Weekend Herald

Investors turn to shares instead of property

New Zealanders’ property obsession appears to be waning as more dive directly into shares, writes Tamsyn Parker

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New Zealand has traditiona­lly been a nation with a property obsession but there are signs that could be waning as more people jump directly into shares as the screws tighten on property investors.

In the last six months property investors have faced a clampdown by the banks on lending with deposit/equity requiremen­ts bumping up to 40 per cent while the Government has extended the bright-line test from five to 10 years, meaning investors will have to hold on to property for longer or face paying tax on their sale gains.

From October property investors will be hit again as mortgage interest deductibil­ity will start to be phased out over a fouryear period until it is no longer allowable on existing properties.

But for those looking to get into share investing access has got easier with a proliferat­ion of online investment platforms allowing Kiwis to enter the sharemarke­t with as little as $5 in their pocket.

Michael Webster, a property investor for 20 years who also trades shares for a privately owned hedge fund, believes New Zealand’s property obsession is slowly shifting.

“I definitely think it is and the reason I think it is, is because it [share

investing] is so much more accessible. It wasn’t for a long time because everyone got scared by the 1987 sharemarke­t crash and everyone remembers that — even those not alive at the time because their parents and grandparen­ts have told them stories.”

Webster, who got out of residentia­l property about five years ago but is still invested in commercial property, said younger people were leading the way into share investing.

“It is definitely increasing in popularity especially among younger people.”

Data from investment regulator the Financial Markets Authority from a survey released in June shows the percentage of Kiwis who own shares directly has risen from

17 per cent in 2019 to 21 per cent in

2021 and 60 per cent of those investors have got in via an online platform like Sharesies, Hatch or Invest now.

Meanwhile the percentage of those who own residentia­l investment property fell from 14 per cent in 2019 to 9 per cent in 2020, although it has bounced up a little to 11 per cent this year.

Of those who made investment­s in the last year 19 per cent said they had invested in residentia­l property, up from 15 per cent in the prior year. But 55 per cent said they had bought shares — a big jump from 46 per cent.

Jose George, New Zealand managing director of Canstar — a financial product research and rating firm — said the recent property tax and interest deductibil­ity announceme­nts had prompted some to reassess their property investment­s.

“Some people who have always invested in property are sitting back and saying: ‘is property it going forward?’ That is incidental­ly the same time as of people are also looking at shares.”

Data crunched by Canstar shows property price rises in 2020 edged out the S&P/NZX50 gross index with property up 15.5 per cent while New Zealand’s benchmark share index rose 13.92 per cent.

Those returns include dividends for shares but not rent given property owners typically have to pay for a range of costs from that income including the mortgage, rates, maintenanc­e and insurance.

But over 10 years the returns on New Zealand shares have been by far the stronger performer with property prices rising an average of 7.73 per cent a year compared to an average 14.74 per cent in New Zealand shares.

The factor that weighs heavily in favour of property is that it can be highly leveraged allowing investors to borrow heavily from the bank and ramp up their returns, and interest rates have never been lower than in the last year.

Put simply, if an investor puts $200,000 in as a 20 per cent deposit on a million-dollar property and house prices go up 20 per cent over a year the investor has doubled their money with a $200,000 increase in value.

That same $200,000 invested in unleverage­d shares with a 20 per cent increase in value will only make the investor $40,000. But leverage also means if property prices fall substantia­lly an investor can be left owing the bank money if they are forced to sell up.

In the year to June 30 average property prices shot up 30 per cent but economists are now predicting property price growth to be in the single digits.

George said Kiwis liked the tangibilit­y of property but most of the returns came from capital gains rather than the income they could get from renting it out.

“Whereas for shares the dividends are attractive as an income. Rental yield has never been great and will be even more impacted by the change in interest rate deductibil­ity.

“Everything that has happened in the last few months for the average property investor has been a rude shock.”

Sharon Cullwick, executive officer at the New Zealand Property Investors Federation, said she had not heard of many investors selling out of their rental properties to get into the share market.

“We haven’t seen too many leaving the industry. We have seen some of the larger players selling one or two properties [to reduce mortgage debt levels].”

She said many investors were still working out what the tax deductibil­ity changes would do to their portfolios. “That will take time. The Government still hasn’t said exactly what is happening.”

Cullwick said what could see people change their minds is if capital gains fall away.

“If we stop having the capital gains and if interest rates start to go up — that is two negatives straight away.”

She said people may start to pull back then.

“A lot of the mum and dad investors are buying a house for $700,000 and they are getting $500 a week rent — that is not enough. If you are an investor normally for that price you would want to be getting $1400 a week to make it pay for itself over time.”

That meant investors were counting on capital gains to make the investment stack up, Cullwick said, and capital gains were by no means guaranteed.

“I live in Hawkes Bay and we had 13 years with no capital gains.”

Cullwick said if she was a new property investor again she would be hesitant to get into it while the market was so hot right now.

“Especially with all the changes coming through and knowing that the Government seems to be hell-bent on changing things overnight. So I think it is quite a big risk. It is more of a risk than it ever has been getting into the industry now.”

Shares also have their own risks and one of the reasons many have been hesitant to get into them in the past has been the volatility of the investment­s, with shareholde­rs able to see the value of them going up and down daily.

Hatch co-founder Natalie Ferguson, who is a residentia­l property and share investor, says while shares do go up and down in value the longer-term trend has been upwards.

“Take a look at any quality company like Apple or Nike or any of these companies that have been around 10-15 years. If you look at the last year it looks like the share price is all over the place but zoom out to 10 years and the trend is up.”

That won’t be the case for all companies but investors can much more easily diversify across a large number of shares through managed funds and exchange-traded funds which buy a basket of shares.

Unlike property, share investors don’t have to save a huge deposit or have equity in an existing house to get in.

Joseph Darby, chief executive at financial advice firm Milestone Direct, says ideally investors would be in both shares and property depending on their individual circumstan­ces.

“They are quite complement­ary.” Darby says shares are very liquid while property is not meaning they can be sold more easily. Shares and managed funds also allow investors to diversify outside New Zealand which means if New Zealand’s economy goes through a rough patch they can still get strong returns elsewhere, he said.

But he said it was hard to beat the leveraging advantages of property.

“Once you have got the capital and assuming you are young enough and can meet the payments — property leverage is pretty hard to beat.”

Rob Everett, chief executive of the Financial Markets Authority, said investors appeared to be moving on from their property obsession “to some degree” although some were also investing in shares to get into property.

“There are still some people who haven’t reversed out of this obsession with property quite as much as we might think.

“I’ve always said a better-balanced investment sector would have more people interested in capital markets and fewer people putting all their eggs in the property market and the conditions are virtually perfect for people to look elsewhere.

“We just hope when the downturn comes [in the sharemarke­t] the proportion of people in there enjoying themselves . . . won’t all disappear the moment there is a market correction and head back to property.”

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