9 Simple Rules of property Investment

I was recently asked to distil my property investment philosophy into a few simple rules.

Now that’s a big ask…

Distil all the mistakes I’ve made and seen others make, as well as all the lessons I’ve learned and those of the many successes investors I’ve worked with into a view of simple rules.

Anyway…here’s my attempt…

1. Become financially fluent

The secret to financial freedom is to spend less than you earn, save the balance and then wisely invest your savings in growth assets.

Learn how money, finance, and property work and start investing early so you have time and compounding on your side.

Along the way learn from proven mentors and get a good team around you, but make sure you have a thorough knowledge base because while you can delegate or outsource many tasks, it’s critical to understand if you’re being given impartial advice or if you’re being taken advantage of by the many vested interests after your money.

2. Adopt a proven investment strategy

Wealth is created by building a substantial asset base. You do this by holding good investments for a reasonably long time, reinvesting the income you’re receiving, and allowing your capital gains to build up.

Residential real estate is a high-growth, relatively low-yield investment, so I recommend a capital growth investment strategy.

While cash flow is important to keep you in the game, it’s capital growth that will get you out of the rat race, so first, concentrate on building a substantial asset base over a number of property cycles, then slowly lower your loan to value ratios and eventually you’ll be able to live off your “Cash Machine.”

It’s too hard to become rich the other way around — from savings or cash flow.

3. Not every property is investment-grade

While virtually any property can become an investment — just put a tenant in; few properties are “investment grade” and will strongly outperform the averages over the long term.

Remember that while the location of your property will account for around 80% of its performance, it’s also important to own the right property to suit the local demographic.

4. Demographics drive markets

Over the long term demographics — how many of us there are, how we live, where we want to live and what we can afford to live in — will be more important in shaping our property markets than the short-term ups and downs of interest rates, consumer confidence and government meddling.

Demographics

5. Real estate investing is a game of finance with some properties thrown in the middle

Recognise that property is a long-term play so set up financial buffers to help you ride the property cycles.

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