The Secret Revealed: Should You Buy For Capital Growth or Yield? - YouTube

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Alright folks, I want talk today about the number one question I often get — “Should
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I buy for capital growth or should I buy for yield?”
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My answer is very, very simple: it depends.
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It absolutely depends on what your strategy is.
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So, first of all I want to make a very clear point here
 strategy is number one.
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What are we aiming for?
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What's the end game?
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What are we reverse engineering?
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In our book, we talk about How to Retire on $2,000 per week in passive income — is that
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your goal?
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Do you want a thousand a week?
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Do you want $3,000 a week?
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Whatever it is, we need to know what your strategy is based on a couple of things.
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First of all, we've got a few levers that we can play with — time, target, income
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and expense.
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What does that mean?
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When we're building a portfolio it's like pulling the levers on a crane, a bobcat or
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a bulldozer — you move these back and forth.
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How much time do I have until you want to retire?
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Are you starting young or are you starting them later?
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What's the target?
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Is it $2,000 a week?
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Is it a $1,000 a week?
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How much income do I have?
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Is there any chance of my income going up?
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Or is there any chance that my income will be going down — I'm going on a sabbatical,
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I'm taking a part-time job so I can go and study, all those sorts of things.
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The last thing is around expenses.
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What is your essential in your discretionary spend?
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Is it high, is it average, is it low?
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Those are the four things (the levers) that we can play with, which help us determine
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what the strategy is so we can work out what your end game is.
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Now, when it comes to buying property, there's 3 broad strategies we can talk about.
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The first one is to buy a growth asset, which is typically the ones closer into the major
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hubs, the CBDs, the main built-up areas.
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(Find out more on how to find one here.)
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The second one is a balanced asset.
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You might find a balanced asset, for example, on parts of the Gold Coast, or parts of the
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Sunshine Coast, or investing in regional locations, where they're close enough to a capital city
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job market so they’ll still get a bit of growth, but they’ll also have a slightly
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higher yield.
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The third one is income assets.
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This is where we're typically getting lots of rent.
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The cost to buy them is a bit lower.
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We often call these “Cash Cows”.
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The question is, “Which one should you use?”
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Again, the answer is really simple: it depends on what your strategy is.
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So let's have a look at the difference between growth versus yield

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Let’s compare two strategies that look like this: the first one is 8% growth, 4% yield.
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The second one is 4% growth, 8% yield — effectively, what we're doing is we're comparing a growth
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asset with a yield asset.
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(For clarity, please see the next section demonstrated on the video.)
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So, if we have the growth asset doing something like that (video shows an upward curve), it
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has exponential growth, and then you've got income through here (shown in video).
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If you compare that with the yield asset, it’s growing through there (shown in video)
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and then you have the income that's superior to the growth asset, and then it crosses through
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under here (shown in video).
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I know that's a little bit rough, but the point is that the growth of the asset in capital
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growth is significant.
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And then you have this scenario right here (shown in video), at about the 17 year mark,
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where the income from the growth asset exceeds the income from the yield asset.
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So, you can see early on that the fact that you're getting a little bit more income might
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help someone who is wanting to retire out your debt because they've got a few investment
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properties already and the extra income will start to accelerate the debt retirement.
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It might also be suited to someone who is on low income and they cannot afford to buy
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a growth asset — this will help them retire out some debt.
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Or this strategy might work for someone who's close to retirement and doesn't have a lot
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of time up their sleeve — this can also help them in the early days.
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So it's important to understand that there is no one-size-fits-all.
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I want to make that really clear.
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So the question, “Should you chase grow or should you chase yield?” becomes my initial
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answer.
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It just depends on your strategy, on what you’re chasing.
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There’s definitely no one-size-fits-all.
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What is it that we're buying in the marketplace?
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Well, we're buying many assets that are growth assets, many assets that are balanced and
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many assets that are income!
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Because we're actually using real estate as simply a vehicle to achieve the lifestyle
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design YOU want, which comes from having an end goal of a passive income that we have
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reverse-engineered based on your specific circumstance.
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A typical portfolio might look like this

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We might buy 2 assets that are growth assets, then we might buy one in the middle that is
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a balanced asset and then we might bring it home with either one or two income assets.
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So you can see the capital base is growing via the growth assets, then we're starting
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to level out the income and the debt on the balanced asset and then, towards the end of
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the portfolio, the idea is about retiring out the debt.
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So there you have it, folks

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“Should I buy for capital growth or should I buy for yield”?
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The answer is it depends.
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It really depends on what we're shooting for and the type of asset that is appropriate
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for the type of strategy you've put in place.
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So next time you're faced with the decision of whether you should buy capital growth property
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or whether it should buy an income asset, the question really comes down to, “What
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is most appropriate for my portfolio right now?”