tech/a
No Ordinary Duck
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I'm not sure where you are based (Adelaide?), but being from WA myself the growth surrounding the north/south freeways has been phenomenal since I moved to Perth to study in 2003. Besides the obvious access it provides to the CBD, it is also positioned relatively close to the coast. For some reason unbeknown to me, people continue to pursue a policy of trading distance from CBD (effectively work) for their own house and garden. Is this something that can continue into the foreseeable future? Or was it a medium term event not too be repeated again until fundamental and vast changes to transport infrastructure occur (think high speed rail)?
Will Australians ever willingly accept highly dense big urban living akin to Western Europe/Japan/States in it's largest cities? And if they do what effect will this have on outlying property prices?
(Not expecting you to take on the burden of answering all those questions Tech - more of a general question to the entire thread's participants)
Gold has been a terrible inflation hedge from 1980 for 20 whole years up until about 2000! It's only been a good investment for the last 5-10 years IF you were hedging $US.
Depends on the time frame Beej. My first home in 1971 cost $10,000. The same place today would cost $350,000 ...up 35 times
An ounce of gold in 1971 was $35 and today it is $1,400.......up 40 times
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Finally, I believe that investing in property in the current market is over valued (based on the levels of debt, the potential slowdown in the resources boom, and the high median value compared to median salary) and a disaster if you leverage to the point where you may be forced to sell. If property does crash - I'll be in there like a shot. If it doesn't crash and stagnates for a few years I'll be in then (I already own a PPOR). If it just goes up forever, then I made a bad investment decision. I prefer to preserve capital and miss an opportunity I am uncomfortable with. There will be other opportunities that I am comfortable with.
AlexG.
the basic formula I use ( and it's subject to different styles of property) is
Annual rental return x 0.85 (to allow for rates maintaince etc) X 22.5 = the highest price I can pay.
In 2001 in brisbane these type of properties were every where, now they are not.
Depends on the time frame Beej. My first home in 1971 cost $10,000. The same place today would cost $350,000 ...up 35 times
An ounce of gold in 1971 was $35 and today it is $1,400.......up 40 times
Hi Explod. Just pointing out to viewers the obvious 'inflation' factor isn't considered here. According to the RBA inflationary calculator, 10k in 1971 would now have the purchasing ability of 92k using an average annual rate of 5.9%. So an increase in inflation adjusted terms to 350k is around 3.8 times.
Yes, Indeed. What you have noticed is in the past 30years property values have grown faster than inflation, this is due to a number of factors.
- growth in housholds ( there is more households due to population growth, more single parent families and single person house holds) this puts upward pressure on land prices as we all keep trying to squeeze into the capital cities.
- Better more expensive homes, The average house has more mod cons these days
Property Prices would only match inflation perfectly if the number of house holds remained the same, growing population obviously puts upward pressure on land prices as you knock down houses and build apartments, those who want to live in a house on land are forced to pay higher prices as over time the population grows and number of houses close to the city declines.
They can move further out to outlining suburbs and it will be cheaper but again it would be putting upward pressure on prices out there.
Demand without credit availability is no demand at all.
Hence, all your above points would be meaningless without an abundance of cheap cheap credit.
interest rates go up, interst rates go down. credit lossens, credit tightens. Over time it all balances out.
Now plus the rental return on the house and minus storage costs of the gold and see where you are at.
Now plus the rental return on the house and minus storage costs of the gold and see where you are at.
RESERVE Bank board member Warwick McKibbin has warned that Australia is being caught up in a global bubble that could hit us much harder than the global financial crisis and expose the weaknesses of Labor's economic settings.
Professor McKibbin told The Australian the bubble in global commodity prices and property markets in Asia threatened to dwarf the US housing market bubble that led to the GFC in 2008.
He warned that the inevitable bursting of the bubble would reverse the surge in Australia's record high terms of trade, push down the dollar and leave the Reserve Bank struggling to fight off rising global inflation pressures.
"This is shaping to be much bigger than 2004 to 2007," he said in comparing the new excess of global liquidity with the global financial bubble that led to the worst global financial crisis since the 1930s.
"This cycle is even bigger."
Professor McKibbin suggested the surge in global liquidity fuelled by US monetary expansion had echoes of the early 1970s surge in food, mining and energy prices that led to global "stagflation", or the combination of high inflation and high unemployment.
Read more: http://www.news.com.au/business/big...in/story-e6frfm1i-1226013248289#ixzz1FEQUMtov
You just can't bid up more than the next guy if the bank isn't offering to loan you more money than the next guy. It's simple maths. As a country we just aren't rich enough to be bidding assets up using cash. We use credit. Therefore, once the credit is no longer cheap and easy there will be less idiots bidding up more than the last guy "before they miss out".
Plus Rental Income
Less Interest
Maintenance
Rates
Land Tax
Agent Fees
Legal Fees
Renovation/Building costs (you've had this property for 40 years, so may have had to rebuild or renovate)
So you can clock the yield on a house but not yield on gold?
Nope, wrong.
http://www.kitco.com/lease.chart.html
Yeah true, it only works during periods of negative real interest rates.as I said a million times, If you use leverage in the property example you have to use it in the gold example, Now I can tell you if you leveraged into gold 40 years ago since it produces no income you would be well and truely under water.
In an inflation hedging context, is this assuming the property has been bought with cash or credit-based?
I was comparing holding $300K in property rather than say a term deposit.
As mentioned above debt is a separate topic.
Yes I know know the strengths and weaknesses of both asset classes very well. I have not been trying to make posts that start the tired old "shares vs property" arguements again.
I have been investing in the stockmarket since I was 14 and the property market since I was 20, I have built an investment operation that uses Property, shares and my own business ( along with some options ), that produces steady all weather returns. and I do this with next to no trading.
Look, anyone that says Property is better than shares is just as wrong as any body that says shares are better than property, In my opinion an investment operation that excludes either one is lacking. But it's your life so do whatever.
I don't care if people dismiss my thoughts or opinions, People can say what they like, But I am not 30 yet But I am in a position where I can retire on multiple passive income streams that don't require super high trading profits or anything unsustainable like that, My investment operation will survive any market crash (property or shares) and thrive in the after math. So I don't really care if some geek disaggrees with me.
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