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Thread: The what, why and how of properties

  1. #1
    Join Date
    Dec 2009
    Posts
    349

    Default The what, why and how of properties

    The what, why and how of properties

    August 11, 2013


    Time flies. My little girl turns two today. Happy birthday sweetheart!

    With a limited vocabulary, her favorite words are “what”, “why” and “how”. And she enjoys dragging the vowels to show her emotions.

    Here is a typical example:

    “See what we have in the fridge.”

    “Whaaat?”

    “Fresh milk or orange juice?”

    She opens the freezer and points at the ice-cream.

    “No, you can’t have this for breakfast.”

    “Whyyy?”

    “Because you’ll have a stomach upset.”

    “Hooow?”

    “Er …”

    “No no,” she shakes her head and walks away.

    A toddler asks what, why and how all the time. But as we grow older, we gradually lose our natural curiosity to question the things around us.

    Perhaps we are too lazy and don’t bother to know what is happening. Maybe it is too tiring to find an explanation to everything. Or we have tried but still have no answer to our question.

    Likewise, when people are buying or investing in properties, many don’t bother to ask questions. Some have asked, but they haven’t asked the right questions.

    Asking the ‘what’ questions

    Find and compare all the offers and options in the market.

    - What is available in the uncompleted and resale market?

    - What is the price difference for new and old flats in the same district?

    - What prices are people buying at the top and bottom of the previous property cycles?

    - What are local sellers offering compared with what property seminars are marketing in the same overseas market?

    Asking the ‘why’ questions

    Understand the reasons why things happen the way they are.

    - Why is there no choice but to buy at the current market?

    - Why developers can sell new projects at future prices?

    - Why the government has to constantly announce new cooling measures?

    - Why the current market only left first-time buyers or upgraders buying new projects?

    Asking the ‘how’ questions

    Validate the information given to find out the truth.

    - How to generate a decent rental return buying at the current market?

    - How to maintain a positive cashflow when market conditions change?

    - How to look for good tenants for projects in this area?

    - How to find future buyers to offload properties bought in this overseas market?

    Having the courage to say ‘No’

    If you have asked yourself the right questions, and have done your homework to find some answers, you should be able to form your own opinion.

    Never go with the crowd blindly and make a property decision based on the comments of the people around you. Don’t fall into the trap of buying a place using the criteria of industry analysts, property developers or marketing agents.

    Remember that this is your home and you are the one paying for it. As soon as you are not being unrealistic, you should make decisions using your own set of criteria. If your priorities are not met, you don’t have to buy.

    Whether the property you bought is good or bad, it is not your fate, it is your choice. You should have the choice to say ‘No’, the courage to walk away and stand by what you believe in.


    Dietrich Bonhoeffer, a German anti-Nazi theologian, once said,
    “It is the nature, and the advantage, of strong people that they can bring out the crucial questions and form a clear opinion about them. The weak always have to decide between alternatives that are not their own.”
    As I am writing this, my two-year-old is standing behind me, getting into a tub of ice-cream with a spoon she finds somewhere.

    “What are you eating?”

    “Whaaat?”

    “Mommy says no ice-cream for breakfast.”

    “Whyyy?”

    “So you’re not listening to Mommy?”

    “Hooow?”

    I try to grab the ice-cream from her but in vain.

    “No no,” she smiles mischievously and walks away.

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Jul 2013
    Posts
    42

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by vip
    The what, why and how of properties

    August 11, 2013


    Time flies. My little girl turns two today. Happy birthday sweetheart!

    With a limited vocabulary, her favorite words are “what”, “why” and “how”. And she enjoys dragging the vowels to show her emotions.

    Here is a typical example:



    “See what we have in the fridge.”

    “Whaaat?”

    “Fresh milk or orange juice?”

    She opens the freezer and points at the ice-cream.

    “No, you can’t have this for breakfast.”

    “Whyyy?”

    “Because you’ll have a stomach upset.”

    “Hooow?”

    “Er …”

    “No no,” she shakes her head and walks away.

    A toddler asks what, why and how all the time. But as we grow older, we gradually lose our natural curiosity to question the things around us.

    Perhaps we are too lazy and don’t bother to know what is happening. Maybe it is too tiring to find an explanation to everything. Or we have tried but still have no answer to our question.

    Likewise, when people are buying or investing in properties, many don’t bother to ask questions. Some have asked, but they haven’t asked the right questions.

    Asking the ‘what’ questions

    Find and compare all the offers and options in the market.

    - What is available in the uncompleted and resale market?

    - What is the price difference for new and old flats in the same district?

    - What prices are people buying at the top and bottom of the previous property cycles?

    - What are local sellers offering compared with what property seminars are marketing in the same overseas market?

    Asking the ‘why’ questions

    Understand the reasons why things happen the way they are.

    - Why is there no choice but to buy at the current market?

    - Why developers can sell new projects at future prices?

    - Why the government has to constantly announce new cooling measures?

    - Why the current market only left first-time buyers or upgraders buying new projects?

    Asking the ‘how’ questions

    Validate the information given to find out the truth.

    - How to generate a decent rental return buying at the current market?

    - How to maintain a positive cashflow when market conditions change?

    - How to look for good tenants for projects in this area?

    - How to find future buyers to offload properties bought in this overseas market?

    Having the courage to say ‘No’

    If you have asked yourself the right questions, and have done your homework to find some answers, you should be able to form your own opinion.

    Never go with the crowd blindly and make a property decision based on the comments of the people around you. Don’t fall into the trap of buying a place using the criteria of industry analysts, property developers or marketing agents.

    Remember that this is your home and you are the one paying for it. As soon as you are not being unrealistic, you should make decisions using your own set of criteria. If your priorities are not met, you don’t have to buy.

    Whether the property you bought is good or bad, it is not your fate, it is your choice. You should have the choice to say ‘No’, the courage to walk away and stand by what you believe in.


    Dietrich Bonhoeffer, a German anti-Nazi theologian, once said,
    “It is the nature, and the advantage, of strong people that they can bring out the crucial questions and form a clear opinion about them. The weak always have to decide between alternatives that are not their own.”
    As I am writing this, my two-year-old is standing behind me, getting into a tub of ice-cream with a spoon she finds somewhere.

    “What are you eating?”

    “Whaaat?”

    “Mommy says no ice-cream for breakfast.”

    “Whyyy?”

    “So you’re not listening to Mommy?”

    “Hooow?”

    I try to grab the ice-cream from her but in vain.

    “No no,” she smiles mischievously and walks away.

    The new generation is albeit very different. They are challenging the conventional wisdom and projecting a new paradigm in the pursuit of wealth.

    Instead of asking what, why, how of properties, they are asking instead - what cannot, why can't we, how can't we ( think yowetan 's Sinai property purchase) and finally, yes, we can ! ( 5K salary for $1.8M house purchase )

    They are smart, creative and daring when it comes to investment decision. It is a new generation. They can't wait to get rich fast.

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Jun 2009
    Posts
    2,309

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by 3centsworth
    The new generation is albeit very different. They are challenging the conventional wisdom and projecting a new paradigm in the pursuit of wealth.

    Instead of asking what, why, how of properties, they are asking instead - what cannot, why can't we, how can't we ( think yowetan 's Sinai property purchase) and finally, yes, we can ! ( 5K salary for $1.8M house purchase )

    They are smart, creative and daring when it comes to investment decision. It is a new generation. They can't wait to get rich fast.
    I hope you are not the generation that is going to bail them out when they go bankrupt ?

    Some rules are universal, timeless, classic. Like prudence, ability to siff out invesments, etc. Without these, anyhow chiong will only result in long term suffering. I dont mind they suffer, but please dont drag the rest down.

    DKSG

  4. #4
    Join Date
    Jan 2013
    Posts
    42

    Default

    VIP...Seems like you have been the winner in the recent property boom or born with a silver spoon or may one of those rare satisfied anti-materialist spiritual lot.

    We live in the world of chrony capitalism where access to precious information, networks make a few privileged ahead of the herd masses. The theory of "why" and efficient markets doesn't work anymore and a few from masses do turn lucky and think they have all the wisdom in the world to predict, beat the market and ask the right set of questions.

    Unfortunately, I am among those like yourself asking hundreds of those right logical questions and times again in many asset classes faced red and wondered want went wrong while cases where like a monkey throwing random darts hit few jackpot investments....so much so for studying economics and finance in the Ivy league institutions of the world ...

    Not to discourage you VIP but really liked your post and thought process but wonder if it still works today!!....

  5. #5
    Join Date
    May 2012
    Posts
    2,429

    Default

    Aiyo, why must ask sooooo many questions before buying?
    If you can afford, then buy , cannot afford then don't buy la.

    If you don't know where you stand then ask the bank.

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