Curated Notes Regarding Property Investing in Australia

In the year 2017, with almost zero knowledge on how to invest in the stock market, I was able to learn, navigate and invest in Australia Stock Market (ASX). Not bad for self learner.

This year, I decided to learn how the Australian Property Market. This repo will served as my notes, where in I can dump information, links, articles, jargons, that I learn along the way. Maybe in the future, If ever that I decided to buy my own property or join the real estate game, then this wiki will serve as my guidance. 😁

For those who are also based in AU, feel free to contribute.

Contents

Jargons

Purchase Price: $650,000
Loan Amount: $450,000
Total Equity: $200,000 (This is the equity)
Formula:

Value of the Property: $ 600,000
Buyer's Deposit: $100,000
Loan: $500,000

($500,000 % 600,0000) x 100 = 83.33

Loan to Value Ratio = 83.3 (LVR)

The higher the LVR, the higher the risk associated with the loan. Every property has an acceptable LVR assessed by the banks.

Two Categories of Mortgages

In the introduction of the ‘National Credit Consumer Protection Legislation (NCCP)’, most interest only loans are set for 5 to 10 years then revert back to Principle and Interest (P & I) loan.

It is worth noting that Australian Property market is 3x bigger than the Australian Stock market.

Lenders Mortgage Insurance

Whenever investors borrows ABOVE 80% LVR in order to buy a property, he will need to pay Lenders Mortgage Insurance. This insurance simple refers to premium that is payable by the borrower, protecting the mortgagee agaisnt an event whereby the borrower defaults on their mortgage.

Only applicable on:

The LMI value depends on the LVR percentage, let say you are borrowing 81% LVR, on a property purchase, the LMI premium might be 0.3 of the total loan amount compared to 95% LVR where the LMI premium may be as high as 3.5% of the total loan amount. To put that into perspective.

@ 81%
($600,000 @ 81%) = $486,000 x 0.3 = $1,458

@ 95%
(600,000 @ 95%) = 570,000 x 3.5% = $19,950

To avoid LMI, the investor needs to deposit 20% of the total property value.

Which Lenders to Use

Start with the lenders that have the hardest and most stringent credit scoring policies and serviceability criteria. The logic behind this approach is that you want the hardest ones and move down the list every time you step down a level, the banking lender’s criteria become easier to meet.

Order of Lenders:

  1. Banks - ANZ, NAB, Westpac, CBA, Bank of Western Australia, ING Bank, Suncorp, CityGroup, Macquarie bank, HSBC bank, AMP
  2. Credit Unions - Credit Union Australia, Australian Central Credit Union, Savings and Loadn Credit Union

Types of Loans

The most important aspect of loan to a property investory is flexibility and loan features, more specifically, ability to unlock equity with ease and have access to funds at hand in the event that the property becomes available to the market while the least important aspect of a loan is the interest rate given that we are currently in a low interest rate environment.

….to be continue