Angela
I did used
to be on housemouse and believe we were in contact before, briefly. I am still interested in the area and indeed
hope to move to Guildford in the next 12-24
months (dependent on the market!!!!)
After that, and when prices are at more sustainable levels, I hope to
become a serious investor… part competitor to you and hopefully more than that
someone who can help you and vice versa.
the last time I
estimated my portfolio value was probably three months ago and I'm not doing it
again now:-) I'm not in the mood! I'll do it again when prices
exceed what they were last time I did it, whenever that may be!
Sounds like a bit of a head in the sand attitude! Knowledge is power, you know that.
I think I've done the right thing in
extracting a lot of cash out of my portfolio over the last two years, while
prices were high, which I use to make more money than I could by keeping it
locked up in there. My gearing is high, certainly over 75%.
If you have made money then you have done the right thing. By gearing do you include any cash? ie is 75% of your gross wealth borrowing or
75% of your gross property values?
Either way I do not think you need to panic, I hope it is the latter. I have done a similar thing and when I talk
about my gearing I include cash as equity so I actually owe nearer 65% but I
don’t include what I can pay off any time I want!
I don't like buy to sell on the
whole... surely that's a high risk activity in this market?!
Holding a falling asset is risky (well it’s not a risk, it’s a
certainty!) But if you are buying
sufficiently BMV then by definition you can sell straight away at a profit,
therefore it is relatively low risk. (If
you can ensure the yield is good as well you have a Plan B to fall back on.)
I guess my main, if not only,
justification for continuing to buy at present is that I'm seriously worried
whether buy to let mortgages as we know them - as we've almost come to
take for granted since 1996, won't continue to be available at anywhere
near the levels they have been. So my argument for buying now is simply
that it's still possible!
That is exactly where I think your thinking is flawed. There will always be finance available. And to a very large extent prices will be set
by the availability of that finance. Now
there is a possibility that BTL finance will dry up and owner occupier finance
won’t. But I doubt it. There is nothing magical about owner
occupiers or BTLers. Both are reliable borrowers
if the income stream is high enough and secure enough. I can see finance getting harder all round
(well it is already). And prices will
fall all around as a result. At some
point the finance will open up again and you will be able to buy again. But the key point is that in theory buyers
and the banks interests are aligned. If
the borrower can afford the property and the price is going to stay steady or
go up, then it makes sense to buy. And
it makes sense to lend. Currently – aside from not having money themselves –
banks are worried that buyers can’t afford the payments and the value of the
security is falling. It does not make
sense to lend (or not at high LTVs).
Put simply, the fact that banks don’t want to lend is in itself a reasonable
indication that it is not a good time to buy.
Also, as I'm sure you're aware coming
from this area, it has been incredibly difficult to get sellers to accept big
discounts when the market has been so hot, but now it's much easier
I did not know that but I would have suspected strongly that that was the
case.
Also, I will admit that I'm learning
all the time: I think I'm a much better investor than I was years ago and so
able to do better deals. These hard times concentrate the mind, which is
good. This thread is good... it has affected me, made me
think. I believe in immersion, focus and constant & never-ending improvement as Anthony Robbins would say:-) I
don't buy too many properties to be honest - I don't overtrade - that's
bad. Probably 95% of what I do is what I don't do, if you see what I
mean... I just wish my friends & family understood..!! I just think
a lot of the time - that's a good thing to do! We should all think long
and hard about what we're doing - or not doing! And have positive
cashflow:-)
All good! I have done something
similar. I can’t remember exactly when I
last posted but I have gone back to university, studied for a masters in estate
management, and am 90% of the way through the training to become a chartered
surveyor specialising in valuation – retail, industrial, offices, development
land, the odd going concern, residential (including residential lease
extensions, collective enfranchisement).
I know a bit about commercial landlord and tenant law, valuing
residential with regulated tenants, planning law and process. And I am learning how to negotiate. Very very useful stuff. Hopefully the next boom and I am ready with
better knowledge and finance than I was last time!!!
Anyway, I'm sure you'll be fine.
50% gearing. Bought as much as possible in the fast rising years.
Sit back and observe now.
I am certainly poorer than I would be had I been less cautious. But then again I only really thought about
property investment in a big way in 2003/04 and by the time I had thought much
about it much I was convinced prices were above long term trend and that buying
would be risky.
I actually saw prices rising in our
area at a ridiculous pace last year and into this, and discounted in my own
mind those peaks anyway - I took that as froth that had to inevitably come off
the top of the market, and never went there! That's what's important
about knowing your area - well, and having commonsense about the market generally.
When I estimated my portfolio value
last, I didn't bother with that froth - I mean, things were going on the market
and selling at 190 - 195k, but I didn't estimate my like properties at more
than 175k.
Sensible. I think investors should
ignore the last 6 months froth in a booming market as – you are right – it can
disappear in a flash. Prices are back at
late 2006 level, with the growth in 2007 having been reversed in a few months
this spring. I would argue that this is
the start of a trend downwards however, and not just the removal of froth.
The problem for investors will be
'catching' the bottom of the market as it turns... and when it turns, it could
turn very quickly - back to days of sellers NOT being willing to accept big
discounts!
Again, I take your point, but I would argue that getting them at 25% or 35%
below peak (in real terms) at 7 or 8% yield rather than 5 or 6% is a significant
enough discount that missing the bottom by 10% won’t worry people anywhere near
as much as some people will regret buying at 2007 prices.