Money Magazine Australia

Buy decent assets at a good price

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QI’m 28 and my partner is 27. We have a one-year-old child. I work full time and my partner part time. Our combined income is about $180,000pa; the mortgage on our house is $320,000 with $100,000 of savings in an offset account. I have $130,000 in super and my partner has next to no super.

At this point we are unsure about whether we should take the money from the offset to purchase an investment property or invest in shares. Or possibly something else?

The right answer here, Nick, depends on your and your partner’s attitude to risk. First up, in the middle of a pandemic there’s the issue of job security. If you are both securely employed, we can tick that box and move to investment options. If your work is not secure, I’d be hanging onto your cash.

One of the very few benefits of a crisis is weaker values on assets such as shares and property. Your $100,000 of savings should be earning you the rate of interest on your mortgage – I’d guess two and a bit per cent. So if you invest that in property or shares, will you do better than that rate? History says that over the long term you should do quite a lot better in either property or shares. But both are riskier than cash and property in particular is an illiquid asset if things get worse.

You need to put all of this into a conversati­on with your partner. If your conclusion is that your jobs are secure and you can take a long-term view (I reckon this should be seven-plus years), then the odds of you earning a decent return buying shares or property at today’s prices over the long term are very sound.

About the only time you can buy decent assets more cheaply is in a crisis. This one may get worse, so I would be in no hurry. Depending on JobKeeper and JobSeeker after September, the pressure on homeowners and hence property prices could well get pretty nasty.

In the long run, though, I believe the economy will recover. So if you buy decent assets like well-located property or shares at a good price, history indicates that over time you will benefit from that. You would, however, have to be prepared for a potentiall­y bumpy ride. One advantage of shares is the ability to “dollar cost average”, meaning you could gradually build your portfolio over time. But the choice between property and shares is a personal one.

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