The 10 most important life lessons of a property investor

The 10 most important life lessons of a property investor

  05 May 2024

I recently celebrated a another birthday.

I won’t tell you how old I am, but nowadays my candles cost more than my birthday cake!

As I’ve been investing in property, and some would suggest rather successfully, for over 5 decades, I’d like to share some of the most valuable investment lessons I’ve learned over that time in the hope that they’ll make your investment journey smoother.

1.  Have a plan

Strategic investors have a plan, know where they are heading and follow a proven system to take the emotion out of their decisions and give them more consistent results.

They make educated investment decisions based on research and buy a property below its intrinsic value, in an area that has above-average long-term capital growth and then add value to manufacture equity.

They recognise that attaining wealth doesn’t just happen, it’s the result of a well-executed plan.

Planning is bringing the future into the present so you can do something about it now!

When you have a Strategic Property Plan you’re more likely to achieve the financial freedom you desire because we’ll help you:

  • Define your financial goals;
  • See whether your goals are realistic, especially for your timeline;
  • Measure your progress towards your goals – whether your property portfolio is working for you, or if you’re working for it;
  • Find ways to maximise your wealth creation through property;
  • Identify risks you hadn’t thought of.

And the real benefit is you’ll be able to grow your wealth through your property portfolio faster and more safely than the average investor.

Your Strategic Property Plan should contain the following components:

  1. An asset accumulation strategy
  2. A manufacturing capital growth strategy
  3. A rental growth strategy
  4. An asset protection and tax minimisation strategy
  5. A finance strategy including long-term debt reduction and…
  6. A living off your property portfolio strategy

This means every property you buy will be the physical manifestation of a large number of decisions you’ve made, and that you’ve made in the right order.

2. Take a long-term perspective

The property market moves in cycles and in every decade there are a few years of flat or falling property prices, however well-located real estate has increased in value by an average of over 8 per cent per annum over the long term.

Long Term Value

Imagine if you could buy the house your parents bought at the price they paid thirty or forty years ago; how many properties would you have bought then knowing what those properties would be worth today?

Research by Metropole, based on data by the REA Group and the Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS) shows that Australia’s national median house value has risen by an enormous 540.1% over the past 42 years.

This is an average annual growth rate of 7.62%.

Of course, these numbers vary by state.

40 Year Growth By City By Period Chart Dec 22

 

  • Over the past 42 years, Melbourne had the highest average annual price growth for houses at 8.26%.
  • Sydney was the second-fastest-growing with a 7.98% average annual house price growth, only just ahead of Brisbane .

And these are just overall averages and within each state here are some locations that have enjoyed significantly more capital growth than these averages, and other locations which have underperformed.

I guess that’s how averages work.

At Metropole, we spend a lot of time researching locations that deliver wealth-producing rates of capital growth.

3. Treat your property investment like a business

The successful investors I know have grown a substantial asset base by treating their investments like a business.

They do this by surrounding themselves with a great team of advisors, getting the right type of finance, setting up the correct ownership and asset protection structures, and knowing how to legally use the taxation system to their advantage.

4. There is not one property market

While many people generalise about “the property market” there are many submarkets around Australia.

Each state is at a different stage of its property cycle and within each state, the markets are segmented by geography, price points, and type of property.

For example, the top end of the market will perform differently from the new homebuyers market or the investor segment, or the median-priced established property sector.

And while at any time there are hundreds of thousands of properties for sale in Australia, most are not investment-grade properties.

5. The crowd is usually wrong

“Crowd psychology” influences people’s investment decisions, often to their detriment.

Investors tend to be most optimistic near the peak of the cycle, at a time when they should be the most cautious (remember market sentiment at the end of 2020) and they’re the most pessimistic when all the doom and gloom is in the media near the bottom of the cycle when there is the least downside (as is happening now.)

Market sentiment is a key driver of property cycles and one of the reasons why our markets overreact, overshooting the mark during booms and getting too depressed during slumps.

Remember that each property boom sets us up for the next downturn, just as each downturn sets the scene for the next upswing.

That’s why I currently see a window of opportunity for property investors with a long-term focus.

This window of opportunity is not because properties are cheap, however when you look back into a three years time the price you would pay for the property today will definitely look cheap.

The opportunity arises because consumer confidence is low and many prospective homebuyers and investors are sitting on the sidelines.

At the beginning of 2023 I forecast that it would be a good year in property at a time when all the bank economists and even the RBA predicted property prices would fall further.

And I was right, probably because I’ve been around long enough to see patterns in the chaos.

We saw an opportunity like this since late 2018 – early 2019 when fear of the upcoming Federal election stopped buyers entering the market. And look what’s happened to property prices since then.

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