First - buy in a rising market.
Try to select a country or region where property prices are rising. A totally clear statement, but this underpins most successful investment plans. It just makes everything easier.
folks who buy in flat markets to make money must work much harder to find property that is valued below the market price because it's less visible and then has been overlooked.
folks who buy in falling markets have to have motives other than making money.
Rising markets are driven upwards by demand exceeding supply. This usually happens in the early stages of the market's development where builders cannot 'tool up' as quickly as the buyers rush in. When they do 'tool up', unless inhibited by restrictive planning laws, supply will ultimately match demand making for a flat market. After that supply will exceed demand for a while making for a collapse in prices and a period of stagnation before demand and supply rebalance.
We are seeing this over supply happen in some areas of Spain at the moment, most evidently on the Costa del Sol but in other areas property prices are nonetheless rising e.g. Costa Calida property Murcia.
Second - know when to sell.
Having decided to invest an exit strategy is needed. You need to be able to sell the property at a profit. This can be done in a rising market. If you purchased early in the rising market you are able to sell in a flat market and nonetheless profit. you are able to't purchase in a flat market and sell in the same flat market and make a profit without first adding some value to the property, maybe by refurbishment or building an extension, etc.
You have to also take into consideration the selling costs although there are an increasing number of web sites offering free property sales services under the banner of "for sale by owner".
The difficulty is in knowing when the market is going to turn flat. This can only be known with hind sight. The last year of a rising market is also the first year of a flat market if the year following turns out to be the same as its predecessor. This gives rise to the TWO YEAR rule - If you purchased inside 2 years of the market going flat you purchased too late and into a flat market.
Third - recognise the market cycles.
A typical market cycle of ten years might be four years rising, two years flat, four years falling. The problem is that you do not know that the market has turned until year six, when it's too late.
The answer is to be an 'early bird' investor. In a ten year market cycle you have just the first three years to stake a profitable claim and no more than the three following years to exit with your profits. This is the ONE THIRD RULE. Buy in the first third of a rising market.
Fourth - investing for the long term.
Some folks invest for say twenty years ahead. The logic might be that although they miss out on the first market upswing, the following one will embark on from a higher pedestal and the top of the second upswing will be even higher. The issue then becomes how can the property investment earn its keep in the years before it's sold?
The usual answer is to 'rent it out'; buy-to-let investing has become very popular over recent years. This is also the plan of a lot of investors who do not have the capital to put down and finance the purchase on borrowings. There is a very simple calculation that tests the validity of this approach.
embark on by ascertaining the realistic rental potential of the property. If it's a holiday property and it will only rent during the holiday season you will usually get a maximum of 90 days rent per year. From this you must deduct any fees agents might charge. Good examples of this type of property are coastal holiday apartments in Bulgaria.
If it's a holiday property with added attractions e.g. golf, sailing, winter sports, idea parks and or a long or year round season; then the property can be rented out for longer, maybe 60 - 80% of the time or more. Good examples of this type of property are Bulgarian apartments in the mountain ski resorts, property in the Canary Islands and property in Southern Spain.
If it's a year round rent it'll be being offered in the local market at lower rates. Whichever is appropriate you will have a net figure to count as income. even so, also remember that in most countries income is subject to tax and property taxes also utilize, so the net figure has to be carefully considered.
Next, take this net figure and divide it by the rate of interest you must pay for the money. do not worry, if you use a calculator the process is easy (if you are good with figures you are able to show off and do it in your head!). a good example goes like this:
Net rental income £5,000 divided by the interest at say 5% = £1,000.
Now multiply by 100 to bring the figure to one hundred percent = in this example £100,000.
Thus your rental income of £5,000 will support £100,000 of borrowings.
If you paid more than £100,000 for your long term property investment you will must make up the difference.
If the rate you are paying includes the repayment of capital then it'll be higher - say 6.5%. Just divide the £5,000 by 6.5% and you get £769-29p. This will support a purchase of £76,900.
The above figures are based on UK interest rates and UK borrowing as this is a very common manner folks raise money to purchase property overseas. Interest rates in the euro zone are a lot lower and mortgages may be found with rates of around 3.5 - 4%.
Rental incomes usually track property value so, if you chose well, rental yields ought to increase making the above calculations better as time passes.
Fifth - What constitutes a rising market?
Basically when folks are willing to pay more for a property than it was worth yesterday. Local folks can drive up values inside their own communities if their living standards are rising. even so, as often as not it's richer 'outsiders' descending onto less prosperous regions that kick embark on a property boom. When a boom has been underway for long enough a lot of of the less prosperous become as prosperous as the incomers, values rise and the lure of cheap property has had its day - along with easy capital profits.
This can clearly be seen in the more traditional overseas property locations of Spain and Florida. Whereas a lot of areas of Turkey are probably nonetheless quite early on in the process.
An under developed property market exists when a country or local region has something to offer outsiders (with high value currencies searching a better climate) and its pricing is based on local incomes. In Europe this equates to the previous Soviet Block states and to Turkey in the eastern Mediterranean. Taking the example of Turkey, property in Turkey is around five times cheaper than in the UK. It used to be this manner with property in Spain but now on some Spanish Costas the prices are roughly the same.
Two tier pricing can arise here but if the markets (holidaymakers and locals) can maintain some physical differentials then two tier pricing can be sustained for some time. There will always be fuzzy boundaries that can be crossed and, over time, the two markets will merge.
For the 'early birds' buying in at local prices even before two tier markets emerge is the objective.
Sixth - in conclusion check out out the Income and Property Taxes
Each country has its own rules on tax. Some levy capital gains tax and some do not. you may be an 'early bird' investor, you might do all the right things, you may be showing a huge profit on your property but the taxman might want his slice too. In the UK capital gains tax is 40%; in Spain it's 35%; in Turkey it's zero after 4 years.
Happy Investing!
If you would like further information on any of the points in this article or on overseas property investing in general, please contact Mike Dunkerley, Regional Director, The Global Property Group
0044 (0)1242 524 081
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