Michal Bodi

Thursday 13 March 2014

Well done is always better than well said...Stop procrastinating!

Well done is always better than well said.

Procrastination is no doubt the number one reason why people don’t become successful at achieving what they dream of. 

It is caused by the change that needs to happen. And we, humans, don’t like change that much!

Why?




Well, it’s got a lot to do with our ego and the actual process of admitting that what we’ve been doing is wrong. 

It can be especially difficult when we’re surrounded by people with same views as us. Why should I stand out?


Generations Y and Z ...

When you’re young, it feels nice to have a first job, still live at home and spend the money on travelling and going out, but just think about where you are at the moment. Your whole life is only starting.

What you may not fully realise day by day (because you just don't) is that the time is on your side and you will never (ever) be in this position again. 

Use that competitive advantage! Trust me, you don’t want to end up like the vast majority of adults – looking back in ten or more years’ time, realising what a massive opportunity you had… And you blew it!

What I’m talking about is the power of ‘doing’.

You have two choices

Choice number one – do nothing and spend every cent. This is what most of you will do. Just like everyone else (I thought you wanted to be different?)

Choice number two – start implementing tiny changes into your spending habits. Time is your best mate here. It will do the rest, as long as you stay committed.

Remember, if you change nothing, nothing will change. The change doesn’t need to happen all at once, you can start with baby steps. 

One year later, you will be definitely in a better position compared to if you did nothing.

There are many ways to put money aside but here’s a fun example to start getting ahead – something that I call the reverse version of The 52 week savings challenge:

You start with $52 that you put away in the first week – that is the biggest commitment you need to make, it gets easier from here.

The next week it’s only $51. And as you continue, you decrease the money by a dollar every week, until you will end up with a dollar contribution in the last week, year later.

Over the course of the year, you will save exactly $1,378.

This can be used as a nice little deposit into an investment plan which can one day be converted into an investment property deposit. It will give you that competitive advantage.

It can be the difference between having to work every night to earn extra money for your ski trip compared to having a passive income to fund your travels so you can spend more time with your friends.


All you need to do is start. 

Anything. Just start…


by Michal Bodi

Wednesday 12 March 2014

How to invest in property

Question:

I have just started investing in property. I want to grow my property portfolio as fast as possible. How do you recommend I achieve this while minimising risk? I currently own my primary place of residence with about $220,000 remaining on the mortgage (valued at $450,000) and have just used this equity to purchase an investment property valued at approximately $585,000 (will rent for approximately $540 per week). From here I would like to purchase additional 4 - 5 properties over the coming 5 - 10 years.


My answer:

Thank you for asking this question. Achieving solid investment outcomes only happens via disciplined strategies with a long term outlook. The trickiest part of investing is avoiding making bad behavioural decisions based on the emotional. 

Successful investing starts with realistic expectations, respecting the investment fundamentals and hiring a third party professional who will draw your investment plan and will ensure you stick to it.

You want to buy one property every year, or every two years – how? If you plan to put cash into each property (minimum deposit plus costs on each purchase) you’ll need to save hard. What is your cash flow position? If you want to keep using equity (by relying on future growth) your goal is not realistic.

From your question it kind of looks like you’ve made up your mind, so if you do go down that road, here’s a few things I would consider and encourage you to implement in your plan.

Avoid acting emotionally

Partner with a third party professional who can draw a time and dollar specific plan in order to help you making objective decisions about your future. This may sound basic but hiring an experienced professional with the objective point of view is money well spent.

Diversify 

If you’re going all property (which I would not endorse) then think of different types and locations. If you’re narrowing your investment strategy to only one idea, you’re putting all your eggs in one basket - all your planned assets would end up in same property. If  you don’t have exposure to different assets you have no backup plan. Also, consider investing in equities to increase an exposure to different assets in your portfolio.

Avoid euphoria

Don’t buy what’s popular, otherwise you possibly lose the sense of risk (when you’re worried that others are making more money than you, you’re in the euphoria zone). It’s the opposite of panic and capitulation and it’s equally dangerous. False expectations are set, your behaviour is completely emotional and the investment decisions are not being thought through. You also lose the sense of value and you end up buying overpriced assets.

Have plenty of equity

Protect yourself against unforeseen events (interest rates, loss of tenants, etc.) and make sure you put at least 20% of cash into each property. This will likely go against your goal of growing your portfolio ‘as fast as possible’, but it’s crucial you don’t expose yourself to high debt.

Don’t speculate

Take a long term view and look for an increase in value over time, rather than chasing short term price movements. You may still think you’re investing but you haven’t realised you crossed the line. If you’re looking at short term price fluctuations, you will end up burning your fingers. Don’t overthink the process; keep things fairly simple, an excitement belongs to Vegas.

Cover yourself and your plan

Have relevant protection strategies to protect your ability to earn income (may need it if property income doesn’t meet your expenses) and to have available cash to deal with the unexpected without pulling money out of your plan.


Lastly, you’re not mentioning this in your question, but what’s your end strategy? 

Assuming you reach your goal of owning ten properties, what do you plan to do with them? Keep them to fund your retirement? Sell them one by one to free up cash? You need to think about this before you start so you won’t get stuck at the end (you may have unnecessary problems with tax, liquidity – access to your money, reliability of income etc.)

Hope these tips help you clarify your points of focus. I believe you’ll consider them carefully before making any investment decisions. Shop around and invest in quality financial advice. It will be worth your while to look for someone who will focus on the dominant determinant of your financial outcomes – your investment behaviour.

Best wishes,
Michal Bodi