Posted on

The truth about good yield and bad yield

The truth about good yield and bad yield

Good_yield_bad_yield

Given the current lack of growth in our property markets, many experts, educators and advisers are pushing cash flow as a good investment option. The trouble is that most of the suburbs and towns they put forward are selected purely because of their high rental yields – but there’s good yield, and then there’s bad yield.

Bad yield is not going to deliver you positive cash flow, because rental yield is a function of both prices and rents. Rental yields can rise if prices have fallen, even if rents haven’t risen, or if rents have not fallen as much as prices. This is bad yield, and some of the highest rental yielding suburbs put forward in various glossy promotions are in locations where housing prices have crashed in the last five or so years.

These “high yield” lists feature towns such as Broken Hill in New South Wales, Blackwater, Collinsville and Dysart in Queensland, Newman and South Hedland in Western Australia and Rosebery, Zeehan and Queenstown in Tasmania. Investors seeking positive cash flow might be tempted to buy in these towns because they have high rental yields and extremely low house prices. If you are amongst them, remember that the high yield in these markets has nothing to do with rental demand and everything to do with falling prices.

Good yield is driven by rent demand not by price falls, so if you seek positive cash flow from your properties, look for high rental yielding areas with high rental demand, such as tourist destinations, infrastructure construction zones and locations favoured by overseas arrivals.

All of these households create genuine rent demand. Some of the highest good yields can be found in coastal suburbs where prices have risen in recent years, but these are seasonal holiday locations, and the high yield is only obtained during the peak summer season. Watch out for such seasonal variation traps.

Permanent and semi-permanent rental areas such as ex-Housing Commission estates or the older affordable outer suburbs of our major cities provide consistently high yields with solid rental demand. These areas might seem unattractive to some, but they have strong rental appeal to others.

Remember, that although some of these locations may not appeal to you, what matters is that they do appeal to someone else. For example, Risdon Vale is an outer suburb of Hobart with a constantly high good rental yield and it’s also where Tasmania’s maximum security male prison is located.

The secret to Risdon Vale’s high rental yield is the demand for rental accommodation there, coming from the girlfriends, partners and wives of the prison inmates. They want to live in Risdon Vale so that they can more easily make conjugal and family visits to the prison. You might not wish to live near a maximum security male prison, but the secret to Risdon Vale’s high rental yield is that many others do.

Posted on

Top tips for obtaining housing finance

Top Tips for obtaining housing finance

Newcastle mortgage broker, David Hoar shares his passion for property by giving us his top tips for obtaining housing finance

The best strategy for getting into the market now depends upon your particular circumstances, and your ultimate objective(s), but remember that in December 2018 around 40% of all home loan applications were rejected – so before you get too excited talk to your broker or bank about getting pre-approved to save yourself unnecessary cost, time and stress.

Leveraging equity

If you’ve been fortunate enough to own property that has gone up in value over the last 5 or so year’s then you can look at using equity in your current property to buy another one.   In this situation the bank re-values your property, to identify the equity you have available, and will generally allow you to borrow up to 80% of your current properties value.

Most lenders will structure the deal as follows:

  • 20% of the new property value plus costs (stamp duty, pest and build, conveyancing etc) secured against your current property
  • 80% of the new property value secured against your new property

By doing it this way you avoid Lenders Mortgage Insurance (LMI), which is normally charged by lenders if your loan on the new property is more than 80% of its value.

Buying on low or no deposit

There are some lenders that will allow you to borrow up to 95% (including LMI) to buy an investment property, however this can be expensive as LMI ramps up quite considerably when your loan/value ratio is over 90%.

If your parents or siblings own a property, then some lenders will allow you to use equity from their property to help support your purchase and avoid LMI.

Like where you live but can’t afford to buy there?

Then rentvesting might be a good strategy for you.  In this case you continue to rent and then buy an investment property somewhere else.

Many people choose to do this – as they enjoy the lifestyle or proximity to work and social and entertainment options of where they live – but can’t afford to buy there. 

So rather than miss good buying opportunities an investment is purchased in another location. Remember, that you don’t have to like where you buy an investment property, you just need a good supply of tenants that do!

About David Hoar

David Hoar of Money Saver Home Loans is a finance lending expert with clients from Brisbane to Hobart. David is a qualified Accountant, has a Graduate Diploma in Taxation, a Graduate Diploma in Marketing and Management, and a Certificate IV in Mortgage Broking – and he is passionate about ensuring property buyers have access to expert information and help.

For more information, visit: https://www.moneysaverhomeloans.com.au/

Posted on

Top Tips for dealing with Real Estate Agents

Top tips for dealing with Real Estate Agents

Melbourne real estate agent, Bryce Houston shares his passion for property by giving us his top tips for dealing with real estate agents

Become a local expert

Try to inspect at least twenty properties of the type that meet your criteria in the town or locality you are looking at before making any purchase decision.

Don’t rush things

Make the effort to visit the area a few times. During the week, at weekends, in the day and during evenings. Talk to the locals to get a feel for the area and what it has to offer – and what it doesn’t.

Check recent sales

Look at the property sales (sold results) on realestate.com.au or domain for the last six to twelve months to ascertain the actual market value of sales. Don’t go only by the listed asking sale price – study what has sold and for how much.

Know your buy price limit and preferred type of property

Know how much you can borrow and the type of property you want before talking to agents. Then tell them that you are pre-approved and what you are looking for. This will make you a serious buyer in their eyes and they’ll try hard to find you a suitable property. Call them once a week to see if anything has turned up.

Set up alerts

Set watch alerts on your favourite real state app like realestate.com.au or domain to alert you of any new listings so you can get into action as soon as they come online.

Check the days on market

Ask the agent how many days on the market a property has been on for or simply search realestate.com.au from newest to oldest as this will show you the oldest. Older listed properties are often more negotiable and agents will be keen to sell.

Don’t be reluctant to make an offer

Real estate agents and Vendors love to get offers especially if the property has been on the market for a while. Even if it’s a low offer, it could be the one the vendor accepts.

Keep in front of the agent’s mind

Agents may not chase you, especially in hot markets, and good deals go quickly in any market. Let them know you are a serious buyer and stay in touch. You may be offered a property off-market, which can save the vendor thousands of dollars in advertising and staging costs, save the agent’s time and reduce your purchase price.

About Bryce Houston

Bryce has bought, subdivided, renovated and sold properties from Frankston to Byron Bay. He combined his thirty years of sales experience with his passion for property by becoming a real estate agent in 2016, and now gets to share his passion for property with other sellers and buyers.

For more information about Bryce: https://carrumdowns.harcourts.com.au/Profile/Bryce-Houston

Posted on

What makes a potential investment area attractive

What makes a potential investment area attractive?

Some investors will avoid areas because there’s a high proportion of rental properties or it’s a dirty looking industrial town. They might favour suburbs where they would like to live themselves, but this is not relevant. What matters is whether other people want to live there, because this is what makes an investment area attractive.  

Risdon_Vale

Risdon Vale is an outer suburb of Hobart and it’s also where Tasmania’s maximum-security male prison is located. It’s not what most would call an attractive place. The area is dominated by massive walls skirting the jail’s perimeter, topped with coils of razor wire and the night sky is penetrated by floodlit guard towers and the howling of ferocious guard dogs.

Coupled with the constant threat of rampaging escapees running amok through the town, surely here is a place that could be called “unattractive” and deter any potential residents.

Yet, here’s the thing, Risdon Vale has the highest housing rental yield in Hobart and it’s driven by genuine rental demand. The source of housing demand comes from the wives and partners of the inmates, who rent properties in Risdon Vale to be near their incarcerated loved ones for conjugal and family visits.

The irony is that the higher the incidence of burglaries, murders and other serious crime in Tasmania, the greater will be the demand for rental properties in Risdon Vale.

The importance for investors is not that you might find such places unattractive or even dangerous, and that you wouldn’t want to live there – what matters is whether other people want to live there, creating housing demand in the process. 

Posted on

Our Accuracy

My published predictions - an unequalled record of accuracy

I publicly forecast Sydney’s and Hobart’s housing market booms, BUT unlike other commentators, my predictions were published in the property media just before the growth kicked in, not years before or after.

In July 2020, I predicted in Smart Property Investment, Australian Property Investor, Real Estate Business and Your Investment Property that Canberra was set to become our best performing capital city.  

Since I made that bold prediction, Canberra’s housing market has recorded the highest house price growth of all Australia’s capital cities!

I was the only expert to forecast (YIP Magazine, March 2020) that property prices would boom in our major capital cities as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic. This was at the same time as the economists and other analysts were all forecasting doom and gloom.