Duke of Marmalade
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This fund only needs to return an overall growth rate of 2% from the total fund before the principles reward themselves
The underlying investments have to perform at about 7% p.a. just to pay the interest and the geared up managament charges. They will have to perform by about 9% for the bonus to kick in.
We can't argue both ways - that 8% IRR can be got by sleepwalking and yet this a bad investment.
Hobbs yesterday on radio challenged the institutions to come up with a cheaper model involving Development and Investment.
What's the minimum investment on the scheme above?Friends First / F&C's Corinthian: -
Challenge met. Which radio station was Hobbs on? I'll give them a call.
- 100% allocation for execution-only transactions.
- 66% gearing.
- Purchase and development of Superquinn sites
- 5 year term so shorter lock-in period required than Brendan Investments.
- Total annual management charge of 1.65% of Net Asset Value - Brendan's NAV is 4%.
- Performance bonus of 15% doesn't kick in until the investors have achieved 10% per annum - a full 2% more to the investors than Brendan's 8% threshold for bonus.
It has been stated that the development costs are external to teh 1% pa charge and it has been stated that this is in the prospectus. Please identify where this is stated because I cannot find it. if this is a genuine error well enough, if it is incorrect and deliberately so, it is another example of mis-information on this thread.
If MichaelDes sees it like this how the heck is a poor "SMTM - must give up the fags" punter going to possibly understand the true nature of gearing.
I have explained it before but let's try again. The underlying investments have to perform at about 7% p.a. just to pay the interest and the geared up management charges. They will have to perform by about 7.5% for the bonus to kick in.
We can't argue both ways - that 8% IRR can be got by sleepwalking and yet this a bad investment.
It has been stated as a fact that the hibernian life European Residential fund has an annual fund management charge that is not on the gross fund value. This is, once again, incorrect. The lengthy PDF from Hibernian Life fully supports my earlier analysis. It is specifically stated taht teh fund management charge is on the gross fund which includes leveraging at minimum levels of 1.45% pa to 1.55% pa and that broker commission, which are material to this discussion, are on top, and can add another 1% pa.
It is interesting to see that the Augusta fund is no longer being used for comparision purposes. It fails to deliver the result that some posters on this thread are glued to for reasons best known to themselves.
The math’s is near right - it’s an overall 2.5% return excl. costs or personal leverage - when compounded. What is the SMTM Acronym - I guess "show me the money". But............however bogged down people are about the math of the product and how it’s portrayed as a deception or not, what do people think of the critical mass i.e. property area's to invest - Germany, Portugal, UK and Ireland.
I think that a debate about the merits (or demerits) of launching a geared property fund at this stake in the global economic and credit cycles would untimately be fairly futile. Think about this product from another perspective, if you wanted to raise cash from (dare I say it unsophisticated) retail investors, what asset class would appear to be the most attractive to them at the moment? The answer undoubtedly is still property and will remain the case for another 12 months or so I suspect.
But............however bogged down people are about the math of the product and how it’s portrayed as a deception or not, what do people think of the critical mass i.e. property area's to invest - Germany, Portugal, UK and Ireland.
The annual charges from Hibernians Residential fund range 1.45 to 2.55 depending on who sells it to you. Commission of 3 to 4 percent is also paid.
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