As the owner of a Unit you should have access to the Body Corp records and the owners of each unit.You could then write to them directly or even go thru the Body Corp to get them to pass on the letters etc.
You would need to get a loan against your current home to get access to teh equity 30K. Then borrow $270k for the rest.So in total your loans would be $300k.Don't forget about legals and stamp duty and other fees etc.So you will be going for 90% loan against the investment property $270k and the depost + fees from you equity.
From my understanding the quote the amount because of the fees to setup and run a SMSF.You need that amount to get a good return to cover them as there is a yearly audit needed and it costs about $1000+ per year.I would say that the investment would have to be netural to positively geared to be able to do this thru super fund.Seek out so advise…[Read more]
Campbelltown is no longer the outer suburbs of Sydney and the prices are more then a few years ago.I have not looked into it recently but Sydney over all is struggling along.
Jon Chown wrote:
Danish83,On the surface of things, this appears to be a reasonable deal. At $135,000 per 80m2 2 bed unit, I am guessing that it must be in a outer or remote location or that there are problems with the Building.Showing a 6%gross return, I would want better than that. The weekly short fall is going to be around $600 and I am…[Read more]
runinniv wrote:
What is a PPOR? – sorry, new at this. My guess is own home? if so, we rent.
PPOR = Principal Place of Residence. This is your own home.PPOR 500k (Sydney 1999) owe 180k1st IP 290k (Sydney 2002) owe 321k (Bought in Sydney at height of boom)2nd IP 350k (Cairns 2006) owe 300kLVR 1140k owe 801k = 70%
I would suggest you get a couple of books and read about proptery investing.
This will then help you narrow down what type of property you want, your price range etc
Then you need to search for a place and find one which is suitable for you. This seems to be the hard bit in finding a CF+ property.
I would pay off your PPOR as it is a non-deductable debit.
With most LOC even if you pay it off the account is still open and you can draw back on it for deposits and costs.
Usually costs are about 5-10% of the property you are trying to buy.
Without equity you may need to save this up.
If your LVR (Loan to Value) ratio is more then 80% you usually have to have LMI (Lenders Mortgage Insurance). LMI is for the lender not you. This could add a few percent to the cost.
So your looking at about 110% of the cost of the…[Read more]
One thing is to check with your accountant but if the current LOC you have has any funds used for your PPOR or any non-tax deductable reason you may have an issue with claim the whole interest on the LOC.
See if you LOC can have multiple accounts and if that can happen you can either create account for the 20% + expenses deposit or for the 100% +…[Read more]
The problem is that I don’t think anyone can pick when the bottom will be.
It may be now or could be in 2 years.
It’s up to you when you buy.
As it is definitly not the top of the boom it should be fine to buy at any time so long as you can handle the payments if the market continues to go down.
From the prices out there I think in some places…[Read more]