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Finance Broker

What counts as genuine savings in a loan application?

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What counts as genuine savings in a loan application?

If you apply for a home loan, particularly if the loan is for more than 80 per cent of a property’s value, you’ll more than likely have to prove to lenders that you have a satisfactory amount of savings. This is to demonstrate your ability to funnel a portion of your income into repayments.

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Investing in a holiday house? Location is everything

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Investing in a holiday house? Location is everything

Before you take the leap into a holiday-home investment, it is essential that you consider all angles. This means taking your heart out of the equation and giving thought to rental returns - which means location really is king.

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Guaranteeing your child's loan

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Guaranteeing your child's loan

Rising house prices are making it increasingly difficult to enter the market. Parents who guarantee their children’s loans can help, but it is important to understand how this can impact the parents’ retirement or investment plans.

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Tiny Houses

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Tiny Houses

It’s easy to understand why we look for the largest, most prestigious properties we can afford – we are constantly urged to define our success by our possessions: bigger, better, newer, faster, shinier. A relatively recent counter-movement, however, urges lower impact, fewer goods and less consumption, and at its core nestles the tiny house.

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How to invest on a low income

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How to invest on a low income

While you may not need a six-figure salary to invest in property, those who earn a relatively low income will require a little more creative thinking to start a portfolio. Here are some tips to help you get started.

Find an investor-friendly loan
The challenge for low-income earners, explains the finance broker, is the time taken to save for a sufficient deposit. Some lenders require a higher deposit for an investor than is required for an owner-occupier, so seek out a lender and loan that is investor friendly, or consider living in the property for a period after the purchase before converting it into an investment property as your portfolio grows.

In any case, having at least 10 per cent of the property’s purchase price as a deposit will not only increase the likelihood of loan approval, it will also increase your borrowing capacity and lower the risk that you will have to pay lenders’ mortgage insurance (LMI).

Prove your financial discipline
Your lower income on an application can be offset by proving yourself a low risk borrower. Having genuine savings will not only highlight to lenders your ability to consistently meet financial payments and live within your means, it is also an opportunity to increase your borrowing power. The same can be said for lowering any existing debts.

“Keep credit card limits as low as possible as lenders always calculate servicing based on the limit, not the balance,” advises the broker. “Also, try to pay off any personal or car loans before applying for an investment loan. Because of the short-term nature of these commitments, repayments can have a significant impact on an applicant’s borrowing power and should be paid out where possible.”

Choose the right property
When it comes to choosing the property, low-income earners will generally do well to steer clear of anything that’s negatively geared, as you are not trying to offset your high income with losses, and remember the importance of profit over property.

“In my experience, regional areas is where to turn to, as the entry point to the market is lower,” says the finance broker. “Although there will generally be less capital growth, there are higher rental yields on offer.”

Seek out different strategies
For those who don’t have other non-deductible debt they want to pay down first, adopting a principle and interest payment is the obvious choice, advises the finance broker. Interest-only loans are only suitable in specific circumstances when strong exit plans are in place, while principle and interest payments reduce debt, freeing up borrowing capacity and allowing the borrower to leverage equity.

Investing with a close friend or relative is another way to enter the market for those who earn a low income. As long as agreements are in place, including who is responsible for the mortgage and what happens if one owner defaults, how the property will be used, in what circumstances it may be sold, and how maintenance will be paid for, co-ownership is preferable not owning a property at all.

Find the right loan
Recent research suggests that as many as 60 per cent of applicants who are rejected by the major banks would be eligible for a loan through a specialist lender. Specialist or non-conforming loans do carry higher interest as a rule, to account for the higher perceived risk the lender is taking, but a good finance broker will see this type of loan as a stepping-stone to a prime loan, and help their client prove themselves so that they can switch to a prime loan after a year or so.

Property investment may not be as straightforward to low-income earners, but in most cases is accessible, provided the right properties and finance products are sought out. For further insight, contact Skybridge Capital on 9221 4888. 

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What are investment lending caps?

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What are investment lending caps?

In an attempt to curb the high competition of the Australian housing market that locked out many would-be first home buyers, the Australian Prudential Regulation Authority (APRA) in late 2014 signalled its intention to keep a close eye on a suite of concerns, including the levels of residential lending to investors.

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A preparation checklist for a business loan

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A preparation checklist for a business loan

Applying for a business loan is a completely different process to that of a home loan application. To ensure you don’t lose your way, we’ve set out a clear path for you to follow.

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Why property investors need savings

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Why property investors need savings

Urgent maintenance is an unavoidable aspect of being a landlord, so having a cash buffer set aside will help you deal with any unexpected problems.

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Explainer: fixed-rate loans

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Explainer: fixed-rate loans

With interest rates at an all-time low, taking the option of locking in an interest rate on your home loan to guard against possible future fluctuation may be attractive. However, it pays to know the ins and outs of fixed-rate loans before committing to one.

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Bank said no? Soldier on and talk to a broker

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Bank said no? Soldier on and talk to a broker

Despite owning a growing business and supplementing his income with a pension from the ADF, former soldier Jake Briggs was told by his bank that he could not secure finance to purchase a home. So he found a broker who knew better.

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How to avoid extra home loan fees

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How to avoid extra home loan fees

Exit and early termination fees can put the brakes on plans to sell, to refinance, and to renovate or purchase an investment property. Here’s how to avoid them from the start.

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How to buy a house when you have a HECS or HELP debt

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How to buy a house when you have a HECS or HELP debt

Paying off your education is no reason to put off buying property.

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Why does my broker ask me for so much documentation?

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Why does my broker ask me for so much documentation?

No one likes paperwork; however, providing your broker with the right documentation will save you time and money.

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How to avoid paying too much for a home

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How to avoid paying too much for a home

Knowing what a property is worth is central to avoiding paying too much for it.

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Selling your home? Here are the first steps to take

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Selling your home? Here are the first steps to take

There is more to selling your home than putting up a ‘For Sale’ sign on your front lawn. Here are the first things you should check off your list to help you get the largest return from your investment and to ensure the process runs as smoothly as possible.

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No savings? A family pledge loan facility could help you buy your first home

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No savings? A family pledge loan facility could help you buy your first home

Young couple Sam and Kate were keen to start paying off their own home rather than paying rent, but had no savings. Here’s how they bought their first property.

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Case study: why you need access to many lenders

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Case study: why you need access to many lenders

When experienced property investor Tim Gordon agreed to buy a block of land, he didn’t expect the land’s mining-town location to make it difficult to secure finance. After failing to find a lender who could help him, he visited a finance broker who found just the right mortgage for his needs.

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What to expect from your first meeting with your Finance Broker

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What to expect from your first meeting with your Finance Broker

The first steps of buying a property, a business or commercial equipment is often securing the finance, and the ‘make or break’ nature of that can make the first meeting with a finance broker a daunting prospect...

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