SYDNEY PROPERTY INVESTING
Welcome!
financial independance


Dear Property Investors,
This year has proven to be one of the most interesting property investment years in all Australian history. The hand over to new government this very month proved a dramatic finish to the year and probably marks the start of the silly season. But what of those people who have grasped the opportunities which have allowed them to ascend up the property mountain? Hopefully you have been able to increase your own market share and can now take a well deserved holiday.
Fortunes are not made by watching others rise, but rather by making sure that each step
you take up the cliff face is the best option at that precise moment in time, and knowing full-well that you are equipped with the right equipment for the job, with the right instructors. T
he anchors in the rock face solid and strong should you slip here or there. The peak is reached this way.
Your speed up the cliff is assured only by following a pre-determined route accompanied by vigorous and dogged determinated to make the dream plan a reality.
I urge you to undertake this Christmas a moral obligation to yourself to achieve the excellence that is no doubt your within you as a fellow Australian and human being as we approach a prosperous new year and a wholesome Christmas period. Thank you. 
 Merry Christmas and best wishes for the new year, Richard B. Jackson.


Managing a 1031 exchange is not difficult – but it does require adherence to strict 1031 tax exchange rules and regulations.You must enter into a 1031 exchange with the advice of a tax professional.Sell your Property Tax Free with a 1031 Exchange!



                

NICOLE KIDMAN SELLS HARBOR FRONTAGE FOR A PROFIT

The great thing about quality assets is that they never go out of fashion. The article below from the age:

NICOLE KIDMAN has sold her Walsh Bay penthouse for about $4.65 million as Sydney real estate agents wrap up their pre-Christmas property offerings.

The sale of the two-storey apartment will yield a handy profit, after $220,000 stamp duty, as it cost $4 million in March last year, just weeks before her marriage to the singer Keith Urban.

Kidman, who maintains her residence in Darling Point, has said she will spend more time on their Nashville farm, taking a break from Hollywood to focus on her marriage.

Although many December property sales conclude previously unsuccessful auction campaigns, agents have about 200 Sydney auctions this weekend, according to Australian Property Monitors.

They include a four-bedroom, two-storey house on Christmas Place, Green Valley. Its co-owner was bankrupted in June. The agent has been quoting more than $480,000, well below the top price of $596,000 for a comparable property nearby in 2004.

In Mosman the former Reserve Bank governor Ian Macfarlane has sold his 1940s house. He had hoped to get $1.9 million, but by late last month it was marketed at $1.7 million. Last traded at $99,500 in 1979, its sale price has yet to be disclosed. Mr Macfarlane and his wife, Heather, have spent $3.55 million upgrading to a 1905 Federation house in Mosman.

Last year there were 13 house sales in Sydney on Christmas Eve, according to RP Data, down on 50 in 2005.

PARALYSIS of ANALYSIS
Many young people wish to get into property investing, however there is so much often conflicting information that they can not reach a conclusion on what to do and don't know where to begin. This is known as paralysis of analysis. A good start is to make an honest self-assessment of assets and income. When I began my personal property investing career, I did just that. I was mid 20's had a little equity in my home and about two thousand dollars in hard earned savings. I knew I wanted to buy an investment property, but I also knew that I was not willing to risk all that I had accumulated so far, in case I failed and lost everything. The important point is to save up some new assets which can be used for investing; that way if you make some mistakes along the way you can recover and can still keep going. 

Motivational Thoughts
1. There are 3 kinds of memory...good bad and the convenient.
2. A hug is the perfect gift...one size fits all and nobody minds if you exchange it.
3. Don't count the days...make the days count
4. The best preparation for tomorrow is proper use of today.
5. Patients is a virtue that carries a whole lot of "wait".

 

 

10 Common mistakes made by Landlords.

How to cut out the MIDDLEMAN and find DESPERATE SELLERS!

     

SELF EDUCATION
The old saying that you'll be exactly the same person as you are today next year, except for the books you read people you meet and information you absorb through research, is and always will be as valid and true as ever. 

Knowledge is power. Getting it requires effort, but expectancy theory says if I perceive a great reward for completing a task, I am likely to be more persistent and energetic in achieving overcoming the obstacle to gain the expected reward. Your reward is knowledge itself. Here are some basic milestones to help you on your way... 1. Read a book every month. 2. find those who have succeeded and see how they did it. 3. Surf the internet for great sites like this one that will help you to gain knowledge that wil empower you to reach your potential. 




Sydney the Lifestyle city

The prime residential property market in Australia continues to hold up, in Sydney supported by wealthy expats buying for their retirement or for family members.

‘In many ways the UK and Australian residential markets have mirrored each other in recent years, with big price growth from 2000 to 2004 a 2005 slowdown and more latterly a recovery in pricing and demand,’ 
 

Sydney property 'has best growth prospects'

By Ross Kelly | September 25, 2007

BIG investment institutions and property companies believe residential property in Sydney has more growth potential than any other class of property on Australia's east coast, a survey says.

Residential property markets in Melbourne and Brisbane are also poised to generate positive returns for investors despite a possible tightening of credit related to the US sub-prime mortgage crisis.

A survey of 31 firms, including the major banks, by the Australian Property Institute (API) asked respondents to gauge where they believed each asset class of property - residential, commercial, retail and industrial - was positioned in terms of the market cycle.

A clock was used to represent the market cycle, with noon representing the peak of a boom and six o'clock representing the bottom of a bust.

At seven o'clock, residential property in Sydney was placed as having the most outstanding potential for growth, followed by Melbourne residential at nine o'clock.

Brisbane residential is sitting at 10 o'clock, respondents said.

"The survey found that respondents see a tightening of credit in Australia, especially from non-bank lenders,'' API New South Wales president Tom Webster said.

Sharemarket volatility was also seen by respondents as likely to dent investor confidence.

But while sub-prime mortgages represent 20 per cent of the total US market, they only account for two per cent of Australian mortgages.

"The survey revealed that people are less certain about any major long term negative impact in Australia ... but generally it was felt it wouldn't have any major impact.''

A rise in interest rates related to higher funding costs for lenders could effect different parts of cities in different ways.

Mr Webster warned that the Sydney market is "very segmented''.

"There are large chunks of the Sydney property market that won't go up, but there are other parts, more at the higher end, that will,'' he said.

Fast forwarding to September 2008, respondents said the Sydney, Melbourne and Brisbane residential property would still have the best growth prospects than any other class, and would continue to do so through 2009.

Retail property, meanwhile, is currently at 11 o'clock, and will hit noon in all three state capitals in 12 months time before going into retreat in 2009.

Commercial and industrial property are both sitting at 10 o'clock in most of the three capital cities today, and will continue to grow through 2008.

But commercial and industrial property markets are are likely to hit noon in September 2009.

Compared to investments other than property, over the next 12 months, 65 per cent of respondents said domestic non-residential property was likely to outperform equity markets.

But domestic listed and unlisted property trusts are only expected to post "moderate growth'' as demand for quality properties fuelled by compulsory superannuation outstrips supply.

"The scarcity of quality Australian properties is having a major impact on the prices people pay, and of course yields,'' Mr Webster said.

Global property was seen as presenting investors with far more opportunities, with 68 per cent of respondents saying it offered significant prospects for strong returns.

Over 50 per cent of respondents said local property was already priced at a premium, and 81 per cent said their was a scarcity of Australian properties in which to invest.






Manly Beach



debt to reach 'crisis point'

Article from: AAP

September 18, 2007 03:30pm

MORTGAGE debt will rise to crisis point in less than two years, an economics expert has predicted.

People were addicted to debt and borrowers would soon face a repayment burden similar to when interest rates stood at 17 per cent in 1990, University of Western Sydney economic and finance professor Steve Keen said.

Releasing his paper, Deeper in Debt, at Sydney's Centre for Policy Development, Prof Keen said if debt continued to climb at such a swift rate, the income to repayment ratio would be unsustainable.

"(Australia) has six times as much debt as compared to income as we did back in the 1960s," Prof Keen said.

"While house prices have doubled, debt has increased fivefold. We're talking debt levels of a level we've never seen before.

"The repayment burden of debt in 18 months' time will be the same as it was back in 1990 when interest rates were 17 per cent."

Prof Keen also warned of a fall in house prices - bad news for investors expecting an appreciation on their asset.

Photo: Stock.Xchng

Australian Property Monitors general manager Michael McNamara said a growing number of home buyers were "living on knife's edge", depending on two incomes to meet repayment obligations.

"If you need two incomes to service your debt and if someone loses a job,or a woman in a couple gets pregnant, it's game over," Mr McNamara said.

"Property prices have increased 250 per cent since 1996 but mortgage debt increased by five times in the same period.



"People are foregoing lifestyle to pay out ever-increasing mortgage."

Mr McNamara said Australia is experiencing "unprecedented levels of bankruptcy and repossession and loan defaults" and that action must be taken to reduce the risk of that outcome.

Prof Keen called for government intervention to regulate mortgage lenders and a full public inquiry into Australia's household debt, taking in the impact of lending standards, housing affordability, negative gearing and capital gains tax.

Ruskin

"Mid-1965 - that's how long ago debt started to rise in the debt to output ratio. We've had plenty of warning," Prof Keen said.

"Neither (political) party really has any idea what the hell to do. The politics around it are: `Don't talk about it before the election'."

Prof Keen said the lack of public housing and tenuous position of renters needed to be dealt with to reduce the incentives for people to take loans they could not afford.

He has also suggested a regulation of lending principles where a borrower must have the capacity to make repayments rather than display asset wealth.
 



    

     

BRISBANE UP 12%

Brisbane's residential property market continues to soar, with figures from the Real Estate Institute of Queensland showing the city's median house price has risen to $425,000 in 12 months.

For the fourth consecutive quarter, property price growth across the Sunshine State was healthy and shows no signs of slowing down.

Queensland's increasing population was helping to drive the market in the state's south-east, according to REIQ chairman Peter McGrath.

"Agents are confident that the market will continue to perform well - as it has been doing for the past 12 months," Mr McGrath said.

A lack of stock in nearly all price ranges is one of the main drivers of the market, as demand continues to out-strip supply, he said.

The median house price in Brisbane increased by 13.3 per cent to $425,000 in the 12 months to the end of September.

Suburbs within 10km of the city and affordable locations close to the water performed especially well, he said.

"Suburbs such as Manly, Auchenflower, Grange and Newmarket are all benefiting from the changing dynamics of these areas.

"It's all part of the evolution of Brisbane."

The top end of the property market also continues to perform extremely well across the state, he said.

Ascot, Hamilton, Mermaid Beach and Surfers Paradise all recorded median house prices of more than $1 million.

Sovereign Island's median house price sits at a staggering $2.2 million.

"The prestige market has been faring exceptionally well all year with strong demand continuing for the very top end of the market.

"Noosa Heads and Noosaville have benefited from this trend with prices up in both these areas."

Locations in Greater Brisbane also recorded healthy gains, with Logan, Beaudesert and Pine Rivers all recording double digit increases.

Declining housing affordability is continuing to prompt first home buyers to look outside of inner-Brisbane, making Ipswich a more desirable location.

The median house price in Ipswich increased 13.3 per cent to $269,000 over the last 12 months.

"Ipswich has had very good sales volumes and solid price growth, while still being affordable for first home buyers.

"The area is certainly benefiting from the current market conditions with plenty of development going ahead."

While there has been steady growth on the Gold Coast, up nine per cent to $436,050, there has been a lack of good quality stock of late, he said.

West of Brisbane, Toowoomba continues to be one of the most affordable areas in Queensland, with a median of $257,000 over the year.

All three local government areas on the Sunshine Coast posted higher medians over the year

Sydney property has peaked

Wednesday, 7 November 2007

Sydney’s residential housing market has declined from an August peak, with buyers spooked by potential interest rate rises, according to recent analysis by independent property group RP Data.

More than 2000 Sydney properties were up for auction during October, but clearance rates slumped to 70% from August rates of 74%, says John Wakefield, company research director. He says residential prices have been rising since February, accompanying increasing clearance rates from a low of 55%.

Wakefield says the willingness of buyers to meet the expectations of vendors in a heated property market is on the decline. “Buyers have needed to bid higher, but as the expectation of the mid-year interest rate rise became more certain it started to dampen the market. It looks like the peak was reached in August.”

He says people will continue to rent and be more reluctant to enter into the property market, predicting today’s rate hike to 6.75% to result in falling clearance rates and more subdued bidding.

Melbourne is a different story. Ange Zigomanis, property analyst with BIS Shrapnel, says the August rate rises didn’t greatly affect the Melbourne market, as population growth has helped maintain pressure in the market. “No matter what strong rental growth is coming through, people still need a roof over their heads.”

But he says today’s rates rise will hit Melbourne’s outer suburbs the most. “Outer suburbs are the most sensitive to interest rate rises. People there are on 95% mortgage, so they’ve been a lot more strained. People in the inner suburbs have more equity in their home.”

Mark Armstrong, director of Property Planning Australia, says Melbourne demand has slowed but it is seasonal. He says the Melbourne market naturally softens in spring, with supply almost doubling. “Psychology of the market tells us that more people enter at the beginning of the year rather than end of year. People don’t think now is the time to buy.”

Armstrong says this pattern isn’t followed to the same extent in Sydney, with level of supply more even throughout year, but there should still be a natural softening of the market in winter. He says the real test of the interest rate rise impact will be the first half of 2008.

 

Time will tell

September 26, 2007

Stampede in reverse ... nervous investors retreat to safety.

Stampede in reverse ... nervous investors retreat to safety.
Photo: Bloomberg

Sharemarket volatility has shaken the bulls.

The subprime mortgage market continues to unravel like a ball of string, connecting banks in London, Paris, Sydney and Wall Street with borrowers in smalltown US. Talk of recession in the US and Australia is growing and Australia may or may not have a new government by Christmas.

With so much uncertainty, investors are understandably nervous about the outlook for shares.

Australian companies finished the 2006-07 financial year in great shape, with average earnings growth of 15 per cent. The share market had already factored this in, posting a total return of 30 per cent in the year to June. By last month nerves had set in and the market suffered a savage correction.

Investors are banking last year's profits and wondering if that's all there is from a bull market beginning to falter in its fifth year. Earnings growth is expected to slow to a more sedate 10 per cent in 2008 and share price volatility is set to continue.

Against this backdrop, Money asked three fundamental share analysts which companies they believe investors can buy and hold, with confidence, for the long term (see box).

John Price, of Conscious Investor, says over the short term the market does strange things but over the long term earnings drive share prices.

Or as Roger Montgomery, of Clime Asset Management, says, in the short term the market is a reflection of people selling to renovate the bathroom, not the health of the underlying businesses.

Montgomery says share market volatility is a sign that people need to stop investing in mediocre businesses that have been tossed up by the bull market and focus on what businesses are really worth. Only then can you make rational decisions about what and when to buy and sell.

In last month's market mayhem, Clime invested about $10 million in Macquarie Bank, ANZ and Westpac because he reckoned the market had over-reacted to the subprime mortgage crisis. Within 10 days of buying, the three companies posted an average share price increase of 22 per cent.

Macquarie's share price fell from a high of $98 in May to a low of $61.90 last month. "Yet for investors looking two to four years ahead the prospects for its business are very good," Montgomery says.

Price says it makes sense to join Warren Buffett and start by looking for companies with good growth prospects. "If you invest in a portfolio of companies that you bought at reasonable PE [price-to-earnings] ratios and whose earnings continue to rise, then you are going to do well," he says.



Alternative Sydney





By Maurice Dunlevy

September 03, 2007 12:00am

Article from: The Australian

THE weekend start of the spring selling season did little to revive the sluggish Sydney housing market, but in Adelaide, house prices are surging.

Saturday's auction clearance rate was 65 per cent, well above the 55.9per cent rate this time last year but down 0.6 per cent on the previous week.

Australian Property Monitors research analyst Michael McNamara said improving market conditions gave an impression that prices should be moving, but results remained sluggish.

Historically, the spring selling season is boosted by people hoping to buy a home by the October long weekend. But Mr McNamara said other factors were in play this year, including the APEC conference, the looming federal election and the prospect of another interest rate rise.

According to the Real Estate Institute of Victoria, Melbourne's Saturday auction clearance rate was above 80 per cent, reflecting booming sales in inner and middle suburbs. However, houses in outer Melbourne, which are traditionally not sold by auction, remain difficult to sell.

Heat in Adelaide market

But reading the real estate advertisements over a Saturday morning breakfast is best not done with a mouthful of food.

Especially if it's been a few years since you last looked. Prices have boomed, locking first homebuyers out of the market.

A hot real estate market in South Australia is making auctions increasingly appealing. Traditionally, a vast majority of homes sold in South Australia are sold by negotiation - or private treaty - rather than at auction.

Figures from the Real Estate Institute of South Australia show that of the 23,000 houses sold over the past 12 months, about 1200 have gone under the hammer. That's less than 5 per cent of the total market, and predominantly in the eastern suburbs.

However, real estate agents say an auction process is the best way to sell for many more people because of strong current demand and a tight housing market.

They say several houses selling at auction are fetching tens of thousands of dollars more than they - and the owners - expected because there are too many people bidding for too few houses.

L.J. Hooker Unley principal Peter Economou said there had been many examples in recent weeks where homes had sold for at least $100,000 more than their valuation.

"I'm not talking in the $1 million bracket - I'm talking in the $400,000 to $600,000 bracket. There's definitely a shortage of good property on the market, and that creates more competition,'' he said.

"Any vendor I think would be well advised, with the protection of their reserve price, to go to auction and make sure they at least have a toe in the water.

"If you are a seller, go to auction. Under the present conditions you owe it to yourself to test the water.''

With Anthony Keane of The Advertiser