Sell your investment properties now - The Money Whisperer
A thought provoking article. From my personal observations, there is a presumption amongst the general public that Property is a "Safe Investment". I assume that this is based upon the fact that you are acquiring a tangible asset by buying the actual physical piece of land with the bricks & mortar attached. When compared to investing in Bonds, Derivatives, ETF's, going long/short, etc. buying a physical thing is more logical to most people.
Buying a property is not a "safe investment" ... BUT ... buying a well-researched, correctly geared, competently-managed property is one of the best investments that you can make. What Magnus has maybe missed is that you can walk into a bank and say "I would like some money to buy a property please" and your request will be considered but not so if you walk into a bank and say "I would like some money to buy equities please".
Gareth Shepperson
Commercial and Property Attorney
Sell your investment properties now - The Money Whisperer
Buying a property is not a "safe investment" ... BUT ... buying a well-researched, correctly geared, competently-managed property is one of the best investments that you can make. What Magnus has maybe missed is that you can walk into a bank and say "I would like some money to buy a property please" and your request will be considered but not so if you walk into a bank and say "I would like some money to buy equities please".
Gareth Shepperson
Commercial and Property Attorney
Sell your investment properties now - The Money Whisperer
Confessions of a property investor.
In many respects an investment advisor is like a priest hearing a confession from one of his congregants.
As part of your due diligence, which is required by law, you have to ask a potential investor a lot of questions about their investment history, returns on investments et al, in order to make a suitable recommendation.
Clients are also living proof of some of the investment themes and/ or scams that have blighted the local investment scene over the last ten to twenty years and in some cases even longer.
With older clients you will see a lot of long-term investment endowments, old style retirement annuities as well as a scattering of investment failures, especially the more recent and spectacular ones, namely Sharemax and Picvest.
As an aside, it seems investors who have lost money in any one of these property schemes - and in the case of Picvest who had not lodged a complaint at the Fais Ombud before March this year - have forfeited their right to lodge such a complaint. It would seem that a complaint lapses after three years from the time you became aware of your loss or potential loss. I didn’t know this nor, I am sure, do the many thousands who have lost billions in these failed property syndications.
Everyone carries some investment scars. I have yet to meet a middle-aged investor who has not, along the way, made some major investment mistakes. The same goes for middle-aged investment advisors.
Slow or quick, you are still losing money
Some investors lose their money quickly, overnight, while others, lose their money or part of their money slowly over time, whether compared against inflation or against other investments.
Many people are aware that their investments are losing money but for some reason are unwilling to face up to this fact. They know an investment is failing but hang on hoping it will come right.
A great number of mostly middle-aged investors have one or more “investment properties” in their portfolios when you see them nowadays. This is a legacy of the previous property investment boom in which the banks, developers, the estate agents and also certain sections of the media all had a hand in creating.
The last boom in residential property prices lasted roughly from 2002 to the beginning of 2008, when the full impact of the National Credit Act kicked in and shortly thereafter, the Great Financial Crisis, which ended the party.
Since then many other countries in the western world, particularly the United Kingdom, certain parts of the United States, New Zealand and Australia, to name a few, have witnessed great revivals in property prices.
Not so here in SA. The residential property market is now in its seventh year of what I would call a bear market. I would describe a property bear market as one where gross prices are not, at the very least, matching inflation.
Unlike an investment market place - like listed equities where investment returns are sliced and diced in every conceivable manner - it is very hard to find good and reliable statistics on the residential property market. I would suggest that the best sources are John Loos from FNB and Jacques du Toit from Absa, even though they only reflect the actual experience of their respective banks.
The gap in providing reliable statistics on trends in the rental market has in recent years been filled by the dynamic Michelle Dickens from TNP.
Every quarter I carefully analyse the property statistics as best I can from these three sources, but it will never accurately measure the returns of each individual investor. At best it will just give a broad indication of the general trend in the market.
It’s during these “confessionals” with an investor that one can fairly accurately calculate returns on investment properties. You have the original purchase price, the annual rent, expenses such as municipal taxes as well as upkeep and repairs. That is if the investors keep a record of these expenses, which in many cases they don’t.
Property returns difficult to measure
I say fairly accurately as one still has to make an assumption on the potential market value of a property plus the “exit fee” of selling the property, if that is a consideration.
The calculation is also complicated by the level of gearing on the property; some are non-geared while others have been purchased with 100% bonds.
Not something that will make the actuaries happy but that is the best way to do it.
Over the past year so I have done many such calculations, including regular ones on my own portfolio of residential properties.
I have yet to come across an investor whose portfolio has been performing at better than a net rental return of 3% per annum, especially since the start of the bear market in 2008.
In many cases the resale value of those wonderful properties sold by means of leaflets at traffic intersections are worth less than the original purchase prices in nominal terms, not real terms.
In real terms some investors have lost between 30% to 50% over the last six years.
Offshore investments, depending on the timing, have given a return in excess of 200% and more over the past five years.
Penny dropping
But the penny seems to be dropping. Almost on a weekly basis now am I receiving emails from the Moneyweb community with the same message: my rental properties are not performing. The rental yield is dropping and is being squeezed by ever-rising municipal rates and taxes, tenants who cannot afford rising rentals as well as, in some cases, property owners who cannot get rid of non-paying tenants who are hiding behind the PIE-act.
And then there are vacant plots of land which do not even earn any kind of income. That must be the worst investment in the world: you have already lost half or more of the value of your original investment but you cannot get rid of it....
For an investment property to be or become an acceptable asset class you need certain prerequisites:
But if they build, people keep on buying, hoping against hope that the laws of investments will be reversed for their particular development or purchase.
There is a lot of emotion in the decision to buy a property. When you buy a property you see the end product: it’s there in front of you and you can also live in it yourself if you have to. An investment portfolio on the other hand is simply a piece of paper with a number printed on it. On an emotional level the property wins hands down.
My final argument against further local property investments is the fact that it is a regionally-based and rand-based investment. It offers no protection against further declines in the currency.
Any foreigner who bought SA residential property in 2010 as an investment, for example, has by now lost between 50% and 70% in global purchasing terms.
Listed and liquid
A far better option to consider for those who have an affinity for property - and many do - is to invest in a property company listed on the JSE or a listed property fund. It gives you all the benefits of a property investment without the hassles and lack of liquidity that physical property represents.
As an “investment priest” it is my duty to speak the truth as I see it.
I do not see the situation turning around soon and I really would like to be proven wrong over time.
But right now, if I could, I would sell all my investment properties tomorrow and invest the money somewhere more liquid and where the returns can be measured and managed.
As part of your due diligence, which is required by law, you have to ask a potential investor a lot of questions about their investment history, returns on investments et al, in order to make a suitable recommendation.
Clients are also living proof of some of the investment themes and/ or scams that have blighted the local investment scene over the last ten to twenty years and in some cases even longer.
With older clients you will see a lot of long-term investment endowments, old style retirement annuities as well as a scattering of investment failures, especially the more recent and spectacular ones, namely Sharemax and Picvest.
As an aside, it seems investors who have lost money in any one of these property schemes - and in the case of Picvest who had not lodged a complaint at the Fais Ombud before March this year - have forfeited their right to lodge such a complaint. It would seem that a complaint lapses after three years from the time you became aware of your loss or potential loss. I didn’t know this nor, I am sure, do the many thousands who have lost billions in these failed property syndications.
Everyone carries some investment scars. I have yet to meet a middle-aged investor who has not, along the way, made some major investment mistakes. The same goes for middle-aged investment advisors.
Slow or quick, you are still losing money
Some investors lose their money quickly, overnight, while others, lose their money or part of their money slowly over time, whether compared against inflation or against other investments.
Many people are aware that their investments are losing money but for some reason are unwilling to face up to this fact. They know an investment is failing but hang on hoping it will come right.
A great number of mostly middle-aged investors have one or more “investment properties” in their portfolios when you see them nowadays. This is a legacy of the previous property investment boom in which the banks, developers, the estate agents and also certain sections of the media all had a hand in creating.
The last boom in residential property prices lasted roughly from 2002 to the beginning of 2008, when the full impact of the National Credit Act kicked in and shortly thereafter, the Great Financial Crisis, which ended the party.
Since then many other countries in the western world, particularly the United Kingdom, certain parts of the United States, New Zealand and Australia, to name a few, have witnessed great revivals in property prices.
Not so here in SA. The residential property market is now in its seventh year of what I would call a bear market. I would describe a property bear market as one where gross prices are not, at the very least, matching inflation.
Unlike an investment market place - like listed equities where investment returns are sliced and diced in every conceivable manner - it is very hard to find good and reliable statistics on the residential property market. I would suggest that the best sources are John Loos from FNB and Jacques du Toit from Absa, even though they only reflect the actual experience of their respective banks.
The gap in providing reliable statistics on trends in the rental market has in recent years been filled by the dynamic Michelle Dickens from TNP.
Every quarter I carefully analyse the property statistics as best I can from these three sources, but it will never accurately measure the returns of each individual investor. At best it will just give a broad indication of the general trend in the market.
It’s during these “confessionals” with an investor that one can fairly accurately calculate returns on investment properties. You have the original purchase price, the annual rent, expenses such as municipal taxes as well as upkeep and repairs. That is if the investors keep a record of these expenses, which in many cases they don’t.
Property returns difficult to measure
I say fairly accurately as one still has to make an assumption on the potential market value of a property plus the “exit fee” of selling the property, if that is a consideration.
The calculation is also complicated by the level of gearing on the property; some are non-geared while others have been purchased with 100% bonds.
Not something that will make the actuaries happy but that is the best way to do it.
Over the past year so I have done many such calculations, including regular ones on my own portfolio of residential properties.
I have yet to come across an investor whose portfolio has been performing at better than a net rental return of 3% per annum, especially since the start of the bear market in 2008.
In many cases the resale value of those wonderful properties sold by means of leaflets at traffic intersections are worth less than the original purchase prices in nominal terms, not real terms.
In real terms some investors have lost between 30% to 50% over the last six years.
Offshore investments, depending on the timing, have given a return in excess of 200% and more over the past five years.
Penny dropping
But the penny seems to be dropping. Almost on a weekly basis now am I receiving emails from the Moneyweb community with the same message: my rental properties are not performing. The rental yield is dropping and is being squeezed by ever-rising municipal rates and taxes, tenants who cannot afford rising rentals as well as, in some cases, property owners who cannot get rid of non-paying tenants who are hiding behind the PIE-act.
And then there are vacant plots of land which do not even earn any kind of income. That must be the worst investment in the world: you have already lost half or more of the value of your original investment but you cannot get rid of it....
For an investment property to be or become an acceptable asset class you need certain prerequisites:
1. A growing and vibrant economy. Our economy is not growing in real terms. Only this week global banking group Morgan Stanley downgraded SA’s growth rate for the immediate future to below 2% for the year - even that number is considered to be optimistically high.
2. Access to bank finance. Bank lending has become very tight and is set to become even tighter in the near future in the wake of the African Bank collapse. That is forcing people to pay cash for their investment property - a very bad option.
3. Rising confidence. Our confidence levels are currently the lowest in 15 years and seem to be dropping every quarter.
4. A rising number of wage and salary earners who are your potential customers. It’s a myth that rentals are keeping pace with inflation, as some marketers of investment property often proclaim. Rentals are lagging inflation due to the fact that wages and salaries are not keeping pace with inflation, especially not on an after-tax basis. Most landlords I speak to “confess” that their tenants are getting free-passes on inflation- adjusted rentals. Its either that or an empty property.
5. Well-managed municipalities. The meltdown in many municipalities across the country, with perhaps the exception of the Western Cape, has been well documented. The wealth destruction in the form of dropping property prices in certain towns and even smaller cities as a result of this, is enormous.
There is a lot of emotion in the decision to buy a property. When you buy a property you see the end product: it’s there in front of you and you can also live in it yourself if you have to. An investment portfolio on the other hand is simply a piece of paper with a number printed on it. On an emotional level the property wins hands down.
My final argument against further local property investments is the fact that it is a regionally-based and rand-based investment. It offers no protection against further declines in the currency.
Any foreigner who bought SA residential property in 2010 as an investment, for example, has by now lost between 50% and 70% in global purchasing terms.
Listed and liquid
A far better option to consider for those who have an affinity for property - and many do - is to invest in a property company listed on the JSE or a listed property fund. It gives you all the benefits of a property investment without the hassles and lack of liquidity that physical property represents.
As an “investment priest” it is my duty to speak the truth as I see it.
I do not see the situation turning around soon and I really would like to be proven wrong over time.
But right now, if I could, I would sell all my investment properties tomorrow and invest the money somewhere more liquid and where the returns can be measured and managed.
*Magnus Heystek is the investment strategist at Brenthurst Wealth. |
Very Informative article Thanks Buddy
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