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Turn $15,000 into a staggering $10 million through property investment

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$15,000 into a staggering $10 million through property investment 

  • Scott and Mina O’Neill, aged 28 and 29, own 25 properties worth more than $10 million across the country
  • The married couple purchased their first home together in 2010 in Sutherland, south of Sydney
  • They  have built their property portfolio by rentvesting, renting their own home and investing in others

A young couple in Sydney’s south have turned $15,000 into a staggering $10 million through property investment.

 

It’s a great Christmas story and one any young couple should be thinking of repeating starting in 2017!

(Please contact us at info@limepropertysolutions.com.au for further information or the chance to discuss this and other issues in the comfort of your own home.)

Scott and Mina’s story can be found here http://dailym.ai/2gNPBDS

 

It’s a story many other young couples could share and one many have shared, turning a relatively small savings account into a multi-million dollar portfolio. Their story is almost a perfect duplicate of the information to be found in the Lime property Solutions free eBook which you can download free from here: www.limepropertysolutions.com.au

 

To turn $15,000 into a staggering $10 million through property investment, the O’Neill’s have used the strategies Lime teaches and recommends, particularly with understanding markets and market timing. They have, in a relatively short period of time, built a portfolio of 25 investment properties while they continued to rent their own home. Lime Property Solutions can explain a few things to clients which would make their portfolio even less risky and almost certainly better performing than what the O’Neill’s advocate. For example, a better understanding of yield and return can make a portfolio much better performing over a relatively short time-span.

If you want to know more about how you can build a multi-million dollar portfolio through property investment, write to: info@limepropertysolutions.com.au.

This couple manage to make their millions through rentvesting.

Rentvesting refers to purchasing an investment property but continue renting. You could turn $15,000 into a staggering $10 million through property investment! 

The Block is a warning for renovators

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The Block is a warning for renovators

It seems to be easy money, buy an old place, renovate and make a fortune but the reality is the Block is a warning for renovators. Most, if not all of the many series of The Block have actually made huge losses but the average viewer is left with the feeling that renovation is a great way to make money!

The worry is these shows give a totally unrealistic expectation to budding renovators.

Washington Brown, Lime’s preferred supplier of depreciation schedules (www.washingtonbrown.com.au) has recently run some numbers on the supposedly successful sales in the recent Port Melbourne series and the numbers do not add up!

(Please contact us at info@limepropertysolutions.com.au for further information or the chance to discuss this and other issues in the comfort of your own home.

The following is from The Washington Brown Report:-

“ From a financial point of view the development, which consisted of transforming a 1920s art deco building into a luxury apartment block, was one of the worst he has ever seen.

While I understand the magic of television, Channel 9 has outdone David Copperfield in creating the illusion of a profit to the public!

Let’s look at the numbers:

According to reports Channel 9 bought the site for around $5 million, which allowed for 6 apartments. Only 5 were sold on TV and for calculation purposes let’s say the acquisition costs is $4.2 million.

The construction cost and depreciation allowances totalled over $11 million, for the 5 apartments alone.

That’s $15.2 million alone in construction and acquisition costs.

It’s worth noting that under the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997 the initial vendor (ie. the developer) has an obligation to pass on the actual costs of construction to the purchaser, where the costs are known.

Let’s not forget there’s then a variety of other costs involved in buying and selling, and undertaking a property development, including:

  • Stamp duty
  • GST on the sale
  • Demolition
  • Marketing
  • Agents’ fees
  • Legal fees
  • Interest
  • Rates

Whilst some of these costs may have been avoided due to contra deals, the bulk would have to be outlaid by Channel 9.

I estimate these additional costs to conservatively be $2 million, which brings the total cost to $17.2 million.

The Block’s total sales realised just a little over $12 million, leaving the development in the red by around $5 million, yet it has been indicated that profits of up to $715,000 were made by the contestants.”

 

Just Google “How much did the block cost channel 9” , probably best to go to page two of your results and read some of these articles. It is unlikely that any of The Block series has actually made money and the The Block is a warning for renovators, not an endorsement to make money!

If you want to know more about the pitfalls of renovation and how to make money from property without the work and hassle contact: info@limepropertysolutions.com.au.

What should you be looking for in a new investment property?

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What should you be looking for in your new investment property?

It makes sense to understand changing demographics because what you buy today as a ‘good’ investment property may not be so good in 10 or 20 years when you decide it’s time to sell, so what should you be looking for in a new investment property?

An investment property that works today may not be as desirable as a home for our population of tomorrow so it’s important to keep track of changing demographics and buy an investment that is most likely to appeal to tomorrow’s owner occupier market.

Just a couple of decades ago, the average Australian household had around five people living in it. Just five or six years ago, the average home had just over 3 persons per household. This has increased slightly as more and more older children decide to stay at home for much longer. The big family for most Australians is a thing of the past, in the 2012 census it was stated that most households within a small radius of the centre of most of our cities had less than two persons per household!

The growing demographics of home owners and renters, the growth group for new households comes from:

  • Young professionals
  • Young couples
  • Empty nesters
  • Retirees
  • Single parent families

It would seem that with older children staying at home longer, as well as the above growth demographics, it’s important to consider their needs for a good investment property.

(Please contact us at info@limepropertysolutions.com.au for further information or the chance to discuss this and other issues in the comfort of your own home.

There is a move towards the city centre with these groups and the need for well-designed units and townhouses with a bathroom each is becoming an essential for shared living, whither with a relative or a friend. Good-sized bedrooms are also an essential with room to entertain.

Nearly 60 per cent of those aged 15-29 are still living with their parents across the 35 wealthy member nations of the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development. In Italy, Slovenia and Greece more than three quarters of that age cohort have not yet flown the coop. Australia’s proportion has reached 54 per cent. Read more https://goo.gl/B3U0kW

This is a trend that is unlikely to change for some years, particularly as house and unit prices continue to rise. Make sure you buy an investment property that will work for you in the future, do the research now before you buy. So what should you be looking for in a new investment property? Consider the future demographics that may eventually want to purchase your investment property.

(Please contact us at info@limepropertysolutions.com.au for further information and the chance to discuss this and other selection criteria issues in the comfort of your own home.

Is it really time to be asking for a rental decrease?

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Is it really time to be asking for a rental decrease?

This attached recent article from Jessica Irvine of sometime ABC fame, is suggesting renters should now be asking for rental decreases but is it really time to be asking for a rental decrease?

I believe that while there is some truth in the story, it is not the time for a huge number of renters to be asking for a decrease.

Read more here: http://www.smh.com.au/money/why-its-time-to-ask-for-a-rent-reduction-20161107-gsjq6i

The data she uses is all sourced from NSW, particularly the NSW Tenant’s Union and of course, this data seems to support the fall in rentals in Perth and the likely fall in rentals in inner Brisbane and Melbourne!

(Please contact us at info@limepropertysolutions.com.au for further information or the chance to discuss this and other issues in the comfort of your own home)

I’d suggest to any renter looking for a new property or a new lease that they use their own common sense when negotiating. In Sydney and Melbourne in particular, yields for landlords (yield being rent paid) are now at their lowest ever. Landlords are not inclined to lower their returns even more. Common sense, in this instance, just means having a look around your area and on real estate web sites for comparable property for rent. If you are looking at a unit, then perhaps in some areas you may find that there are many similar units available for rent. In the knowledge that you can easily find another place if necessary at maybe a lower rental, then you MUST try and negotiate a decrease on your current rent or try for a decrease in the advertised rent. If the landlords are desperate, they will negotiate.

If you are sitting in a nice little townhouse or villa, or even a house and land close to the city or even in the middle suburbs of your city, you may find that you are lucky to have the property you are currently renting. There are many areas with plenty of rental properties, but make sure you are comparing apples to apples. It can still be very difficult in many areas of all our east coast capital cities to find the type of home you wish to rent, particularly if it is not a unit, and if there is a scarcity, be prepared to pay for it. Your landlord will easily find someone else who is prepared to give them what they want if you won’t! Maybe it is not time to be asking for a rental decrease.

If you want to know more about rental yields in certain areas or discuss buying new property investment,   contact: info@limepropertysolutions.com.au.

Buying your first home is not easy, Bernard Salt

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Buying your first home is not easy, Bernard Salt

Buying your first home is not easy, Bernard Salt, some of our younger generations, Gen X and Gen Y, seem to miss the humour of one of our best known demographers, Bernard Salt, who has now written two articles over the last couple of weeks suggesting firstly, that they might like to stop buying expensive avocado lunches and save for a home or even give up their overseas holidays and save instead for a house deposit! Like me, Bernard is a “baby-boomer”, one of the lucky who just drifted through life buying cheap properties and having a ball!

(Please contact us at info@limepropertysolutions.com.au for further information or the chance to discuss this and other issues in the comfort of your own home)

While his recent articles should not be taken too seriously, or rather too literally, I do feel some annoyance at how hard the world is perceived to be to some of the younger generations trying to jump on the first step of the property ladder. It has never been an easy step to take, Buying your first home is not easy, and it can be annoying when we baby-boomers are reminded just how easy it was for us to get started.

Read more Bernard Salt article here: https://goo.gl/wGnqiK

My first home was bought in the UK. I was a 21 year-old teacher and the very small two-bedroom duplex I purchased was around eight times my annual income. I managed the deposit through working for the previous four years, sometimes up to 126 hours per week during all the long university breaks and saving by staying at home. On a couple of occasions, I did take lower paying jobs which offered me free accommodation and free meals in holiday destinations like France and the Channel Islands. While I didn’t save much on these jobs, I at least had the opportunity to explore and enjoy a different culture. Travel expenses were absolutely minimal as I hitch-hiked most of the time.

When I eventually moved in to my first home, I had most of the basics from presents from a large family. I had a bed, lounge suit and necessary kitchen-ware and linen. I made most of the ‘furniture’ from cheap melamine sheets and watched a black and white television gifted to me as most people were switching to colour. I did have an old car that was serviced by me with the help of a friend. I had to take on another evening part-time job to help make ends meet. The only time I could ever afford to eat-out was at family gatherings where usually, my parents were paying. Every couple of weeks, if the budget allowed, we may have had a bottle of wine. Eight years after buying the house, I had my first 10 day trip overseas.

This was a lifestyle very typical to all my friends, it did not seem ‘hard’ and it certainly was not unusual. The older generation thought, quite rightly, that we never had it so good.

In speaking to older Australians, including many European immigrants from the 50’s and 60’s, it seems their life was similar. Many tell stories of building their own first home with the help of friends and sleeping on mats on the floor until they could afford a proper bed.

I’m very glad the world has changed and our standard of living has improved immensely since the 1970’s but I do think Mr Salt, tongue in cheek or not, is putting out a very important message; it is not easy to get on to the property ladder buy it never has been! It does often take some sacrifice in current lifestyle and it does involve living on a tight budget …. and always has!

‘Affordability’ is always an issue after a period of cyclic growth. Buying your first home is not easy and never has been. The same stories emerge after every growth cycle. We had the same discussions in Sydney in 1989 and again in 2003 after the last two major growth cycles. After a few years, income increases, borrowing rates change and things become easier – affordability increases! If we make the necessary sacrifices and budget/lifestyle changes now, then there may be a good chance that advantage can be taken during the next phase of more-affordable housing. It will happen, it always does, just be ready for it and don’t expect to start off with everything that your older neighbours have; it’s taken them all their life to get to where they are!

If you want to know more about this or discuss buying new property investment, a great way to ‘save’ towards your own first home, contact: info@limepropertysolutions.com.au.

Affordable Housing fix is years away

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Affordable Housing fix is years away

Don’t you get fed up reading about the latest ideas on affordable housing? Now we read again something we all know, the affordable housing fix is years away!

The latest government inquiry, costing thousands of dollars again has been abandoned and placed in the ‘too hard’ basket yet again, good and not surprising news to the property investor but not so good news for the first home buyers in our major capital cities.

(Please contact us at info@limepropertysolutions.com.au for further information or the chance to discuss this and other issues in the comfort of your own home)

It’s reported today, “Treasurer Scott Morrison’s speech on housing affordability might look like an improvement on his predecessor’s “get a job, a job that pays well” advice. It’s not. In practical terms, it’s nothing at all.”

It’s reported as one of the government’s favourite sort of problem, “one they can flick responsibility for onto the states and spend some years “thinking” about it without actually doing anything constructive.”

So the problem is all about supply, or is it state land use regulations, or is it tax policy and something to do with the cost of supplying expensive social housing? Maybe it’s all about changing our capital gains tax rules or getting rid of negative gearing or just moderating the rules on new land releases? It might also help to charge developers more for appropriate infrastructure around new releases or developments, (struggling to understand this one?) or just a simple case of easing the huge amounts of stamp duty payable on the purchase of a property?

Of course, the answer may just be reviewing the first home owners grants, introduced in 2000 to assist with the additional costs in building caused by the introduction of the GST or maybe it’s just about lowering interest rates even further and keeping them low?

Now you know what some of the issues are you should have some idea of how easy this is to rectify! For a fuller explanation, you might like to try and understand this article: https://goo.gl/pE6vAR

I really think it is fair comment to assume that property investors have little to fear in the future about what government can or will do to make owning a property more affordable. The one thing that is very true and understandable about the issue is that affordable Housing fix is years away, if ever.

If you want to know more about how to make money out of the ever increasing price of property, contact us at info@limepropertysolutions.com.au.

Empty bedrooms? Put your money where your mouth is!

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Empty bedrooms? Put your money where your mouth is!

Apparently Sydney now has 20 years of future housing stock in empty bedrooms? Put your money where your mouth is NSW if you want to utilize more of this ‘space”.

Houses roofs

Downsizing is too costly for many older Australians

The first point of this new argument must be defining who has these ‘extra bedrooms”?   While some bedrooms in the homes of empty nesters may be empty some nights of the week, many do not have empty bedrooms gathering dust.  After years of being cramped with children, it’s a later life treat to own enough space for a study or an area to pursue a hobby. These rooms can also be used as exercise rooms to keep ageing bodies trim. Most are also grandparents who require bedrooms for visiting children and grandchildren; they are perhaps underused but certainly not empty.

(Please contact us at info@limepropertysolutions.com.au for further information or the chance to discuss this and other issues in the comfort of your own home)

 It’s also time to review the massive disincentives placed on older Australians to downsize. Many empty nesters will never consider downsizing because the appropriate type of housing is just not being built. Sure, we are constantly being warned about the forthcoming glut of apartments in most of our east-coast city markets, but many older Australians are not prepared to give up their gardens or a small private area where they can allow their ‘fur-children’ some space to run around outside the home. A smaller garden is often an attractive proposition but no garden at all is a deal-breaker. We need more villas and town homes in the established suburbs where the majority of these older Australians currently live.

 

The financial penalties for retirees downsizing can be enormous. Just imagine, an older retired couple in a slightly above average (larger) home worth $1.5 million. The home sale, including marketing and legal costs will cost them around $30,000. They buy a smaller town house at around $900,000 and they say goodbye to another $40,000 in stamp duty, another $2000 on legal fees and probably around $10,000 in removal expenses and buying some new furniture that ‘fits” their new surroundings. Basically, they would need to budget around $100,000 of their, (in most cases) diminishing wealth just to move.

 

Having made the move, they find that they have an additional $400,000 in the bank. This may be enough to stop many of their senior benefits, including pension payments. The argument, of course, is that they don’t need any government funding now but this misses the point that older Australians do love their children and grandchildren and they see it as an essential legacy to leave an inheritance to their family.

 

It will always be difficult to persuade older people to move out of their family home to free up empty bedrooms for the younger generations but as long as our governments insist on penalising such a move, the bedrooms will stay “empty”. Read more https://goo.gl/jBePqx

If you want to know more about appropriate house type investment contact us at info@limepropertysolutions.com.au.

Guide to buying property with your partner

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Guide to buying property with your partner

Today we have two very good articles which offer a guide to buying property with your partner and many other financial issues that are so often overlooked or completely ignored when two people decide to live together.

I have lost count of the number of couples I have worked with who tell me they are buying an investment property but ‘it has nothing to do with my partner, we keep our financial lives completely separate”.

It’s Spring again and love is in the air so it’s maybe a great time to sit down with your significant other and sort out some problems you may face if you decide to go your separate ways at some point in the future. Probably the two most important issues to recognise are:

  1. If you have been living together for two years or more, then under Australian law you will be treated in the same way as a married couple.
  2. Understanding point 1 above, you should try to steer clear of potential sexually transmitted debt.

Moving in together with a partner can triggers unexpected tax and financial consequences that are not all bad as there can also be unexpected financial gains from living together. Read here: https://goo.gl/ktYEYg

Relationship Australia research has found that disagreements over money are a stronger predictor of divorce than other commonly cited causes of marital disagreements.

Among other things, the 2015 online survey by Relationships Australia found 7 out of 10 couples said money causes tension in their relationships

A lot of people think that a pre-nuptial agreement is something that can only be done before an actual wedding but it makes a lot of sense to organise a pre-nuptial agreement before you move in with somebody. While it may be easy to keep separate bank accounts, what about the money your partner owes to the Bank? Half could easily become yours! Or what about your superannuation or even the inheritance from your parents that went towards paying off the house you both own or maybe its sitting in your long-term deposit or share portfolio; it may only be half yours!

There are other issues that can immediately affect you for good or for bad and they are all worth checking out. Make sure you do your guide to buying property with your partner. Here is a small list but further information on how they affect you can be found on the above link and below..

  • Medicare levy surcharge
  • Private health insurance rebate
  • Businesses and structures

Find out more at: https://goo.gl/pxcLUO

What Sydney Housing Bubble?

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What Sydney Housing Bubble?

Another international story about “The Bubble” – what Sydney housing bubble? Should be he title!  It seems that every month or so we read of overseas ‘experts’ (and very occasionally some local ‘expert economist”) telling us here in Sydney that doom is on the horizon for house prices in Sydney. Instead of peering over price growth charts in their far-away offices on the other side of the world, maybe they should just try finding a property to buy or rent in our great city before predicting yet another housing price crash!

Highlights from the recent UBS Global Real Estate Index Report place Sydney as the fourth-biggest housing bubble in the world. A bubble is something that is about to burst so this suggests that our young in Sydney actually will have no problem at all in entering the housing market as prices tumble when the bubble bursts. How many people do you know who actually believe this is close to coming true?

Bubbles burst when a city ends up with a major over-supply, populations decline and/or when loan repayments become impossible. With all the warnings of bubbles bursting in Sydney over the lifetime of anyone reading this article, it has never happened! Sure, towards the end of a boom period, we have seen prices correct by a few percentage points but no-one alive can ever tell you about the time the Sydney Real Estate market bubble burst.

If you actually believe this overseas take on the Sydney market, then you must also believe the following is about to occur:-

  • Sydney’s building boom is about to leave us with a massive oversupply of new stock
  • Sydney’s population boom is about to come to a screeching halt
  • Sydney is about to be hit with a very large unemploymnet problem
  • Interest rates are about to increase dramatically leaving home owners unable to pay their mortage

If you are concerned about interest rate hikes, read this: http://dailym.ai/2dno9k3 – they are likely to remain low for decades! As for the likelyhood of the other factors – forget it!

 

It would be great for our younger generation trying to make their first step on the housing ladder  if there was the slightest element of hope in our non-existant bubble bursting- what Sydney Housing Bubble – and maybe the topic makes for a little light banter around the BBQ but I’m convinced anyone who knows this great city also knows the story of the bubble bursting is just pie in the sky.

Read more: https://goo.gl/fAhbYi

Choosing an investment property and understanding demographics

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Choosing a good investment property and understanding the demographics

Choosing an investment property and understanding demographics of a neighbourhood go hand in hand.

When we are looking at an area or suburb for investment, it is essential to have a look at the demographics of the neighbourhood to understand the age groups attracted to the area and the likely incomes and type of housing that will be the most attractive for the majority of people wanting to rent and wanting to buy as owner-occupiers in the area.

It makes sense to be buying a modern two-bedroom apartment close to the city for your investment if you know that a large percentage of the population in the area are young professional renters with a reasonably high disposable income who can afford to pay the rental your investment should achieve.

Report found Cardiff as the most segregated city in England and Wales

Report found Cardiff as the most segregated city in England and Wales

Likewise, in areas where we see large numbers of retirees moving to smaller single level villa developments, wanting the added security of a gated community, then perhaps that type of property may make the best investment in that type of area.

A recent report from the UK may be of some interest to Australian planners also as we see the median age of residents in our cities fall considerably as young Gen x and Gen Y renters move closer to our city centres. The article entitled “Housing crisis ‘is driving young and old apart as different generations are being forced to live apart‘ , highlights the fact that age segregation is now an planning issue in many UK cities.

The study found that:

  • Under-30s are stuck renting in Britain’s regenerated city centres
  • In a rise in ‘age segregation’ the middle-aged dominate the coastal regions
  • The lack of affordable housing in many areas has damaged society, says a report by the Intergenerational Foundation

Recognise any of these issues for our Australian cities? Older people congregating in smaller towns and outer suburbs has implications on where to place health services and other planning issues as well as some of the more obvious problems ‘age segregation’ may cause.

Choosing an investment property and understanding the demographics of a neighbourhood is essential in understanding the type of property likely to work best for you both for finding renters immediately and for future capital growth in having the type of property most likely to appeal to future owner-occupiers.  Read more: https://goo.gl/CbaxP7