5 Hot Property Investing Tips
- By Robert Projeski
- Investing
- Unrated
Robert Projeski
Robert Projeski is the Managing Director of Australian Mortgage Options - an innovative home loan provider - best known for introducing their revolutionary consumer benefit driven loan products including the 3 Year Fixed, Rate Saver, Revolution Home Loan and Zero20 - No Deposit Loan) - log onto www.amo.com.au for details or call 133 266.
Robert is considered an expert in his field and is regularly quoted in major newspapers, finance portals and industry publications.
Investing in property? Have you considered these...?
1) Using property experts
Just because you have bought and sold a couple of houses with profit, does not mean you are an investment expert. Don’t listen to friends and family blindly – usually they have an opinion about investing, often despite that fact they are not doing it themselves. Property investing is too important an expenditure to take chances with – talk to property experts, investment advisors, finance brokers and study property reports before you make a decision.
2) Waiting for the price to come down...
Property generally always goes up in value. It may plateau or slip back a few %, but across the board – prices are steadily claiming. So, if you wait until the prices from 10 years ago return, you will wait a long time. You are in most cases better off buying now rather then in 6 months, as often you will pay more down the track – effectively reducing your capital growth. Having said this, the best time to invest is when you are ready to do so. Sooner than later is usually best.
3) Emotional vs commercial decision
When selecting and deciding on an investment property – do yourself the favour of approaching this simply as a commercial decision based on figures, returns, vacancy rates etc, not what colour the walls are, whether you would want to live in it or that it is in easy reach so you can mow the lawns on a weekend. The more emotionally detached you are, the better it is. Investing is done from the head, a home is bought from the heart.
4) Old vs New
Unless you are a tradesman or have loads of time to spare to perform renovations, repairs and maintenance, you probably are better off buying a newer investment property. Apart from the work and expense, your depreciation schedule is more substantial on a new property than an older one. After all, it is all about letting your money do the work – work smarter - not harder.
5) Managing the Property Yourself
Unless you are rather experienced in this area and have access to the industry tools to ensure you do end up with the best tenants possible – don’t do it yourself. Firstly, if you do select a ‘lemon’ for a tenant, this can easily turn into a lengthy process in front of the tenancy tribunal, with loss of rent, loss of access to the property, presentation costs etc. Once again, you want to work smarter not harder. So, get a good property manager to look after your investment. The percentage you pay them should outweigh any losses through your own tenant mismanagement and peace of mind is worth a lot!
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