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Re: [Help-glpk] A financial optimization problem
From: |
Reginald Beardsley |
Subject: |
Re: [Help-glpk] A financial optimization problem |
Date: |
Sat, 17 Nov 2012 04:50:44 -0800 (PST) |
My question is primarily aimed at seeing if anyone knows of papers on
something like this. I couldn't find anything like this w/ google, but it
seems like a topic someone would have written a paper on. But I have no idea
how they would describe it.
I'm currently managing other commercial properties so quite familiar w/ the
issues that entails. I really just want to optimize where the money comes
from. At a small scale I don't think optimizing more helps. Unanticipated
maintenance will just make the calculations irrelevant. I *know* I will have
unanticipated maintenance, I just don't know what, when and how much.
Reg
--- On Thu, 11/15/12, Jeffrey Kantor <address@hidden> wrote:
From: Jeffrey Kantor <address@hidden>
Subject: Re: [Help-glpk] A financial optimization problem
To: "Reginald Beardsley" <address@hidden>
Cc: "glpk" <address@hidden>
Date: Thursday, November 15, 2012, 9:00 AM
I don't have time right now to provide much help, but I do something much like
this on occasions when making personal financial decisions. It's very useful
and helps significantly with the bank when explaining why you're doing
something outside of their general experience. Based on your brief description
I'd offer a few suggestions:
a. Consider using the present value of net worth as your optimization
objective. Minimizing tax and debt service implies that your investment
decision has already been made and its only a question of how to finance.
b. Develop plausible scenarios. Looks like you have a nominal scenario in
mind. What can go wrong and what would be your recourse? You don't need a lot
of scenarios, just a few that representing downside risk such as failure to
realize the full income.
c. You'll need to model the before and after-tax value of the IRA. Real estate
also provides some tax benefits if you can deduct interest payments or shelter
capital gains. You'll want to provide a common foundation for comparing
alternatives which circles back to point a above.
d. Include an extra cash flow in the model to maintain future financial
flexibility. You'll want to retain some cash flow for the inevitable but
presently unknown extras that come with these kinds of investments. Whatever
you think you need consider doubling or tripling it. Trust me on that one.
Jeff
On Wed, Nov 14, 2012 at 6:02 PM, Reginald Beardsley <address@hidden> wrote:
Can someone point me to information on how to setup the following optimization
problem? It seems to me a not unusual problem and there are a lot of smart
people who follow this list.
I'm interested in buying an income producing property. I currently have the
purchase price in an IRA from which I can withdraw money w/o penalty. However,
I will have to pay income tax on what I withdraw.
An option would be to borrow money and then withdraw money from the IRA to pay
off the loan.
Given:
current income
rental income from acquired property
tax rate schedule
withdrawal rate
interest rate
repayment schedule
Minimize:
sum of tax & debt service
Thanks,
Reg
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