- Joined
- 24 November 2005
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- 4
and the LAFHA {living away from home allowance has been abolished.}
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It was.
sydboy007, I'm just trying to figure out what you're (and a few others) intentions are. You play the violin for the poor regular Aussie battler that just wants to put a roof over their heads for their family yet you openly admit you'll happily participate in the exact same thing that you're preaching against.
What exactly are you trying to achieve here?
Would I be tempted to invest in property if prices fell? They'd have to at least halve and then it would depend on what the yield was with that scenario playing out.
I wonder if any of the others here that see residential property investment as some sort of cancer on society are willing to admit that they will take full advantage of the situation should some sort of crash occur and their "guidelines" for the "right" returns are met?)
Just about every problem we have today, economic, social, strategic and environmental, has short term thinking as its' ultimate cause.
AS pointed out , prices go up because demand outstrips supply . Free market economics 101 . I'm surprised someone on a share forum needs to ask that .....
If as you suggest , the majority of people expect this ( however wrong you may feel they are ) then in all likelhood it's going to happen .
People are paying more for properties because they can afford too....
Marching with their eyes closed . Yes ,there are many people doing that . I'm not . During the last boom I sold down many of the properties so when the GFC hit I had an LVR of around 15 % . When the GFC hit we were able to make cash offers to people who hadn't been that prudent.
Was it Buffet who said that wealth creation is the the transfer of money from the impatient to the patient . I'm patient . The business cycle is a reality and I'm happy to take advantage of it.
There will be another slump at the end of the next cycle . I'll be surprised if it's 40 % , but if it is I'll be on the sidelines waiting to buy.
Currently the world economy is getting back on track and I don't expect the next slump for a while . By then I'll be debt free or with a very low LVR and bullet proof .
Last week, the Reserve Bank hosed down fears of a bubble as ''unrealistically alarmist'', saying prices were rising in line with incomes over the past decade
A two year time frame is fine by me ( any times ok actually ) . By then I'll have a low debt level and be looking for my next opportunity.
You boomers are leveraged to the hilt, there is only so much more debt the ignorant ones can take on, not to mention theyll be shifting into retirement soon.
Just about every problem we have today, economic, social, strategic and environmental, has short term thinking as its' ultimate cause.
The trouble with spending, using up, selling off etc everything now is that tomorrow does come.
If you measure wealth in real, physical terms rather than fiat money then it seems that we are slowly but surely going broke. A generation ago, Australia had the ability to manufacture just about everything we needed. Homes were either owned outright, or with relatively modest (relative to income) money borrowed from the bank. Public utilities were in public ownership and so on.
Now we have foreigners owning, via mortgages, much of the same housing we already had. In effect, as a nation we simply borrowed a lot of money from overseas, backed it with the same houses we already had, then spent that money on something else (consumption). In a broad sense, that's what we've done - borrowed a heap of money and spent it in order to obtain, well, not much at all. It's much the same with governments too. They sold the railways, buses, power stations and even office buildings to "private" owners who, it turns out, are quite often foreign governments and thus not "private" at all. Now the money has been spent, debts are soaring and we're in a far worse position than we were previously. The debt is back but we no longer have the physical assets we had previously.
All of this comes down to short term thinking. GDP may well be going up, but it is doing so largely because we keep exporting our real, tangible wealth in order to fund consumption. That must surely end at some point and future generations won't thank us that's for sure.
Steady on Pal, I and a lot of my friends are boomers. I do not have even 1 cent of debt, totally debt free and so are most of my boomer mates. Shifting into retirement, yes we are but most of us enjoy the steady rental income that we receive. The same old question comes up with my boomer mates. It is, if I sell now what will I do with the money that can give me the same return on our long held IP's? Cash? 3% Term Deposits 4%. Shares? In retirement? Good luck with that, we do not want to lose our capital under any circumstances. (Super Funds are only just breaking even after 5 years). And as we debate it over a beer in the RSL club we just nod our heads and say, I'll just leave it where it is.
Sorry I wasn't generalising or hinting that cliff is up to his eye balls in debt. But fact is a lot are. Not everyone cares nor do they understand or even think about the few things you outlibe above.
If I was a boomerwith little debt of course id hold all my properties also. My arguement has always been that it makes little sense to START at this point in time. Which would require loading up on debt with poor returns.
Sorry I wasn't generalising or hinting that cliff is up to his eye balls in debt. But fact is a lot are. Not everyone cares nor do they understand or even think about the few things you outlibe above.
If I was a boomer with little debt of course id hold all my properties also. My arguement has always been that it makes little sense to START at this point in time. Which would require loading up on debt with poor returns.
I have been looking in some of the lower priced suburbs I had listed to see how they had been moving and all seem to have jumped beyond what I would be willing to pay. I was looking in these areas 1-2 years back with the streets I was looking at coming in around $240k for 3 bed. It's all over $320k now for similar properties. While I think prices will come back eventually, it has jumped a fair bit and the market is moving and selling. Everyone is back to selling at auction.
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BB
I'm happy to leave you with your vision property investing as some sort of tool the evil Baby Boomers use to repress the following generations .
Cliff
Cliff, pour scorn over my opinion if you wish, as you do to most other opinions on here furthermore your mistaken in the way you interpreted my opinion, based on the generational divides & understanding the exponential functions.
However if you believe most of Australia is based on your reality of "home & away" Sydney's northern beaches, then its too removed from the average citizen of this country IMHO. Probably a symptom of never having lived in many states or experienced anything outside your idyllic lifestyle.
Your entitled to your point of view but don't be disrespectful by trashing someone else for their point of view by installing something or interpreting outside what was actually stated.
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