Case study
Remuera vs Otara
The Great Property Debate: Cash flow vs Capital Growth
Property investor compares investment returns
Tyson is a property investor, looking at investing in the Auckland market. He has been told by his parents that he should 'buy the worst house in the best area, and only invest where he would be comfortable with having his tenants over to dinner'. (I note that some people call Tyson's parents awful snobs and say they should get out in public a bit more often.) But personal bias and snobbery aside, do Tyson's parents make a valid point? Does the quality of an area and socio-economic status of the tenants dictate returns in the Auckland market?
Tyson decided to test the theory and look at the maths of the 10-year return on two specific suburbs, and make his investing decisions based on numbers, not old sayings and emotion.
Otara vs Remuera
Tyson was interested that Otara, with its higher cash flow but similar capital growth, won the contest on total return. He wanted further convincing so looked at the five-year and two-year comparative growth rates to see if the shorter term trends were changing. This revealed as follows:
22-year: Otara was doing 22% vs Remuera 17%
9-year: Otara was doing 9.4% vs Remuera 9.3%
5-year: Otara was doing 12.2% vs Remuera 10.5%
2-year: Otara was doing 22.3% vs Remuera 12.5%
Source Property Ventures Real Estate / REINZ Median House Price Data
Otara is still standing up.
From an internal rate of return (IRR) perspective, selling at year 10, this is how it stacks up:
Comprehensively then, looking at the total return and IRR, Otara keeps up with Remuera's capital growth, but thrashes it when cash yield is added into the analysis.
Author notes & morals of the story
Summary
I am not saying, 'Here is a silver bullet, go buy in South Auckland for cash flow and high growth and this should be your only property strategy'. Far from it. I'm simply pointing out to those that 'want to be able to have their tenants to dinner', that there are other places you can invest in Auckland, and do very well, possibly even better than in the perceived prime residential suburbs.
If you'd like to learn more about property investment strategies, you might be interested in attending one of our upcoming events.
This letter is to express my appreciation for the assistance and encouragement of both Anthony Lipscombe and particularly John Heaslip over the last financial year. The period since activating my trading trust has been one of considerable stress, as well as personal development, as I embarked on this as a relative business neophyte with virtually no awareness of the contemporary requirements of running a business, particularly the financial records aspect. During much of this period I have therefore felt considerable out of my depth. However I have been lucky enough to have had the benefit of the advice and support of John Heaslip in rationalizing what was a fairly chaotic set of records of the first year property trading. I am able to say that John in particular, has been unstinting in his attention to my needs and has done so in a manner which has never alluded to my extremely rudimentary grasp of managing a business, or even of being unable to set out a spread sheet properly. The result of the above guidance is that now, although my trading trust would still not be able to operate without the advice of GRA, I do least feel a sense of satisfaction that I have got to my present point without major disaster and that my property trust does now have some kind of firmer basis for any future activities - Name withheld by request
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