Monday, 11 August 2008

Property Insights June 2008

UK Market Update

More doom and gloom. It's no surprise with oil prices at $142/bbl, and inflation has reared its ugly head again. Indeed the negative impact of oil prices on inflation could have been far worse so far, but the affects are well and truly now feeding through. In the UK CPI inflation is now 3.1% and looks likely to rise to over 4% in the next year. So this in theory would add at least 1% to interest rates, and push mortgage costs up about 20%. If oil prices don't rise further then it's likely inflation will drop back from 4% to its target range 2 to 3% within a year - but we believe oil prices will continue to rise and cause inflation to stay stubbornly high and put pressure on the Bank of England to raise interest rates. They cannot do this indefinitely because this could cause a fully-fledged recession, but they are well and truly between a rock and a hard place on this issue. We believe it's all down to the oil price – as we've been warning for the last 18 months.

Meanwhile the effects of the credit crunch appear to be working their way through, and some interest rate offers have recently been reduced – a good sign of good credit availability to the banks. Berkleys the builders will now start buying large tracts of UK land, have stopped paying out dividends and therefore seem to have called the bottom of the property market – they've called the bottom and top successfully before. We'd like to re-iterate our view that the property market has not reached the bottom yet, and is unlikely to do so any time soon. It may now take years to properly recover because of high oil prices. This is why we have been advising for 18 months to invest in cities and areas that are positively impacted by high oil prices. You can read the range of Special Reports at the end of this Newsletter.

One element missing so far that could cause a fully fledged house price crash in the UK is dramatically rising unemployment – employment has stayed stable for the last year. As long as the jobs market holds up – which is not for certain of course – then house prices should not drop more than say 5-10% per annum for the next year or so – with the possibility of stabilizing prices at any time if the oil price drops.

Landlord Rental Update

The rental market generally remains firm as first time buyers struggle to obtain mortgages because of the credit crunch, and are avoiding taking the plunge because house prices are likely to drop further. This has been a boon for buy-to-let investors as there are plenty of tenants for reasonable quality accommodation in central – convenient locations. The employment market remains strong and the wave of immigrants needing accommodation shows no sign of reversing. We believe unemployment may rise slightly, but not significantly despite the UK slowdown. As long as your properties are in reasonable decorative order, well presented and in handy locations at competitive prices, you should avoid long void periods in the current market. Rents have generally been rising in the last year or so, particularly in London. Yes, mortgage costs have risen a lot as well, but although many buy-to-let properties don't make positive cashflow, most buy-to-let investors are sitting on sizeable equity so are not suffering undue distress as yet. Some reports of distress seem to come from media coverage of people who entered the market very late and also bought into new build developments for instance in northern cities. But this is not the average buy-to-let investor – most investors purchase older flats and houses and are less exposed to a flood of new build properties hitting the market at the same time.

Continued Housing Shortage

As house prices rose in 2007, the government predicted that the UK needed an additional 300,000 properties per year, yet only a net 180,000 were being built. Now building levels have dropped considerably, probably to something like 120,000 a year - mostly flats. But these government targets should not really change since they are based on population growth, immigration, aging population, and predicted smaller family units. So we expect a further shortage of property now and in years to come as building levels drop when they should be rising. Any older house in the south of England that can be purchased at low price in a good location close to higher paid jobs should be a good long term investment. So we advise looking for selective bargains in London and southern and SE England within 60 miles of London – hopefully requiring some easy renovation – upgrade. As oil prices rise, huge profits will be generated from London based oil/gas and mining companies – London is also energy efficient compared with most areas with its electric trains, commuting and lack of manufacturing. So GDP should be maintained at reasonable levels as long as banks do not go under (unlikely since the key reason they would go under is stress caused by high oil prices, and Middle East investment funds would then step in and buy them up).

In summary, the current conditions are enough to discourage building just when there should be a big building spree for the medium to long term. This lack of building should help support prices into 2010. Yes, transaction levels have halved, and people are staying put, but there is not much sign yet of severe distress, unemployment or a crash. It's hardly surprising so few people want to move because of massive stamp duty increases and transaction costs – a key reason why so many people are choosing to extend or upgrade existing homes. So for the buy-to-let investor, one can see opportunities abound in southern England and London – particularly in the run up to the Olympics in 2012. (Stratford, Hackney, Bow, Canning Town spring to mind, with Gravesend further out another good bet with the new Ebbsfleet station).

 

US Market and Future Economic Outlook

The dollar has dropped as we all know – by about 25% against most currencies in the last 8 months. This has probably fuelled about 25% of the oil price rises. It's also helped re-balance USA's massive trade deficit. Exports have been very strong since the dollar dropped – hardly surprising. Inflation has been remarkably well contained despite higher energy prices and the weak dollar. Productivity improvements and general efficient public and private sectors have helped the US weather the economic downturn – and it now looks likely that despite the sub-prime crisis, credit crunch, house price declines and general low consume and business confidence levels, the economy will escape any form of recession. Indeed, GDP growth is likely to be well over 1% in the next year or so. Even with oil prices up to $170/bbl, we believe the US economy is robust enough to not drift into a recession. We think the worst will be over by end 2008 and a recovery will start in 2009. For US real estate investors, end 2008 is probably a good time to purchase bargains – particularly in areas hit hardest by the sub-prime crisis and re-possessions such as Florida, Phoenix in Arizona, and parts of California. These are the areas that in future years will encounter large population increases, GDP growth and retiring baby-boomers settling in the sun. Texas is another winner with the oil prices booming. Wyoming and NE Colorado (coal) are other areas that will benefit from high energy prices. Bakersfield in California is another – a rather depressing small industrial city, but oil production activity will continue to boom – so rentals and oil worker homes will be in short supply.

For non US investors, there is a dollar currency risk to investing in the USA which needs to be properly considered. If you believe the US dollar will continue its decline, it might be worth investing in your home country. It's also a function of local interest rates, local inflation, where you are financing, how much equity you put in yourself (and currency) and which currency you are financing in. We're no experts at currency risk – not many people are – hence your real estate investment strategy needs to add this risk into your decision making. They say if you don't understand it – it's best to avoid it! Overall, if you are a non US American investor and believe the dollar will strengthen – it should increase your appetite for US investments. If you believe the dollar will continue dropping over many years, its probably best to avoid the exposure – unless you intend to settle in the USA one day.

For global investors, our steer is, don't under-estimate the US economy. People have been writing the USA off for years, but it's got the following going for it:

  • Highly motivated, organized and educated workforce
  • Innovation and high technology
  • Available financing for business
  • Small public sector, large private sector
  • Low taxes
  • Increasing workforce and population
  • Low cost building
  • Coal, oil, gas, nuclear, water, forestry, agriculture, minerals
  • Oil shale deposits, and tight gas deposits for when oil price rise further
  • Much land, varied climate, good security and political stability

There are not many countries that have so much going for them – yes, the US uses too much oil and gas, but they do produce half of what they need. They have the largest coal reserves in the world – these will not run out. So when the US finally begins to wean itself off its addiction to oil, it should be well placed to trade with China, Brazil and India in the global economic expansion.

Most countries have public sector inefficiencies dragging down their economies – the continued US productivity improvements in manufacturing and services is impressive and it's difficult for many European countries to compete, particularly now the dollar has declined in value.

Norway focus

Let's take a look at Norway. This cold and rainy northern outpost! The population is 5 million. We predict oil and gas revenues will top $200 billion a year by 2009 – massive. That's $40,000 per person per annum. Meanwhile inflation is moderate, currency is strong (hardly surprising with high oil prices), and the Norwegians have been investing their oil wealth for years internationally in high earning investments. The trade balance is massively positive. The population is stable. No problems with immigration, emigration, asylum seekers etc. Politically very stable democracy. Highly educated workforce. Efficient working practices. Trusting and honest people. Very high on transparency and business ethics. Good legal framework. Many good engineers. Beautiful scenery. Long summer evenings. Hydro-electric power in abundance. Forestry in abundance. Nordic culture. The list goes on.

Okay, taxes are high and it's cold and rainy in the winter. But property investment in such a booming business climate looks to us to be low risk and relatively high reward. Another bright outlook is the currency – how can such a currency drop when the oil prices are booming, look set to continue this boom, whilst the currency is not pegged to the dollar or Euro.

Our favoured locations are:

  • Oslo – capital, oil company headquarters, banking, services, government-public sector jobs
  • Bergen – oil town
  • Stavanger – oil town, port, oil-gas import-export terminals
  • Southern coastal seaside resorts SW of Oslo – 2 nd homes for increasingly rich Norwegians

If you like long distance skiing and the northern lights (Santa for the kids), the place is also a winner in the winter. In the summer, 20 hours of daylight, skinny dipping in the Fjords and the staggeringly beautiful scenery are all plusses. Good healthy outdoor life. We really cannot think of anything particularly negative about Norway – you've got to break into the relatively introvert family oriented cultural persona and social circles. It's got Finland, Denmark, UK and Sweden as it's neighbours – nothing negative here either! The real highlight though is massive oil revenues and massively increasing gas revenues projected over the next twenty years. Norway will overtake Switzerland and Luxembourg as the most wealthy state in Europe soon – and it's difficult to see property prices not rising off the back of this.

Mining Property Boom

As India and China industrialize, commodity price have risen fast – all commodities have experienced big rises in the last five years. This cycle seems unlikely to be ending any time soon. Minerals like iron ore, aluminium, platinum, uranium, copper, lead, gem stones and coal are required to fuel industrialization in the “BRIC countries”. This cycle has been described by investment banks as a “supercycle” which could last a decade or two – rather than the normal five yearly boom-bust cycle. The reason is this time the expanding global population, shortage of supply, increasing demand for raw materials and rapid industrialization of India and China are likely to lead to a sustained demand over a long period. Countries heavily positively exposed to mining are:

  • Chile
  • South Africa (NW and north of Johannesburg)
  • Australia
  • Russia
  • Kazakhstan
  • Mongolia
  • Democratic Republic of Congo (high risk)
  • Sierra Leone (high risk, diamonds)
  • Canada (oil sands open cast extraction)
  • Indonesia
  • Zimbabwe (high risk)
  • USA (coal in Wyoming, low risk)
  • UK ( London is the biggest global financial centre for mining companies)

Out of these Russia and Kazakhstan are also rich in oil and gas and to a lesser extent Australia is also. South Africa has no significant oil or gas, but is very rich in minerals – however, the government recently cut off electric power to the mines in January due to power shortages which reduced mining GDP by -22% - risks have therefore increased and inflation is now over 10%. For a pure mining real estate play, Chile is probably the closest you can get. When mineral prices skyrocket, mining jobs multiply and the mining rental market strengthens – all the employment leads to property prices rising. Void periods are low and yields are high. In Canada, the oil sands mining town of Fort MacMurray is a place the canny property investor can make serious money – purchase of oil company temporary accommodation. Rents are high, property is in short supply, real estate prices are rising and the employment scene is booming – massive skills and accommodation shortage are the order of the day in this oil sands boomtown outpost.

For a booming city with a stable economy, mineral wealth, oil and gas wealth and general exposure to Asia Pacific's booming economy, Perth is a place to consider, albeit it is very remote. Many oil, gas, LNG companies and successful mining companies have their offices in Perth – Melbourne is another city positively exposed to all these booming sectors. In Kazakhstan, Almaty is a city to consider – massively changing in a positive sense. The reason for mentioning all these great cities is that if one finds the sweet spot of rising oil, gas, minerals prices coupled with real estate – you can massively reduce your risks and increase returns – if you can be bothered to visit these cities and invest in these expanding regions. So much easier than trying to make serious returns in Italy, Greece and Morocco – all countries with negligible oil, gas and mineral wealth and set for economic downturn as oil prices rises.

Powerful global forces at work

Our analysis of oil and gas imports-exports suggest a massive transfer of wealth in future years from oil importing nations to oil exporting nations. The dollar is likely to continue its slide and asset prices in western countries are likely to drop. This will provide conditions for Middle Eastern oil wealth to be re-invested into low priced dollar and UK pound denominated assets such as commercial property, businesses, infra-structure and residential property. In general the Middle Eastern, Russian and Far Eastern economies will inflate – whilst the western oil importing nations will deflate. Banks may well go bust in the west as write-downs and lack of credit begin to bite. How long this process lasts and how severe it will be is very difficult to judge – part of it depends on how high the oil prices go – high cost of oil imports acts like a huge tax on energy importing nations. Economic balance will shift further to China, India, Middle East and Russia – and away from Europe and USA – albeit these economies will of course continue to be dominant as far as percentage of global GDP for the next few years. China and India will be catching up fast. Overall global GDP should continue to motor onwards at 3 to 4% growth per annum – fueled by expansions in BRIC countries and oil/gas and minerals exporting nations. For UK investors, avoid the FT100 stock market – all shares except oil, gas and mining stocks. Retail, property and construction will continue to take a hammering. In the USA, the Dow will also suffer (except for oil, gas, coal and mining stock) as asset prices drop and business profits come under pressure from inflation and high energy prices. We re-iterate our stance to invest in property in areas positively exposed to high oil and gas prices.

For Europeans who have been living off debit, rising house prices and the seeming never ending growth period – particularly in the UK – tough times lie ahead. The amount of air travel to foreign locations is likely to drop, with it the holiday home markets in place like Portugal, Greece and Italy – possibly Spain. Much of the property price increases have been driven by mobile UK and other European citizens buying second homes. As retrenchment begins, these prices should come under pressure. There will be exceptions though in fast growing local business areas like Barcelona, Valencia, Montpellier and Malaga/Marbella. But areas remote from jobs and business relying on ultra-low priced air travel will suffer – Cyprus, Greece and remoter areas of Portugal spring to mind.

Property prices are likely to stay firmer in Nordic countries that have efficient industry, knowledge based economies and many high paid jobs with relatively low unemployment – also with better demographics and less of an aging population. Some of our favourite locations are London, Oslo, Luxembourg, Aberdeen, St Petersburg and Moscow.

As Italy and possibly Greece and Portugal slip towards recession, there will be pressures building to reduce Euro interest rates. However, because EU inflation is running at 4% and driven by high energy prices and growth in Germany and France, the European Central Bank is likely to INCREASE rates – sending the peripheral EU economies further towards recession. In a year or so, if oil prices stay high – which we expect – this could eventually lead to the break-up of the Euro currency – as Italy, Greece and Portugal split then deflate their currencies to stimulate business, growth and competitiveness. If they keep pegged to a Franco-German Euro dominated Euro, they will likely slip into recession if oil

Property Insights May 2008

UK Market Update

More Doom this month: April wasn't a very upbeat month and May was no different - Halifax reported a –1.3% monthly drop in house prices with the biggest drop reported by Nationwide at -2.5%. Interestingly, on 20th May Rightmove reported asking prices actually rose by +1.2% with the biggest increases in the south. They also described how vendors were being unrealistic and would likely not find any buyer unless they were willing to accept far lower than the (inflated) asking prices.

The negative sentiment is hardly surprising in view of the credit crunch, and oil prices being $125/bbl as we predicted back in June 2007. What's on everyone's mind is – will the situation get far worse or not. One other factor weighing on sentiment is the current government's overall performance and Gordon Brown in particular – this is likely affecting confidence. The tax take has risen +76% since labour came to power in 1997 and 56% in inflation adjusted real terms – so household finances are being squeezed severely by a combination of high oil prices (this acts like a tax), high food prices (mainly because of oil prices) and the high tax burden (much of it interestingly coming from tax on fuel). It seems all these aspects are coming together to create negative sentiment – people are fed up with high prices and tax all round.

We expect things to worsen in the next few months as the remnants of the credit crunch plays out and rates are re-set in the UK. Furthermore, we see oil prices heading higher – we'll make another we hope accurate prediction in the next few months, but do not be surprised to see $150/bbl in the next six months.

One of the most depressing pieces of news was the inflation rate shooting up to 3% which means the Bank of England will find it difficult to drop rates further. And it also seems the banks are being very slow to pass on any rate cuts to their costumers – financial competition has weakened because of the credit crunch and the banks are clawing back losses via higher rates than they would normally offer. We also now expect interest rates to most likely remain unchanged for the rest of 2009 to control inflation – we hope they will not rise, but this is now a distinct possibility.

The good news is employment remains high, unemployment low, the population is expanding and wages are rising 4% per annum – so the rental market is buoyant. We expect retail sales to slide and property prices to remain under pressure for the next six months at least.

We hold to our Dec 2007 prediction of an overall -5% drop in house prices in 2008 – it's possible it will be slightly more than this. But don't get too disheartened. Longer term we are still quite optimistic. What we need is oil prices stabilizing, a change in the leadership of Government or a new Government and an end to the tax hikes the population has incurred over the last ten years. All this seems likely in a few years time, but for now, we're in a period of consolidation and mild distress.

We hope you have heeded our advice in investing in property in oil exposed cities and countries – the Special Reports describe these. As oil prices stay high, this advice will become even more applicable as a massive transfer of wealth takes place from oil importing nations to oil exporting nations. Oil exporting nations will boom. Oil importing nations with no alternatives will stay in the doldrums:

191: Oil Price Update and Real Estate
187: Real Estate and the commodities super-cycle
186: Oil price starts to skyrocket as predicted - how to profit
180: Oil prices continue to skyrocket
172: Make serious money - best investment sectors
169: Oil supply crunch begins… protect yourself
168: Alarm bells ringing – oil price shock now on the horizon
163: Making Serious Money as asset prices plateau – resources and property
161: Resources winners and losers - ranked list for property investors
160: Find out the winners and losers in the biggest oil boom in history - about to happen...
159: Massive oil boom - the winners and losers - be prepared
158: Supply and demand scenarios - oil boom and the property investors insights
157: Impact of 'Peak Oil' for Property Investment
151: Oil price $125 / bbl and rising…how to take advantage in property
150: Peak Oil shortly due to be reach – unique insights for a property investor
148: Take advantage of the oil/gas/coal boom – key insights

In Europe, the only country that produces more than it uses is Norway. The UK supplies half its own oil requirements (not bad) – so is better off than most. And London is home to many of the world's largest oil/gas and mining companies – so in general London and Aberdeen will benefit, whilst the rest of the UK will suffer.

 

Buy-to-let : No strong evidence of a buy-to-let bust – most investors have made ample equity to shelter themselves from a downturn. As long as the rental market stays firm, which is happening, then – okay – the really good times are behind us, but it should not lead to a meltdown. It's a period of consolidation. Some of the smaller players who got in late and bought new build flats in city centres may decide to exit the market, but anyone who has been in the market for say 3-5 years should be okay. The vast majority of buy-to-let investors intend to remain with the current portfolios or actually expand them.

It's certainly a good time to go searching for a bargain – it's probable prices will drop further – so most people are not in a big hurry. We advise searching hard for real bargains now with a view to the bottom of the market being in October 2008. We expect 2009 to be quiet, not sure yet whether prices will rise, but we think much of the doom and gloom may pass by October.

The stock markets are performing reasonably well and city bonuses will again be high at year end – corporate profits are also strong and the global economy is expanding by ca. 4% GDP with many international companies located in London, so don't expect a recession. We think UK GDP will drop to ca. 1.5% Q4 2008 with London at 2.5% and the rest of the UK at a meagre 0.5%. So we reiterate our long term stance – invest in London or anywhere within a 60 mile radius, or Aberdeen. We are also still fairly positive about south coast towns and cities like Southampton, Bournmouth, Brighton, Weymouth and Portsmouth.

The south-west long term is also very good, but expect some second home owners to sell up in the next year – this will likely suppress prices a bit.

Scotland : Prices stayed so low for so long that Scotland is still playing catch-up with England. The de-population has also slowed and many areas now have moderate population growth such as Inverness and Aberdeen. So prices should keep rising albeit at a moderated pace.

Overall direction: So overall, we stick with our guidance that the prices in southern England and London will outperform other areas in the next 2-10 years. South-west England will continue to be a good place to invest because of a massive housing shortfall as the population increases – partly people settling from London and the Midlands, and partly babyboomers retiring and an aging population living longer. Aberdeen (and within 50 miles of the Granite City) will be a bright spot in the north of the UK. Scotland should weather the credit crunch relatively well in the next year. The oil boom will drive prices further up as housing supply falls short and wealthy oil workers look to retire in the region in the next 5-10 years. In summary – follow the wealthy job, jobs, jobs – and you will find property prices going up.

USA Market Update

We believe all the gloom regarding the US economy is way overdone. An example is the first quarter GDP figures reported last week. Most of the media was reporting the USA was probably “already in a recession” in February and March – as it transpired, Q1 GDP was a whopping 0.9% (or 3.6% on an annualized basis). This is above trend growth. Tax breaks and low interest rates should start feeding through shortly – so we expect growth to continue to be strong. Okay, there has been a severe credit crunch for about 8 months, but this is more or less ended now in the USA. Foreclosures are still rising and house prices areas still dropping markedly, but we expect the worst to be over by October 2008, as the main period of rate re-setting has worked its way through.

As oil prices have stayed high, many oil exporting countries have taken the opportunity to invest in banks, real estate and businesses in the USA whilst asset prices are relatively low and the dollar is weak. The weak dollar has also benefited US exports and reduced imported goods – so the USA's current account deficit and balance of payments deficit have reduced significantly. The dollar is likely to remain weak, but this should boost growth, employment and inward investment by oil rich nations. As the banks work through their bad debit, and take their learnings from the spree of lending too much money to sub-prime candidates, we believe the real estate market is likely to start improving by year end. By end 2009, we see prices rising. So in summary, anytime in the next 8 months is probably a good time to pick up some real bargains – we're thinking foreclosures and distressed sellers.

 

The biggest downturn has been in Florida, Arizona, and Utah plus parts of California. We actually believe all these states in the longer term are the best states to invest in – the reason is the massively expanding population and good weather for retiring babyboomers – as you can be read in our US Special Reports. The main reason why prices have come down by up to 25% is because of the boom in prices in the previous five years, large building programs and intense speculation. So you might now find you can pick up foreclosures, and real estate from distressed developers for reduction of a further 20-35%. It's when things look the most distressed that it's best to buy, and we think things should start looking less distressed in 2009.

USA boom areas. The latest real estate price news has confirmed our predictions that some of the best areas to invest in are those areas exposed to the energy business – examples are Texas (Dallas, Fort Worth, Houston, Irving, Galveston, Austin), Montana, Wyoming (Green Rover area) and to a lesser extent Oklahoma and Bakersfield in California. All areas positively exposed to soaring oil, gas, coal and energy prices. Some parts of northern Utah may also eventually benefit from oil shale production. Areas around Houston – the Bakken Shales play – are also benefiting from renewed drilling activity.

The coal mining areas of Virginia are also worth a look – it's predictable that coal prices will keep rising and coal mining activity will boom in SW Wyoming and parts of the Appalachian Mountains coal belt. Jobs will be created and previously depressed areas will improve driving real estate prices higher.

We also like Carolina – many businesses are moving south from New York and NE USA in part because of the nice climate, educated workforce and new technologies – Charlotte is the only highlight in the Schiller real estate price survey with real estate prices up over the year.

Canada : House prices in Canada should keep rising and the Canadian dollar should strengthen further against the US dollar as the commodities boom continues and oil sands developments expand. Particular boom towns are Fort MacMurray, Calgary and Edmonton. The whole of Canada though should be positively impacted. The sheer size of the resources of Canada is impressive and this stable prosperous country is sure to do will in future years – a low risk place for real estate investing with good upside, particularly in the oil boom areas.

European places to avoid investing in

There will be a slow and telling suppression of the economies:

  • that do not produce an oil, gas, coal and minerals
  • have an aging and declining population
  • have weak manufacturing
  • are slow to reform – especially if socialist government, large public sector and strong unions
  • prospered during low oil price times, and before the Indian and Chinese manufacturing and services global boom hit their economies
  • where innovation, new technology and education is not strong

In Europe, highest on the list of countries that will suffer are Italy and Greece. Much of the property price booms of these countries has been fuelled by low priced airline travel bringing in NW Europeans to prop up property prices. We see both economies suffering in the next ten years and do not advise any property investment in these developed but potentially declining economies.

Spain is also a candidate for decline, though the country is closer to wealthy NW European neighbours and its economy is rather more dynamic and progressive than Greece and Italy. The population is also more stable. So we do not expect Spain to suffer like Italy and Greece. Portugal will also suffer – we rate Portugal half way between Spain and Italy.

As airline travel becomes far more expensive, and routes are cut, along with new taxes because of climate change, expect any city or country that relies on foreign long distance airline travel to decline – avoid these locations like the plague – examples: Cape Town in South Africa, Gambia, Seychelles, Mauritius and Maldives and possibly Cape Verde. It may sound boring, but wait ten years and oil prices will have hit home in some unlikely locations.

The best place to avoid such a scenario in Europe is to invest in or close to major population centres with prosperous services based businesses. These cities are less energy intensive and may actually benefit from rising oil prices – examples are: London, Amsterdam, Paris, Moscow, St Petersburg, Rotterdam, Munich, Oslo and Copenhagen in Europe. But avoid areas, cities and town way off the beaten track that need much energy and cost a lot to get to – unless these are the most desirable richest enclaves frequented by the most wealthy (e.g. Virgin Islands). Examples are Calabria and Sicily in Italy, and remote parts of Greece.

Other European countries we are neutral on are France, Belgium, Sweden, Finland, Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania. Prices in the countries should slowly drift upwards – all of these western European countries use technology and innovation to mitigate risks of high energy prices (e.g. renewables, nuclear, wind, efficiency savings). Meanwhile the Estonia should benefit from the proximity to booming Russia and stable Finland.

In eastern Europe, prices will still be playing catch up so we expect prices to continue climbing in Romania, Bulgaria, Montenegro, Croatia, Albania, Czech Rep., Poland, Slovenia, Slovakia and parts of Serbia. The point is, in older EU countries that boomed in the 1990s, we expect suppressed GDP and house price growth and a decline in tourism as airline travel becomes far more expensive.

We reiterate the safest places to invest in are Aberdeen, London in UK and Stavanger, Bergen and Oslo in Norway – higher risk but large upsides are St Petersburg and Moscow in Russia. The common thread – they're all oil boom towns!

Saturday, 8 December 2007

Property predictions ' 2007

According to Nationwide, UK house prices dropped 0.8% in November after a surprise rise of 1.1% in October. Mortgage approvals also slumped to 88,000 in the month, the lowest level since 2005 and down from 109,000 the in October. Undoubtedly the property market has now dramatically slowed. Five interest rate hikes and the uncertainties around the US and UK credit crunch have taken their toll. Things are not likely to improve for some time. Most people expect prices to stagnate but the doom-mongers are out in force and many people are again talking of a house price crash.

In the last few years, we have been advising investors to buy in London – prices have risen 25% in the last two years and ca. 50% in the West End. But we now do not see any significant growth in 2008. There are risks of a fall in prices - so for new investors, now is not the time to buy. For established investors with much equity and cash, bargains could be available in the next few months as the market cools further.

We do not expect a crash for the following reasons:

  • Shortage of supply – this is an underlying trend and it's not likely to go away with an expanding population, smaller families, more singles and people's continued aspirations to live in a home, many on their own. We believe 300,000 new homes need to be built per year to keep up with demand, with the biggest demand being in London and southern England, but only 200,000 are being built, mostly in other parts of the UK.
  • Employment – unemployment has remained stable a 5.4% - barring a recession, this should protect against too many distressed households.
  • Interest rates – these are likely to begin dropping either early December or more likely in January 2008. A 0.25% drop is likely in the next three months, with another 0.25% drop in mid 2008. This should ease household finances – the Bank of England cannot afford to see a wholesale house price crash – so expect them to react to house prices like they have done when prices have been rising strongly.
  • Inflation despite record oil prices close to $100/bbl, inflation (measured in CPI) has remained remarkably low. This allows room to drop interest rates.
  • GDP – this is expected to slow to 2% or slightly below in 2008 and will further encourage the Bank of England to drop rates, which should in turn help support house prices.
  • Sterling – the pound is likely to drop as oil prices rise and interest rates come down slightly – this should increase manufacturing competitiveness boosting exports and manufacturing jobs, but the threat is increased inflation. As long as inflation remains in control and wage inflation subdued as it currently is, Sterling will probably correct against the Euro and possibly against the Dollar though this should not unduly affect property prices.
  • Immigration – record levels of inward migration is boosting the UK's population and keeping wage inflation lower than it normally would be – both these boost property prices and should help prevent a fully fledged crash.
  • Tax – the flat capital gains tax change to 22% should positively impact the market and increase returns for investors.

We expect the GDP in northern parts of the UK and the Midlands to drop to 1% whilst London will continue to motor along at about 2.5%. The lack of new public sector jobs and pressure on manufacturing will suppress property prices in these northern areas. The population is growing at a slower pace, less services jobs are available and it's easier to build new homes – so the north should feel the effects of the interest rates more than the south. This is why we were not surprised to see the recent Rightmove.co.uk report which showed London prices rising 2.3% in a month whilst all other areas saw falls of up to 2%.

The wild card continues to be the oil prices – and as we have so often predicted, we believe it will end 2008 at $125/bbl. The big unknown is whether this will affect inflation – it seems rising from $20/bbl to $95/bbl has had no appreciable affect on longer term inflation, so we are now thinking that a rise to $125/bbl may not be a tipping point. If you are concerned about oil prices, you'd better read all our special reports on the subject.

As a reminder, we enclose our ranked list of the best towns and cities to invest in – the top two are both exposed positively to higher oil prices:

Highest growth

  1. London
  2. Aberdeen (oil town)
  3. Cambridge
  4. Reading
  5. Bristol
  6. Brighton
  7. Plymouth
  8. Portsmouth
  9. Southampton
  10. Manchester
  11. Leeds
  12. Bradford
  13. Chester
  14. Glasgow
  15. Oxford
  16. Edinburgh
  17. Leicester
  18. Liverpool
  19. Derby
  20. Birmingham
  21. Middlesboro
  22. Hull
  23. Nottingham
  24. Newcastle

Lowest Growth

So all investors – be careful – make sure you have enough cash to weather some rough times and be on the lookout for bargains from distressed sellers. Some people simply have to move to a new location of work or move because of divorce or other problems, so do not underestimate how much reduction you could get if you are able to move quickly and have proper financing in place. For the less wealthy investors – it's probably best to hold fire for now and monitor the market. For the first time buyer – best not enter the market just at this time for fear of immediately running into negative equity.

But remember, if we'd all listened to those Chicken Little's who predicted a house price crash back in 2001, we'd have missed out on a doubling and in some casing trebling of house prices. Confidence has been shaken and prices can go in both directions, so it's up to you to judge whether you want to enter this market and seek out bargain, or sell your portfolio because you are so spooked. But the wealthiest investors normally buy on a low and hold – Warren Buffet being the classic example – of a disciplined value investor. We can try and follow his tenants. But don't expect to make serious money unless you risk at least some of your hard-earnt cash.

Oil Prices Continue to Skyrocket

On 14 th August when oil prices were at $70 / bbl – we predicted oil prices would rise to $125 / bbl by end 2008. They almost touched $100/bbl end November before easing back to $90/bbl. We have written ten special reports on this topic – we suggest all serious property investors should read these report that have taken years of analysis and insights to prepare:

In these reports, you'll find, for free, all you need to know about how to make serious money from the predicted boom in oil prices. The analysis of all producing oil nations has taken years to prepare and we finally think we've cracked it. The results shows that we are now on a rolling plateau production rate, meanwhile demand is increasing by 1.3 million barrels a year. We spotted this abnormality on 7th June 2007 and we now think prices will skyrocket. The opening gaps between oil supply and oil demand is a dangerous situation. OPEC meet early December and may very well communicate they will increase supply by 0.5 million bbls oil per day. But it's too little too late. Any increase in oil supply will likely be lower value high sulphur heavy crude. When the markets finds out that the global oil producers cannot increase production any further, there will be a mother of all oil price hikes. So be prepared. And don't say we didn't warn you!

This analysis is underpinned by our unique oil production mathematical model which forecasts every country's production up until 2015 and it does not make very pleasant reading. As already described – production is on a plateau and has been on plateau since October 2005. This is why prices are rising. But many in the market mistakenly believe there is more oil out there that can be switched on – it's not going to happen. The plateau could be long and undulating, but we believe everyone is more or less pumping at their maximum. So for the property investor:

  • do not purchase property in far off places which take a tank full of gas to reach – this includes suburban homes with a very long daily commute to work centres
  • be careful about purchasing holiday homes in places that need a 10 hour flight to reach (stay within 2-3 hour flight radius from major population centres)
  • be careful not to purchase huge fuel inefficient homes in cold climates requiring much heating oil, gas or electric
  • the lowest risk options are city central quality apartments close to services jobs
  • consider purchasing property:
  • in oil, coal, gas and mining boom towns (refer to the above special reports)
  • close to oil company and oil services company offices
  • in areas positively affected by renewable energy developments – solar, wind, hydro-electric, low energy conservation centres.

For US investors the best places to invest in the USA to take advantage of the oil boom are:

  • Wyoming – Green River area for the coal boom
  • Western Colorado – oil shale potential future boom area
  • Texas – Houston, and Dallas-Irving-Fort Worth – oil/gas HQs and technical services centres
  • New York City – oil/gas/energy trading
  • Oklahoma – ethanol from corn and some old oil/gas wells

The USA has more coal than any other country in the world. So it seems clean coal technology with electricity to automobiles (electric cars) will be a key future response to dwindling oil (and gas) supplies.

As we predicted, Houston has done well in the last few years to weather any downturn in the real estate market and we expect this to continue. But be very careful not to purchase property more than a 30 minute auto commute to a city centre – when oil prices skyrocket, people will want to move into the cities to reduce their fuel bills. Outlying suburban areas will suffer. An extreme example is – don't buy a large detached suburban house 80 minutes commute to downtown Detroit. The gasoline guzzling car plants will close. No-one will be able to afford to commute or heat a huge house in the cooler north. You would be better off buying a downtown apartment in the oil capital of the USA – Houston, which will benefit from the high oil prices that in turn will destroy the gas guzzling autos.

US Market Update

The US real estate market continues to be in a distressed and depressed position in most states. However, the market varies – the US is such a huge market – some areas are still rising but overall the situation looks fairly bleak. We believe the extent of the unraveling of the sub-prime woes is about 45% complete. In Spring 2008 we will be past the peak of the rates resetting and by September 2008 most of the resetting will have unraveled. Until then, expect a bumpy ride with continuous negative headlines and some banks getting into trouble and writing down bad debt. The problem emerged in the open in July – it's now December so quite some time has now passed.

[Reset]US homes prices have been most negatively affected in areas away from cities where prices shot up the most. Examples are holiday areas in California and Florida. But closer scrutiny of the numbers identified that cities like Miami and Detroit actually saw prices rise slightly in the last quarter. Prices in large cities like New York and Los Angeles are fairly stable. Prices in Texas have been robust and in most areas rising. Prices in remoter areas with less service industries and more manufacturing and agriculture have generally dropped back. It's difficult to generalize but it does not look like a full scale meltdown. Although everyone talks about the US housing bubble and it's bursting, prices rose by a relatively modest (in global terms) 50% in five years up until early 2007. It's difficult to see how prices could crash and burn when home prices came from a low base.

The US population has risen from 150 million in 1950 to 300 million today. The population is projected to rise to 450 million by 2050. This implies 75 million new homes will be required. The fastest growing areas are Nevada, Arizona, Texas, California and Florida – see our special reports for more details. So in these areas where land shortages occur, it is likely prices will recover and move far higher in years to come. One can expect a period of stagnation for a few years then prices in these areas will again rise. California should also follow suit as the population in this state is also increasing and it's difficult to see where all the new homes will be build with increasing environmental restrictions coming into force. Ditto Florida. And remember the wave of aging babyboomer that will start retiring this year, peaking in 2016. These people will want to move to the sand, sea, surf and cultural centres. This is why we have a long term view that coastal Florida, California and culturally interesting places like Austin in Texas and Sante Fe in Utah will continue to see prices rising after a few years.

But be careful investing in oil intensive areas like Detroit and Cleveland. These cities are far too reliant on the auto-industry and the increase in oil prices will hit them hard. But Houston will prosper along with the new energy corridor of western Colorado, Wyoming and NE Utah – areas expose to coal, oil shale and coal-bed methane and closer to the Oil Sands projects of Alberta in Canada.

 

European Mainland

Property prices have risen dramatically in the last seven years as interest rates have remained low and inflationary pressures subdued. The GDP of Europe has averaged around 2% for the last few years. But Euro area asset prices are likely to come under pressure as evidenced by price drops in Ireland this year. It's late in the party and we would steer clear of faltering economic area exposed to high oil prices such as Italy, Portugal and Greece. Southern Spain and southern France will likely see prices continue to increase led by wealthy people migrating to these area and setting up businesses – populations in areas like Perpignan, Toulouse, Sete and Montpellier in France and Marbella, Malaga and Valencia in Spain are increasing - investment levels remain robust. Wealthy retiring northern European baby-boomers will also support this market.

Germany is an interesting market but it's difficult to judge whether it's best to invest in previously depressed cities like Berlin and eastern Germany where asset prices are very low priced, or areas like Munich in the wealthy south which have very high property prices. Our gut tells us, that Munich and the south is the better place because of the booming services business, pleasant climate, local wealth, central position and booming banking and high-tech businesses. But it's not an obviously a high return area and Germany has suffered in the last 15 years compared with countries like UK and Ireland because of the excessive regulation and high cost of labour. Undoubtedly a pleasant place to live, but it is difficult to see high investment returns. Yes, yields for rental property are high in northern and eastern Germany, but asset prices are unlikely to boom.

The new European Union entrants Romania and Bulgaria remain very interesting. We expect the markets to cool in the next year, but property prices in good locations in the capital cities of these two countries should continue to boom as long as their economies continue to be managed affectively. There has been a brain drain away from Romania and Bulgaria to places like the UK and Ireland in the last few years, but eventually these people will return flush with cash and want to purchase property in the capital cities Sophia and Bucharest, as well as nice farm houses in the best areas. So we expect prices to double or more in Romania in the next ten years. One just needs to be very careful with the legal, tax side and make sure one does not get ripped off!

Bratislava – the capital of Slovakia is another gem. It's only 60 km from Vienna and cross border trade is increasing rapidly. Austrian property prices have also risen by about 10% in the last year. We expect Bratislava prices to normalize towards Vienna prices in future years. It's very central and the flat tax regime plus car plants on Slovakia have helped the economy enormously – worth checking out for all those exploratory investors in Europe. Another interesting option is ski villas in the High Tratras mountain – a booming ski centre – though one needs to research the affects of global warming since the snow might become rare in future years. But still a beautiful scenic area for holidays years round.

Monday, 25 June 2007

UK PROPERTY Market Update

 

Fizzling out in the summer: Just like last year and the year before, the heat in the property market has started to fizzle out early May. In the last five years, the customary spring market has been getting earlier and earlier. Followed by summer cooling. There are a number of reasons for this

  • the property market is being driven more by city bonuses in London and provincial cities - the expectation of bonus payments has made the more competitive minded investor start looking earlier to prevent being caught up in a hot market.
  • the stock market tends to do well from November to mid May then cool or go into reverse during the summer months – this knocks confidence.
  • GDP, employment and manufacturing levels are higher in the October to May periods – creating confidence early in the year that peters out when the economy slows mid year.

Interest rates have risen to 5.5% and there is at least one more rise anticipated as early as this month, with the possibility of a further rise of 6% by year end. This should cool the property market significantly moving towards the end of the year.

But bonuses back on the horizon: In London and SE England, again, a wall of bonus money like no year before will be hitting the streets starting January 2008 and ending May 2008. This should revitalize the SE and southern English property markets. Other financial centres such as Edinburgh, Leeds and possibly Manchester and Glasgow will also benefit this wall of money. Most people receiving big bonuses have much net worth and equity held in property, so a few ¼ point rises in interest rates should not unduly affect them. So prices in the most select areas of London, Leeds , Edinburgh and Manchester will likely continue to rise. Belfast will also continue to perform well because it is still playing "catch up" from years of underinvestment and low confidence levels during the troubles. So do not be surprised to see prime central London property prices continue to drive forwards into 2008. Central/West London areas popular with the most wealthy international professionals and investors are likely to go up the most – Chelsea, Kensington, Mayfair, Soho, Bloomsbury, Hampstead, Notting Hill and Bayswater are examples.

Bonuses in the USA: The same is true of New York, Massachusetts, Boston and parts of California (LA, San Francisco San Fernando). The Dow Jones has reached record highs, M&A activity has been good and global business is doing well. New York has lost some ground to London, but global finance has performed well so far in 2007. Hence these city bonuses will arrive Jan 2008 to May 2008 and generally be heading for the best areas of NE USA and California. Do not be surprised to see property prices in such areas growing in early 2008. Some Euro and £ Sterling investment may also be taking place because of the weak dollar.

 

Mediocre Midlands: Average suburban areas in regions not affected by city bonuses and holiday home investments are likely to see prices stagnate – examples are most of the Midlands, and many northern areas, and remote parts of Wales and East Anglia. Areas exposed to manufacturing and public sectors will show less growth than areas exposed to services sectors. The south-west would likely escape a severe slowdown because of its popularity with wealthy people working in London (second homes, holiday homes, buy-to-let investment property).

Cornwall : This is an interesting market – the county has the highest projected population growth of any county in the UK yet barely any homes are being built because of planning and environmental constraints. Despite having about the lowest affordability ratio between local earned income and house prices, it's likely prices will continue to move higher because of influxes of telecommuters and retiring baby-boomers in the next 5-10 years. This once depressed corner of England – which suffered from the collapse of tin mining and agricultural jobs in the 1960s to early 1980s is now booming in towns like Truro and Falmouth. We can't see any house price crash in Cornwall, or similar select localities in southern England.

UK Economics Laid Bare

With inflation running at 2.8%, GDP growth motoring onwards at 2.7% (4.0% in London, down from 4.4% earlier this year), employment at record levels and wage growth in the 4.0% to 4.4% range in 2007, the economy shows no signs of falling into stagnation or recession. This should support house prices – if any correction is due, it is likely to be in the 5-10% range rather than a fully fledged crash (say 30%). So far in UK history it is unheard of to have a crash without a recession. However, inflationary pressures have been building and the predicted drop in the inflation rate to below 2% has now shifted from later in 2007 to mid 2008 according to the Bank of England forecasts. Oil prices remain a concern – these have risen from 53$/bbl earlier this year to $66/bbl in May. Tensions in Iran (threat of the closure of the strategic Straits of Homez because of Iran 's nuclear testing programme) remain a concern – because any big hike in oil prices would immediately feed through to inflation and cause interest rates to rise significantly.

Meanwhile, the EU economy also motors onwards at 2.7% GDP growth and generally lowering unemployment – the European economy is now growing faster than the US economy whose economy has cooled to 2.3% GDP growth for 2007. China's economy is fast expanding at 11% (higher than the ten year average of 9.5%) and this has become the prime global growth engine as the US economy has cooled. Overall, the economic environment looks healthy and benign with no discernable threat of recession. It would need a trigger like a financial market collapse in a G7 county, war and/or oil price spike above $100/bbl to create such a recession. It looks unlikely, but eyes should watch whether USA achieves its expected "soft landing" and the Iran tensions subside – with oil prices remaining below $70/bbl. We'll keep you posted, but so far it does not look like the right conditions in the UK or the USA for a big property price market correction.

Business Cycles

Those people with long memories or interest in history will note that in the UK (and many parts of Europe and USA ), there have been recessions or severe economic slowdowns in:

  • 1971 (oil price shock)
  • 1981 (oil price shock)
  • 1991 (monetary shock)
  • 2001 (dotcom bust and 9/11)

We are now motoring away in 2007 and all looks rosy. We may be mid cycle, heading towards the end of another ten year cycle. Pressures are undoubtedly building with inflation, oil prices and commodities shortages. The UK and US babyboomers are aging and are likely to start re-trenching (likely the Japanese did in the 1990s) – our prediction is by around 2012 these boomers will start to reign in spending. Stock markets have had a long bull run from their lows of 2002, so risks have increased. It's not likely to look much better than this.

The experts will say, whenever it looks great, benign and stable, the whole lot starts to wobble. So do not be surprised if we get a shock any time from now until 2012. It only takes someone to close the Straits of Homez to create a global oil crisis and for the whole lot to start heading to recession. So our advice is, stay alert to the risks for your property investments. Do not ever think it can't get worse. But remember – if you know your business well – and you can take managed risks – you will make money in any business climate. Try and avoid paying prices at the top of the market. Don't ever get arrogant or "take your eye off the ball". Don't believe you are an expert. But focus on what you know best – if this is council flats in Liverpool and you know how to make money from them, then focus on this. Become a master at it. Use your intuition and knowledge, plus social and economic trends, to give yourself insights into whether a market in an area has reached its peak. Don't over-extend. Don't pay more than you have to. Watch your cash-flow like a hawk. They say to make a million is easy, but keeping it is the tough bit.

Boom towns around the world

For the adventurous and international property investor, we can provide some interesting insights into the current boom towns. Many of these cities are little heard of. Many are booming because of mining, oil and extractive industries. Quite some research has gone into preparing this list for our website visitors. The main sector themes cities where oil, mining or financial services have been very strong – there are no indications this will change in the next few years. Many analysts believe we are in the middle of a commodities "super-cycle". The reason is because of China and India 's appetite for raw materials, global population growth and the European and USA's continued reliance on these same raw materials. Other boom towns are tourist related – others a combination oil, financial services and tourism (e.g. London). But one thing is for sure - in all these cities and areas – populations are increasing, jobs are being created and not enough homes are being built. The ideal combination for property prices to rise.

  • Green River Wyoming – coal mining
  • Limpopo Mpumalanga Rustenburg – Rep South Africa – platinum and chrome mining
  • Houston – global oil & gas services
  • Macao – gambling, tourism
  • St Petersburg – oil & gas, tourism, finance
  • Moscow – oil & gas, tourism, finance
  • London – financial services, wealth management, M&A
  • Bratislava Slovakia – low cost proximity to Vienna, E Europe boom
  • Warsaw Poland – EU integration, low cost, increasing wealth
  • Muscat – oil & gas, tourism
  • Luanda Angola – oil development
  • Doha Qatar – gas developments
  • Mongolia – mining, proximity to China
  • Dubai UAE – oil, financial services, tourism
  • Cape Town Rep South Africa – tourism
  • Fort McMurray & Calgary Canada – oil sands developments
  • Aberdeen Scotland – international oil & gas services
  • Stavanger Bergen & Kristiansen Norway – oil and gas operations
  • Bangalore India – IT/call centres/communications/services
  • Mumbai India – financial services, manufacturing
  • Guangdong province, China – global manufacturing
  • Shanghai, China – financial services, manufacturing, export
  • Beijing China – public sector, services
  • Ho Chi Minh City Vietnam – manufacturing and services
  • Buenos Aires Argentina – business and services
  • Cairo Egypt – regional business centre

As advised on our website, if one has a combination of:

  • Increasing population
  • Increasing employment
  • Increasing business (GDP growth)
  • Increasing wages
  • Low levels of home building
  • Low reliance on imported oil and gas
  • Low interest rates
  • Low inflation
  • Exposure to financial services sector
  • Land shortage and/or environmental constraints

This powerful combination will lead to booming property prices.

Norway : If one uses these criteria for cities like Bergen in Norway it's difficult to see how prices would not continue rising. London is the same – it's also a global centre of oil and commodities financing and re-investment of proceeds from the extractive industries that are booming. Moscow is similar albeit more regional in its sphere of influence.

 

South Africa : Localized gems occur such as Rustenburg to the west of Pretoria in South Africa. The population is booming as 25,000 new jobs are being created in the expanding platinum and chrome mines. Pretoria is also worth considering with its access to Johannesburg government employment – it is the regional centre of the Bushveld Complex of minerals and mines, with most mines within a 100 km radius of the city.

Canada : Fort McMurray in NE Alberta, Canada is booming oil town. A huge wave of new jobs have been created in the oil sands business – accommodation is desperately short and rentals are in big demand. Many billions of dollars are being invested to grow oil sands production – in part because this makes the USA less reliant on overseas imports. This is something not likely to go away – hence Fort McMurray will likely see prices booming into the future. Calgary the centre and HQ of the Canadian oil & gas business is another booming town – and a pleasant place to live as well. The creation of new oil and gas jobs and wealthy retiring oil workers will likely support prices into the next decade.

USA : The Green River area of Wyoming is another gem – who would believe that in 2007, a boom is taking place in a coal mining area in the USA? This part of the world has more barrels of oil equivalent of hydrocarbons (locked up in coal) than Saudi Arabia and Russia combined. The USA will never be short of fuel for electric power station because some of these coal seams are 50 metres thick and mines are open-cast and of the highest quality anthracite coal. Huge wealth is being created as production is increased and this is supporting rentals and property prices in this remote area of the USA.

Mongolia : Mongolia is another gem – yes, this area is booming. The reason is its minerals mining. China is desperate for its products and there is a property boom to match the mining boom. It's not likely to go bust unless China's economy goes bust – something most unlikely in view of the sustained 9.5% GDP average growth over the last ten years and China's hugely increasing middle classes and 1.2 billion population next door. Mongolia has also benefited from being next door to booming Russia and the Siberian oil and gas fields. Some gas pipeline projects run close by and as long as there is peace in the area, Mongolia's fundamentals and booming population look impressive.

Macao : Property prices have been booming for five years – massive investment in casinos and neighbouring China's booming economy, middle classes and interest in gambling has made Macao the rival of Las Vegas. Difficult to see this changing – all the money being made in manufacturing in southern China will benefit Macao – talk of Richard Branson investing in the area is interesting. He's well known for getting in early – the future looks bright for Macao.

Egypt : Cairo is an interesting city. Huge traffic jams everywhere, pollution, rumour has it the true population of Cairo conurbation is 25 million. No wonder the traffic never moves. This regional business centre has benefited from relative peace, expanding oil and gas businesses north and east, and a booming population. Property in the city centre for business people wanting to avoid the traffic jams is worth considering. Always at risk of instability but the city will likely further double in size over the next 50 years, making central property values increase.

Wealth and Amenities – the meaning of Location, Location, Location

London and New York – examples: Ever wonder why property in central London and Manhattan are so expensive? Because of wealth and amenities. The wealth is from businesses, private investors, shareholders and corporate headquarters – financial, banking, services jobs. But the reason why so many people want to pay huge prices for such property is because of the local amenities. Shops, theatre, trains, planes, work-offices, tubes/metro, roads, restaurants. Proximity to high paid jobs, where profits are made and a nice residential environment are key. So in London when you think of Mayfair it ticks all the boxes. So does Covent Garden. So does Kensington. But can prices in such areas go any higher? This depends on how successful the businesses close by are doing. London has been gaining relative ground on New York as a premier global financial centre – in part because it is less regulated and in part because of the huge wave of Middle Eastern, Asian and Africa money that has found its way to London – a truly cosmopolitan global city. So if you think global finance stimulated by China India and the Middle East will prosper, buying property in Mayfair could still be good value for money.

Other examples: This same model applies to other areas and cities. It's no good investing in a lovely Georgian Mansion in NW Scotland – it ranks low on almost all the above criteria. You won't find many millionaires wanting to live in the sticks – it's too far from where they like making money. And enjoying their money. So Monaco, Luxemburg, London, Stockholm, Helsinki, Geneva – they're full of wealthy people who want to be close to the best amenities. It's probably the case in Barcelona, Marbella, Miami, San Francisco and Shanghai – 'location, location, location', as they say. Never forget this. If you find a location very close to excellent amenities that you believe will have increasing numbers of wealthy residents and is under-valued, go for it! Some examples in London are:

  • Shoreditch
  • Bermondsey
  • Southern Hackney
  • Telegraph Hill - New Cross Gate
  • East Dulwich – Peckham borders
  • Battersea
  • Kennington - Vauxhall

Luxemburg - another good example: And remember our analysis of Luxemburg? No other European city has such an exciting combination of land shortage, population growth, massive wealth and GDP growth – a lovely city to live in – some of the most wealthy Europeans will want to a place in this city tax haven and financial wealth centre.

 

Disillusioned with "work"?: Ever feel like your current job is leading nowhere? Get frustrated with the lack of control you have over your life, work and your diary? Looking for an outlet? Then may be property investment is for you! Everyone needs a hobby to relieve themselves of the stress of work or daily drudgery. What better way than to indulge in something that makes you personal financial progress, gives you more financial control of your life, and let's you take your mind off the pressures of work. This is how many property investors first get started. Out of frustration and a feeling of drifting in their work lives, being over taxed and underpaid as an employee for their precious time. Disillusioned with pension and stock performance. Being tired of putting money into funds that other people (mis) manage. If this all sounds familiar, then this is likely the reason you have got to this stage in this newsletter. We sometimes have people ask us – "what sort of people come to your website" – it's pretty obvious when you see the name of the website. You would not be visiting if you were not interested in property investing. That is – making money from investing in property. It's not always easy, but we've not found any other better way to make serious money. Almost all financed by the banks. You leverage up your minimal amount of cash, using the bank's finances in order to exposure oneself to property – and if capital values go up, it's quite possible to double your cash in a year. There are few property investors that have not achieved this some time in their investing history. Many achieve it regularly – year-on-year. You won't find many advertising this fact though. Why should they? Most people don't like other people knowing how much money they have. The purpose of writing this closing contribution is to help you think about why you are investing in property. It's likely because you want to make serious money and it's probably because you enjoy it was well. So what an excellent combination. You like it and you make serious money out of it. If this is the case, best do more of it! And you might even consider doing it full time!