It is the latter
So how do some guys go about owning multiple chunks of real estate? That's what I want to know. I mean I understand renting out your property after getting stations somewhere else but how do you convince a bank to let you take out multiple mortgages and all the fuss that comes with owning a lot of land? Or is it really as simple as keep the old house full, but a new house, rinse, repeat?
It is the latter; pretty simple concepts, once you understand them.
"Leverage"
"Equity"
"Net Worth"
"Income"
"Pyramiding" & "OPM" . .no . .not drugs

"Other People's Money"
"Leverage" - you put a down payment you can afford and 'qualify' for and get a loan you can afford. Face it, a Naval Officer has 'job security' and is a known commodity. As long as you have not screwed up your credit along the way, you will qualify at any bank.
Using round numbers to explain "Leverage":
$20,000 downpayment (20%)
$100,000 purchase price
$80,000 loan (principle goes down with each monthly payment)
You get PCS orders in 24-36 months -and house has (conservatively) appreciated 10% (now worth $110,000)
You 'only' put down $20,000 . .you have 'made' a 50% gain on your money! PLUS you have 'paid down' the loan a little. You have leveraged Other People's Money to get a 50% gain on YOUR money!
That - the original $20,000 + the $10,000 appreciation + the principal paydown is your $30,000+ = "Equity".
In the meantime, you have not been living the typical "high life" of the studly Naval Aviator. No Corvette, no binge partying (like Juan McCain did before crashing into Corpus Bay). You are still putting away a good % of each check, for the next house/investment. (I know this sounds boring to a 20-something, but think of the parable of the 'Grasshopper & the Ant")
So, you go into the bank (mortgage broker) at your next duty station (think Navy Federal or North Island FCU or the local one at the base) NOW, it is a couple years down the road, you have maybe made promotion or getting close, you have a valuable asset with maybe $32,000-33,000 "Equity" AND additional "Income" (rent, which, hopefully comes close to covering actual expenses) in addition to your Government paycheck. You are living within your means and kept your credit rating clean. YOU are a VALUABLE asset to this lender.
He $ee$ someone who will help his bottom line $$$ -and be a long term customer, if he treats you right.
After you have done this a couple of times, funny thing, your "Net Worth" is a LOT higher than your equally ranked/paid peers! There will be NO question when you walk into a lending institution that they will be drooling to do business with you. You are an astute person of 'means' in their eyes. They are in business to do business with YOU!
It is called "Pyramiding" and you are using "Other People's Money" to control growing assets. Of course, you had to start with your own funds and early on you will have to 'augment' -and there are always risks.
Another thing is the favorable tax treatment being a landlord affords you. You get to write off not ONLY your actual 'expenses' -like travel, hotels & meals back to Pensacola (or wherever) for a few days, BUT you also get to write off "depreciation", which is not money out of your pocket, but government's way of encouraging investment.
Somewhere down the road there is another little incentive you can use, called a "1031 Tax Deferred Exchange". Say you find a neat little duplex or 4-plex for $800,000 (
http://www.onevirtualtour.com/flyer.php?FlyerID=149605648).
You have a property you have owned for a while which has appreciated substantially and you have $180,000 equity. You make an offer on the $800,000 property 'subject to a Tax Deferred Exchange' of your property with the $190, 000 equity. That would cover a 20% downpayment + expenses on the new property. As long as you take no cash out of the transaction, you have ZERO tax consequences on this. You can just keep pyramiding up until you have 10's of millions in net worth, just like Donald Trump:icon_smil
Ain't American great?!