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The following material is of a general nature only and does not take your personal circumstances into account. You should seek financial advice before making any investment or financial decisions.

Tuesday, October 11, 2011

Victorian homeowners' $300m blow

VICTORIAN homeowners have lost more than $290 million over the past three years selling properties for less than what they paid for them. 
 
Alarming figures that point to a hidden crisis in the property market reveal 5427 vendors lost an average of $54,000 on investments gone wrong in the three years to July.
The Melbourne CBD, Southbank and Docklands are the state's leading loss-making suburbs.
One out of every 20 properties sold in those locations had lost their owner money, according to the data from a property research firm.
But the losses are not limited to the flats-dominated inner-city market, with the figures also showing vendors losing millions in popular family areas.
These suburbs include Point Cook, Roxburgh Park, Frankston, Reservoir, Carrum Downs, Glen Waverley, Hawthorn and Elwood.
Residex, a property information firm that collates data on real estate markets throughout Australia, compiled its analysis after sifting through the results of 268,000 sales recorded with the Valuer General.
It is the first time the firm has crunched the numbers on Victoria, meaning it could not make historical comparisons.
The losses are even more startling given that the city's median house price rose by around 30 per cent over the same period.
A breakdown of the top 10 loss-making suburbs is heavy with inner-city locations as well as some of Melbourne's most expensive postcodes.
At the top of the list is the CBD, where 427 properties were sold for less than what the vendor paid.

Southbank recorded 213 loss-making sales, Docklands 92, St Kilda 92, Carlton 91, Hawthorn 85, South Yarra 70, Brighton 61, Elwood 61 and Point Cook 57.

The figures come as Melbourne limps into its traditional spring selling period, with little more than half of all properties selling at auction.

The market has been battered by seven interest rate rises since April 2009, which have added about $85 a week to a $350,000 mortgage.

Yesterday, almost 600 properties were auctioned, but only achieved a clearance rate of 54 per cent.

Residex chief executive John Edwards said the number of vendors burned in property sales would eclipse 6000 if stamp duty and transaction costs were taken into account.

Mr Edwards, who has monitored the nation's property market for 25 years, said the pain for Melbourne home owners was far from over.

By the time the market bottoms at the end of next year, Residex expects the city's median house price to have shed 15 per cent. Families living in a $500,000 home can expect to see $75,000 wiped from its value.

"The adjustment process in Melbourne is just beginning," Mr Edwards said.

"I won't be surprised to see Melbourne suffer more than any other capital city in Australia. It has got the highest volume of surplus stock in the country and as the manufacturing industry further turns down the city will suffer from more unemployment than any other capital."

JPP Buyer Advocates' Catherine Cashmore said many of those who had lost money in property purchases would have been short-term investors, both local and foreign, buying off-the-plan, inner-city apartments.

"There is a surplus of high-rise developments and they tend to lose value before they gain value," she said. "Nine times out of 10, off-the-plan developments are overpriced. They are priced on speculative value.

"When you go to sell you are also in a situation where no one wants to buy your lived-in apartment because there are always brand new ones coming on to the market in those postcodes."

About 55 per cent of houses in Melbourne are now worth double what their owners paid, RP Data found. Interest-rate watchers are predicting a Melbourne Cup day interest-rate cut of 0.25 per cent by the Reserve Bank.

AMP Capital chief economist Shane Oliver said while homeowners will welcome the cut, it will take several more to inject any life into the state's property market.

"We will need a few more cuts before housing picks up," Oliver said.

Ref: http://www.heraldsun.com.au/news/more-news/home-owners-300-blow/story-fn7x8me2-1226162101573

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Tuesday, September 13, 2011

First home buyers set to benefit from housing slump


Financial comparison website RateCity.com.au found that first home buyers face a tougher environment than last year, with the release of its second First Home Buyer Index.
But despite these concerns, the RateCity report shows property prices were relatively stable over the past 12 months and some states are lower. The national average house price for instance, (based on the RP Data-Rismark Hedonic Index using the capital cities data) fell by 0.15 percent to about $491,000.
"Interest rates have been on hold since November 2010, and recent Reserve Bank comments suggest relatively slow rate movements for the rest of 2011," says Mr Smith.
"We believe this is a very good time for potential first home buyers who are confident about their employment prospects and have a solid track record of building savings, and can therefore meet repayments with confidence."
RP Data's research director, Tim Lawless agreed.
"With household incomes growing at 6 percent per snnum, interest rates potentiall approaching the peak of the tightening cycle, rents increasing, and house values going nowhere, buyers are seeing an improvement in their position," he said.
"With first time buyers now representing a bit less than 15 percnet of all owner occupier housing finance commitments it is likely that market activity in the first-time buyer market will increase in the medium term."
The RateCity Index measures the level of difficulty for first home buyers entering the property market. It compares household incomes, first home buyer mortgage sizes, the benchmark basic variable rate – which is the average of the four major banks including ANZ, Commonwealth Bank, National Australia Bank and Westpac – monthly repayments and percentage of income towards repayments.
Currently first home buyers are facing tougher challenges than 12 months ago, with the RateCity Index lifting by nine points since February 2010 to reach 120 points in February 2011.
Damian Smith, RateCity’s CEO, said the biggest factor contributing to this change was interest rates.
"There’s no doubt that first home buyers are nervous about their chances of getting a foothold in the property market. We’ve seen the benchmark basic variable rate lift by 115 basis points in the past year to 7.17 percent. Also, lower government grants for first home owners, plus general consumer uncertainty are hanging over the market," says Mr Smith.
"The average first home buyer is paying around $164 more per month in mortgage repayments compared to 12 months ago, which has a big impact on the family budget.
"As a result, the level of activity from first home buyers is historically low. Compared to 12 months ago, the proportion of first home buyers out of all home loans financed has fallen by 3.7 percentage points to 14.9 percent."

Source: http://finance.ninemsn.com.au/pfproperty/buying/8242582/first-home-buyers-set-to-benefit-from-housing-slump

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Friday, September 9, 2011

How the rich got richer

The past year was very good to some of the richest people in the world. Many of the globe's wealthiest saw their net worth increase through entrepreneurship, investing, inheritances and other business endeavours. These individuals wisely put their money to good use and reaped the rewards of their wise stewardship in 2011. Let's take a look at how the world's richest people got a little richer over the past year.
Entrepreneurship
Bill Gates life is a testament to the wealth-building power of entrepreneurship. His tiny start-up company, Microsoft, has evolved into one of the largest technological companies in the world. He is proving that full-time philanthropists can still maintain a spot on Forbes richest list. Gates has given away billions of dollars over the past few years and no longer takes a salary from Microsoft, yet he remains the second wealthiest man in the world. Gates fortune increased from US$53 billion to US$56 billion dollars over the past year.
Commodities
The multi-year run up in oil and gold prices has not just benefited oil and gold investors. Business owners like Elke Batista have reaped a nice return on investment from their oil companies' holdings. Batista has a conglomerate, with the majority of his holdings being in the energy and mining sectors. He has seen an 11% growth in his net worth over the past year, as it grew to US$30 billion dollars. Elke Batiste is the wealthiest man in Brazil and has his eyes on the number one spot in the world.
Expansion
Bernard Arnault may have become wealthy by inheriting his father's construction company, but wealth has not made him lazy. The richest man in Europe increased his fortune 49% over the past year due to aggressive expansion. Arnault aggressively expanded his empire by acquiring profitable businesses through takeovers and shrewd decision making. He increased his fortune from US$27.5 billion dollars in 2010 to US$41 billion dollars in 2011.
Real Estate
The drop in the North American real estate market has not affected the price of real estate around the world. As Lee Shau-Kee has proven, there is still money to be made in the global real estate market. Real estate prices in Hong Kong have risen 65% since 2009. Lee has seen his net worth double from US$9 billion dollars in 2009 to US$19 billion dollars in 2011. Lee is increasing his investment in the real estate sector with his recent US$1.3 billion dollar investment in Henderson Land Development.
Inheritance
Inheriting wealth is one way that a person can rise from relative obscurity into the ranks of the rich and famous. Scott Duncan vaulted onto the Forbes billionaires list after the passing of his father last year. His father, Dan, was the head of the very profitable energy company, Enterprise Products Partners L.P. Scott inherited US$3.1 billion dollars along with each of his three siblings. At the age of 28, he is now one of the youngest billionaires in the world.
Investing
The Oracle of Omaha used the financial recession to make investments that have paid off big time for himself and his company. Buffett's net worth has risen US$13 billion dollars over the past two years to US$50 billion dollars, and his company, Berkshire Hathaway, has seen its value rise 15% last year. Buffett wisely invested in iconic companies like General Electric and Goldman Sachs. Buffett's Goldman Sachs preferred stock investment in Goldman Sachs made him US$15 a second.
The Bottom Line
As you can tell, the world's wealthiest people were able to increase their fortunes by putting their money to good use. Of course, they say the first million is the hardest to make, so it's no surprise that these multi-millionaires are able to propel their fortunes to greater heights each year.
Source: http://au.pfinance.yahoo.com/money-manager/smart-saving/article/-/9409444/how-the-rich-got-richer
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