Tuesday, May 22, 2007

Mortgage your stocks and shares investment portfolio

Australians are borrowing at record levels to invest in shares, an asset class which is gaining in popularity over property.
An Australian Securities Exchange (ASX) survey found 46 per cent of respondents now own shares either directly or indirectly, down from 55 per cent in 2004.
Many of those who exited the market in the past two years did so to pay off debts on homes and investment properties, according to the research.
Shareholders are now just as likely to be female as male, aged 35 plus and university educated, with a household income of more than $100,000.
Their method of investing has also become more complex, the typical investor has a stake in nine companies, up from seven in 2004.
But the study also shows a remarkable geographic division in share ownership.
Between 2004 and 2006, direct share ownership in regional areas plunged from 45 per cent to 32 per cent, which the ASX believes is largely attributable to the financial strain of the drought.
While share market participation might be down, those who are investing are borrowing madly to take advantage of booming conditions.
Margin loans are at their highest level in Australian history, with demand jumping more than 40 per cent in December according to financial researcher Cannex.
Shares favoured over propertyConversely, investment for housing loans failed to post even a 10 per cent increase in the same quarter.
”The strong growth in the Australian stock market, thanks largely to China and the resources boom, has fuelled increased demand for margin lending as an investment tool,'' says Cannex financial analyst Michael Moran.
”This suggests investors are favouring equity to housing with its current affordability issues in many areas.''
The fact margin loans have skyrocketed in relation to housing investment loans mirror the fluctuations in each market, he says.
Housing investment soared after the property boom in 2003, but tapered off as prices plateaued in most Australian cities.
ASX market research manager Mary-Anne Muscat says many became shareholders accidentally, through demutualisations, the floating of public utilities and enterprises, or employee share schemes.
These “accidental'' share owners contrast with the sophisticated investors who now typify share ownership in Australia. The Advertiser