Archive for the ‘Real Estate Investing’ Category
Getting The Latest Real Estate Indie Music Vibe!
Earlier this week we were in Toronto taking care of some business when we got chatting about the “naysayers” who always believe the sky is falling.
You know the type, the ones that call for real estate to fall in value for so many years in a row that one day they’re right.
Well, we ourselves have been scared off of the Toronto Condo market for some time and although investing for appreciation isn’t our “cup of tea” we continue to be amazed the strength of the Toronto condo market and shot this quick update…
And then, right after the video someone literally jumped on us … one of Nick’s old high school mates lives in the neighborhood and is part of the Indie Music scene. He gave us the local updates that we love and can only get from someone living in the neighborhood.
Enjoy PART II to this video!
The “New Fundamentals” of Real Estate
In the interest of full disclosure let it be known that we own real estate as investment and a real estate brokerage … and all the bias that comes with those.
Good, with that said, let’s continue.
We *think* there was once a day where the stock market was a place that actually helped both large and small businesses.
Wall Street facilitated the selling of stocks and bonds so that businesses could access capital to help them expand and grow.
Investors earned interest payments on their bonds or equity in their stocks.
Stock traders earned a commission. Everyone was happy.
We’re not sure when the stock market went off course but we do believe that that was the original intent of it. A place where Wall Street helped Main Street.
Maybe it was just an “idea” and maybe it never actually worked as we’ve just described.
It certainly hasn’t worked that way since we entered the game in the mid to late 1990′s. That was the era of “irrational exuberance” and the tech bubble took us on a ride that we’ll never forget.
But even in the late 1990′s it *seemed* that you could find businesses that met your criteria as good investments…
A business that seemed to have good, universally needed, products.
Products that were cheap to make, cheap to sell and had huge profit margins.
Products that made the world a better place to live and didn’t ruin the environment.
Management that had the best interest of the owners in mind and were also honest.
Today the world has changed.
Today, with very few exceptions (like Apple) no matter what company you find to invest into, it’s highly likely that their stock price is going to be affected by large global economic factors.
So no matter how well they do on an individual basis the larger winds of change will determine the direction of their stock price.
Things like “Sovereign Debt” (the debt owned by governments who sell bonds to raise cash) which were barely even mentioned 12 months ago are all over the news -daily.
The economy has officially moved from a banking debt crisis to a government debt crisis.
1,000 point drops in the Dow Jones Industrial Average and countries banning “naked short selling”, as Germany did this week, is the new normal.
So even if you fully understand all the fundamentals of the stock you have purchased, much larger forces are now at work. Huge macro economic events are sweeping their way around the markets that can alter a stock’s value no matter how good its “fundamentals” are.
Fun, eh?
Mark Cuban has one of the better rants on this exact topic.
Now let’s turn to real estate.
It’s not perfect either. These same large macro economic forces can have devasting affects on real estate as well.
Just look at the U.S.
30% declines across the board.
Not fun.
But there’s something real estate has that other investments don’t.
Shelter is fundamentally a need.
If you own property in the right “category” you will always have demand for it.
Obviously, owning the right property in the right category is important. Many will ignore this, they won’t put in the work necessary to learn what the right properties are and those will be the same people who waive their arms in disgust when the winds of change come.
And when managed properly, good real estate produces something critical to your economic life, cash flow.
The value of the property may swing wildly but with tight managment and smart control of your costs, like mortgage rates, you should be able to ride out even the most terrible of economic storms.
“Should” is the important idea here of course.
“Cash, cash flow and credit” are excellent daily mantras.
Most real estate investors are scared to buy properties because its value may fall.
That’s inaccurate thinking in our books.
Your goal is to own real estate free and clear.
You should EXPECT changes in value and plan accordingly. At some point in your ownership of it … it WILL fall.
Your path to getting to the end goal of “free and clear ownership” may involve many different strategies and styles but at the end of the day you’re looking to flat out own your investments.
That’s what gets you out of the rat race forever.
So wild swings in value are to be expected.
Accept that right now.
The question should be, how will you prepare for them?
When the downward pressure in Canada comes what will you do to protect your investments?
Will you sell? At a loss? Or wiill you have the proper reserve funds to carry you through a tough period?
Will you have polished up your marketing, negotiation and “action taking” skills to the point where your are ready to jump into action?
In the early 1990′s our family went through an extremely difficult time and if it wasn’t for some reserve funds we would have lost property to the bank.
The good news is, that although there were difficult days, we came out the other side. We survived and it made us stronger.
Here are some of things we personally enjoy with real estate investments:
1. We’re the board of directors. So we can take personal responsibility for results.
2. Our product always has a need (starter homes).
3. We can control where we own them (what community, with what fundamentals – population, employment, transportation, infratstructure).
4. We can closely watch the global economic landscape, increase our financial education, and have plans for multiple different economic changes that could come sweeping through.
Here’s the interesting part.
For years, numbers 1 – 3 on this list were the most important factors when investing in real estate.
Knowing your “local” market was the key to success.
And it’s still important.
But in today’s world, number 4 has become critical. Essential even.
If you’re only watching the “local” fundamentals you are not watching enough. You are not preparing enough.
The days of just knowing the population trends, employment sources and transportation routes are over.
Huge macro economic trends are here.
It’s a new world.
Get ready for it or get out of the way.
Until next time … Your Life! Your Terms!
This Week’s Teleseminar, “Six-Figure Pay Days & Cash Flow Investing”, Recording Now Available!
We had a completely overwhelming response to this week’s Teleseminar and the feedback has been fantastic! We had hundreds and hundreds register for the call.
We made a recording of the call, if you missed it you can click here to access the MP3 recording of it.
During the call we announced that we’re re-naming our “Real Estate Pain Free” program, which is over 6 hours of us sharing Real Estate Investing Strategies and Tips.
And because of that we’re clearing out our existing inventory and offering a 50% discount on the program, but only until Wednesday May 5th, 2010. Once our existing inventory is gone, it’s gone! You can learn more about it here.
“Global Trends Changing The Canadian Real Estate Investing Landscape” (Video Below)
Over the next few months you’re likely to hear a louder debate growing around the Chinese currency, the Yuan, and how it is “pegged” to the U.S. Dollar … meaning that it doesn’t dynamically flow in value like the currencies of other industrialized countries like Canada, Australia, the UK etc.
Why?
The North American economic picuture isn’t quite as rosy as the media is currently reporting.
There are long term, underlying fundamentals at work that are changing the landscape of North America.
Part of that is due to the fact that over the last 20 years China has been able to sell a lot of products to U.S. and Canadian consumers by artificially holding the value of their currency down.
This makes their exports cheap to the us Canadians who enjoy buying Plasma TV’s for under $1,000 and T-Shirts at Old Navy for $3.
The effect this has on our economy is pretty interesting of course. We’ve gradually changed from producing many of our own products to importing theirs.
This is a slippery economic slope and definitely impacts our lives.
You see, countries that are NET exporters or goods typically have a major polictical and economic advantage over those who don’t.
What is that?
CASH in the bank! Lots of it.
Check out this quick video we shot this morning at a new strip mall going up in Oakville … almost every single store is “service based”.
It’s a far cry from the strip malls I remember growing up, you know, the one’s with a men’s store, bakery, butcher, women’s fashions, Radio Shack, local Jeweler, furniture store, local hardware store and children’s clothing store.
As an investor these global trends play an important part in the places you choose to invest.
Never has it been more important to choose communities with diverse employment as a means to buffer your investments from the rapidly changing employment landscape.
Is Canada still a great place to invest. Absolutely.
Our laws, people and economy are relatively speaking … first class.
Do you have to have an even deeper understanding of global market dynamics when investing locally … YES.
Enjoy the video….
Until next time … be a Renegade!









