When you want to diversify your investments and look at options other than property, there are plenty of other places for you to park your hard-earned cash.
Shares
- Capital gain occurs when the share price increases. For example, if you buy 1,000 shares at $2.50 and they grow in value to $3.00 and you sell, you’ll make a capital gain of 0.50c per share, or $500. Capital losses can occur too, and sometimes very rapidly.
- Just as property owners receive income in the form of rent, share owners receive dividends as regular income. Dividends can be paid up to twice per year, but some companies pay no dividends and keep profits, to help fund growth in their business.
Managed funds
The bank
Diversifying your investments
“Every second year or so, I get told that an investment guru has just pointed out that the future is in dividend imputation funds, overseas equities, biotech stocks or an obscure Australian mining company that’s about to strike it rich,” says Greville Pabst, CEO of WBP Property Group, a strategic property consultancy, buyers agent and valuation services company.
“What I always recommend to investors is to get top quality advice no matter where they invest, and diversify their portfolio across the major asset classes.”
They should only consider options that have a well-entrenched history of performance, he adds, “including a recovery from a bad set of circumstances”.
“It’s for this reason that I think well selected property should be a part of any investor’s portfolio,” Pabst says.