skc
Goldmember
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- 12 August 2008
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A good friend has recently purchased her first property :
Inner city 2 bedroom house in Melbourne
Buy price $700k
Stamp Duty $28K
Mortgage Insurance $25K
Other Fees $2K
Loan Amount $650K
LVR 95% Loan repayments of $3.8K per month
Equivalent property to rent : $2.1K per month
Original deposit $90K
Her Salary $120K pa divorced with one child.
Then don't, you posed a question and I responded. Yes it's off topic to a degree but the modest returns available on property are nicely highlighted by the data provided. It has been a steady rather than stellar asset class.I thought this was a " Future of the Property Market " thread , not a Shares Vs Property thread , though I must admit I did raise the share thing , so I shouldn't really complain.
Then don't, you posed a question and I responded. Yes it's off topic to a degree but the modest returns available on property are nicely highlighted by the data provided. It has been a steady rather than stellar asset class.
Wow. I can't imagine how that works. Income $120k is only ~$88k after tax or $7.3k per month. Loan repayment is over 50% of that, leaving $3.5k to live off. Without knowing anything about her lifestyle - she'd probably spend the majority of that. There's little margin for error (or an interest rate rise). I'd be stressed out in that situation.
She's basically spent 60% of her available equity on fees/one off charges that is un-recoverable. Although I don't know if a margin share portfolio is the right advice - but at least she won't be down 60% straight up.
Slightly off topic but 3.5K / month is plenty to live on.
No, I responded to your spruiking of property (not it's future) here by commenting on just how ordinary the returns are for property based on the data YOU provided. If you're an experienced property investor or developer then no doubt returns can be far above the average.But you responded in terms of share vs property . Seem like all the detractors try to shift the arguement , or quote selective examples of times where it didn't work . Would you like be to do that with examples of shares ..... How many thousands of examples could I find ... But that's not the point...
As you are a recent contributor to this long standing thread, please don't seek to lecture me or others here about what we should be getting out of this forum. This thread is not about past investment glory or titled "How I became a millionare investing the property and how you can too". As you noted it's about the future prospects for property prices based on current evidence, trends and economic conditions to name a few.The whole point of being involved in a forum like this , is not to be average , but to be a well informed investor whether it's in share , property or in business . We've done two subdivisions in sydney and made lots of money doing these , but I'm not here promoting this as a time to do that . It's a specialised area
All I see in the press is 'the press' saying that there is no real housing bubble but it's all you see in "the press."
WTF
Exactly right Craft, the entrenched interests of property investors in particular are driving the market distorting taxation policies that will ensure a greater proportion of future generations will be forced to rent rather than own.
That would be established residential property, not your generalization. Shares are a form of business ownership, and many businesses produce something for profit that represent productive use of capital that generate economic activity, employment and benefit for society. There is no comparing the increasing profitability of a business and it's increasing share price to the non-productive use of capital deployed in churning established residential property.
My point remains, regardless of the market, the churning of established residential real estate is unproductive use of capital and very costly to society as a whole.
The churning of established residential housing stock at ever higher prices provides little economic benefit while driving up household debt and rents. Such investing is non-productive, an economic burden to society and needs to be curbed.
I ignore no evidence to the contrary and am watching the property market closely for opportunities.
Might be plenty for you to live on but you don't know her circumstances and expenses.Slightly off topic but 3.5K / month is plenty to live on. IT would probably be a rude awakening for her to make the adjustment though. I know I felt the pain for the first couple of years with a mortgage and my situation was a lot better than hers.
So what is it you're trying to convince everyone of? On one hand residential property should be "curbed" but you're "watching the property market closely for opportunities".
If you want to be taken seriously take a good look at what it is you're trying to say and stop contradicting yourself.
Trolling again ftw? I have not contradicted myself at all. Your lack of comprehension of my posts aside, what I meant by curbing is capping government subsidized negative gearing on investment property not eliminating it. You seem to imagine that I am some kind of anti-property investment doomsayer and continue posting based on this false premise thinking you are actually making a valid point. Why not post something useful instead of just sniping at posters here on a singular issue of no significance to this topic whatsoever.
So what is it you're trying to convince everyone of? On one hand residential property should be "curbed" but you're "watching the property market closely for opportunities".
If you want to be taken seriously take a good look at what it is you're trying to say and stop contradicting yourself.
Trolling again ftw? I have not contradicted myself at all. Your lack of comprehension of my posts aside, what I meant by curbing is capping government subsidized negative gearing on investment property not eliminating it. You seem to imagine that I am some anti-property investment doomsayer and continue posting based on this false premise thinking you are actually making a valid point. Why not post something useful instead of just sniping at posters here on a sigular issue of no significance to this topic whatsoever.
A good friend has recently purchased her first property :
Inner city 2 bedroom house in Melbourne
Buy price $700k
Stamp Duty $28K
Mortgage Insurance $25K
Other Fees $2K
Loan Amount $650K
LVR 95% Loan repayments of $3.8K per month
Equivalent property to rent : $2.1K per month
Original deposit $90K
Her Salary $120K pa divorced with one child.
Why did she buy, her family convinced her that it was a good investment. I tried to convince her she was better off with a margin loan + her deposit and build up a share portfolio. But she is convinced her property will double within 10 years.
Her property needs to rise by 10% for to break even if she is forced to sell. When asked could she cope with IR's increasing by 2% she would have to sell. Responsible lending, no. Banks are just drug dealers pushing debt as the new cocaine.
Cheers
I guess for me, growing up with my older brother, we took 2 very different paths. He bought cars and holidays, I bought my first property at 21 and then my second at 25. Our parents, relatives and friends were always in awe of my ability, to save, plan and be very disciplined about the choices I made. To own an "investment property" was seen as something only the rich do. Me, I went out there, with my 37k pa income at the time and showed them how it's done and until this day I enjoy the way people look at me when they find out that I'm 32 and onto my second investment property ready for my third.
You FXTrader and sydboy007 just happen to be the most recent posters spurting the idea that property is some sort of cancer on the economy (if I've misinterpreted you I apologies but there's been plenty others in here that this applies to) and that the country would be better off without it and yet you're all waiting to jump in and cause the same mess you advocate against... which really kind of pisses me off. I'd have more respect for your opinions if you weren't rubbing your hands together waiting to feed off the system yourselves should it all go to hell for a while...
The future of Australian property is and always will be, UP
(but hopefully down in the short term so keep talking it down ladies and gents)
How is that property investing?
Thats the same gamble as getting a hot tip on stocks and doing all your dollars. You want dumb investor stories then I have a million and yes you can lose millions in shares off $100s of dollars as was evident from all those people who bought into that QLD company and were then up for paying the dividend.
Secondly I wouldn't really class PPOR as an investment.
Personally if all you think you need to investing in is shares while missing the other investment classes you have rocks in your head. You guys are putting up bad examples to prove a pretty stupid point. Id question if many of you actually have any money behind you.
Imo there is a lot of opportunity across a few areas to make a killing right now. Preaching here is a waste of time.
So you invested at the begining of the main part of the housing boom and made a lot of money. If you can do the same over the neext 10 years I'll be impressed.
You only have to look to the USA / Spain / Ireland to see how fast the market can turn.
Spent plenty of time in all three.
The glut in housing surpasses anything
You'll ever see in Aust.
It will take at least a generation to correct.
Comparing Australia to any one of these three
Is ridiculous.
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