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Having trouble wrapping my tiny brain around a colossal meltdown in prices of 20% across the board. YES there will be some attrition due to people selling for lower prices for reasons outlined above. Hardly a bubble IMO !
Having trouble wrapping my tiny brain around a colossal meltdown in prices of 20% across the board. YES there will be some attrition due to people selling for lower prices for reasons outlined above. Hardly a bubble IMO !
You see what most people miss is this,
I have a house worth $480,000 which currently rents at $395 / week. The average person here will say " Ha, what a bad investment, he would be negatively geared because the interest on $480,000 is $33,600 / year and the rent is only $20,540"
But if you look deeper you will see the following.
I bought in 2001 for $218,000 with a deposit of $30,000 so the loan was only $188,000 and over the space of 10 years I have reduced it to less than $130,000.
So the current interest bill is $9,100 and the rent is $20,540 so there is positive cashflow of about $10,000 / year.
So I have a $480,000 asset that requires no further capital input from me paying it's self off.
So over all I invested $30,000 + $7000 stamp duty etc and then funded the initial neg cashflow in the first three years, Now I have a steady income stream that will continue to build as the loan decreases and it will grow with inflation.
So yes property is a very sound investment
Still neg cashflow at 50%.
Hi Tysonboss,
I need help with some basic math,
A good mix of top 10 stocks will get you a yield conservatively estimated at 5% not including franking credits.
Therefore yield on a 100k (using nice round numbers) portfolio at a conservative 5% is $5000, not including franking credits.
Expense on a 50k loan using an unusually high interest rate of 9% (remember this can be negotiated and can be done for much less, esp. if using a LOC) is $4500.
But anyway, that's not the point I was trying to make, my point is negative gearing for both stocks and IP is a joke.
So you get 10k for a 350k investment. This is about 2.85% return.
ANZ currently offer 6% on term deposits on 1 year, at maturity.
You could double your return
I don't understand: it doesn't need repairs, maintenance, BCC rates, utilities (water), etc ? (when I was renting it was the landlord paying this, who's doing it now ?)
Negative gearing has it's place, It should only ever be considered as a shorterm option though, just to get you started.
Hi Tysonboss1,
You're still missing my point,
Negative gearing is a joke because the taxpayer is funding your own get rich scheme, why should that be the case ?
Perhaps the "greedy bankers" as you put it are using the trust & capital of others, whilst your average property investor is adopting 100% of the risk themselves?Daily people in the financial industry (bankers in particular) have to put up with being labelled greedy capitalists with no moral purity etc, and quite often the ones criticising greedy financiers are the ones with numerous negatively geared property investments and are themselves as hypocritical and as greedy as anyone. Why doesn't the mainstream media get stuck into main street Australian greed?
It is worth mentioning at this point the effect inflation has on deflating the debt burden over time. A property matching the inflation rate geared at any significant amount performs over time simply because the inflation on asset, combined with the deflation on debt, accelerates the equity growth.See the point of buying a property is that you are buying an inflation hedged income stream. This is the biggest point that gives property a huge advantage over a cash investment.
If you don't understand that your rental return and capital value of the investment will increase with inflation over time (through the ups and downs), but the value of your cash investment and the cashflow will not increase, then you don't understand property investment at all.
When I said it does not require any further capital from me I mean that the property is now self funding, the rent covers all costs including maintance, So it is providing an income stream net of costs.
In order for it to perform you need at least 3.5% more (to match the risk-free investment) plus some more to cover the ongoing costs and justify the risk taken. The more part may come from CG, rent or both.
How much is worth it is a matter of personal choice.
2. What is the risk / reward ?
What is the capital at risk under various scenarios and what is the projected return (realistic scenarios required
3. Are there better investments ? (better is user-defined here)
Regards
Hi Tysonboss1,
You're still missing my point,
Negative gearing is a joke because the taxpayer is funding your own get rich scheme, why should that be the case ?
My example was BHP which is only 2.5% yeild not 5%.
Negative gearing has it's place, It should only ever be considered as a shorterm option though, just to get you started.
The property that I used in the example a few pages back, was negatively geared for the first three years but now provides a strong positive income stream.
Once you are over the hurdle of making your first property positive cashflow, you can use that extra cashflow to help bring another property into positive cashflow.
The goverment does not actually give you money, when I first bought my property I was earning about $1000 a week, and the property had a negative cashflow of about $50 / week, so I paid tax on $950 instead of $1000. Not really a big loss in tax revenue for the government, and that was just the first 3 years.
Never mentioned it was a bubble and 20% is only the last years growth and that is my point. Even if 20% was wiped off prices, it would essentially only effect those that bought in the last year. This is why it is such a good investment for those who got in pre GFC. If 20% can be added to prices so fast then why can it not be taken away just as fast.
As for people speculating on PPOR, ask young families if they would have both parents working to pay off a large mortgage if there was no chance of capital gains for the next five years. Answer, no. Australians have become the greatest speculators of property in the world, how else do you explain the massive growth in prices last year, fundamentals, ha. No the speculation of missing out, no getting on the property ladder, being priced out forever, rent is dead money etc etc etc.
Cheers
When I first read your example I did some calculations just to satisfy my curiosity over the property vs shares debate. I calculated what would of happened if you just bought a big blue chip with out a loan. I chose WOW shares.
I deleted my calculations but they went on the lines of this:
1.) 2001 you buy $37000 worth of shares (equiv of 30k deposit + 7k stamp duty)
2.) Over the next three years you annually buy WOW shares to the equivalent amount of the minimum payment on a $188,000 mortgage calculated at 7.5% interest over 30 years
3.) at the end of the each year you reinvest the dividend ignoring the franking credits.
The result was an income in 2010 (assume the second half dividend remains the same as the first half) of about $11000 + franking credits ($14000 pa). I cant remember the share value.
Considering there is no debt, no work and no ongoing costs this sounds like a win to me. BHP shares might not have produced the same result but I doubt anyone with a bit of common sense would put all their money into a single blue chip anyway.
I am not saying property is a bad investment but its not as great as its made out to be. Unless you are a person who is prepared to work or knows the market well.
Tysonboss1,
interest expenses from a get rich scheme can potentially wipe out all income from other sources.
Never mentioned it was a bubble and 20% is only the last years growth and that is my point. Even if 20% was wiped off prices, it would essentially only effect those that bought in the last year. This is why it is such a good investment for those who got in pre GFC. If 20% can be added to prices so fast then why can it not be taken away just as fast.
on their tax return they will now have $150,000 income, However like any business you don't pay tax on total revenue you pay tax on profit.
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