Wysiwyg
Everyone wants money
- Joined
- 8 August 2006
- Posts
- 8,428
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- 285
175 k worth of dwelling? Certainly highlights the fact that in some places of Australia building costs are significantly less. Around here, as a comparison, the billboards have land starting at 220k for 600sq.m.. My enquiry 2 years ago to build a 3 bed brick house started at 250k. So 470k minimum to buy in a newly developed suburb. Blatant price gougeing.One developer makes >20% on properties in our street.
Buy property $300k
Subdivide $35k
Demolish $10k
Build $175k
Build $175k
Total Outlay $695k
Sell $420k
Sell $420k
Profit before abnormals $145k
About 20%
But then, I may have missed a few sundry costs (stamp duties, commissions)
175 k worth of dwelling? Certainly highlights the fact that in some places of Australia building costs are significantly less. Around here, as a comparison, the billboards have land starting at 220k for 600sq.m.. My enquiry 2 years ago to build a 3 bed brick house started at 250k. So 470k minimum to buy in a newly developed suburb. Blatant price gougeing.
Equity curve - the equity curve for a share portfolio over the longer term is very volatile in comparison to residential and commercial property. Note that I did not say Listed Property Trust or structured product. The moment you list a product (even if that product is property), you correlate the product to the share market. This defeats my purpose of owning an asset that is negatively correlated to the share market.
Depends on your age and income requirement, having a stable income stream like rent is understandable.
And i'm sure it make all of us sleep better knowing if the market were to fall, at least the tenants will pay us $500 a week or so and that's enough to do the shopping.
But... that's not really investing as i understand it. It's financial planning, financial security.. not investing as a pursuit of the highest possible return with the lowest possible risk.
Risk is not beta, it's not the average market price fluctuation of your stock versus the fluctuation of a representative group of that stock etc. If you buy a stock today, and next week that stock dropped 30% while the market dropped 2% or even gained 5%.. .why would buying it at 30% discount riskier? Put another way... if you're buying 1 can of Coke for $1 then the owner said the second can is for 50 cents.. .would you look at his shop and seeing that no other stocks are being discounted and conclude the second Coke is riskier?
If you know what the value of your assets, or know the value of someone else's assets on sales... and have the courage, and capital, to take advantage of those opportunities... That's not being myopic or short sighted, it's the definition of intelligence and far-sighted ness.
The hard part, of course, is to know, with reasonable certainty, of what you're looking at. This is where Graham's margin of safety, where Fisher's scuttlebutt analysis, where Buffett's emphasis on buying established businesses whose future are pretty much as it has been up to today (only bigger due to its own growth from its strong position and able management) etc... come into play. well the other parts all came from them anyway 'cause i got nothing original or new...
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Stocks are share of businesses. Not all stocks are equal or represent the same thing called stock.
So you could diversify within this one asset class... The businesses on the stock market does represent the entire economy.
So if you are able to know when or want to be expose to certain asset classes, like property... buy REITS or developers or infrastructure stocks. You'll probably do much better through owning Stockland or Australand stocks, at the right time, than buying a property to flip... and will also reduce your risks too. Those property companies has billions in real assets all over the country, your $1 million could maybe buy you 1 or 2 properties in 1 or 2 states... and if one of those property market is depressed, or one of your rental burnt down, that's half your investment damaged.
Let say you see a booming property market, low interest rate, more home and offices doing up... The best thing to do is probably not rush out there and buy yourself a property... better, and i have seen this work, to buy into stocks of companies that supply those demands. Concrete, building/construction suppliers like CSR or Boral...
I don't own these... I should actually take a look see though
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Why would you want a smooth earnings/returns curve? Unless your pay and bonuses depends on it I think it's more important to look at the entry and exit point, everything in between only make you feel happy or sad, not richer or poorer. And this is why I don't borrow or leverage... i want to keep my mistakes private and not forced to recognised it and having to make another mistake
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Over the long term... 10 years should do it... equities has been shown to outperform properties. You could easily find evidence of this... but that's a general statement you say...
i don't think many people could point to many example of properties that gained 5 or 10 times its price in 10 years. I could point to CSL, Monadelphous, Cochlear, CBA ? as examples... that's not to say that i could have seen or predicted these... it's just to show that if you know what you're doing, you could make good return... even in property.
I agree with your post except about properties being negatively correlated to shares. They are lowly correlated but positively, if any..not negative.
I don't think a beginner, or a student, would have enough money to diversify across property and stock. I don't think they could afford one property to live in, let alone as an investment property.
But as a beginner, a student, wanting some guidance, or in my case, just my opinions... some ideas as what to set his time and efforts towards for the most potential gain from his time, current and future savings, it might be safer and wiser to advise the guy to spread it all across the field, but it is not productive or profitable for him in the long run.
From a practical point of view, if a person has $100 000 to invest, would your advise be to spread it into property and stock? With that money, the guy might have $10 000 left for stock after a deposit for a flat somewhere, and have to continually pay the short fall from the rent, the additional capital repayment.
I think a well considered advised should depends on what he want, how he want to go about it, how serious or how much time and effort does he have to look after his eggs. That and the fact that a person seriously seeking to to start and learn, and does not have a big enough pot to bet on every table... what should he do to start off? Spread and diversify to reduce risk or to specialise and study a particular class first?
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Property vs Stocks:
While we could all point to specific instances of people making amazing profit from this or that... and even though studies have shown that over the long term, stock investment always beat property investment generally... about 2 to 3 percent per year, on average... I don't like that as an argument because it's not practical to the average investor who does not or could not buy the entire market to match his to the averages.
So let's considered the merits of either class based on its productive capacity... because value will ultimately come from how productive the asset is or considered to be.
How productive could an average suburban block of land be? Assuming there's no gold or oil under it, and assuming that like most properties, its uses will remain relatively the same over decades (say could be rezoned after 20 years)... Over the years, a property is just something you build a house or a factory or an office over.. knock down and rebuild.
What about stocks?
If you see stock as merely the market prices ticking up and down, then it won't be much. But if you see it for what it really is - an organic organisation that comes about for the sole purpose of growing and be more profitable for its investors - then the productive capacity of businesses, whose ownership are transferred by many means, one of which is the secondary stock market through brokers... its productive capacity is practically infinite, and its returns to investor are only constrained by the company's effective use of capital, what that capital could employed and produce.
So putting property and businesses into that perspective, i think you will agree that ownership of business enterprise would generally be more productive and profitable than property.
We could all make mistakes in property investments as well as stock investments... the thing to do is probably to reduce the chances of us making mistakes, not to say there's no use trying and should spread things evenly.
Say a person does not understand much about stock valuation, does not have a clue either about property investment... would risk be minimised by diversification into both?
As i think i've said before... invest in what you know. And if you don't know either one or either is fine for you as long as it reaps the most rewards... then it probably is more profitable to spend time to study and get to know the field that are generally, and has proven to be, more fertile.
If i go skydiving and jump out of the plane... i don't expect the to fall flat and die as much as I don't expect to fall and die sitting on a stable bench in the yard.
Both have the same expectation, which is riskier?
No investor expect to lose money, that does not mean they always play it safe or that no financial lost ever befall them.
I don't read the economy or try to predict business cycles or any cycles... I could barely read the financial statements. So if the cycle isn't already there for any idiot to see, I wouldn't have seen it or try to predict it, and if i do sometime try to make a guess, i haven't put money on it.
And I don't expect lost or take risk in my investments. I expect to gain, and sometime expect to gain handsomely... doesn't happen but it has nothing to do with risk.
The risk i do take and do expect as risks are from me being wrong, being unlucky, being duped.. that's enough risks i think.
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I don't understand your reasoning for a higher return relative to base being a good thing. Following that logic and when my kids inherit my property, it costs them zero and they will get... i don't think you can divide by zero.
Anyway, congrats on your property investments. I hope you've already sold it and realised the profit.
Thre's just too many people with too much money scaring young people with some money and no experience.
ExampleYour kids inheriting the property would generate a CGT event.
.Full exemption
Rodrigo was the sole occupant of a home he bought in April 1990. He did not live in or own another home.
He died in January 2012 and left the house to his son, Petro. Petro rented out the house and then disposed of it 15 months after his father died.
Petro is entitled to a full exemption from CGT as he acquired the house after 20 August 1996 and disposed of it within two years of his father's death.
If Petro did not sell the house within two years of his father's death, he may request the Commissioner to grant an extension of time, see Commissioner may extend the two-year period
*shakes head*
No both have the same extent or potential outcome. Each one has a different probability of that potential outcome.
OK its obvious you need to learn more about risk. have fun.
Your kids inheriting the property would generate a CGT event. Far better to put that kind of asset inside a trust and merely change trustee as an inheritance mechanism or use a testamentary trust structure.
No I haven't sold yet...I have no reason to.
Cheers
Sir O
Example
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Apart from teaching yourself which could take a long time depending on your personality, there are educators and service providers to bypass what could be years upon years of trial and error. Nick Radge offers a service for stock trading/investment. The Chartist.com.auHi everyone i'm new here
I'm a university student studying nursing and have a dream of one day being a property developer. As I don't have much cash I am looking at stocks to be my initial investment vehicle (my silver investment is more a long term thing).
I want to educate myself about stocks (having read Robert kiyosakis books) and am wondering where to get started as I want the right education.
I want to educate myself about stocks (having read Robert kiyosakis books) and am wondering where to get started as I want the right education.
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