All Topics / Help Needed! / First investment – what would you do in this situation to create a sol
Hey guys, my first post on here, so far I have read a lot of interesting information so thank-you for that.
this is my situation –
I am a 28 y.o carpenter also with a builders licence and I am looking to buy my first property investment/home.
I would eventually like to own several properties and perhaps do some kind of developing down the track
I want to capitalise on my expertise and feel it necessary to help get ahead of the pack.
I have about $100,000 for a deposit and am eligible for a first home buyers grant.
I also earn around the 70k p.a working as a contract carpenter.Preferably I want to make my first purchase a solid base to grow my property portfolio on.
What would you recommend as the best way to get the snowball rolling?
Im thinking along the lines of purchasing a run down house (around 350k) as a first home buyer and living in it for 1 year then refinancing the property as an investment property and spending around 80k on lifting and renovating the property and renting it out as two flats/dual living
Hoping that the project would take 2 years, and be worth around the 470k-510k mark once complete.
And if property rented would be rented for approx $570-$620 p/wdoes this sound feasible and would it be best to sell and take the profit for the next project? or rent the property and borrow against it?
It’d be great to hear from someone who has been in a similar situation as myself, but none the less I am open to all ideas and suggestions, even thought about building a spec home or buying a block of flats or small commercial even splitter block subdivision.
really am open to ideas.Thanks to anyone who has advice for me.
I have about $100,000 for a deposit and am eligible for a first home buyers grant.
I also earn around the 70k p.a working as a contract carpenter.That’s a good start there, will give you a few options. Depending on the entry point and LVR you want to go you could even leverage that $100k for more than 1 IP.
Preferably I want to make my first purchase a solid base to grow my property portfolio on.
What would you recommend as the best way to get the snowball rolling?
Depending on your level of month to month savings, generally an equity play is the way to go so you can either manufacture capital growth or wait for it and use that to leverage to purchase the next properties. Cash flow is important too where you will need to find the balance as your income is still healthy but may start to limit you in terms of serviceability once you get in the thick of it.
Im thinking along the lines of purchasing a run down house (around 350k) as a first home buyer and living in it for 1 year then refinancing the property as an investment property and spending around 80k on lifting and renovating the property and renting it out as two flats/dual living
Get your finance right from the start as it saves you having to do an unnecessary refinance and another hit to your credit file. If you plan on making your PPOR and IP then start off with the mortgage being an interest only loan with an offset account to put your additional cash in. The interest only loan will also help with your cash flow whilst doing the renos.
Do your due diligence before purchasing the property to ensure you’re able to make the property dual occ and what is involved and whether it is worth it or not. It can sometimes be easy to over-capitalise with those sorts of things but it looks like you’ve researched your figures – always good to run some various scenarios and projections.
does this sound feasible and would it be best to sell and take the profit for the next project? or rent the property and borrow against it?
I’m usually a fan of buy, reno, hold and rent (and drawing on equity against the prop) as the buying and selling costs eat too much into the profits. I would only consider selling if there was an opportunity cost by holding or there was more $$$ in it than what there was holding over the long term.
even thought about building a spec home
You’ve got the skillset to do this and there could be some decent money to be gained from this as (I would assume) materials and labour would be cheap BUT there are also the pitfalls of this as you would be working for yourself and not deriving a wage from working on other projects then there’s the hurdle of owner builder finance too.
or buying a block of flats or small commercial even splitter block subdivision.
All these have their upside and pitfalls too. It’s a good idea to work out a strategy and work from that and find the properties that suit the strategy rather than being overwhelmed by options and purchasing something then trying to fit a strategy around it to suit your purchase.
I’m a fan of reverse engineering so set the end goal which (for arguments sake) is $5m portfolio with a 50% LVR in 10 years. So in order to obtain that I need to purchase X $300k properties that average X% capital growth p/a and have a rental return of X% per year. That’s just the big picture view but the details need to be worked out as well.
Kinnon Bell | Kinetic Funding
http://www.kineticfunding.com.au
Email Me | Phone MeMortgage & Personal Loan Broker based in Cairns and Melbourne but servicing clients Australia wide.
Thanks Kinnon,
Appreciate you taking the time to reply, your information is very helpful and makes a lot of sense, especially the idea of reverse engineering a plan which I haven’t ever thought about but will certainly be drafting something up.
There is one question that has come to mind and that is the amount of LVR I should be using.
I am looking at an initial purchase of 350k for the prop I have in mind.
Meaning a %20 deposit of 70k (avoiding LMI) and leaving enough to start renovating and have it completed in 2 years with my current savings around $3500-$4000 a month.
Do you think it would be wise to go with something more like 90% LVR or even 95% LVR and cop the LMI sweet to get the project completed in a shorter timeframe? Potentially 12 months instead of 24 months.Once again thank you kindly
No worries.
Re the LVR and LMI – all it really comes down to is your risk profile and how aggressive you want to be as that will determine which strategy will fit best.
The 95% lend world is getting tough, particularly for investments.
There’s a LMI sweet spot around the 88% mark. In your example (with some big assumptions here) LMI on an 88% lend for a $350k prop would be ~$3900 whereas a 90% lend would be ~$6400 (but keep in mind these are very rough figures only to give you an idea of difference of 88% vs 90% would make). A portion of that would be tax deductible too depending on the time spent as PPOR to when it becomes and IP.
If you do an 80% lend then want to bump it up to 90% down the track you should be able to but depending on the bank they may impose extra conditions on you that they wouldn’t should you go in a LMI territory to begin with and preserve your cash. BUT if you do get an LMI loan to begin with then you’re tied to that particular bank in the sense that if you refinance to another bank and want to go over 80% again then you will be up for new LMI charges.
There’s a lot of variables at play so difficult to give a definitive answer.
Some things I have learnt along the way are to borrow money when you don’t really need it and maximise your deductible debt and minimise your non-deductible.
Kinnon Bell | Kinetic Funding
http://www.kineticfunding.com.au
Email Me | Phone MeMortgage & Personal Loan Broker based in Cairns and Melbourne but servicing clients Australia wide.
Hi Macard
Firstly welcome to the forum and hope you enjoy your time with us.
There are other important considerations to think about.
What is the end goal ? To rent the property out and start again.
If this is the case then the LMI will be proportionally deductible once the property is available for rent.Maximise your borrowings now so that when you rent the property out the full amount of the interest is Tax deductible.
Refinancing it in 12 months might contaminate the loan and you will lose the tax deductibility.
Make sure your Broker is aware of the situation and understands investment loan structures as getting it wrong could be an expensive mistake in the long run..
Cheers
Yours in Finance
Richard Taylor | Australia's leading private lender
Hi Macard
Perhaps attack the figures the other way around.
You mentioned you were hopeful of the following scenario:
– I’m thinking along the lines of purchasing a run down house (around 350k)
– Spending around 80k on lifting and renovating the property
– Property be worth around the 470k-510k mark once complete.
– And if property rented would be rented for approx $570-$620 p/wPerhaps instead look at it in the following way. It will help you eliminate a lot of suburbs and properties that do not fit the goal:
Is a rental return of $570-$620pw on a $470k-$510k property sufficient for your needs, and what would this return do? Would it cover the bills? Would there be money left over after paying the bills, and if so, what do you intend to utilise that income for?
Is there any such thing in our target suburb as properties priced at $470k-$510k which return $570-$620 per week in rent?
Is the suburb you are looking at offering properties priced at $470k-$510k in a renovated condition, and if so, does this same suburb offer un-renovated properties priced at $350k that would require no more than $80k to renovate to a standard of being worth $470k-$510k?
Hope this helps!
Jacqui Middleton | Middleton Buyers Advocates
http://www.middletonbuyersadvocates.com.au
Email Me | Phone MeVIC Buyers' Agents for investors, home buyers & SMSFs.
Whereabouts are you thinking? The buy reno market varies greatly ( in profitability ) from spot to spot.
BuyersAgent | Precium
http://www.precium.com.au
Email Me | Phone MeSouth Coast NSW Independent Buyers Agent - Wollongong to Batemans Bay and Regional NSW. DOWNLOAD OUR FREE 14 POINT PROPERTY BUYER'S CHEATSHEET to avoid painful mistakes at precium.com.au
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