When is the best time to invest in real estate? Is it a good time to get into property??

86
rate or flag this page
Facebook

By Mark Knowles

Bank owned

Investing in real estate is not without risks, especially in the current market. Some extremely high profile “experts,” are getting their fingers burned as we speak. Donald Trump is one that immediately comes to mind, and although he is unlikely to end up losing the shirt off his back, the chances are he will be spending a good proportion of the next few years in and out of court defending his “good name,” and protecting himself from a variety of lawsuits ranging from the creditors of Trump entertainments, which filed chapter 11 for the second time earlier this year to Credit Suisse, the bankers of one of his failed apartment developments.

So when is a good time to invest in real estate? And I make a distinction between investing for monetary gain and investing in a piece of property to live in. The market around the world has dropped considerably in value since the peak prices of 2006/7, but I feel has a considerable way to fall still. This is a generalization, but looking at the current world situation and the lengths being gone to by the world’s governments to artificially prevent the market from correcting, I have come to the conclusion that they are not going to be able to do so and in general it is not yet time to put too much money into investment properties unless you are going to live in it, or you are reasonably sure it will provide enough income to pay for itself. In the latter case, I would suggest waiting also because a property that costs 80% less will pay for itself all the sooner.

I will give an example, and it does not really matter which country is used as an example, the fact is, the amount of privately owned real estate has shrunk considerably when compared to institutional and governmental ownership. Take Spain for instance.

The Spanish banks, although largely not involved in the US subprime mortgage mess, managed to create a mini subprime crisis of their own, and are a good indicator of where the world is headed real estate wise. This is how the scenario has played out so far in Spain.

1. Boom, boom, boom. Between 1995 and 2007, Spanish property prices increased by more than 200%, fueled by low interest rates, 40 and now 50 year mortgages available to anyone with a pulse. Prices rose to such an extent that the nation went heavily into debt and by 2004, household debt stood at €595 billion—equal to 74.5% of the country’s gross domestic product – and much of it tied up in mortgages. Average house prices are around 8 times average salaries.

2. Debt debt debt. Household debts of this magnitude became unmanageable and foreclosures began to increase in 2004/5, continuing to increase throughout the following 4 years. At the same time, credit became scarce, because the banks were finding large portions of their outstanding loans going unpaid. Developers went broke forcing banks to seize assets and partake of “debt for equity swaps,”

3. 2005-2009 Banks refused to sell these seized properties at genuine market values, because that would mean heavy losses and allow property values to correct downwards, which would mean the banks would be forced to re-evaluate their own assets and would be shown to be insolvent.

4. 2009. The Spanish banks have now become the biggest property owners in Spain. At the same time, the insolvency in the banking system has forced the Spanish government to start bailing out banks beginning with the regional savings bank Caja Castilla-La Mancha, which will almost certainly not be the last. The European Central bank also sneakily injected €60 billion into Spain by buying Spanish covered bonds. All of it destined to keep the banks afloat. This last piece of information went largely un-noticed by any of the national or international news sources.


My thinking now is that we have reached critical mass. Throughout the down turn, official average Spanish property prices have fallen a few percent, but new builds have stopped almost completely, the amount of sales has gone through the floor and the Spanish economy is being affected because it has come to a standstill. Unemployment is now at 17.8% - and that is the official figure. There are some where between 1.5 and 2 million empty properties and still property prices are staying where they are. Kept there artificially by the government and banks.

Spain is by no means alone in this situation, and I am sure if you are American or British, you have seen similar scenarios played out in your own country. How much real estate does the US government own? Across the world, the governments are taking over banks or injecting huge amounts of capital, and the banks are, in turn, using this capital to take over either individual, privately owned real estate, or entire developments when the developer goes broke. Some of this gets sold off piece meal, but by and large it is sitting on a bank’s asset sheet somewhere at a value (my estimation) somewhere around 900% more than it would be worth in today’s market if all this stock was put up for sale.

It is very difficult to predict exactly where this will end up because of the amount of “quantative easing” being done by all the governments. The UK, the USA, and the Eurozone have already been forced to inject vast amounts of new money – from nowhere. But this is just serving to keep the stock markets from collapsing. I mean – General Motors went broke the other day and the stock market didn’t take any notice,

I cannot speak for China, because it is all but impossible to find any true figures as to what is going on over there. But I can say that in North America, Western Europe, the Middle East, Australasia and Central America, there is a critical mass of real estate owned by the government – either directly or indirectly through the financial institutions. The amount of residential property already sitting on their books is too vast to be able to quantatively ease their way out of, and the commercial property defaults are beginning.

Commercial property funds around the world have been frozen, and values have fallen 40-60% from peaks. And we have only just begun. Anyone who thinks the real estate bubble has already burst is sadly mistaken. It is nowhere near burst yet. It will burst properly over the next two years. And this will be the time to invest in real estate before hyperinflation kicks in. I do not believe it is going to be possible for the governments Inc to be able to get away from this bubble. It was caused by twenty years of runaway lending with no basis in reality and the time to pay the piper is fast approaching.

Comments

Captain Dad profile image

Captain Dad 2 years ago

Mark - Great hub.

I have a rental property I've been trying to sell for the last two years. I haven't even received an inquiry. Very frustrating.

If you are right, I'd be anxious to get in when it happens, but right I just want to get out before it does!

Thanks for the great info.

Mark Knowles profile image

Mark Knowles Hub Author 2 years ago

Thanks CD - Unfortunately - the banks and governments are deliberately manipulating the market which is costing everyone. No one can sell because of the vast amount of unsold property sloshing around. The sooner they let the correction get properly underway, the sooner we can start moving forwards. This business is just dragging the problem out for everyone.

Nancy's Niche profile image

Nancy's Niche Level 2 Commenter 2 years ago

Mark, thanks for all the information on buying and selling real estate...I just purchased a new (soon to be built) 4/B-3/B home at a 1989 price and interest rate...My christmas present for this year....

Mark Knowles profile image

Mark Knowles Hub Author 2 years ago

Good for you. I estimate we are going back in time price wise at least 20 years - so you paid a realistic market price.

Don Simkovich profile image

Don Simkovich Level 3 Commenter 2 years ago

Hi Mark, thanks for giving an international perspective on real estate. I invested in 3 homes in western PA. On one, I'm carrying the note, and sold almost for the asking price. The other two I expect to be sold between Aug and Sept. But I was able to buy them originally for low enough, that with the fix-up costs, I'm still coming in below mkt value to sell.

There are local markets in different areas which are good. Maybe like politics, real estate is local. I do agree you're not going to buy residential property and hold for 5-7 yr appreciation in general.

Mark Knowles profile image

Mark Knowles Hub Author 2 years ago

Of course - if you bought low enough in the first instance - you can make a profit. And yes - to a certain extent the market is local, but the widespread problems with the banks is going to infect every market to some extent. The markets most affected are the ones where the boom was biggest. Switzerland for example has very little issue, but the Swiss government Inc was very careful to stamp on any unrealistic increases in prices over the last 10 years. UBS and Credit Suisse both managed to go broke though lol

RGraf profile image

RGraf 2 years ago

Thanks for showing how much further the issues are throughout the world. It's hard to think like that when so many of the for sale signs are in our own backyard.

Mark Knowles profile image

Mark Knowles Hub Author 2 years ago

I know - the problem is world wide though.

jonmcmillan6546 2 years ago

Great info Mark. I think the Spanish problem has been exaggerated by very loose planning regulations and wipespread corruption. Its a shame to see many beautiful areas spoilt by essentially illegal developments.

Mark Knowles profile image

Mark Knowles Hub Author 2 years ago

No doubt about it. There was talk of knocking a lot of homes down, but there has been a stay of execution. Still - with 2 million empty properties - not such a bad idea to tear a few down.

Debbie Thompson  2 years ago

Thank You Mark for writing such an informative piece. But, instead of knocking down some of those properties, the governments could always use some of them to house the elderly, the disabled, and/or the homeless with small children. It breaks my heart to see all these families with no where to go; who have been put on one of the government's 'waiting lists' for help with a place to live.

Mark Knowles profile image

Mark Knowles Hub Author 2 years ago

My pleasure - I do agree with you and have written several posts elsewhere suggesting this. If we are going to socialize the losses - we should socialize the benefits also:

http://blog.luxuryproperty.com/luxury-hotel-comple

Jordan @ Sarasota Property Management 2 years ago

thank you for your insights. I agree that we still have a long road to the bottom. Too bad they won't just let it crash and we can start over. In the recession/depression, cashflow is king.

Mark Knowles profile image

Mark Knowles Hub Author 2 years ago

That is the problem right there. They are so scared the whole system will come crashing down, it is being artificially propped up - just delaying the pain.

propertyauction profile image

propertyauction 2 years ago

One way one could 'invest' in a house to live in is by bidding on auctioned off homes. The possible problem there is when the house requires some fixing up, even when one already got it for a 'bargain' bid. Then of course there's the sour times right now, where real estate is hard to sell.

ronlv profile image

ronlv 2 years ago

Mark,

I am a Real Estate investor as well and this market is the reason I turned to online marketing. I also agree the time to buy is not right yet. I am just holding for now and I am thankful all my properties are rented.

Later, Ron

Mike Rowlands 2 years ago

Nice info about time to invest. In today's market, it's difficult to come up with the financing to invest, but if you have it, there seem to be a plethora of good deals out there.

Neil Ashworth profile image

Neil Ashworth 22 months ago

That's really good info, thanks for sharing. Very good piece of writing.

Kevin Warhus 18 months ago

Very interesting. I am in the process of buying a new home in a commonuty in Fountain Hills, Arizona. Our real estate market is one of the most effected and its interesting reading about all of this. Thanks for a well written article.

Morson profile image

Morson 13 months ago

Great and wonderful hub and a perfect guide for those who are about to invest in real estate. It's utmost essential to see at the industry trends and forecast future of real estate before investing in it and you have explained it a very good manner. Nowadays, Dubai Property is also in crisis and prices are also at bottom right now therefore it is the best time to invest in Dubai real estate to reap its benefits in future. I have come to know from a site http://www.bayut.com that property prices are at very low than those were in 2004. Anyhow thanks for the great article.

dablufox profile image

dablufox 11 months ago

Amen, in Australia this is only just starting to happen. I get angry when I see articles written in the newspaper by prominent real estate agents saying 'the Australian property market is getting its second wind'.

No real estate agent will ever admit that there's an impending bubble, when they know its coming they sell their investment properties and tell everyone else its a great time to buy.

It's hard to feel sorry for the gullible people who bought at the peak, now interests rates in Australia are going up and up their $450 000 investment has instantly turned into a liability.

All the hangers on here in Australia benefit from rising home prices because all taxes and fees are calculated on the value of your home, so governments from local to federal adjust their policies accordingly to artificially inflate home prices. Council rates, stamp duty, land tax, all of these are calculated as a percentage of the value for your home. Even real estate agents get a piece of the action, there is no flat fee, they get a percentage of the purchase price, this is wrong.

Average house price in Australia close to 400k, the bubble is yet to begin here, but its coming!

wheelinallover profile image

wheelinallover Level 6 Commenter 10 months ago

I live in a small town (approximately 12,000) where for years the unemployment rate for years was around 1.7%. The unemployment rate here went to 19.5% and the number of foreclosures went through the roof. I bought the house I currently live in for $16,000 above it's tax accessed value in 1999. There have been $14,500 in improvements done to the house through grants, $5,000 from a home improvement loan, and another $2000 dollars of materials bought for, and installed in the house. The accessed value increased $10,800 but the house would currently have to be sold for the original accessed value. Today because of lifestyle choices I have made the house is too small, so I am trying to decide whether to enlarge this house or buy a foreclosure and fix it up. So far my research shows it would be better to buy either a pre-foreclosure or a foreclosure and fix it up. Those are currently selling for around half the original accessed value of my current house with double the square footage. The disadvantages are I would no longer have my oasis (about 60 acres where no one can build) and I would lose my view along with the 4 stall garage. I would gather that your advice is to stay put, don't enlarge, and wait for the markets to compensate. It's just a little overcrowded now, so unless we have the other 6 who were living here move back in that is what I will try. Thank you for this hub.

ilitek profile image

ilitek Level 1 Commenter 4 months ago

i believe anytime is a good buy provided that the price we pay is the right price.

Jokylu profile image

Jokylu Level 3 Commenter 4 months ago

An excellent and well prepared hub. You are so right it can be risky and we do need to do our homework, but there are great rewards in property investment and I think we are about to hit new buying opportunities. How can we be sure when that hyperinflation you talk about will kick in?

SoManyPaths profile image

SoManyPaths 3 months ago

I'd say the best time is when rates are low, prices are low and rents are high. Ahem now!!

Submit a Comment
Members and Guests

Sign in or sign up and post using a hubpages account.



    • No HTML is allowed in comments, but URLs will be hyperlinked
    • Comments are not for promoting your Hubs or other sites

    working