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19 Charts That Explain the Global Listed Real Estate & REIT Markets (Guest Post)

19 Charts That Explain the Global Listed Real Estate & REIT Markets (Guest Post)

UBS Global Research got a pretty good special taking stock of the global real estate scene. This covers the REITs in various global markets as well. A lot of these reports would want to shape our views on where are the attractive investment opportunities. This one is no different but the report does provide a lot of good data that I find will help shape your view as long term listed real estate investors.image-75-min

This post was originally posted here. The writer, Kyith Ng is a veteran community member and blogger on InvestingNote, with username known as Kyith and has 1051  followers.

If you identify yourself as a long term listed real estate investor or a REIT investor, this article might be suitable for you.

They presented some data that tells you:

    1. 10-year compounded return of Listed Real Estate versus other asset classes
    2. Correlation of GDP downgrade and Listed Real Estate performance
    3. Different layers of Listed Real Estate Valuation Metrics and how the various market rank
    4. Range of Historical Vacancies in different office markets
    5. Typical duration of Office Lease Tenures in various office markets
    6. Correlation between Listed Real Estate company’s EPS and global GDP growth
    7. Correlation between Listed Real Estate with equity and bonds
    8. Sensitivity Analysis of Interest Rate changes and Listed Real Estate Returns
    9. Correlation of Long term Yields and Demographic Changes
    10. Correlation of Long term yields and CAP rates
    11. FED Rate Hikes and Listed Real Estate Performances

And much more.

Let us get down to it.

1. Performance of Real Estate Equities Compared to Other Category of Securities

In the past 10 years to May 2020, global listed real estate delivered 6.7% a year. Listed real estate felt the impact of the pandemic more than global equities, who returned 9.8% during this period.

Physical real estate delivered a better return at 8.3% a year to December 2019 (due to the lack of availble data).

You can also compare global REITs return against other asset classes during this period.

2. Performance of Various Listed Real Estate Markets During 2020

Overall, global listed real estate have fallen by 20% this year. However, we observe that some countries have it worst such as France and Australia. Singapore REITs and Germany listed real estate have recovered relatively better.

On the right side, we also observe that most property sectors were hit but hotel, retail was more hard hit. This is because our movements were restricted to such an extent that overseas travel could not happen. Social distancing have also prevent retail operations.

While the stock prices have fallen, it does not mean that the cash flow of the underlying real estate business has dried up. Property tenants are contratually obligated to pay rent despite not making full use of it. Some tenants were very hard hit as they have no revenue and not enough working capital to fully pay for it.

The share price fell because stock markets are forward looking. The price reflects the uncertainty whether work from home, lower demand would change the long term nature of the rental income.

The uncertainty over rental income will in turn, affect the property values, which in turn, will affect stock prices.

If there is a secondary lesson to learn from this slide, it is that not all property segments are the same.

3. Economic Impact and Listed Real Estate Market Performance

This chart plots the change in year to date performance against the downgrade to a country’s GDP.

We observe a loose correlation between the economic impact (GDP) and performance by region.

Germany is unique in that the economic impact looks better than other countries. This is driven by the resilience of their residential sector, which dominates the market cap in Germany.

4. Valuation of Various Listed Real Estate Market

The analysts back tested different valuation metrics over time. They then weigh Price to NAV with a 50% weightage and 10% for the other 5 metrics.

Lower Z-Score reflects that based on that metric, the said market is cheap. (Blue is cheaper, red is expensive).

You can observe HK REITs, HK Property Stocks, China, and Japanese developers are the cheaper ones by all metrics.

The markets that are not cheap are Australia listed property companies and Singapore REITs.

I love spider graphs.

When we play a lot of computer games, this is one graph that shows which character or item is good. This spider graph presents valuation in a different view.

If all the legs of the graph is spread out wide, that region is cheaper.

We can see that Singapore REITs and Australia listed property companies are relatively expensive.

If there is one takeaway here, it is that there is not just one valuation metric.

If you want to have a greater margin of safety, layer price to NAV, PE, dividend yield and EBITDA divided by Enterprice together and you may find some company that is dead cheap based on all metric.

5. What Foot and Transit Traffic Tells Us About the Pandemic Recovery

The analysts trakc a number of unique data sets that can help inform their view of the markets globally during this pandemic.

What you see here is the foot traffic monitor. For most countries they have not recovered.
Here is one that monitors the public transit network traffic. Hong Kong did very well but the rest of the other countries were pretty depressed still.

6. Historical Vacancies in Different Markets

When you invest in a property company, management may update shareholders on the current vacancy rate or the amount of leasable space that are not leased out.

The best case is to have more spaces on lease, but it would be challenging for us to always have the best case.

To find out if this property is performing up to expectations, you can compare against the vacancy rate of the sub-market.

This chart above shows the vacancy rate of various office markets. London city has the wides range. Hong Kong office vacancy has climbed above the average.

Melbourne, Sydney CBD, and Tokyo Central 5 Ward vacancy are still within the historically lowest range.

7. How Different Are the Lease Tenures in Different Office Markets

The tenure of office lease term varies in different cities.

The tenure in major Asian cities tend to be shorter. The average tenure in Western cities tend to be longer.

 

8. CAP Rate Trends

CAP Rate is computed by taking the average net operating income of stabilized properties in that segment divide by the prevailing market value of the properties.

You can infer that this is like the average unleveraged net rental yield of the property segment.

If you rearrange this CAP rate formula, you can work out different things.

For example if your property rent for $10,000 a year and the CAP rate is 6%, if you take $10,000 divide by 6%, this will value your property at $166,666.

The CAP rate is in a way, like how investing people would use the discount rate.

Therefore, a high CAP rate lowers the valuation of your property, all else being equal. A lower CAP rate increases the valuation of your property.

The chart above shows the CAP rate change for different country segment from different time period.

You would observe that the CAP rate trend have been downwards. This reflects average property valuation rising faster than average rent. Most likely, this is due to greater demand for properties.

A lower CAP rate therefore leads to higher property value.s

Appreciate how high the CAP rate for Australia, UK and USA was in the past.

9. The Yield Spread Compared to Historical

This chart shows the physical property yield as a spread to the local 10-year bond yields. The rate at which the owners of the property lends at typically flows with the local 10-year bond yield.

So a wider spread means greater risk, greater value, possibly greater reward.

The current spread above the historical average for Hong Kong, Australia, UK initial, US, and continental Europe have been wide, indicating potentially greater reward.

10. The Leveraged Net Operating Income Yield of REIT’s Physical Property Indicates Attractive Value Versus Bond Yields

Because the yield spread is wider than the historical (previous chart), investors can possibly get a reasonable return on equity if they invest in REITs.

This chart shows the leveraged NOI yield of the properties belonging to REITs.

    1. This leveraged NOI yield is based on 40% debt 60% equity (40% LTV).
    2. NOI is equal to the stabilized rental revenue minus the stabilized cost expenses.
    3. The analysts assume the investors purchase this property with 40% loan. They then include the interest expense in the NOI computation.
    4. This NOI is then divided by the equity portion of the property.

What you see is the leverage yield.

I felt that if this is leveraged, an acceptable return with more margin of safety should be higher (perhaps close to 7-8%) in a normal interest rate environment.

However, on average, the leveraged yield is 6% which may mean the unleveraged yield is about 4.2% only. The yields in Hong Kong and Singapore should be even lower.

UBS has the opinion that these yields are attractive because if we compare them to the 10-year government rates for their respective countries, they looked very attractive.

In a yield-starved world, investors are on the look out for yield alternatives.

From this angle, REITs look more attractive vis a vis bonds.

11. The Correlation Between Listed Real Estate Company’s EPS and Global GDP Growth

This chart shows us that there is a reasonable correlation between earnings growth of listed real estate companies or REITs and global GDP growth.

By any indication, with the lower GDP growth, we should expect the EPS growth of real estate companies to fall drastically.

But I think, this time is a special situation. We have to wait for the rent collection to stabilize before making judgments if the EPS growth really becomes so negative.

 

12. Listed Real Estate Has Strong Equity Correlation and Weaker Bond Correlation

The historical relationship between bond prices (the inverse of bond yields) and listed global real estate is not very strong.

The average correlation is 0.15 since 1993.

However, a strong correlation exists for the relative performance of listed real estate against equities.

Listed real estate tend to outperform when bond yields fall.

Listed real estate companies, are… equities in general. If you are expecting listed real estate to help reduce the volatility of your portfolio, they might disappoint you.

Here is a sensitivity plot that shows the change in return from changes in US 10-year treasury rate.

We observe that when 10-year rate falls, the relative returns tend to be better but that is not always the case.

There are some outliers that, when rates increase, the relative returns were still quite OK.

13. The Correlation of Long Term Yields and Demographic Changes

This one is new to me.

The economist thinks that long term interest rates will remain low for some time.

The analysts think there are some structural changes in the economy, including aging populations and persistently high debt levels globally.

This suggests that 10-year treasury yields may trade in a lower range of 2-4$ over the next 20-30 years.

This chart shows the ratio of spenders (those in the 20-34 years old cohort) to savers (those in the 40-49 years old cohort) versus the 10-year treasury bonds.

The relationship looks strong.

This low rates trend looks supportive of listed real estate.

14. Correlation of CAP Rates and 10-Year Bond Yields

This chart above shows 2 different markets.

It shows that given enough time, there is a correlation between 10-year bond yields and the CAP rate.

Of course, bond yields are not the only influencing factors, with others including:

    1. rental growth expectations
    2. risk appetite
    3. weight of money

What I observed is that

    1. Office CAP rate correlation with 10-year yields is lower
    2. Retail CAP rate correlation with 10-year yields is lower
    3. Industrial and Apartment CAP rate correlation with 10-year yields are higher

 

15. Relationship Between FED Rate Hike and Equity, Real Estate Performances

There are 4 things overlayed in this chart.

The light brown line shows the real estate index while the dark brown line shows the equities index.

The light brown bars show the yield spread between the long duration treasury bonds versus the short duration treasury bonds.

This yield spread shows the shape of the yield curve. A region where the spread is high indicates that the yield curve is steep in a positive way. The yield curve narrows over time and then inverts. Correspondingly, we also see the bars becoming shorter and shorter.

Finally, the grey area indicates the period where the FED raised rates.

The grey area is where real estate investors traditionally fear the most because they believe higher interest rates are negative for real estate.

As we see on this chart, the grey areas coincide with the period where the light brown bars are at their lowest. This make sense because as the yield spread narrows and the yield curve flattens, the FED raised rates to make borrowing more expensive, to prevent the markets from overheating.

In the three notable periods where FED hike rates, the real estate and equity index did well together 2 out of three period. During the 1999 period, real estate did not do as well.

The main lesson learn here is that while higher interest rate puts pressure on the real estate business, other factors might matter more than just interest rates.

16. The Explosion of Debt Issuance in Asia and EMEA

This bar chart shows the debt issuance over time. What fascinates me was that, while more money was raised over time in America, the amount of capital raised in EMEA and the Asia Pacific grew by a crazy amount after 2010.

Once again, this article is a guest post and was originally posted on Kyiths profile on InvestingNote. 

Become a part of our community and also see what other investors are saying about the current market right now: (click on the view now button)

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4 SINGAPORE DIVIDEND STOCKS WITH INCREASING DIVIDENDS FOR THE LAST 10 YEARS. THIS STREAK COULD CONTINUE IN 2020 (Guest Post)

4 SINGAPORE DIVIDEND STOCKS WITH INCREASING DIVIDENDS FOR THE LAST 10 YEARS. THIS STREAK COULD CONTINUE IN 2020 (Guest Post)

It is pretty rare for Singapore stocks to have a consistent track record of paying dividends. Unlike in the US where there are hundreds of companies classified as Dividend Aristocrats (companies that have increased their dividend payments for 25 consecutive years or more) and a handful of Dividend Kings (companies that have increased their dividend payments for 50 consecutive years or more), Singapore stocks typically do not have a good track record of consistent dividend payments.

4 Singapore dividend stocks with increasing dividends for the last 10 years. This streak could continue in 2020

This post was originally posted here. The writer, Royston Tan is a veteran community member and blogger on InvestingNote, with username known as Royston_Tan.

https://newacademyoffinance.com/singapore-dividend-stocks/

(For those interested, you can check out the site for the graphical representation of their dividend track record)

It is pretty rare for Singapore stocks to have a consistent track record of paying dividends. Unlike in the US where there are hundreds of companies classified as Dividend Aristocrats (companies that have increased their dividend payments for 25 consecutive years or more) and a handful of Dividend Kings (companies that have increased their dividend payments for 50 consecutive years or more), Singapore stocks typically do not have a good track record of consistent dividend payments.

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Suntec REIT’s Annual Report 2019: A Quick Summary

Suntec REIT’s Annual Report 2019: A Quick Summary

Some insights of Suntec REIT’s portfolio, Tenants and Net Property Income from their annual report and key pointers to take note.

This post was originally posted here. The writer, Jun Yuan Lim is a veteran community member and blogger on InvestingNote, with username known as ljunyuan and has 886 followers.

Fountain of Wealth – Suntec City , Singapore | PLACES-CITY

 

Suntec REIT (SGX:T282U), another long-term investment of mine, released their annual report for the financial year ended 31 December 2019 last Thursday (09 April 2020.)

I have gone through the report, identify key pointers to take note of, and am going to present them in today’s post for the benefit of those who do not have the time to go through it:

Suntec REIT’s Key Figures in FY2019 at a Glance:

  • Net Property Income: Decreased 2.0% year-on-year (y-o-y) to S$236.2mil due to the sinking fund contribution from Suntec City upgrading works (excluding it, the Net Property Income would be 1.3% higher y-o-y)
  • Distributable Income from Operations: Increased 3.9% y-o-y to S$236.7mil due to increase in contributions from Suntec City, Southgate Complex (Australia), MBFC properties, and contribution from 55 Currie Street (Australia)
  • Distributable Income to Unitholders: Down by 1.5% y-o-y to S$262.7mil as increase in distributable income from operations was offset by lower capital distribution
  • Distribution Per Unit: Decreased by 4.8% y-o-y to 9.507 Singapore cents/unit due to the enlarged unit base and lower capital distribution
  • Portfolio Occupancy: 98.7% (office), 99.1% (retail)
  • Aggregate Leverage: 37.7% (31 December 2018: 38.1%)
  • All-In Financing Cost: 3.05% per annum, with approximately 75.0% of their debt fixed or hedged
  • Weighted Average Debt Maturity: 3.1 years

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Mapletree Commercial Trust – Why Did I Invest in the Blue Chip REIT? (Guest Post)

Mapletree Commercial Trust – Why Did I Invest in the Blue Chip REIT? (Guest Post)

Mapletree Commercial Trust had been in my “shopping list”, and a drop in its unit price of late presented a golden opportunity for me to add it to my long-term investment portfolio – which I did last Friday (03 April 2020) when the REIT’s unit price fell to my intended entry price of S$1.57.

This post was originally posted here. The writer, Jun Yuan Lim is a veteran community member and blogger on InvestingNote, with username known as ljunyuan and has 834 followers.

Where to shop in Harbourfront and Sentosa - Visit Singapore ...

 

Mapletree Commercial Trust (SGX:N2IU) was one of the “casualties” of the ongoing Covid-19 outbreak in Singapore, where its unit price took a huge tumble by 34% at the time of writing (it fell from its 52-week high of S$2.48 to S$1.64.)

This “blue chip REIT” had been in my “shopping list”, and a drop in its unit price of late presented a golden opportunity for me to add it to my long-term investment portfolio – which I did last Friday (03 April 2020) when the REIT’s unit price fell to my intended entry price of S$1.57.

In my post today, I will be sharing with you reasons why I’ve invested in the REIT.

Let’s get started…

 

Brief Introduction to Mapletree Commercial Trust

Mapletree Commercial Trust was listed on the Singapore Exchange Securities Trading Limited (“SGX-ST”) on 27 April 2011, and subsequently joining the benchmark Straits Times Index (STI) on 23 September 2019 (taking the place of Hutchison Port Holdings Trust.)

At the time of writing, the REIT’s properties in its portfolio are all located in Singapore, and they are:

  • Vivocity
  • Mapletree Business City
  • PSA Building
  • Mapletree Anson
  • Bank of America Merrill Lynch Harbourfront

 

Historical Financial Results of Mapletree Commercial Trust between FY2011/12 and FY2018/19

One of the first things I look at before I invest in any company or REIT is to first study its historical financial results (for at least the past 5 years.)

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Updates from Manulife US REIT & Prime US REIT (Guest Post)

Updates from Manulife US REIT & Prime US REIT (Guest Post)

Most of the REIT investors endure some extreme volatility in this March Madness. Their holdings have quite a good run in 2019.Coming into 2020, investors believe that the low rate environment is here to stay. Even when the threat of Covid-19 reaching the United States and Europe, investors rationalize that when the interest rate plunge, this must be a more conducive environment for the REITs. What comes next is that in a span of 2 weeks, many REITs saw their stock prices plunge 50%.

This post was originally posted here. The writer, Kyith Ng is a veteran community member and blogger on InvestingNote, with username known as Kyith and has 954  followers.

Most of the REIT investors endure some extreme volatility in this March Madness. Their holdings have quite a good run in 2019.

Coming into 2020, investors believe that the low rate environment is here to stay. Even when the threat of Covid-19 reaching the United States and Europe, investors rationalize that when the interest rate plunge, this must be a more conducive environment for the REITs.

What comes next is that in a span of 2 weeks, many REITs saw their stock prices plunge 50%.

Manulife US REIT and Prime US REIT both endure the same fate as their peers.

In the past 2 days, both REITs provided some updates to analysts, so as to address the potential uncertainties of investors.

Since then both REITs saw their share price go up 20-25%. Manulife’s share price held up better, probably because they are in the Index and are much more liquid.

Their transparency may have worked wonders for their share price. However, overall, a lot of the REITs managed to bounce off their lows.

Here are some updates that I have gathered.

 

Possible Reasons for the Sharp Price Falls

Management updated that possible reasons why the draw down was so swift was due to

  1. Manulife’s entry into the index. When index funds, exchange-traded funds systematically sell down, there isn’t many fundamentals per se
  2. There was a lot of margin calls from the Private Banks (my friend KK from RisknReturns mentioned a few days ago that the three US Office REITs may have been removed from the list of marginable stocks on private banks)
  3. Funds redeeming and switching around. They are switching from smaller stocks to more liquid stocks
  4. Ultra-rich Chinese are facing heavy margin calls (we can guess who they are). Manulife US REIT does not have them on their register

 

Are Manulife US REIT’s Properties Affected?

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[UPCOMING WORKSHOP] The Essentials of REIT Investing

[UPCOMING WORKSHOP] The Essentials of REIT Investing

Real Estate Investment Trusts (REITs) are one of the most reliable way to invest as they generate steady and consistent tax free cash flow.

REITs also open up access for investors to participate in a diverse range of real estate assets with low capital outlay.

https___cdn-evbuc-com_images_69214821_172624929685_1_original

In this exclusive 2 hr-intensive workshop, our speaker Tam Ging Wien will be sharing his knowledge and experience including:

Foundational understanding of REITs

✔ Characteristics of various real estate sectors

✔ How to perform financial evaluation on a REIT

✔ How to quickly shortlist high quality REITs

✔ How to value and buy undervalued REITs

✔ Common REIT investment traps and how to avoid them

During the sharing session, various case studies and Singapore-listed REIT examples will be used.

There will also be a Q&A and mingling session so that members of the investing community may engage in open dialog and discussions in order to deepen their understanding of REITs.

Registration will start at 6.30pm.

Do mingle and network with other fellow participants after the seminar, after all, this is where people of the same interest gather. Do bring along your writing materials for note taking.

Limited seats only. Book yours now.

USE PROMO CODE: EBACCESS to get 30% discount now!

To learn more about REITs, we recommend the article: What are REITs?

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Singapore REIT Fundamental Analysis Comparison Table – 1 July 2019 (Guest Post)

Singapore REIT Fundamental Analysis Comparison Table – 1 July 2019 (Guest Post)

Technical Analysis of FTSE ST REIT Index (FSTAS8670). FTSE ST Real Estate Investment Trusts (FTSE ST REITIndex)broke out from the 10 years resistance at 875 with significant increase in trading volume. The REIT index increased from 858.67 to 916.95 (+6.78%) and as compared to last post onSingapore REIT Fundamental Comparison Tableon June 3, 2019.

The REIT index is entering in an uncharted territory after breaking new high and may head towards to 1000 points based on projection of 161.8% Fibonacci level. Based on the current chart pattern and and momentum, the sentiment is BULLISH and the trend for Singapore REIT direction is stillUP.However, the REIT index may go for a short term pause before moving higher.

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As we approach mid-year 2019 (Guest Post)

As we approach mid-year 2019 (Guest Post)

Since the last post, the STI did indeed fell further forming a trough by early June. By this week, the STI regained some of its lost territory, landing at 3214.85.

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This post was originally posted here. The writer, Brennen Park is a veteran community member and blogger on InvestingNote, with username known as Brennen Park and 3400+ followers.

Banks are still lagging as the fall out of the US-China trade war began to infiltrate into smaller economies. It is a situation that when giants fight, all the others feel the ripples. For the 1st quarter of 2019, the actual GDP growth of 1.2% fell short against the forecast of 1.9%. Economists are now downgrading Singapore’s yearly growth rate from 2.5% forecast in March 2019 to 2.1% for year 2019. Certainly, the banks stocks are not going to fare well when the state of the economy worsens. Just months ago, it was widely expected that the FED would continue to increase the interest rate well into 2020. This would help mop off the liquidity in the system, resulting in higher net interest margin (NIM) for the banks. Right now, more and more are expecting the FED to lower the interest rate in response to the slowdown due to the on-going trade war. This would inadvertently slacken the interest margin again. Banks, which have been increasing their deposit rates recently, in preparation for higher interest rates may find their efforts come to naught if they are not able to lend them out efficiently.

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A Tale of Two REITS (Guest Post)

A Tale of Two REITS (Guest Post)

There are investors who like to base their Reit selection on two criterias: Price to Book Value and Dividend yield.
real-estate-singaporeThis post was originally posted here. The writer, D Wong is a community member on InvestingNote, with username known as Pizzaprata.

M Reit: $Mapletree Ind Tr(ME8U.SI)
S Reit: $Sabana Reit(M1GU.SI)

Based on the latest quarter’s results and closing prices:
M Reit’s P/B is 1.41 and yield is 5.7%
S Reit’s P/B is 0.76 and yield is 6.9%

From the above M Reit looks overpriced and S Reit looks attractive. Both Reits had their IPOs just one month apart in Oct/Nov 2010 with similar IPO prices of 0.93 and 0.917 respectively. That’s where the similarity ends, from the price performance chart below you can see that M Reit has doubled it’s share price since IPO while the other has dropped to less than half.

The reason is simple, M Reit has consistently improved it’s DPU every year whereas S Reit had to cut it’s DPU over the years. Therefore a good management track record is a more important criteria. So quality reits don’t come cheap and if you are hung up about P/B ratios you would never have bought M Reit as it has never dropped below its book value since IPO. Including dividends, M Reit’s total return is more than 200% so you would have missed a 3 bagger.

However past performance is no guarantee for future performance. You need to look at the Reits results in detail to see if the distributions are sustainable and what projects they are doing to increase DPU. Tomorrow I will reveal the Reits and why I accumulated M Reit last week although seasoned investors would have guessed which Reits I am talking about.

 

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Should You Leverage Up Your REIT or Stock Portfolio? (Guest Post)

Should You Leverage Up Your REIT or Stock Portfolio? (Guest Post)

There is emerging trend of experts teaching folks to build wealth with the aid of leverage. Leverage means, using other people’s money, in a lot case the banks money, to aid you in building your asset base.

Image result for leverage

After the large DFA article last week, I do not really feel like writing a lot of stuff. There is probably a lot of other stuff I need to catch up upon then to do one humongous article every week.

So this week one is a little breather. It is some numbers that I ran some time ago.

I think I decide to bring it out.

This post was originally posted here. The writer is a veteran community member and blogger on InvestingNote, with username known as kyith and 700+ followers.

You have folks like Kim Eng who is able to give to loan you currently a 3.28% interest rate loan on your shares. This enables you to buy shares more than you can afford to and speculate on them. When you earn as you sell off the shares, you earn a lot more. Conversely, if you lose as you sell off the shares, you lose a lot more.

Now, the idea for a lot of people is not to do leverage irresponsibly. We all want to do the sensible thing, but to make use of what is available to us so that we can accelerate our wealth building.

So basically, rather conservative wealth builders wish to use leverage to step up and build their wealth. It makes me wonder how conservative we are.

Here is the Setup

We are going to invest in good blue chip stocks and Real Estate Investment Trusts (REITs).

And we are going to choose to invest in 1, or more of these, to form a portfolio that gives us a 7.5% per year compounded rate of return (hypothetically). If you want to take a look at whether its achievable, you can take a reference on the dividend yield that you can get on my Dividend Stock Tracker. Those are dividend yields, and do not show the future compounded growth rate. The growth rate can be +2 to 5% or -2 to 5%, depending on which you choose. Not all stocks are appreciating over time.

Let’s say we make use of Kim Eng’s margin financing which enables us to invest in selected stocks and REITs at a rate of 3.28% (this rate used to be 2.88%. When the global interest rate moved up, it also gets shifted up. This gives you an idea that these rates do not stay stagnant).

According to the strategy, we want to use leverage to build up our financial assets.

However, we do not want leverage to kill us. So at some point, we will pay back the debt.

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