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Thread: Leverage to grow, Un-leverage to preserve.

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    Default Leverage to grow, Un-leverage to preserve.

    How a Falling Australian Property Market is Creating Many Negative Equity Property Owners
    Kyith, 28 Jul 07:00 AM

    http://investmentmoats.com/uncategor...operty-owners/

    Australia residential property market was hot but recent cooling measures have stemmed a prolong rise in prices.

    While the price have not collapse, the effects could be devastating.

    The main reason is due to the internals. Specifically, the kind of loans that got popular are the interest only lending.

    Now, the majority of your Singapore home loans are amortizing debt.

    Amortizing debt is a debt that you pay down the principal and interest. At the start, you pay more interest, because the interest is applied on a large loan. At the end you repay more principal because your loan has become small.

    As you pay off your principal, you build equity, or you get to own more of your home.

    An interest only loan is one where you pay a deposit or down payment. Your subsequent monthly payment is interest only. No principal payment.

    The advantage here is that your monthly payment is smaller.

    The disadvantage is that after the tenure, typically 5 years, you will need to extend the loan. Thus you may face re-financing risk. If the economic climate is not good, if your employment situation becomes worse off, this might become a problem.

    You would be familiar with interest only loan, because that is what the real estate investment trust or REITs used. They keep borrowing and extend the loan, paying interest only.

    While the payment is smaller, it does not mean it is safer.

    This is because we are dealing with human greed here.

    It justifies that you can buy a more expensive home. If you pay for an amortizing loan, your principal and interest would restrict you to only buy at reasonable price. However, if its interest only, even after appreciation, it is justifiable to purchase it because for the same dollar in monthly payment, you can still afford it.

    While the price have gone up, the thinking is that property prices would just continue to go up.

    The Australian Financial Review (AFR) reports that some of these property owners might be going into negative equity.

    What is negative equity?

    Suppose your home when you bought is $1 mil and you borrow $950,000. If you take $1,000,000 – $950,000 = $50,000.

    This $50,000 is your equity.

    Now if the property value falls by 10%, or by $100,000, your property is now worth $900,000 instead of $1 mil.

    Your equity is $900,000 – $950,000 = – $50,000.

    This means that if you sell off the home today, after paying off the $950,000 in mortgage, you still owe $50,000!

    Suffice to say, this is not a good situation to be in!

    In the AFR article, it provides us the reality that the down payment is not the only cash outflow.

    There are other closing cash out flow:

    Stamp Duty
    Lenders Mortgage Insurance
    Downpayment
    So your hurdle is higher than the prevailing market value of your home.



    The table above is from the same AFR article.

    There are 2 sections, one for Sydney and one for Melbourne. Both are cities where the jobs are and cosmopolitan living. If you want to look for work, you gravitate to mainly these 2 cities.

    The 2 tables show the purchase price if you buy at 3 different periods, 2013, 2015, 2017.

    The LVR tells the loan to value ratio.

    This example shows the most fierce borrowing of 95% loan to value. You basically put down a 5% deposit.

    If the properties are sold at $928k and $684k respectively, those bought in 2013, and 2015 will be positive after paying off the loan.

    When Evaluating Gains and Losses, Factor in the Unrecoverable Cash Outflow
    However, if you include the closing costs that you paid at the start, even the purchase in 2015 will be underwater.

    As you can see from the table, someone who bought in Sydney at the median house price of $1.03 million in December 2017 and sold in June 2019 at $928,350 (which assumes a 10 per cent fall in house prices) would be $194,467 worse off after $51,575 principal repayments, losing the deposit and having spent about $42,000 on stamp duty and $49,000 on lenders mortgage insurance.

    Someone who bought in Melbourne at the median house price of $760,000 in December 2017 and sold in June 2019 at $684,000 (which assumes a 10 per cent fall in house prices) would be $152,842 worse off after principal repayments, losing the deposit and having spent about $40,000 on stamp duty and $36,000 on lenders mortgage insurance.

    Fierce.

    There could possibly be more furnishing and renovation outlay that would make the financials look even worse.

    If we contrast this to the Singapore cooling measures, the ABSD, BSD and SSD have to be factored into your gain or loss computation.

    If you wish to sell the property in the third year, ABSD is 7%, BSD is 1%, SSD is 4%, you would have to build a hurdle of 12%. With the recent 5% increase in ABSD, the hurdle becomes 17%. Add on 3 years of 1.5% interest, you really need initial developer discount and some long term appreciation to break even.

    The Impact of a Tighter Lending Market
    If you are a a REIT investor, you might be seeing the same condition as the great financial crisis unfolding but in a different market.

    There is a cloud overhanging the Australian Banks because they became very dependent on mortgage loans.

    They are now under more scrutiny, with analyst speculating how bad it would get for them.

    This means that as property owner on an interest only loan, your interest cost might increase, they may revalue your property more conservatively. This affects the amount that you can lend, increasing the amount of down payment or cash flow that you need to put up.

    Lenders of interests only loan might decrease.

    As an owner you are in a fix.

    You need to come up with greater monthly cash flow (which you might not have).

    If you do not know what its like for a REIT in those times, its something like this. A property investor with better connections would have greater probability of getting a loan, or a sensible loan in that climate, compare to the every day person.

    Those owners who cannot refinance, are forced to sell off their properties at prices they should not be selling off.

    To have Prudence in Your Evaluation
    Crazy prices makes us greedy and clouds our evaluation.

    It makes us factor in more hope into our evaluation. That is often very risk seeking and unwise.

    If we are prudent, we might not have purchase the property at all.

    When the Singapore government came up with the TDSR, that was widely applauded. It ensures that only those that have good cash flow can purchase more properties, and protects those with poorer cash flow from speculating.

    The interest used in computing the TDSR is closer to 3.5%, about 100% more than the then prevailing market interest.

    Essentially, this is how we should evaluate as well.

    We can take on an interest only loan, but at the bear minimum, our cash flow should allow us to pay for a traditional amortizing loan. We should also ensure that even in the event of refinancing with a 20-30% down payment, we can do something like that.

    Summary
    Smart investors would use leverage or other people’s money to make money for them. Whatever equity they have are spread so that they can own more properties.

    In this way great growth can be achieve.

    However, there are some assumptions here:

    They always make sure that the property can cash flow on a conservative measure, if not they will not get into it
    They are able to get quality tenants
    They have good and strong relationship with lenders
    They have a diversified group of lenders
    Unless you are experienced, or spend time building up your team as above, taking excessive leverage is likely a recipe for disaster.

    Leverage to grow, Un-leverage to preserve.

  2. #2

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    When the Singapore government came up with the TDSR, that was widely applauded. It ensures that only those that have good cash flow can purchase more properties, and protects those with poorer cash flow from speculating.
    Holodeck bukan hanya di desain dengan kekuatan tapi juga punya karakter flexibilitas yang cocok untuk dunia arsitek yang perlu keseimbangan antara keindahan desain dan kekuatan struktur materi.

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    Quote Originally Posted by fajarsun View Post
    When the Singapore government came up with the TDSR, that was widely applauded. It ensures that only those that have good cash flow can purchase more properties, and protects those with poorer cash flow from speculating.
    It was calibrated, if you noticed they want a slow grow property market.

    Looking at the GLS land price, developer become greedy and start to launch at price beyond the set limit.

    https://www.scmp.com/comment/insight...reedy-property

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