 6-6.5%, but there's no way I can expect to average that rate of return until I retire. As the economy recovers, those rates will fall.
If I take a riskier road and go into the stock market, the short time I have until retirement still means I'll have to average an unrealistic rate of return to be able to grow that Roth into an entity that can offer any real income at retirement. That leads me to think I need to look at other avenues.
It's clear you're not a fan of Real Estate IRAs. You also clearly know a lot more about them than I do, but here's my thinking on it. Maybe you can show me where I'm wrong.
In Tulsa, where I live, the real estate market is down, but nowhere near as much as the national average. This holds especially true for the part of town I live in. It's an area built in the 30s, 40s, and 50s, and has been a hot remodel market for the past 10 years, and it's actually heating up. Right in the heart of this area are some small condos. A year ago, they were going for 40-45,000. Today, they're going for 55-60,000, as the horrible dump of an apartment complex next door to them has been torn down, and a luxury apartment complex is going up in their place. I believe the prices are also going up because people who found themselves in too much house when their ARMs adjusted appear to be downsizing into them.
I already plan to buy one of these as my personal residence. With what I'm currently spending on rent, i can pay the mortgage on the condo, the property taxes, the insurance and HOA fee, and make monthly principal reduction prepayments that will pay the loan off in 11.4 years. That seems a pretty good personal investment to me.
If I were to convert my Roth to a Real Estate IRA, I could purchase two of these condos as turn-key rental units right away, putting 10% down on each. Assuming 11 months' rental income per year, and leaving all rental income in the IRA, I would be able to pay them off in less than 15 years. With the 6,000.00 I contribute to the IRA yearly, I could also purchase several more units in the future.
Assuming 4 units paid for in retirement, I've run the numbers in today's dollars.
These units rent for 650.00 per month. 11 months' income per year would be 7,150.00
HOA fees are 1,500.00 per year.
Property taxes are 560.00 per year.
Insurance is 525.00 per year.
Budget 500.00 per year for maintenance and upkeep (All external maintenance and upkeep is covered by the HOA fees)
That leaves 4,065 in profit per unit, per year. Four units yields 16,260.00 per year. I'd also have four wholly-owned pieces of real estate which could be sold or reverse-mortgaged. Given my circumstances and time until retirement, I just don't see how I can make that money work more efficiently for me.
What am I missing?