A bit of financial turmoil may not actually be a bad thing for the property investor. Remember all those ordinary people who got bitten by Unit Trusts, failed Pension Plans, Endowment Schemes and the Dot Com Bubble. Many decided to take control and get into buy-to-let property – many succeeded in making a small fortune. Well, it might just start happening all over again. Stocks and shares are very risky – you have little control – by the time you want to sell – all the experts have already got their money off the table! The ordinary person does not stand a chance against the sophisticated financial investor – who have far more inside knowledge of the markets and businesses. When the average investor looses confidence in the management by other people of their funds, they may then shift into investments that they can control themselves – unfortunately there are not many examples of these. But the best example is probably property. You control the purchase price, renovations, letting and resale timing – and you can form a view on the lettings market and property market to time the purchase, sale and investments in renovations etc. You attempt to get onthe “inside track” by doing property research and finding good sources of advice – mostly for free. You share good practices within the property investment community – friends and investor colleagues – you network. In doing so, you control your investment far more than the average investor in the stock market. So this is why, if investors pull their money out of the stock market – this does not automatically mean property prices drop. On the contrary, the reverse can be true particularly if the banks are still willing to fund property acquisitions – this should still be possible if the investor has a good credit rating and a large portfolio. So this should help support property prices - some potential scenarios are:
1. 2002 all over again: For those of you worried about a house price crash, there is a positive scenario that played out in 2002 that could be repeated. After 9/11, interest rates dramatically dropped – to as low as 1% in the
2. Possible Meltdown? Another scenarios is there is a financial meltdown and interest rates drop dramatically to keep countries like the
3. Hyper-inflation? An unlikely scenario is inflation gets out of control and interest rates are forces up just as the economy cools – a recession occurs and unemployment rises. Yes – this would lead to significant house price decreases and even a chance of a fully fledged house price crash. But in the
Summary: Overall though, it’s difficult to see how the whole global economy could go into recession when corporate profits are staggeringly high, GDP in
And overall it's difficult to see how China and all those oil producing Middle Eastern countries not stepping in to help any global financial crisis - after all, they still need customers and they have a lot of spare cash..
What do you think?