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You are countering again with opinion.
Gonk, evidently, simply dislikes the opposition at a time Augusta with its very high upfront charges, is launching.
Honestly, criticising this offer which is the most explained, transparent and most scrutinsed collective investment in Irish financial history on the basis of what it did not say in its 90 page Prospectus looks a little trivial.
Good to hear that there is no excitment. The previous night at Raddisson during the match and hosted by NIB there was 230 I'm told. No surprise that its website is very busy given the scale of publicity. To be accurate, the promoters cannot be accused of hype and risks are explained at length but the media reaction is a different matter and certainly can be criticised for inaccurate and misleading headlines and copy.
Was the presentation professional or razzle dazzle?
So much for hype then, but back to the exchange on value / cost. Both Harchibald and Gonk reckon its too expensive so I repeat my challenge to get out of the terraces and come play;
What should the fee charging structure be to manage the assets and produce profits using proper professional services? You are starting from the belief that all syndicated property schemes are a rip off so design a notional one, properly costed and report back. Your model must deliver acceptable quality of mgt to investors and make a profit to be credible. You decide the optimum vehicle to deliver transparency and you decide the markets, the marketing and the strategy of your notional vehicle.
Commercial property in August failed to deliver a positive monthly total return for the first time since December 1992, data used for property derivatives trading showed on Friday.
The data, based on Investment Property Databank's (IPD) benchmark UK All-Property index, also showed negative capital growth in all three of the country's main property sectors -- retail, industrial, and offices.
So much for hype then, but back to the exchange on value / cost. Both Harchibald and Gonk reckon its too expensive so I repeat my challenge to get out of the terraces and come play;
What should the fee charging structure be to manage the assets and produce profits using proper professional services? You are starting from the belief that all syndicated property schemes are a rip off so design a notional one, properly costed and report back. Your model must deliver acceptable quality of mgt to investors and make a profit to be credible. You decide the optimum vehicle to deliver transparency and you decide the markets, the marketing and the strategy of your notional vehicle.
If the tightening in banking spills into lower prices due to depressed demand over coming months cash will be king and Brendan plc will should have plenty of that.
Once again thanks for continuing this exchange.
Gonk your sensitivity to Augustus syndicate is telling. Your cons are not supported by the facts.
1 High charges. This is a false conclusion when measured against other schemes even those 100% iNVT as demonstrated. Augustus 2.3m upfront mostly commission rebates, 0.75% amc, Hibernian Life Res Fund 1.45% to 2.55% on Gross Fund etc.
The Augusta fund charges 3 million in upfront fees on equity of 20.
2. Its 7 to 10 which is actually better given the property cycle and it avoids the 23% tax payout on the 8th anniversary which is now compressing terms for syndicates.
3. This is the funniest because Brendan is 60% investing in Germany which you like but have listed as a con.
4. Again an false statement as outlined in the roadshows and reported in the media, including a Formula 1. Project on 700 acres Algarve 5 Star Hotel, Dresden Hotel 20 yr lease 6.5% yield etc.
5. The MD has 600m and another Director 1 billion GDV experience..
6. The Prospectus is regulated and there has been enormous scrutiny. Your "worry" is unconvincing given you support and invest in schemes with zero scrutiny and regulation.
7. The gearing from NIB is clearly aimed at HNW based on the criteria and is subject to CPC. Once again a false statement.
As you can see Gonk, all of your cons either demonstrate that you haven't been researching properly even on this thread or you simply don't want to disengage from posting misinformation.
he claims vast experience in syndicates and displays deep knowledge of Augusta, perhaps as a scheme designer himself.
Gonk, you use the language of a player and your adherence to Augusta is not one common to investors but I'm happy to withdraw the implication on the basis of your flawed analysis of costs.
The correct mathematical method is to calculate the opportunity cost of the extra upfront costs as an impact on rolled up profits. Instead you begin with a common IRR and work back, an understandable but amateur mistake. The loss in future profit earning in the Augusta model from the % payment upfront is the key - redo the calc and you will see.
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