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My point was that why do you need the McMansion???? As a starter buy a two brm unit somewhere, something you can actually afford.
Why can't you get what so many of us are trying to say here? i.e. that your expectations of initially having the bloody McMansion are totally unrealistic, not to mention unnecessary!
There are a number of things you have to consider and allow for when making simple comparisons, like x times salary as a guide for house prices... not the least of which is the stage in the cycle of development/growth or recession of a particular area, better transport and services etc which allow for you to have the same convenience as your parents close to the city, but from a further distance where the house prices are lower.
Also the culture of the city has significantly changed such that whereas the center of the city used to be the center of business and social activity, the development of undercover shopping centers and malls with a large range of businesses under one roof has introduced the notion of satellite cities where you can get the convenience and service of most things much further from the traditional city center.
I don't know how old you are, but I'm assuming about mid 20's.
Obviously your parents were quite a bit older than you in 1999 when they bought that house. I'd say they worked and saved and waited for the right time in all the cycles of things to buy the house. There's a clue!
You demonstrate my point about want it, need it now mentality of some, particularly associated from surveys with gen Y.
You will not be able to do what your parents did and get the same results, for numerous reasons. All the things that make the world go around have changed and will keep changing.
I'd get the chip off my shoulder and start doing some simple maths, and logistic planning to see how you can best meet your life goals given the prevailing conditions and limitations.
as i said i am in a position that i have already been out, built a house in the outter suburbs, payed a small fortune for it, only to sell it 14 months later as i failed to see the point in blowing so much money on sky high interest repayments.
for those of you that think this is typical gen y wanting everything brand new, ill have u know it was an investment strategy as i received the 21k from the government in doing so, 21 grand is alot fo money, but barely makes a dent in interest repayments.
You forgot to mention that some actually will learn from the more experienced posters in this thread who use property as an income/investment deriving tool and others will remain internet experts beacuse they can google in 4 seconds the information they think is required to make them proficient in trading RE.:
Just out of curiousity, young gun, why did you sell that house? Why didnt you rent it out?
Wouldnt that have been a better option?
Just my opinion
I can understand what you are saying, but you have to remember the rates were up to 17% at one time, and though the houses might have been abit cheaper, was still alot to pay in mortgage repayments at that time too.
I think we all had to make sacrifices in one way or another.
haha another guy who 'made it with real estate'. congratulations. how many properties have you bought in the past 12-36 months? if any, how many of these have seen growth? as someone else just said, times are a changing, and they always will. investment strategies that worked for you guys WILL NOT work for us. its great that you hitched a ride on the tsunami that was the boom, but previous real estate strategies will not work for the next decade.
i have a plan in place. or a strategy if you will. so if you wish to give advice please post perhaps some of your own ideas for the future, and how you plan to attack RE. do you think there is a good buy time? a good sell time? will the market stagnate for the next 5 years? or perhaps see some growth? instead of throwing figures at another user to prove him wrong(which seems to be quite popular in this forum)to satisfy your urge to put gen y in their place, give us some of this advice your talking about. i dont know about anyone else by i signed up to this forum in the hope of getting information and advice and being able to voice my opinion on things.
at the end of the day anyone can spend hours on the internet pulling figures to support any form of argument. your probably going to suggest that i go back and read all your previous posts on this matter, and that i shall.
PROPERTY IS LONG TERM IN A DEPRESSED MARKET !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
How the heck do you rationalize that?
HAHA another young guy who held property for 14 months and thinks he knows it all.
I have and do trade in real estate for a living. Over the past 3 years I have purchased 4 blocks of land, 1 x 3 bedroom unit (neutrally geared) and built a comercial warehouse (returning 18%) for lease and 3 "spec" homes that all sold for above 20% return. In this time I have sold ONE commercial property as the price was REDONKOLOUS that they offered me. YES ...... I have scaled back from where I normally trade up to 5 deals a year.
I started small with a 3 x 1 (IN THE RIGHT AREA) as my PPOR ....... I lived in it for SEVEN years to attain enough equity (as well as paying OFF the mortgage as fast as I could with every spare cent) This was my investment strategy ..... PROPERTY IS LONG TERM IN A DEPRESSED MARKET !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Don't like it??? Then get out of the kitchen.
Tsunami boom???? Ummmmmmmm this is the usual cycle of RE IMO
Take your own advice and go and read 330 pages and 2 and a half years of explanations from the people who are actually out there doing it for a living.
In defense of the boomers it was not as easy as YG assumes simply because lending standards where much tighter back when. Getting into property still involved (at least in Sydney) saving a hefty deposit, borrowing from family, lending all you could from the bank and eating beans for five years. The only real difference now is the LVR's are way up and you can get way more money that you once could on relatively modest means.
Resi still looks at risk to me on the average numbers, sure you can pick winners and do deals etc but broadly speaking I'm still in the cautious camp.
usual cycle my ****. this boom is unprecedented and is bigger in magnitude than anythng seen before. fueled by demographics and very easy credit. i never claimed to know it all. your strategy is typical to just about anybody who invested in RE in the past 20 years. once again it is not applicable to todays circumstances. as you said yourself you have scaled back. in my situation by and hold would have worked, if i held it for 15 years, i may have seen it start to bounce back. property is almost always long term unless your renovating and flipping.
im curious about your 'neutrally geared' apartment. you obviously dont have an 80% loan on this or i highly doubt you would be getting enough income to cover cost. which leads me to believe you funded this from previous investments in the property market.
i dont know anything about commercial real estate. and am not questioning the fact that you are obviously accomplished in the RE game, but your current view on where real estate is and where it might be heading seems to be somewhat blurred by your previous success.
Good luck in your endeavours young-gun.
please understand i am not of the belief that it was easy for all. but for a large portion between certain years it is evident that you simply couldnt go wrong no matter what you did, or purchased, share market included. as you stated, much caution is now required when considering RE, unfortunately there are alot of people my age still being told that real estate cant fail, and they will be burnt something fierce.
Yes you could go wrong and I know people that did, in RE and stocks, you are using 20/20 hind sight. Things are always clear and safe once you are looking in the rear vision mirror.
People will look back on this period and say that the moves to make where obvious.... the trouble is that it is not that easy in real time. I think I have things right at the moment but call me in twenty years and I will most assuredly tell you how you couldn't go wrong in this decade
Anyway... I agree resi looks out on a limb, but then it has looked that way for a while. I don't like the grants that have enticed young people into property that they probably should not have purchased BUT ---> IIWII! For now it looks like we are in a situation where all resi needs is a catalyst send us properly south. I'm not certain where I think that is coming from although I can think of a few triggers. Sans catalyst it will probably still labor under its own weight for the foreseeable future --> but that is JMO.
your 23, engaged, no kids, have a small house deposit, no other debts. steady job making lets say 70k a year with overtime. what would you do in the current climate overrrrr...lets say the next 5 years? granted a 5 year plan may be a bit ambitious given the current uncertainty, and a strategy has to be able to adopt new economic conditions, but disregard that for now.
Clearly your myopic view of RE is misguided by your own sense of comprehension of the matter at hand. Prices WERE NOT CHEAPER back then. You really need to do some research before posting.
In 1991 the average median house price was $121,125 http://www.econ.mq.edu.au/research/2004/Abelson_9_04.pdf
In 1991 the average income was $17,614 http://www.abs.gov.au/AUSSTATS/abs@.nsf/0/66B7AF146D7F99E3CA2575010014EAF3?opendocument
So therefore this would be 7 times the average income in 1991. So what has changed?
EASY CREDIT ...... you could get a house and land package deal with $500 deposit and a job. Financiers would loan you 95% LVR and compound the interest and the LMI into the loan taking borrowings past 100%.
But you know all of this because you have studied and trade in RE .......
can you please talk about what 'triggers' you might expect would cause such a move?
Number one at the moment would have to be a proper China slow down. All the elements seem to be there for them to take a pause and shake some of the imbalances in their economy out. That would impact sentiment down here greatly IMO. ATM I'm looking toward 2013 as the danger year and I expect a few compounding issues with both Europe and the US across this time... specifically a resurgence of the sovereign debt issue as the flaws in this fix become apparent and problems of a similar nature in the US muni bond markets. For now it looks like we might get some plain sailing but by mid to late next year things very much look like they will be on the slide again.
I really don't know for sure but the idea of a China lead Australian recession is becoming a very realistic possibility to me. Having said that understanding China is a challenge in an of itself, getting that call right in terms of timing is hard enough without forecasting its impact on Aussie houses!
In terms of this global credit bubble ---> We have jumped off the sky scraper roof, the optimists among us are saying, so far, so good. The pessimist are screaming we are all going to die! I suspect that the fire brigade are at the bottom with a catchers net... but that the result of that will not be pretty, fair or something you'd want to try twice. No we are not going to die but some of you will need new undies.
Life... ain't it grand?
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