All Topics / Help Needed! / Car parks, a worthy investment?
Hi all im back! After a tough semester at uni i want to get back into the investing game and learning as much as i can!
I have saved around $5K and I have been exploring car parks, as they are the cheapest form of property i can find. They promise net returns of around 6% which is ok at this time in the market, no? Anyway I did some numbers in regards to loans and this will probably sound stupid but i was surprised to find i would be paying more than double the purchase price to the bank over a 25 year period on a ‘principle and interest’ loan at 7.5%.
But the real worry was that the weekly rent from the car park even if it was tenanted every single week, would not cover the interest payments. SO my question is, is it possible to find some car parks for sale that would provide me with positive cashflow? Maybe if i broadened my search to outer-suburb car parks because i have physically only looked at city -based car parks.
Cheers fellas![biggrin]
Hi Sweet,
I know nothing about carparking as property. But one thing jumped out at me when reading your post. You say you are looking at paying 7.5% interest on something that will give you 6% yield, cannot have value added and presumably is going to be dependent on capital growth to make it look at more attractive. Can’t see the attraction or am I missing something?[blink]
jebro
Well i sort of just saw it as an easier way into investing, in that it is quite cheap to start…but i also figured that most properties these days return 6%, unless i go out and find problems to solve (Steves method) which would take a lot of time of which i dont have at this stage…i did some basic calculations and came to the figure that id b earning around $35 a week off this deal, which is ok to start?
A waste of time and money
At the end of each property cycle car parking becames a popular investment. What is the point of purchasing something that you loose money on and will not provide any capital growth.Nigel Kibel
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http://www.changingplaces.com.au Buyers advocate.Nigel Kibel | Property Know How
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Car parks have an element of risk API FEB/March 2003 has an article on the risks involved. See http://www.apimagazine.com.au. You can order back issues. Getting the lease renewed after the current lease to the car park operator expires is a Risk. The government trying to tax car parks to discourage cars coming into the city. Extra charges like Sewerage charges may be involved. South Yarra victoria has some really cheap car parks also. I think it was on http://www.domain.com.au.
I know of a man who finally received his 600K (after he paid his lump sum tax thingy) super payout about 6 years ago.
He had a good lump of Telstra shares which he and his wife lived off the fully franked dividends. Anyway….(I’m getting there)….
Against all financial advice, he went to his Bank of 40 years, and they extended to him a loan of 1.6 MM to buy a carpark situated on about 1.5 acres over two levels for 2.2 MM, all on one green title. The concrete infrastructure was worth a bit, the dirt was worth most of it.
Ever since, he has been going to his “place of work”, being the guy sitting in that little booth where you hand him the correct change or he doesn’t let your car out. He has some long term bays leased out to corporate suits and some casual bays.
He listens to the footy on the radio and has a small TV set there to keep him company. The newspaper is thoroughly read from cover to cover.
Personally, I think he does it mainly for the human interaction when the people come through. He regularly patrols the carpark and knows most of the regular people by name. He’s very proud of the fact that in his time, no vehicles have been stolen or even tampered with on his watch.
At about 6:30pm he packs up, pulls down the steel shutters and heads home to his wife.
The carpark is cashflow positive with his 1.6 MM loan, and he refuses to pay someone to do his “job”, as he believes they won’t care and treat his “customers” properly.
At a function a couple of weeks ago, he was saying (no idea if it’s actually true) the bank valued his property last month at 4.2 MM. The concrete is still worth the same, but the dirt has gone up just a tad.
So over the past 6 years, with an appreciation of 2 MM, he’s literally been paid $ 913 per day, every day for the past 6 years. Not bad for shuffling around and saying hello and goodbye to commuters.
Not sure if those financial advisers have been paid as well every day (including holidays and weekends)….The little man in the booth is probably on more than his high faluting customers.
Knowing him, I always say hello to carpark operators nowadays….’cos you never quite know who just you are really talking to. [happy3]
Owning the dirt underneath is the key….
I believe carparks to be a great investment over time.
I’ve heard similiar stories here in Brisbane about what Dazzler was saying.One note poped into my head though.
Can anyone tell me what sort of LVR will alender give you for these?
I’d imagine you wouldn’t be able to get above 80%Cheers
thanks a lot guys! thats the first time one of my posts has had differing points of view, cheers!
Unless you are buying the whole building like Dazzling’s friend, then I agree with Nigel that car parks are a waste of time and money.
What sort of LVR can you get? Probably something like 60%. There are substantial risks such as govt taxes increasing, competition springing up and probable low capital growth.
If you are only getting 6% yield, with little or no capital growth prospects why not just put your money in a ING account?
Terryw
Discover Home Loans
Parramatta
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Well said Terry……
Just remember Sweet, property isn’t the only method of investing. To have such enthusiasm is great, but if the numbers don’t match up, you may be better to put your cash in a term deposit until the day they do.
All the best,
Mark.
If you look at car park prices they have not varied much since the last property boom in 1989. In terms of buying an entire car park, thats fine but the type of person attracted to thios type of investment are normally only looking for 1or 2 spaces to invest in. Banks would look at these as commercial investments and you would only get a 60-70% lend. But frankly even if they gave you 100% it would still be a dud investment. The only exception would be in the downtown area of Sydney where there is a lack of car spaces. In Melbourne the value of these investments have dropped because there is not a lack of car parks and becuase of a new tax that will cost investors around $800 per year
Nigel Kibel
http://www.propertyknowhow.com.au
check out my new web siteAustralian and New Zealand The United States Property Researcher and education
One Day property investment research workshop The United States. Please register your interest
http://www.changingplaces.com.au Buyers advocate.Nigel Kibel | Property Know How
http://propertyknowhow.com.au
Email Me | Phone MeWe have just launched a new website join our membership today
terry, mark and nigel that makes sense, i think i should look elsewhere, many thanks!
Car parks is a great investment.
i’ve seen 10% rental yields over 5 years with a guarntee buy back on year 5!!
its effectively a high interest savings account!
Soudns good Jimmy.
Can i ask you how many you own yourself ?
Richard Taylor | Australia's leading private lender
I own 5 car parks in total, very happy with the returns plus the buy back scheme is a bonus. If your looking for an investment with zero risk.. this is the way to go
invest007 wrote:I own 5 car parks in total, very happy with the returns plus the buy back scheme is a bonus. If your looking for an investment with zero risk.. this is the way to goHi Invest
How does the buy back system work? Is there a set price, or is it just at the original price?
Terryw | Structuring Lawyers Pty Ltd / Loan Structuring Pty Ltd
http://www.Structuring.com.au
Email MeLawyer, Mortgage Broker and Tax Advisor (Sydney based but advising Aust wide) http://www.Structuring.com.au
Hi Terry,
It would be bought back at the original purchase price as car parking spaces don’t really appreciate in value.
I view it as a very high interest savings account.
Thanks Invest.
I suppose if you could rely of the guarantee, then it would be like a savings account. You coould also leverage a bit (low LVRs), but how tight is a guarantee?
Terryw | Structuring Lawyers Pty Ltd / Loan Structuring Pty Ltd
http://www.Structuring.com.au
Email MeLawyer, Mortgage Broker and Tax Advisor (Sydney based but advising Aust wide) http://www.Structuring.com.au
invest007 wrote:Hi Terry, It would be bought back at the original purchase price as car parking spaces don't really appreciate in value. I view it as a very high interest savings account.Hi invest
so does the car parking value always stay the same regardless of the market condition?
A cheap form of property with a high rental return (alot above interest rates/currently). Ok so they don’t appreicate in value (but you have CF+) but do they depreciate (seeing as we are in financial crisis times)??
I just looked on findacarpark.com.au and I have looked on the sydney maps…
110 sussex street is for sale at $90,000. and under the rent section of the website the same place (110 sussex st) is for rent at $433.35/month which equates to 5200 per year.
This means the return is ~5.8% which is lower than interest rates (currently?). Note this is the first one i looked at, so it might be low?
But is this how it works really… buy the parking space (with borrowed money), collect rent, pay mortgage but still have some rent left over so CF+… don’t worry about capital growth or captial decline cause you have instant CF+??????
Chris
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