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- The beauty - and beast - of leverage
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- Analysis by Dianne Maley
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- November 10, 1989
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- Ever wonder how the rich get rich?
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- Well, to start with, they usually have some money. But to turn a little
- bit of money into a lot, you have to follow religiously the golden rule of
- investing: borrow in boom times and retrench when things begin to slow.
- The magic tool is leverage. Real estate investors know it well. In times
- of rising house prices, you buy a property with a little of your own money and
- a lot from the bank. Say you put $10,000 down on a $100,000 house; the rest
- you finance by taking out a mortgage on the property.
- Over the course of the following year, the house price rises by 10 percent
- to $110,000 -- not an unreasonable thing in a healthy market. You have made a
- 100 percent return on your money in one year.
- In a really hot market, house prices can rise even faster, making the
- returns stunning. This is the beauty of leverage.
- As we have learned from the U.S. takeover binge, leverage is not limited to
- real estate. When a big corporate raider wants to take over a company, he
- borrows against the assets of the target company to pay for it. Then he pays
- the debt back with its earnings or by selling some or all of its assets.
- This is known as a leveraged buyout, in which little of the purchase price
- comes from the buyer's pocket. The buying companies have made so much money
- doing this in the past while that they have lost interest in the stock market.
- Why buy stocks when you can buy the underlying company, break it up, sell the
- parts and make a huge profit?
- But when you are starting up a company, leverage may not be the best tool.
- Often, the start-up period turns out to be longer than you expected and the
- costs higher. If you are relying solely on your bankers, you run the risk of
- having them pull the rug out from under you before you have had a chance to
- get going.
- If you have an established business and you want to expand, though,
- leverage can work nicely. You can borrow against your existing plants to
- build a new one, for example.
- By and large, small investors have learned the leverage game well. Where
- they go wrong is in not knowing when it is time to reverse the strategy.
- Delightful as it is on the way up, leverage works in reverse on the way down.
- Your holdings can collapse like dominoes.
- To use leverage with the family home is downright reckless.
- The problem is to recognize when the tide has turned. Is your business
- about to boom or bust? One clue is interest rates. When the difference
- between what you are paying to borrow money and the inflation rate begins to
- widen, it may be time to retrench. A spread of more than five percentage
- points is a warning sign.
- Currently, the real or inflation-adjusted cost of borrowing money ranges
- upward from six percentage points, high by historical standards. The path to
- riches is littered with the bleached bones of investors who did not heed this
- sign.
- Often, people overextend themselves so that when the time comes to lower
- their debt load, they have no money left with which to do so. This points to
- another investment rule: what if? Smart investors always ask themselves, what
- if real estate prices fall by 20 percent rather than rise? What if oil prices
- plunge? What if the stock market crashes?
- To use leverage properly, you have to have assets in reserve so you can
- reduce your debt before it reduces you -- to insolvency.
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