Thursday, December 13, 2007

Mortgages at the click of a mouse

The key benefit of online-only loans are that they offer lower interest rates, according to CANNEX mortgage expert Michael Moran, who surveyed the field of online products for API.

The nominal interest rates on online products are considerably lower than comparable products offered through traditional banking channels, Moran reports.

"The average online rate of 7.25 per cent is 0.82 per cent lower than the average basic variable product offered by five major banks," he says.

Online loans are best suited to homebuyers and investors who want a 'no frills' product that offers low costs by removing bells and whistles such as branch access and bundled banking, Moran concludes.

API editor Eynas Brodie notes that property investors need to consider other factors apart from price.

"Online-only loans often have limitations such as higher exit penalties and no option to make interest-only payments or have the loan act as a construction loan," Brodie says. "This means that if you're going to turn a property over quickly, online mortgages may not be best for you.

"Clearly, online mortgages offer a cheaper product but borrowers need to be aware of what they’re giving up in order to save money. It's a matter of choosing the right loan for your own circumstances."

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source: rpdata.com

Young Guns of Australian property

For an age group dubbed 'Generation Rent', Generation Y is throwing up a surprisingly high number of successful property investors.

Australian Property Investor magazine invites you to meet five more Young Guns of Australian property. Featured in API's October issue are:

Damien Moriarty

At age 26, Damien owns 12 properties in Darwin. He’s also a previous nominee for the NT’s Young Australian of the Year, a budding philanthropist and heavily involved in the Ship for World Youth organisation. Among all that, he's also managed to start a home building company and a finance company with his brother.

"The key to financial freedom is investment because your income is only ever going to be finite – you can only be in one place at one time," Damien tells API.

"I look at it as if I've got a number of properties then it's like having a number of workers all working to make me money." By that measure, Damien has 12 workers on staff.

Kenneth Soward

Kenneth Soward is a character fit for a challenge: he's in a wheelchair as a result of an accident a couple of years ago. Rather than stopping him from doing anything, Kenneth says it's spurred him to get busy with property investing.

Kenneth owns six properties in Adelaide, worth about $1.4 million. Yet his investing acumen means the portfolio will only cost him about $6000 in the first year.

David Stewart

Few 12-year-olds would give buying property even a passing thought. But at that tender age, David Stewart had started saving for his first real estate purchase.

At his mum's encouragement, David started saving money from his after-school jobs and by age 17 was able to buy a one-bedroom unit across the road from the beach at Cronulla in Sydney. He now owns three properties in Sydney.

Adam Drabarek

At just 22, Adam Drabarek owns three properties in three different states. He's invested at Kalgoorlie in Western Australia, Sarina in north Queensland and finally at Darlinghurst in his home town, Sydney.

"My mum thought I was completely insane," Adam says, recalling the day when he flew to Kalgoorlie to buy property even though he didn't yet have his driver's licence.

Glenn Staker

Gold Coaster Glenn Staker, 29, used to spend all his money on cars but then decided to change his priorities, move back in with mum and dad and start saving for a property.

"I budgeted properly and if I spent $2 on a can of Coke I'd go and re-adjust my budget that day," he says.

Glenn now owns two properties on the Gold Coast and is weighing his options on buying a third.

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source: rpdata.com

Confidence at 11-year high

Professionals working in the property industry are more confident now than at any time in 11 years that the residential market will see growth in the coming six months, a survey suggests.

Almost 73 per cent of respondents to Ashe Morgan Winthrop’s latest survey of investors and other property professionals tipped the residential market to climb, the strongest result in the 11 years of the bi-annual survey.

"After the doom and gloom of the past two years, we are now seeing a renewed confidence across the residential markets," Ashe Morgan Winthrop director John Winter said.

"This widespread confidence comes in spite of the fact that investors are expecting another interest rate rise. Property professionals have clearly already factored a rate rise into their investment plans, so when it happens there should be no cause for alarm."

The survey attracted 846 responses from large and small property investors, lenders and advisers. Property investment intentions were up slightly from the previous survey, with 62.7 per cent of respondents saying they were quite likely or definitely likely to invest in property over the next six months, 1.3 percentage points up from six months earlier.

The biggest impediment to investment remained a shortage of suitable stock, with 26 per cent of respondents listing that as a major problem.

Confidence was high in Queensland, with more than 84 per cent of Queensland respondents expecting the market to improve in the next six months and more than two-thirds intending to invest.

Ashe Morgan Winthrop said New South Wales saw the strongest resurgence of interest, with more than 64 per cent of the state's property professionals reporting they were likely to invest and just over 63 per cent saying they expected the residential market to improve. Victoria also saw a rebound in confidence.

Western Australia put in the weakest showing of the four largest states; only 59 per cent of respondents said they planned to invest in property in the coming six months and just 48 per cent preferred to invest in WA's residential market.

"According to our survey, most property professionals now agree the WA market has reached its peak," Winter said. "The state was saturated with investment following the resources boom and its small size now seems to be limiting further growth."

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source: rpdata.com

Keep it simple: buy cheap

Property investors would do well to heed the advice of a learned US fund manager who summarised his approach to the share market as, "We try to buy stocks cheap", according to Michael Carman from Wealth Enhance.

Walter Schloss, a fund manager who's now in his 90s and retired, told an interviewer some years back of his simple approach to investing and legendary investment fund manager Warren Buffett cited the comments approvingly in a recent memo to shareholders.

The 'buy cheap' line was deceiving in its simplicity and applied to property as much as shares, Carman said. "For property investors it's easy to get caught up second-guessing when the property market will turn or reading the tea leaves of Reserve Bank statements to try and predict interest rate movements," Carman wrote in a recent Wealth Enhancement Bulletin.

"Schloss' advice, although aimed at shares rather than property, is nonetheless a salutary reminder of an investing and wealth creation fundamental: you make your money when you buy, so buy smart to build wealth.

"That said, the present time offers some terrific opportunities for buying cheap property. When prices overall are plateauing or growing slowly, investor and media interest is directed elsewhere, heightening the ability to locate bargains.

"In a similar vein there is a silver lining to the cloud of the (latest) interest rate rise... more bargains will surface as bank foreclosures rise, and the time for finding those bargains will lengthen.

“Add to that the inherent variability in prices across any given property market and your search for cheap properties is a veritable treasure hunt!"

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Commercial realities

You're looking at buying a small commercial property but the standard indicators aren't available to help you choose the right investment. There are no median sales charts to show the last 50 properties to sell in the suburb because the offices or shops you're considering have little or nothing in common and there probably wouldn't be 50 sales in 10 years, let alone one. In short, assessing a sound commercial investment has a different set of guidelines and strategies to buying residential. But there are some pointers that make the search easier.

Macquarie Bank head of property research Rod Cornish says investors need to pay attention to vacancy patterns and local business growth when considering office space and interest rates and spending patterns for the retail sector.

"Definitely prospective investors should be looking at where the vacancies are falling and demand is increasing before buying into the office market," he says. "Lower vacancy rates typically lead to rental growth. What we're seeing now is low vacancies are driving up rents and that's flowing further into value increases because investors can see the rents rising."Cornish urges investors to consider the age and efficiency of commercial properties. He says investors need to treat older office buildings more cautiously than they would a residential property of the same vintage, where age may be a character asset.

"They also need to consider sustainable or green issues, which are a major factor in today's office market," he adds. "An older, rundown residential property in a prime location could be refurbished but a similar standard building in the commercial market would be relying very much on the site value."

Cornish says CBD locations are in strong demand in all capital cities, so smaller investors should look to buy as close to the prime areas as possible to gain the greatest benefits.

"The Brisbane and Perth CBD markets have done exceptionally well, with office vacancy rates the lowest they've ever been and Melbourne's the strongest in 35 years," he adds. "The CBD rises first and then tenants tend to look at near-city locations."

Retail investment requires a different set of principles, Cornish says, but says the market's stability makes it an option worth considering. "For retail properties, investors should look for a spending pattern and sales growth," he says. "While non-discretionary or essential spending in outlets like supermarkets aren't impacted by the same cycles, typically discretionary spending is linked to the housing cycle. When you have housing construction, you tend to have people buying fridges and plasma TVs so discretionary spending went through a really strong cycle through until 2004. It started to slow down through 2005 and 2006 but now it's just started to pick up a little. But right now, the office cycle is stronger than the retail cycle.

"Retail is still a very steady investment. It has very low volatility and typically solid returns even in downturn. The one indicator in retail property is to look at sales because that flows through to rents and when you have rental growth in the retail market, you get value growth flowing on. Look at interest rates when you look at retail property. When you get a fall in interest rates, typically retail property does well and when there's a rise in interest rates, it doesn't do as well."

Adelaide property analyst Peter Koulizos stresses to investors that they understand the lease situation on any potential commercial property. He says a reliable current tenant is essential to a successful commercial property and investors should make themselves familiar with the term and length of the lease before considering a purchase.

"The key to commercial property is the lease," he says. "You value residential property based on what other similar residential property sells for. But if you're looking for sales of restaurants on the first floor in Adelaide, for instance, there wouldn't be too many."

Koulizos says incoming rent and not just the promise of a good rent in the future can't be underestimated: "Commercial property is based on the rent coming in, multiply that by the sort of return you're looking at and commercial property, depending on whether it's retail, industrial or office, you're probably looking at 6.5 to 8 per cent return."

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source: rpdata.com