Ever have a property settlement about to go through and at the last minute your professional trustee has held up the game by asking pesky questions like “Why are you buying this?” or “Is this the right entity to be buying it in?”
What about those times when you’re arranging a simple re-finance and just when everything seems to be sorted your professional trustee wants to know if you’re getting a good deal or if the loans are in the right place or, even worse, if you should be offering up all your property, your future and your first born as security? How annoying!
But hang on, did you really want to offer up your first born as security? Or buy a development property in your family trust? Or sign up to a pyramid scheme? By asking these ‘pesky’ questions your professional trustee is simply doing their job, a job which you pay them for. They are looking out for the best interests of the beneficiaries of the trust and by doing so are effectively forcing you to do the same, meaning that you are meeting your obligations as a trustee too. If your professional trustee is not annoying you then they’re not doing their job. If they are not doing their job then they are a sham. If they are a sham, then you need to watch out because your trust may be one too.For the first time in my life I actually love my accountants. - Anna-Marie
Investing in residential property?
If you're investing in residential property, seeking to maximise your ability to succeed and minimise risk, then this is a 'must read'.
Matthew Gilligan provides a fresh look at residential property investment from an experienced investor’s viewpoint. Written in easy to understand language and including many case studies, Matthew explains the ins and outs of successful property investment.