Archive for the 'Buying Property' Category

LITTLE STANDING IN THE RESERVE BANKS WAY

Sunday, February 28th, 2010

By Terry McCrann

From: Herald Sun  February 25, 2010 12:00AM
THE Reserve Bank will almost certainly lift the official interest rate by 25 points next Tuesday.
Both the governor Glenn Stevens and his deputy Ric Battellino have ‘told us so.’

Not, obviously, in specific words. Indeed they haven’t even yet ‘told’ their fellow board members. The management’s recommendation will be finalised and sent to board members today.

Further, any prediction of what might emerge from Tuesday’s meeting has to carry one big and one small asterisk.

The big one, is that some cataclysmic event doesn’t come out of left field. Like another, heavens forbid, 9/11, a Greek default, or even just a big - very big - fall on Wall St.

The small asterisk is that the actual decision really is made by the board; it doesn’t just rubber stamp what RBA management - Stevens - puts before it. So why only a ’small asterisk?’ Does that deny my very point?

No, it’s only a tiny risk, because the board has clearly signed on to both the overall strategy of lifting rates; and in doing so will, indeed has to, leave the tactical month-to-month (pause or lift) decision to management.

Yesterday’s benign wages - and so, potential future inflation - numbers are essentially irrelevant.
Because the RBA is not lifting rates to target an immediate emerging inflation threat.

Thus for the immediate future any inflation data impacts asymmetrically on the RBA’s tactical rate decisions. Bad data would tend to lock in a rate rise. Good data would be neutral; ‘other’ factors would drive the decision.

This in a sense is what Stevens ‘told us’ last Friday at his public appearance, what Battellino ‘told us’ in his second recent seminal (as in, telling us) speech; and what the whole RBA has ‘told us’ in its latest analysis of the economy a couple of weeks ago.

Simply, broadly, that in this crazy mixed-up world, the RBA has signed on to the China thesis not the Greek one.

That there’s more chance (risk?) of China continuing to boom than Greece causing some sort of financial and then perhaps economic implosion.
If not necessarily something as bad as GFC Mk II.
The RBA forecasts in the latest analysis had our growth strengthening to more than 3 per cent through the year and then kicking a little higher next year. And doing so despite the higher interest rates the RBA would deliver.The critical thing to understand is that the RBA believes it has to move rates back to neutral through the course of this year. Indeed, Stevens said that explicitly on Friday.

But also very importantly, it’s doing so not to fight emerging inflation. Again the RBA expects inflation to keep falling back into its 2-3 per cent target ban and stay there through 2011, although edging close to the limit by the end of that year.

So yesterday’s news of benign wages would merely reinforce the RBA confidence. But not divert it from its desire to lift the official rate by between 50 and 100 points. That’s importantly two to four moves.

Why important? Because it goes to the timing.  How many ‘in-a-rows’ increases we could get; how many pauses and of how many months at a time.

Stevens and Co are fully mindful of the uncertainties both ways. China could ‘peter out’ - that probably means growing at ‘only’ 6 per cent rather than 10 per cent. Or the developed world could pick up some pace, backstopping if you like a booming China.

The first would tend to see the RBA only delivering two more rises, if that; with an extended pause after Tuesday’s increase.

The second would tend to see the RBA deliver four rises and do so pretty quickly.

As it would want to get back to a ‘low neutral’ fairly quickly, by say June, and perhaps an ‘upper neutral’ by July-August.

Politics and the budget will also have to be factored in, more to the timing of moves than the aggregate.

The other critical thing to understand about both timing and quantum is that if inflation does start to rear its head, Stevens will want to go above neutral.

In those circumstances, he would end up wanting to deliver, say, six increases over the year. Passing next Tuesday would leave a lot of ground to make up. In those, it needs to be stressed, unexpected circumstances.

Passing next Tuesday would also mean we would go (at least) four months without an official increase.

From the last one in December, to the next (possible) one in April.

That is too long a gap in the context of what the RBA believes is likely to develop over the year and where the official rate is. In three words: still too low.

The RBA wanted time to assess the impact of the initial increases and also the mix of global developments. It has had that time, and the statements all show very clearly how it has decided the balance of risks.

There’s an interesting coincidence around the word ‘four’ and an interesting comment on the psychology of the economentariat.

Three weeks ago, the economentariat unanimously believed the RBA would do ‘four-in-a-row.’ After in December being all-but united in declaiming it wouldn’t possibly contemplate ‘three-in-a-row.’

Not there’s a significant sanguinity that the RBA would sit on its hands for ‘four months.’ It won’t.


Decoding real estate jargon

Sunday, March 1st, 2009


Article from: Sunday Herald Sun
CAROLINE JAMES, Key editor
February 11, 2009 12:00am

REAL estate agents are often guilty of talking in another language.

Unscrupulous agents may run “ghost'’ auctions, take “dummy'’ bids or actively “condition'’ vendors with claims the property market is “coming off the heat'’.

Property dialect is often amusing.

Did you hear the one about the “cosy'’ one-bedroom unit that smelled like sea air?

Intrigued, you organise an inspection only to find “cosy'’ means a 3m by 2m living room and the unit abuts a 24-hour fish and chips shop, hence its pungent salty stench.

Real estate speak can be confusing.

Perhaps you have been told there is “hot'’ interest in a property so the seller is “in the box seat'’.

When the open inspection rolls around, nobody attends.

“Make your best offer,'’ the agent says.

“You are definitely in the box seat'’.

Real estate promotional materials would often make a romance novelist cringe with their colourful, ambitious descriptions and acronym-rich text.

“Real estate writing is a lot like a Mills and Boon novel,'’ Keyhole Property Investments director Melissa Opie said.

“You are working for the vendor. Your job is to romance buyers. You only get one chance, particularly in a market such as this, so you’ve got to grab attention.'’

Ms Opie, an advocate for buyers and sellers, employs copy writers to craft her sales materials.

Realising “some people are better at the spoken word, some the written'’, she prefers to leave real estate writing to the experts.

A client recently came to her, excited by a property advertisement, telling her it “ticked all the boxes'’.

“I went for a look and found it was under a bridge and next to three car garages,'’ Ms Opie said.

“You could say it had been hit on the head, taken to ugly land.'’

The enthusiastic client was sent images of the property’s less marketable features. Not surprisingly, she didn’t want to take the sale any further.

“I’ve got to hand it to the seller’s agent — they did a very good job promoting that property’s best features and getting us there.'’

Buyer advocate Christopher Koren, of Morrell & Koren, likened agent language to “a secret society'’.

“It is the real estate equivalent of the (Free)masons, pretty much only used between agents,'’ Mr Koren said.

“The most important thing to ask agents is for plain speak”.

“Ask direct questions and you should get straight answers”.

If you are still bamboozled by property market propaganda, the Sunday Herald Sun polled real estate pundits for their favourite agent words and phrases and translated them to plain English.

Prepared to be amused, enlightened and disturbed.

CLEAN AGENT WORDS

May come up in polite property conversation and handy to understand if you hope to talk the talk:

Asking Price — the listed price of the property, open to negotiation, not a fixed price.

Fixture — anything of value permanently attached to, or a part of, a property.

Forthcoming auction, prior offers invited — the vendor wants, or needs, to sell prior to auction as they may have bought elsewhere.

Coming off the boil/cooling down/heating up/hot buying — reference to temperature is common in real estate circles: the hotter it is, the more expensive and/or desirable it is.

Gazumping — when a seller verbally accepts a buyer’s offer, but later sells the property by exchanging contracts with another buyer for a higher price.

Private treaty — a private sale.

Chattels — assets such as machinery, tools, furnishings and fittings that, if fixed to a property, can be easily removed.

Realisation sale — means desperate vendor or desperate estate agent. The next step usually involves the bank.

Motivated — if used to describe a vendor, can mean desperate; if used to describe an agent, can mean willing to sacrifice commission to sell property at any price.

Desperate — desperate.

DIRTY AGENT WORDS

These words won’t appear in any sales brochures, but if you hear them spoken, be wary:

Conditioning — the practice of convincing a vendor to lower the asking price. Treat with suspicion comments about how quickly lower-priced properties are selling in your neighbourhood.

Dummy bidding — an illegal practice of putting someone in an auction crowd with the aim of artificially inflating a property’s sale price with false bids.

Ghost or dutch auction — an auction-like private sale without fixed deadline. Multiple prospective buyers’ offers are privately disclosed to each other to try to raise the final sale price.

DECODING BROCHURES

When real estate agents get industry qualifications, some get a “poetic'’ licence:

Sophisticated city living — next to a noisy bar, expect drunks to knock on front door at 3am.

Cosy/intimate/petite home — no room for six-seater modular sofas.

Rustic — barn-like, without the livestock, could “need TLC'’.

Dolls’ house — a tiny home, may suit dust-collecting knick-knacks.

Sea glimpses — NASA-strength binoculars should render views of something wet; take a packed lunch on walks to beach.

Sea sounds — close to beach, but landlocked by six-storey factories.

Treed aspect/picturesque views — any view not of a brick wall.

Meticulously maintained/original condition — kitchen and bathroom circa-1950.

Master bedroom — outdated term, should read “biggest'’ bedroom.

Hostess kitchen — outdated, suggests cooking is a woman’s role; should read “kitchen'’.
1.5/2.5 bathrooms — half rooms do not exist; usually means a toilet with basin.

Country lifestyle — too remote to commute for work or food.

Country kitchen — expect floor-to-ceiling pine, potential for sauna-conversion.

Country charms — see rustic.

Excellent transport links — backing a busy train line or highway.

Opportunity to create your dream — home about to collapse, may have to invest twice the asking price to renovate before liveable.

Renovated, refurbished, redecorated — should read rebuilt, redecorated, repainted.

Architecturally designed — doesn’t necessarily mean an architect designed this home. May mean built to a plan that copied an architect’s work or by someone who’d like to be an architect.

Art Deco — should be used to describe a particular style of 1920s design, but often misused — a cream-brick house is not Art Deco.

Price reduced to sell — vendor very motivated to sell, see Motivated, see Desperate.

Prized inner-city location — could be first, second or booby prize, best to ask.

On-site pool, gym, sauna — expect to pay exorbitant body corporate fees.

Courtyard garden — an oxymoron; concrete pavement with pot plants is not a garden.

SLUG — unpleasant-sounding acronym for single lock-up garage.

DLUG — odd-sounding acronym for double lock-up garage.

TLUGWEDRSS — warning that acronyms can look ridiculous if over-used: in plain English triple lock-up garage with electric doors, room for storage space.

Phone: 1300 735 1616

www.mrsmortgage.com.au

House rules change (Mortgages Australia)

Tuesday, May 20th, 2008

Author: Lesley Parker
Date: May 14, 2008
Publication: Sydney Morning Herald

In the space of six months, just about everything anyone thought they knew about the Australian home loan market has changed. Mortgage rates no longer track the official rate set by the central bank; borrowers must jump through hoops rather than fend off overzealous lenders; instead of racing to beat rising house prices, prudent buyers must factor in the possibility of stagnant or even falling values.

Previous assumptions about where the best home loan deals lie need to be examined, then re-examined. Many borrowers spurned non-bank lenders last year, for instance, only to be socked by higher rates from the big banks this year.

RESI Mortgage Corporation’s head of consumer advocacy, Lisa Montgomery, says the result is that people are confused and suffering from inertia when it comes to their home loans.

“A lot of people have lost confidence in all lenders. They’re not sure what they should do,” Montgomery says.

So, let’s look at some of the big questions facing borrowers in this changed landscape.

HOW TIGHT ARE LOANS?

Lenders usually don’t announce the fact that they’re tightening their lending criteria but analysts are unanimous in saying that this is happening.

“We are definitely seeing lenders tightening up their lending standards and lending criteria,” says Mark Hewitt, the general manager of sales and operations with Australian Finance Group, which describes itself as Australia’s largest mortgage broker.

“In the credit crunch, with the difficulty of raising money, lenders are looking for assets to be much cleaner.”

That said, Paul Dowling, the principal analyst with banking research firm East & Partners, says talk of “credit rationing” is overstating things.

“There’s a general move towards more conservative lending but I wouldn’t quite describe it as credit rationing,” he says.

“The banks have money to lend - it’s a question of the [borrower’s] credit profile and the [profit] margin.”

Observers say all lenders are tidying up their credit processes to varying degrees, with the most marked changes coming from smaller lenders, which now have difficulty raising funds on wholesale markets at a reasonable price due to the global credit crunch.

Among the changes, maximum loan-to-valuation ratios are coming down. In other words, people must now stump up a bigger deposit - harking back to the days when the rule of thumb was that potential borrowers had to turn up with a 20 per cent deposit.

Broker group Mortgage Choice says Adelaide Bank, for instance, now requires borrowers to have 10 to 20 per cent of the value of the property as a deposit when they apply for an interest-only loan. Previously the bank would have lent 95 to 100 per cent of the value.

Newcastle Permanent has changed its servicing ratio and borrowers must now have a greater disposable income after loan repayments and other commitments, the broker says.

So-called 105 per cent loans - where you can borrow more than the value of a property - are falling away as well, says Warren O’Rourke, the national corporate affairs manager for Mortgage Choice.

With line-of-credit loans, where you can dip into the equity in your home for other spending, rates in some cases have moved by a greater amount than for the lender’s standard variable loan.

“A number of lenders weren’t necessarily pricing for risk on low-doc loans or line-of-credit loans,” O’Rourke says. “Traditionally there was a premium over standard variable rates but that gradually disappeared in the face of competition. Now they’re starting to rejig them.”

Dowling says there’s been a “significant” drop-off in low-doc loans, which relieve borrowers of the burden of proving their income.
O’Rourke says the bigger lenders are just “tinkering” with their criteria. “In some cases LVRs have changed but [only] on specific product types.”

Denis Orrock, the general manager of researcher InfoChoice, says lenders are looking more closely at borrowers and at property valuations, “particularly for certain property types and in certain areas”.

In July last year Money ran some numbers through online borrowing calculators to see how much lenders were prepared to put on the table for a hypothetical household. At that time, ANZ’s calculator indicated the bank might offer a loan requiring 46.3 per cent of the household’s gross income for repayments.

In a recent repeat of the exercise, ANZ remained the most generous lender but the result came to 41.7 per cent of gross income.

An ANZ representative was unavailable to comment.

BankWest’s result dropped from 43.7 per cent to 39.2 per cent. Its head of mortgages and savings, Paul Vivian, says the Perth lender, owned by British bank HBOS, regularly reviews its criteria. “We’re undergoing one of those reviews right now - they’re just regular reviews and there’s nothing unusual in that,” Vivian says. “But it would be fair to say that, across the industry, there will be a review of credit practices, if not wholesale changes.”

INTEREST RATES

Everyone sighed with relief at the Reserve Bank’s decision last week to leave the official cash rate at 7.25 per cent and normally that would be good news for borrowers. However, lenders have shown in recent months - and weeks - that they’re prepared to lift rates independently of the central bank.

Home loan rates are now determined by the cost of raising funds on the global credit markets, where money has become much more expensive since dodgy US housing loans were bundled up and sold to investors.

“The connection between the Reserve’s official cash rate and the cost of funding for the banks hasn’t quite broken but is almost broken,” Dowling says.

Even if the Reserve Bank remains on hold, market rates may still move higher. What’s worse, there’s no guarantee that once the cycle turns and the Reserve starts to cut rates that lenders will follow.

In Britain, a recent Bank of England rate cut wasn’t passed on uniformly, with new borrowers and those coming off fixed-rate loans reported to have missed out on the savings. Asked what would happen here in the event of an official rate cut, Steve Blinkhorn, the head of home loans for St George Bank, says in the past the bank has been quick to pass on any rate cuts. He says, though, that can’t be guaranteed “in the current environment”.

Dowling says the main hope for borrowers is the banks’ “manic obsession with market share”, which should cap potential rate increases as they fight over customers.

BankWest’s Vivian says moving independently of the Reserve “is a very difficult decision, and we spend an awful lot of time debating how much you move while trying to balance the impact on customers. All of the banks have been forced to move more than we would like.”

BANK OR NON-BANK

Non-bank lenders were the first to feel the impact of the global credit crunch - and to pass on those costs - because they rely on wholesale markets to raise money to fund their lending operations.

In contrast, Australian banks use their depositors’ money to finance a large chunk of their lending - about half of lending for the big banks and about a third in the case of regional banks, Dowling says - so they’re not as exposed to rising rates on global credit markets.

The result was that in the second half of last year many borrowers backed away from non-bank lenders, seeking what they thought would be safe haven with the banks.

Orrock says it’s a mistake to assume that bigger is better. Indeed, the table shows that credit unions and non-bank lenders have many of the best deals (see table on opposite page).

“If you did refinance from a non-bank into one of the banks before January, when the banks also started increasing rates, you’d be feeling cheesed off at the moment,” he says.

The state of play is that banks and non-banks have “topped up” the Reserve Bank’s official cash rate rises by roughly the same amount.

The Reserve has lifted the official cash rate one percentage point since August, while the big banks and non-bank lenders have moved about 1.4 percentage points.

Credit unions and building societies, which have the benefit of being at least partly funded by household deposits, have managed to undercut them, however. Umbrella group Abacus-Australian Mutuals says that, on average, mutuals’ home loan rates are about 0.2 percentage points behind those of the banks.

“There’s some excellent value - a number of credit unions and building societies haven’t passed on rises and, where they have, in general they’ve been much slower to pass higher costs on,” says Abacus’s chief executive, Louise Petschler.

However, she acknowledges there’s a limit to the capacity of some mutuals to meet any surge of interest from borrowers looking for bargain rates.

“For some, it’s a good opportunity - they’re liquid, they’re ready to roll,” she says. For others, it will be a case of managing growth carefully.

Some mutuals are open only to members of certain occupations and are not included in the table.

HOUSE PRICES

In the past borrowers felt compelled to race against rising house prices - borrowing to the hilt to get into the market before prices left them behind.

Some borrowed on the basis that capital growth would leave them debt-free when they sold.

But those assumptions may have to change, too.

UBS’s chief economist, Scott Haslem, says most indicators point to economic growth - and jobs growth - slowing in Australia.
“It seems to us that 15 per cent growth in house prices year on year is unsustainable,” he says. “You’re looking at flat to minus 5 per cent as a realistic range.”

In 2004, house price growth went from 20 per cent to zero in the space of a year, he says. “Our expectation is for a similar effect this time.”

Morgan Stanley market strategist Gerard Minack thinks prices could fall by 10 per cent in the next two to three years if there’s a soft landing for the economy but by as much as 25 to 30 per cent if we fall hard.

The International Monetary Fund recently said Australian property was among the most overvalued in the world and that at least 25 per cent of the increase in value over the past decade couldn’t be justified by fundamentals.

The Housing Industry Association, however, has dismissed talk of widespread price falls as “way off the mark”.

Last week’s Bureau of Statistics data showed a 1.1 per cent rise in house prices nationally in the March quarter, or 13.8 per cent over the year. However, Commonwealth Bank economists say the data masks “significantly divergent trends” in the capital cities.

“Higher interest rates are likely to suppress demand for house purchases in a national sense but there are still likely to be significant differences in demand conditions prevailing in the next five years,” they say in an analysis of the data. “The mining-related capital cities such as Perth, Brisbane, Darwin and now Adelaide, with stronger population, jobs and income growth, are likely to have relatively larger house price rises.”

BE PREPARED

Tighter lending standards mean that people must have their finances in good shape before they approach a lender.
RESI’S head of consumer advocacy, Lisa Montgomery, says a clean credit profile can mean access to a wider range of loans - potentially at better rates - and quicker approval.

“A borrower’s credit rating is one of the most important criteria lenders look at, along with the loan-to-value ratio and the borrower’s ability to service the loan,” she says.

The way you’ve managed all your past and present credit arrangements - such as credit cards, mobile phone accounts and retailers’ interest-free packages - will count for a lot.

“By reviewing your credit profile before applying for a loan, you can identify any issues that may be of concern to lenders and look to clean up any outstanding financial arrangements,” she says.

RESI suggests taking these steps:

Review your credit reference. This includes information such as inquiries about you by lenders, any credit card defaults and bankruptcies. You can check your credit reference at http://www.mycreditfile.com.au.

Consider reducing the number of cards you have or your spending limits. Lenders look at the amount of credit you have access to, not just what you owe. Cut up cards or reduce the limits and you may be eligible for a bigger home loan.

Don’t leave bills in arrears. Even telephone bills can appear on credit reports - nothing’s too small and everything counts. Even if a loan or account is no longer current, past credit problems can still show up.

Explain any arrears or defaults to your lender upfront. It’s better to reveal any past or present credit problems to your lender yourself at the time of application, rather than have them discovered later.

Avoid multiple applications for credit. A credit report shows applications for credit, not just those approved, and multiple inquiries can ring alarm bells with lenders. Apply for credit only once you’ve carried out your initial research.

Questions to ask when applying for a mortgage loan

Saturday, March 8th, 2008

Applying for a mortgage is a very important part of buying a home or investment property. Knowing what to ask your lender could save you a lot of time and headaches, so before you sign your mortgage documents you should find out the answers to the following questions.

1. What is the interest rate on this mortgage?

It’s important you understand exactly what you’ll be paying in interest over the life of the loan. Even if you have a ‘honeymoon’ interest rate for the first year of the loan, you should be clear about what your interest rate will revert to after the honeymoon is over and ensure you can comfortably afford the monthly repayments on this higher amount.

2. Can I lock in an interest rate if I need to and what will it cost me to do so?

The interest rate of the mortgage you’re applying for may go up or down between the time you apply and the time you close so you might decide to lock in the rate for a specified period. Be sure to ask the lender if there is any fee for locking in the rate.

3. What are the bank guidelines for approving the loan?

The banks guidelines might relate to your income, employment, assets, liabilities and credit history, so be clear about what you’ll be asked and ensure you have the documents to support your application.

4. What documents do I have to provide?

You will probably need to provide proof of income and your assets and liabilities to get a loan. Find out what documents will be required in your particular situation by asking your lender and make copies of those documents for your lender.

5. How long will it take to process my application?

The approval process for your loan will vary from lender to lender. It often depends on how much business your particular lender is doing and how much business the market is seeing as a whole. When borrowers are knocking down doors all over town, loan approval will probably take longer. Just make sure you get a realistic estimate on how long your approval will take and use that estimate to determine when you should start house hunting.

6. Is there a minimum deposit required for this loan?

Depending on the amount of your deposit and its percent of the price of the home you’re buying, you might be charged different interest rates or quoted different loan terms. Loans at high loan-to-value ratios can cost more than loans with larger down payments. Still, customers with good credit or those who are willing to pay mortgage insurance may be able to borrow more than 80% of the value of the property.

7. What other costs will be charged on this loan?

Every mortgage comes with fees and charges for various services that lenders and other parties involved in the transaction provide. These may include application fees, valuation fees, bank solicitor’s fees and stamp duty on the mortgage documents. You need to find out what you’ll be charged and whether these costs can be rolled into the loan or need to be covered separately.

8. Can I make additional repayments on the loan?

Some mortgages only allow you to make the minimum monthly repayment, while others will let you make additional payments. If you can make additional repayments you should find out whether these payments will be credited towards the loan interest or the principal amount.

9. Is there an early repayment penalty on this loan?

The early repayment question is most important for loan shoppers. Generally speaking a home loan is not tax deductible and should be paid off as quickly as possible. Therefore, if you do come across extra money which allows you to pay off your loan early, it’s important to ensure you won’t be penalized for early repayment of the loan.

10. What might delay the approval of my loan?

If you provide the lender with complete, accurate information, everything should go smoothly and fairly quickly. However, there could be a delay if the lender discovers credit problems or requires extra paperwork, which is why it is critical to get everything in order (as much as possible).

This is where engaging the services of a Mortgage Broker can save you time and money, a Broker knows and understands the different loans and the different Lender’s available in the market place, they can take you through the total process from assisting you shopping for the right loan one that suits your lifestyle through to settlement.

10 Biggest Mistakes of Novice Property Investors in Australia

Saturday, March 8th, 2008

If you want to go into property investment, you need to do so with your eyes open.
Following are some of the common mistakes made by new prperty investors:

1. Falling in love with the property.

You need to stop thinking like a homeowner and start thinking like a business owner.

2. Not performing your due diligence.

This is more than just an inspection of the property, although that’s essential. It’s also a thorough investigation of your area’s current rental market. What are the vacancy rates and average rents for comparable properties? What’s the average age of the rental housing stock? How is the neighbourhood zoned? What are the government regulations about rental properties?

3. Forgetting the rule of home improvements.

It will always take three times the money and twice as long as you estimate to get a property ready to rent, you need to build that extra cost into your expenses.

4. No cash reserves.

In order to stay in real estate long term, you need cash reserves. Buying real estate with a small or zero deposit is easy; handling negative cash flow, repairs, and other expenses in the meantime is the trick. In fact, if you can handle the bad times, you will always come out on top.

Lack of cash reserves puts unnecessary pressure on you to do substandard repairs, accept less than qualified tenants, and give into tenants’ demands for fear of vacancy. When you have a sufficient cash reserve, you act rationally.

5. Not pre screening tenants.

New landlords can get very excited about prospective tenants who show up, take one look at the place, hand them a cash deposit, and want to move in that weekend. Don’t do it. When selecting renters make them fill out an application, and check their credit, employment and rental history before you take a dollar from them. It’s a much more expensive — and potentially nasty — headache to evict a bad tenant than to have a property sit vacant for a couple of months.

6. Investing blind.

Real estate is one of the few investments in which risk is directly proportional to knowledge. True, it has a higher learning curve than investing in the stock market, but there’s no proof that having knowledge of the stock market reduces risk.
The more knowledge of investing techniques, financing, acquisition, negotiating and, of course, your local marketplace, the less risky your investments will be.

7. Investing long-distance.

Unless your rental property is in a spot you love to visit regularly, such as a lake or the beach, keep your rentals very close to home. Otherwise, you’ll eat up your profits by driving back and forth to manage the property or by paying someone to make repairs for you.

8. Paying too much for the property.

If you’re embarrassed to make a low-ball offer to a seller, don’t invest in real estate. You can never know a sellers circumstances and an offer you think will be unacceptable may be very acceptable to the seller. Don’t assume anything.

9. Not studying the competition.

Why does the guy across the street rent his property the same day someone moves out and yours sits vacant for months? He might not be very picky about whom he rents to, but he also might have lower rents or have gone to a little extra effort to present the property.

10. Being underinsured.

Insurance on rental property goes beyond insuring the building against fire or natural disaster. You need to look at comprehensive landlord insurance. There are too many horror stories about destroyed rental properties to not take out this type of insurance. Most major insurance companies now offer this product, which will not only cover you for damage to the property but also loss of rent.

11. Not using the services of professionals, a good mortgage broker and an accountant who specialises in property investment.

Property as security

Monday, February 4th, 2008

Security (or collateral) is defined as ‘rights over an asset belonging to another’.

When a mortgage is involved, the mortgagor gives certain rights regarding the property to the mortgagee in return for the loan of funds.

The property becomes security for the loan, allowing the mortgagee to recover the debt if the borrower does not repay the loan in accordance with the loan conditions.

Mortgagees are known as ‘secured’ creditors. They have an advantage over ‘unsecured’ creditors because they are more likely to recover their money in the event of default.

If loan commitments are not met, a secured creditor can sell the security and use the proceeds to repay the loan.

Unsecured creditors cannot do this. They must obtain a court judgment against the debtor to try to recover their money. Once this has been obtained they can execute the judgement, however the proceeds from the sale of assets must first go towards paying off any secured debt before whatever is left is applied to pay off unsecured debt.

From this it can be seen that secured debt is much more desirable, from an investor’s point of view, than an unsecured debt.

Guide To The Mortgage Process

Sunday, November 4th, 2007

Every person seeking a home loan has to follow certain steps from start to settlement. Understanding each step and how it works prepares you for the process and can, hopefully, get you into your new home faster.

Preparation

• Know your finances and budget inside-out, and prepare a list of your assets.
• Do some initial research about home loans and mortgages.
• Get some background information on the company or person you’re approaching or a referral from a previous customer.

Initial contact

• Get additional information about the mortgage provider.
• Find out the names of the lenders on the broker’s panel — the lenders the broker deals with — or what loan products a lender offers.
• Advise how much money you are seeking to borrow, outline your finances and personal details.
• Organise a time and place (preferably their office) to meet.
• Determine what documents you need to bring to the meeting.

The more information you can provide the mortgage provider in this step the more prepared they are for your meeting.

The meeting:

There are usually five stages of the interview:

Introduction: will cover what will happen in the interview, information about the company you’re dealing with (their panel of lenders if they’re a broker, or their products if a lender) plus their commissions and fees.

Qualification: provision of documents to support your financial situation and budget; discussion about the size of the loan you require and its use; such as for an investment or principal place of residence.

Offer: discussion of loan products, matching you to a loan product/s, if using a lender a discussion about the types of loan products. Other mortgage providers will also discuss products and compare the different loan products from their panel of lenders. Use of calculators to determine repayments and upfront and ongoing fees. Deciding what loan/s to apply for.

Application: signing a finance broker contract and privacy declaration form (agreeing to what you and the broker discussed, allowing them to provide information to third parties). Completing the application form, and declaring the information provided is correct.

Close: advises what happens next, and up to settlement, expected time frame for the next contact, and returning original documents and your copy of the Finance Broker Contract.

The application

Your mortgage provider will:

• Review the application, check details and complete any missing information.
• Attach supporting documents.
• Complete a serviceability sheet — to demonstrate your ability to pay back the loan.
• Send on to the assessor.

The lender’s assessor will:

• Log the application, allocate a file number to it and confirm receipt of application.
• Check it is completed correctly and has all relevant documents (or return it if incomplete).
• Undertake detailed review and complete relevant checks.
• Log all the information on to your file.
• Pass the file to the team leader with a recommendation to approve or decline the loan.

If approved by the lender a pre-approval or conditional approval is sent back to the mortgage provider to inform the borrower.

Pre-approval or conditional approval:

Advises that your loan is approved subject to certain conditions, such as finding a property. The conditional approval usually lasts for about three months and should not cost you anything.

Valuation:

The lender will conduct a valuation on the property you have chosen to show its market value and ensure they are lending within their guidelines.

Unconditional approval:

Granted when all the conditions of the loan have been met, and all costs are determined, such as establishment fees, stamp duty, and lender’s and solicitor’s fees.

Letter of offer:

This document delineates the terms, conditions and costs of the loan. Get your solicitor to review the letter of offer and, if OK, sign it and send it back to the lender so their solicitors can proceed to settlement. Once signed, it becomes the credit contract.

Mortgage documents:

Sent with the letter of offer, they outline the agreement between the lender, borrower and the Office of State Revenue. The details of the mortgage are recorded on the Certificate of Title along with the name of the borrower/owner and the mortgage lender. This process will be managed between the lender and your solicitor.

Settlement:

Settlement occurs when the loan funds are drawn down to pay for the remainder of the property and the relevant costs. The date of settlement will be managed between the lender and your lawyers.

Loan to Valuation Ratio (Article 2)

Saturday, November 3rd, 2007

The Loan to Valuation Ratio or LVR is an important criteria used by
Lenders as part of the evaluation process in assessing your suitability to borrow.

The loan to valuation ratio (LVR) is the proportion of money that the lender is prepared to provide in relation to a particular property. The LVR determines two things. Firstly, the maximum amount the client can borrow on a property and the minimum deposit they need to contribute.

It is a formula that the Banks and Lenders have devised based on experience of loan defaults that attempts to minimise risk from borrowers defaulting.

The following calculation is used to determine the loan to value ratio.

Loan amount ÷ property value = LVR (as a percentage)

For example:

$200,000 (loan amount) ÷ $350,000 (property value) = 57% (LVR

The LVR is a product of the property value, not the property sale price (although they are often identical).

Therefore, if the LVR is at a maximum allowable under the Lender’s terms, the borrower will need to provide the difference between the loan amount and the purchase price.

In addition, they will need to provide funds for the additional costs and charges associated with the purchase of the property and borrowing.

Usually, the maximum amount lenders will fund is 95% of the value.

Note, that loans with an LVR exceeding 80% require lenders’ mortgage insurance.

Certain factors such as the use of low-doc loans and loans for the purchase of investment and or rural usually means the lender will lend a lesser proportion on the cost. This results in a lower LVR.

Note that in the instances where there is a discrepancy between the sale price and the valuation, the lender will usually adopt the lower amount.

Want To Buy a Home - What do Banks & Lenders Consider?

Friday, November 2nd, 2007

There are a number of factors a lender will consider when you ask for a home loan. Knowing what they are looking for can increase your chances of being approved.

To qualify for any home loan you must have a deposit. Many lenders will consider borrowers with a 5 per cent deposit (generally 10 per cent for investment properties). However, it is important to recognize that this is the minimum and is only offered to clients considered to be a very safe prospect.

In addition you will need to have saved an amount to cover other costs involved in purchasing a property and taking out a loan, such as lender’s mortgage insurance, government stamp duties and conveyancing fees.

For your loan application to go ahead, the mortgage insurer will also have to approve the application and be willing to provide the lender with insurance.

Lender’s mortgage insurance companies require a minimum of six months of “financials”, that is, bank statements, pay slips or any other proof of income documents.

With most mainstream lenders, you also need to be able to show a pattern of genuine saving. Often described as ‘hurt money’, it is often required to be at least 5 per cent of the value of the property. This has to be money you (and your partner) have earned and saved, not a gift or other financial windfall.

Applicants with a higher disposable income are more likely to have their home loan application approved. The maximum loan repayment is often set as a percentage of your income.

The type of property, its location and its condition will all be evaluated when assessing your loan application. Comparable sales in the area are also investigated.

Lenders also consider your employment history. Temporary, probational positions or a volatile work history are not generally well regarded and may affect the outcome of your loan application.

The lender will also conduct a credit reference check with a credit bureau such as My Credit File/Veda Advantage. Your credit history is a record, within the last five years, of any defaults, substantially late payments, seriously overdue or outstanding debts, records of inquiries and bankruptcy.

This can often be a major determining factor in the success of a home loan application as lenders can flatly reject an application based on a poor credit history.

What is joint tenancy?

Friday, November 2nd, 2007

It has nothing to do with renting a property, but is a decision that needs to be made when two or more people are buying a property together. It refers to how they own the property. This will ultimately determine how the property is dealt with if one of the owners passes away.

It is important to know the two types of ownership.

Joint Tenancy is based on the principles of survivorship or how one’s property is to be dealt with if one of the owners dies.
This means that on the death of one of the owners the surviving owner(s) automatically receive the deceased person’s share of the property.

Usually a death certificate is required to be lodged, with a Notice of Death to bring this about. However, it is automatic and occurs regardless of what their individual last will and testament may say.

Tenants in Common on the other hand, is where the owners may possibly want an individual share in the property with that share being disposed of by their will rather than that share automatically going to the survivors.

Under a joint tenancy, each owner has the same rights with the others regarding legal ownership, enjoyment, possession and sale of the property; in other words they all share together in the whole of the property equally, not in separate shares.

Under a tenancy in common on the other hand, each owner has a separate and distinct share, and these shares may be different in size or percentage.

So, this is obviously an important decision to make. When the time comes for you to decide what’s best for you, make sure you talk to your solicitor or conveyancer and accountant to get further advice based on your individual needs and circumstances.