- Joined
- 10 March 2008
- Posts
- 28
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- 8
I don't see the point, people leverage money every day.
cars, homes.etc. etc. etc
if you can afford the repayments why not start with borrowed money?
The difference in using leverage in the market is you can lose money a hell of alot faster than normal. What happens if you jump in now, with high leverage and the market continues to drop and you get a margin call?
you only make a paper loss the day you pull out
I'm looking at 30 years + of investment
i believe i'm starting out the correct why under the wing of a managed share fund
There would be no "margin call" on an equity loan. it is succured by my house. as long as i can make the payments the bank is happy
Because when you invest it is always with not how much you can win but the relationship between what you could win and what you could lose.
Can you afford to lose money that is not yours?
Back of the envelope cal. tells me you are going to pay about $5000 this year in interest.
You are going to need close to a 10% return just to break even every year(to cover interest). If you want to be greatly profitable you are going to need a market to go up 20% every year, which will only then give you 10% on 50k. hardly going to move you out of Mr.average league.
but if you simply saved your interest payment you now have 5k no risk.
Hi I"m looking for a bit of reassurance here.
There will be if your LVR deteriorates below the required level which can happen when property goes down. And if investments are worth less than the loan you may not be able to meet it. How healthy is your property equity level?
So it's true advisors are sharks
This won't seem like such a trite statement if you are paying off a $50k loan that is backed by only $40k of assets in 12 months time at interest rates of 10%+.
(I'm not saying this is the future but its one possible scenario).
Which fund are you going to invest in and who has recommended it to you (not the same people that are suggesting you borrow $50k to invest in it I hope). Are you paying for this financial advice? If not who is paying the advisor. What market sectors is the fund focused on?
What have you learnt about the markets and about investing in them in the 5 years you've been watching and how are you applying it in your current decision process.
Doh! said:So it's true advisors are sharks
I have about 300 k in equity
What I'm meaning is the proportion of debt to equity - how much does property need to fall before the bank starts to query the healthiness of their asset (the banks asset being their loan to you). Though $300k equity sounds reasonable for most Australian suburbs. Banks do stress test their portfolio's and can theoretically ask for top-ups or adjustments if property values fall enough to affect the LVR levels on your loan.
Not trying to rain on your parade - though you seem to be placing a lot of trust in your advisers. Do you have some justification/basis for why you have this level of faith in them, and have you researched a range of funds or sought some alternate opinions on the advice you've been given?
Asking the question on here seems to have generated plenty of food for though which can't hurt - its always good to have a healthy level of skepticism and eyes wide open before taking any significant investment decision.
Who knows but why don't you do some calculations for us just to show us what either they told you or what you are expecting to make from this. Please do this for us. just a simple P & L analysis. And post it here for some real meat to this thread. PLEASE.
Hi I"m looking for a bit of reassurance here. I've been looking at investing now for about 5 years, but have only just decided to enter the share market with a equity loan of 50k this has has been advised through a well respected finance company. My itchy feet in the past have prevented me from making some fabulous gains in the last 5 years. Doh!
Any way to the future. Ive heard the saying "you can't time entering the market" but I have to ask is it a good time to enter the market now has the market bottomed out?
Ive heard the saying "you can't time entering the market" but I have to ask is it a good time to enter the market now has the market bottomed out?
Can I name funds in this forum?
the advisor is paid on commission and yes they are the same people
I under stand the first year I'll make a 4k loss with commission Fund entry fee $2000 Advisor $2000
Paul Clitheroe is another writer who recommends the borrowing to invest strategy
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