12 Ways to Fail When Building a Property Portfolio

Key takeaways

About 70 per cent of investors own one solitary property, and of the 2.1 million property investors in Australia, only 20,000 people own six or more investment properties. Most Australians who try and secure their financial future through property investment fail.

Australians tend to love property, go to open homes and auctions, and dream of becoming a property mogul. But if you treat property investing as a business, you’ll have a business plan, cash flow management, a finance strategy, asset protection, insurance, and correct asset selection.

Property investment is a game of finance with some houses thrown in the middle. You must have rainy-day money that you can draw on when needed to see you through the lean times.

Over-confidence is the worst thing a property investor can do. They falsely believe that their first investment was a good idea and then buy the wrong type of property at the peak of the market.

The media keeps talking about the Australian property market, but there are hundreds of different property markets in Australia, each performing differently based on local factors including demographics, economics and supply and demand.

Many novice investors believe that investing in real estate is easy, but it’s not. Savvy investors take responsibility for their own education, build a team of experts around them, and only buy investment-grade properties that will outperform the averages.

There seems to be a disconnect between what is myth and reality when it comes to the number of investment properties that people own.

We sometimes hear about “greedy” investors who own dozens of properties when this is not really borne out by the facts.

Did you know that about 70 per cent of investors own one solitary property?

Property Investor

And of the 2.1 million property investors in Australia, only a tiny percentage – around 20,000 people as it turns out – own six or more investment properties.

Of course, only owning one investment property isn’t going to help you achieve financial freedom.

This means most Australians who try and secure their financial future through property investment fail.

So why don’t investors own more properties?

Well, generally it’s because they make one of the following mistakes, which stymie their chances of growing a portfolio.

1. They treat property investing as a hobby – not a business

Australians tend to love property, they love going to open homes and auctions.

They love the excitement of buying a property and renovating it.

They love the thought of becoming a property mogul.

In short…they’re having fun.

That’s not the way to become rich through property – you need a business mindset.

If you’re looking for fun go bungee jumping, go trail bike riding.

Property investment should be boring, but the results can make the rest of your life exciting.

If you treat property investment as a business you won’t think as much about each individual transaction, but the big picture – your long-term goal because property investment is a long-term process, not an event.

You’ll have a business plan which includes cash flow management, a finance strategy, asset protection, insurance, and correct asset selection.

2. No strategy

Following on from the point above, owning an investment property is not a strategy.

The problem is, most people become property investors without putting much thought into it.

Choose Your Way

Some upgrade their home and turn their old house into an investment.

However, that doesn’t mean it will make a good investment because they probably bought it for emotional, rather than objective, reasons.

Others buy an off-the-plan property based on promises made by marketers, while others buy a property in their comfort zone – close to where they live.

Now don’t make the mistake many investors make and buy in your own backyard because you’re familiar with the location.

That’s really not a good reason to buy there.

In fact, a recent university study showed those investors who bought a property close to where they lived tended to buy underperforming properties and didn’t even get a price advantage on purchase.

You’ve heard it before – failing to plan is really planning to fail.

On the other hand, strategic investors devise a strategy – they bring their future into the present and devise a plan to achieve the results they want.


Why not get the team at Metropole to help you build your customised, personalised Strategic Property Plan? You can learn more about this here


3. The wrong strategy

Almost as bad as having no strategy is following the wrong one.

Residential real estate is a long-term, high growth low yield investment.

Strategy

Your strategy should be to use the capital growth of your property portfolio to grow a large asset base that will give you more choices in the future.

Yet many beginners chase cash flow or the next hot spot or try and make a quick profit by flipping.

All recipes for investment disaster!

Others chase tax benefits because they think negatively gearing new properties will “keep their tax down.”

So they buy a new house in an outer suburb or put a deposit on an off-the-plan unit due for completion in two years’ time, because of the higher depreciation deductions on offer.

The problem is that these properties just don’t offer the capital growth you require to grow your wealth.

4. Changing strategy

Unfortunately, some investors get spooked when markets soften, and rather than sticking to a proven strategy to secure their wealth creation through capital growth, they opt for something cheap and supposedly cheerful instead.

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