Archive for the ‘General Opinion’ Category
Posted by: admin   Dated on: Thursday, 23rd December 2010

If you´ve had a tough year in the office and have spent the past couple of days trying to fly out of an Irish or British airport you could be forgiven for missing this - but the world economy hasn´t done too badly at all this year. The Economist magazine estimates that it has grown by 5% - which is way above what people were forecasting in 2008 and 2009.

Manufacturing is up, global stock markets are doing well and the big fears of double dip recessions in the US & UK never materialised. The economies of Germany, Brazil, China and India - big players all - have been tearing through 2010.

Not so good if live in the wrong part of the EU

While Germany is putting a nice shine on the overall EU performance, the nations on its periphery (Ireland, Portugal, Greece and Spain) are facing a very grim 2011 and all still have the potential to wreak more havoc in Europe and beyond.

Additionally, Europe´s existing banking model is (in my opinion) unfit for purpose and needs serious alterations. Some banks are sick and some are healthy, but almost all have either borrowed from or lent huge sums of money to vulnerable EU economies. A bickering and fractious EU leadership does not inspire confidence at a time when new shocks and major political decisions are almost certainly imminent.

Warm Regards

Colin



 
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Posted by: admin   Dated on: Friday, 5th November 2010

Places like Canada, Hong Kong, Singapore and Australia are all going in the opposite direction to Ireland & Spain - these are overheated markets and prices are rising much faster than they should be. Overheated markets...

Australia was one of the best performing real estate markets in the world in 2010 with an 18% increase in property prices year on year. However, that had a lot more to do with their appreciating currency and mineral exports to China than their citizens earning more money, having more kids, wanting more homes or receiving better property loans.

In other words, it isn´t sustainable.

Regards

Colin



 
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Posted by: admin   Dated on: Friday, 5th November 2010

Ireland isn´t quite as deluded as Spain (at least the statistics are reliable), but properties are still overvalued. An “off market” bulk deal that landed in my inbox a couple of weeks ago serves as a prime example. It was 40+ tenanted apartments in a central Dublin location with an asking price of more than €20 million. The gross rental yield was 2.6% - which I can get in a bank. I wouldn´t have bought those apartments for €10 million, never mind €20 million.

Prices have fallen dramatically in Ireland (at least 35-40%), but they are still too high. The Irish government has recently taken ownership of tens of billions of euro worth of bad property related loans from the Irish banks and it will take years to resell them to regular and institutional investors. Until they do, neither developers nor investors can feel comfortable planning what to build and what to buy.
Regards
Colin



 
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Posted by: admin   Dated on: Friday, 5th November 2010

Where is the pain in Spain?
Spain is a very beautiful country and it had one of the biggest real estate booms ever seen. I get asked about it all the time by investors who like the idea of purchasing a great value property there.

I tell them all the exact same thing - if you want a pure holiday home there are some acceptable deals, but if you want to make any money continue waiting because prices have not fallen enough and rental yields are still way too low and unpredictable.
Nobody in Spain (including the Central Bank) trusts official goverment estimates of an 11% decline in property prices over the past two years. The ministry of housing also refuses to release data on actual sales prices rather than the asking prices, which, as you can imagine, would be quite useful to people considering an investment there.

In contrast to the deluded government numbers, privately held property portals like idealista.com publish much more reliable estimates of a peak to trough decline in the real estate market of 24%.


My problem with Spain is that it should be a 60% decline considering the rampant speculation and house building that went on, not 24% and certainly not 11%.

Most importantly, the Spanish banks are still not telling us how many bad loans they have. The Bank of Spain estimates that there are potentially €181 billion in “problematic” real estate loans. In other words, loans worth 10% of GDP could be bad but this isn´t reflected in their accounts and they´d rather not talk about it.

It´s a recipe for disaster and huge amounts of bank owned property may get dumped on the market in the next two years. It isn´t going to be pretty, but I´ll be keeping a very close look out for bargains when it happens.

Regards

Colin


 
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Posted by: admin   Dated on: Friday, 5th November 2010

Unlike a 3 year old, when an investor thinks about bubbles, the first thing that comes to mind is probably the real estate bubbles that have been bursting over the past 2-3 years. As a description of something which can grab everyone’s attention, and yet is unstable, fragile and difficult to control, a bubble is quite a nice metaphor to use when discussing real estate markets from 2003-2006.

Funnily enough, even though we´ve had the most dramatic and painful changes to the global real estate market in living memory, my gut feeling is that there are still way too many real estate bubbles that should have burst a couple of years ago and others that are actually getting bigger. These are by definition much more risky places to invest, as something other than the natural order of things is keeping prices artificially high. In economic jargon (if that´s your thing), the prices in too many markets are still considerably at variance with intrinsic values.

Regards

Colin



 
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Posted by: admin   Dated on: Wednesday, 3rd November 2010

If you´ve been waiting for the US dollar to fall, between now and Christmas is going to be prime buying time. The dollar fell last night following the mid term election results and it will continue to fall after the Federal Reserve announces the next round of quantitative easing later today (3rd November). That means a $70,000 apartment is going to cost you less in Euro and British Pounds than it did last month.

On the otherhand, if I was selling or buying real estate in Brazil, Mexico, Canada or Australia, I´d be quite worried about how sudden currency movements could severely disrupt carefully laid out investment plans.
Currency fluctuations are a notoriously tricky subject and I could write several newsletters discussing how much I don´t know about them. If you ever receive an email telling you how to make “easy money” by trading currencies from the “comfort of your home”, delete it straight away!

Levity aside, we do seem to be in the middle of a period where a burst bubble, record house price lows, high rental yields and a falling US dollar are all combining to make a terrific buying opportunity for the right kind of real estate in fundamentally sound locations like Florida.

Regards

Colin




 
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Posted by: admin   Dated on: Friday, 29th October 2010

A revealing global survey was published by The Economist on Oct 21st, 2010.

The report stated “America’s housing market, almost alone among those which experienced a big bubble, is more or less fairly valued at this point, at least according to price-to-rent ratios”.

The full table is below, with further commentary available here.

economistsurvey



 
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Posted by: admin   Dated on: Monday, 11th October 2010

In the late 1990s, enormous wealth was being transferred from venerable pension funds to Silicon Valley kids in their early twenties setting up overvalued dotcoms. I was a 20 something in San Francisco at the time and even at that tender age I couldn´t believe what was happening in front of my eyes.

Similarly in the late 2000s, an ever bigger amount of wealth is being transferred from those who overpaid massively for real estate to those who are willing to underpay massively for real estate. Funnily enough, a lot of the money lost was from the same venerable pension funds repeating their mistakes from a decade earlier!

The last two years have been great for Torcana as we´ve been sourcing a lot of high quality distressed property. Our job was to put it in front of cash buyers who are keen to take it off the hands of those who paid top dollar for them when prices were irrationally high.

We target areas that are going to recover fast when the tide turns. They are places within a 15 minute commute to the city centre, where professionals buy and rent, where they send their kids to great nearby schools and in neighbourhoods that are safe and clean with lots of parks and shopping areas. Makes sense to buy these kinds of properties right?

Despite having a local office, an enviable network of contacts and Torcana directors living in Florida fulltime, it´s getting very hard to find these deals. There are practically no new condos being built in Orlando at the moment and inventory of existing units is falling fast - the year on year sales figures are up 22%.

Residences at Sabal Point meets all of our investment criteria and with prices at $54 per sq ft (you couldn´t build them for twice that) we´re probably not going to have much trouble selling the 31 units we´ve exclusively secured for investors. As with all of our products, this is a turnkey investment with full services provided to buyers.

Regards

Colin



 
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Posted by: admin   Dated on: Monday, 11th October 2010

If you take a step back and look at what´s been happening to the property market over the past 10 years, you might figure that lots of people would take advantage of these booms and panics by selling when prices were high and demand frothy and buying when prices were low and demand flat.

Some people do exactly that, but not enough. The force of the herd mentality which encourages euphoria during price rises and panic during falls can be overwhelming. Warren Buffett has plenty of folksy quotes to illustrate how he made his fortune by doing what he felt was rational, which was usually the opposite of what most people were actually doing at the time.

Property shouldn´t really be treated differently to other products though. We should buy property when prices are low. If people want to buy it from us when prices are higher, then we should sell it to them. Then you repeat the cycle and buy more when the prices fall again.

Ironically enough, it´s the people who can treat property the same way they would treat an ipod who stand the best chance of making money out of it.

Regards

Colin



 
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Posted by: admin   Dated on: Monday, 11th October 2010

Last week a friend of mine showed me his new ipad. It was an impressive gadget and after checking out their eyewatering sales estimates I couldn´t help but take my hat off to Steve Jobs for anticipating demand ahead of the curve for yet another blockbuster device.

As happened with the ipod and the iphone, other companies are now rushing to launch rival devices, which will soon drive down prices and widen their appeal way beyond gadget enthusiasts like my friend above.

In theory that´s how a market works - price goes down and demand goes up. If Zara put an advert in the newspaper saying they´ll have 50% discounts on all stock the following weekend, there´ll be hoardes of people queuing outside the door on Saturday morning. If my favourite restaurant suddenly doubles the price of everything on its menu, I´ll start looking for somewhere else to unwind on a Friday evening.

Property isn´t at all like that though. It and many other financial assets move to a different rhythm. If property prices are increasing, more people will want to buy them, not less. There are few things that can cause people to rush to their check books as much as seeing a friend getting rich and wanting a piece of the action for themselves.

Over the past 3 years we´ve seen how the flipside is equally true. Unlike a department store, most people will not rush to buy a technology stock that just fell 30% overnight, and most people don´t rush to buy a property when the market is falling either.

Regards

Colin



 
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