How can I best combine BRXS Notes and Private Ownership in my portfolio?

Category: Private Property Ownership Last Updated:

If it fits your goals and risk tolerance, combining BRXS Notes and Private Property Ownership can offer a balanced way to pursue income and long-term growth. Below is an example of how these two approaches can complement each other and what to consider when deciding if this is right for you.

Strategic portfolio diversification

A blended approach can help balance stability with potential upside:

  1. Private Ownership – You own the property and receive the full net rental income, with exposure to any property value changes over time.
  2. BRXS Notes – You invest in secured, property-backed notes that pay fixed interest and may include performance-based bonuses; day-to-day management is handled for you.
  3. Combined strategy – Using both may help diversify across instruments (ownership vs. lending), effort levels, and liquidity profiles.

Reinvestment and compounding (illustrative)

Some investors choose to periodically reinvest part of their net rental income from privately owned properties into BRXS Notes. This can:

  • Add a second income stream (fixed note interest in addition to rent).
  • Spread exposure across multiple underlying assets.
  • Support a compounding effect over time as interest payments and rental income are reinvested.

How much to allocate—and how often—depends on your circumstances. There is no single “optimal” mix, and outcomes will vary.

Multiple income streams (illustrative)

  1. Primary income: Net rental income from properties you own directly.
  2. Secondary income: Fixed interest from BRXS Notes purchased with funds you choose to allocate.
  3. Capital appreciation: Potential changes in the value of the properties you own.
  4. Compounding potential: Repeated reinvestment may amplify results over the long term, but it also compounds risks.

Is this for you?

This kind of combined approach may suit investors who:

  • Want to balance hands-off income (Notes) with full ownership and control (Private).
  • Prefer to diversify across different types of real-estate exposure.
  • Have a long-term horizon and can tolerate periods of illiquidity.

It is only an example of how you could combine BRXS Notes and Private Ownership. You are responsible for making choices that fit your goals, timeline, and risk appetite.

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