Some serious calculations needs to be done..
Like the post before me is saying, your doubling your risks and costs in certain areas.
what are your short terms and long terms goal? It may be worth speaking to a financial advisor.
The interest payments of paying a property with a mortgage is a killer. The percentage is calculated at the start of each month and divided by 12 and added to the amount owned. The cheapest way of buying is to put down as much deposit as possible and pay off the mortgage as soon as possible with over payments.
Some people believe it’s better to invest in the stock market than to use the money to pay off the mortgage. Which is true in the past as mortgage rates was around 2.5% and the stock markets return around an average 9%. But there’s no guarantee what the stock market returns in a given year or a period of years and with higher mortgage rates, it may be better and certainly more satisfying to pay of the house sooner. Also after paying off the mortgage, there’s the opportunity to use the funds of the mortgage to buy a second property or to take higher risks for better returns in the stock market.
One thing is for certain, if you just leave the cash in a normal account, inflation will eat away at it.
One of my friends was telling me that there are buy to lease schemes; Where you buy a property then lease it out to someone to rent, they the ones that takes the risk on in regards of the management of the property.
And lease to rent schemes, where you lease a property from someone and take on the risk of managing the property.. in terms of its maintenance and finding someone to rent it. This sounds crazy.
What I’m doing at the moment is putting my eggs into serval baskets.. a percentage into the stock market and a percentage into paying off my house sooner. And the returns from my managed accounts; my pension and vanguard has returned higher than the interest from my mortgage. But the account that I manage/mess about with myself is lower than my mortgage.
The other thing that I’m doing is investing in REITs, which is buying share into real estate companies that rents/leases out properties to companies and people. So basically I’m buying a percentage of a property portfolio and getting a percentage of those companies profits. They do all the buying/selling of properties and the management. It’s far more liquid than buying a property but you don’t get the advantage of leveraging and like all shares can go down if a load of shares are dumped.
In 2023 I bought a lot of REITs too.
Historical dividends were running at 10pc for many. Plus a halving of share price.
If (and it's a dangerous assumption) they went back to before this you'd double (at least) your money and be hitting a 10pc YoY yield.
If..