the numbers simply don't stack up for property as an investment class.
Ok, take today's rates:Only during the initial term of the loan - eg. 20 years ago Melbourne's median house price was $140k. A debt of $140k today, at rates of 8%, would equate to $933 pm which would either be easily affordable for the majority of wage earners or covered by current rental income.
Without this debt deflation, in most cases the numbers simply don't stack up for property as an investment class.
SM, I also hold investment property - you've only quoted part of my post.Obviously you either love property as an investment vehicle or not. For me it is far simpler, all I'm concerned about is how much it will cost me on a monthly basis. At the moment my outlay is basically the cost of a standard mortgage, then come tax time and my deductions and depreciation are done and the costs are negated. Now I have built a fairly substantial portfolio that someone else pays for.
So property can make you money. It also provides a more tangable asset and I like to have investments across several asset classes.
Macca, I understand your point (including the argument regarding holding costs impacting on teh debt servicing), but you seem to be slightly misunderstanming mine.
Yes, but that is represented by inflation, is it not?Macca, I understand your point (including the argument regarding holding costs impacting on teh debt servicing), but you seem to be slightly misunderstanming mine.
Deflation over the long term devalues cash, it also devalues the value of debt independant of mortgage rates.
$20,000 cash (or $20,000 debt) would have been a significant sum in 1967 (enough to purchase a proprty); it is not such a significant sum today.
ubiquitus
I had a plan when I started investing in property, a long term plan, which will continue on for another 30 or more years....
good luck and bad luck is not included in the plan....its a straight forward plan , using historical figures to justify it....it has worked brilliantly so far...
and will continue to into the future...
My Modest 10% pa Growth Projections Over a 5 year Plan.
Not quite - the real capital value is represented/impacted by inflation, however the impact of deflation on the debt is rarely mentioned and is also a driver in equity-creation, which is probably a better way of measuring performance than purely on capital return.Yes, but that is represented by inflation, is it not?
Not sure I follow, deflation is the effect of inflation on cash(debt).Not quite - the real capital value is represented/impacted by inflation, however the impact of deflation on the debt is rarely mentioned and is also a driver in equity-creation, which is probably a better way of measuring performance than purely on capital return.
An average Sydney home valued today at $550k house, appreciating at 10% pa for the next 30 years wil be worth $9.6million in 30 years
Meanwhile, the average salary of $50k pa, IF it appreciated at an inflation busting 5% pa, for all of those years, would be $216K in 30 years.
So the average house price in Sydney based on the Kincella model will cost 44x average earnings.
Based on a 100% mortgage (which I am sure you will say will be available for borrowers of $10million), the repayments for the average worker would be $64k per month which they would pay from their $18k(gross) per month salary.
Mate, even robots wouldn't go that far. I also notice that you aren't getting any backup form Beej.
The cost of servicing the debt is reducing in real terms though - 8% of $100k in today's dollars is much cheaper than 8% of $100k in 1980 dollars. The deflation is having a real effect on serviceability, before we consider rents track more closely to AWOTE in capital cities than to CPI, or capital growth will generally track at ~inflation.The cost of servicing the debt(ie interest, etc) will always be greater than the effect of deflation(if it were not, the banks would go bust).........which in the end means that using debt to purchase property will always cost more in real terms than using cash up front(ignoring other factors like tax write-off's)
This depends on the area - on a market-wide basis I agree with you, however we exist in a society where the gap between low & high wage earners is increasing, so there are some areas which will grow faster than average wage growth (conversely, some "entry'level" suburbs with higher proportions of FHB will underperfrom the market LT)You've hit on a good point here. House price growth in % terms cannot exceed wage growth in % terms without adversly impacting the ratio of cost to average earnings.
ubuity....not at all...
but look at you, using figures for an infamous mining company like posiedon as your example.....
then comparing same to housing and wages....
well if you can find a free site, where you can plug in the postcode ...I can name a few suburbs....
in the meantime....this link shows 20 years to 2006, with median prices...returning 8.3% every year...
now there are suburbs that beat the median growth....they are not the median price...buying at the lower end...
my 10% growth is based on actual examples....with family and friends
actually I think it will be almost impossible to find a 40 year chart...
there used to be a graph for actual house prices over 100 years in australia, not fudged with cpi and any other stuff....cannot find it now....just the schiller graph from the us comes up...adjusted for this adjusted for that etc
http://www.aph.gov.au/library/pubs/RN/2006-07/07rn07.pdf
Take into account inflation at 5%(rough average from here) and you get:House Prices
here are just two examples....real prices...
in 1966 a house purchased in a regional city in Vic cost 12,000....it doubled in price every 10 years for the next 40 years to 2006....sold for 192,000
same time a house bought in Melbourne, Armadale for 12,000, it tripled in price every 10 years, after 40 years, the land alone was valued at 1,000,000
It's interesting that based on 5%pa inflation that $50pw is only worth $335pw by today's currency, yet that was the average wage back then and now it's $1,200.fast forward 40 years....that 50 pw is now about 1200 pw....
I'm not saying its having no effect, I'm saying it's not enough to counter the cost of servicing the loan..........ie interest will always be higher than inflation(over the medium to long term) in which case, as I mentioned, it is moot for my example.The cost of servicing the debt is reducing in real terms though - 8% of $100k in today's dollars is much cheaper than 8% of $100k in 1980 dollars. The deflation is having a real effect on serviceability,
In which case if you paid it off in full over the term it would cost you more than if you paid cash up front in full. Hence once again, for my example, the effects of deflation are moot.........or even increase the capital loss.Cash up front would make purchasing an individual property cheaper overall, however your ROI would then be measured on the entire acquisition costs rather than your % contribution to it.
Can't argue with that, just as it should be, since housing is first and foremost to provide shelter and not purely an investment..........though many would argue that factAs a pure asset class, residential property lags behind many others on a dollar for dollar basis so if I wanted to pay cash for an asset, I'd prefer something else.
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