All the talk of a resources boom that might last for decades has encouraged investors to look at buying property in mining towns, chasing the next hotspot.
BY MICHAEL YARDNEY
Only last week Chris, a builder from Tasmania, asked my opinion on investing in a mining town, saying he was chasing capital growth but was worried about the effect the new carbon tax may have on Australia’s resource sector and the towns that rely on this booming industry for economic prosperity.
I advised him to steer clear of mining towns – but it has nothing to do with the controversial tax. There are a whole plethora of reasons why buying at the coalface should be avoided.
The first thing I asked Chris was "are you an investor or a speculator?" I explained that seeking out the next big boom location is not really investing.
To me, investing in property is all about generating strong long-term capital growth. To achieve this, investors must have a clearly defined investment plan that outlines their goals and how they intend to achieve them. Then they must do their due diligence and research locations that have a proven history of outperforming the averages and buy the type of property that will help them reach their goals.
Hotspotting is almost the complete opposite to this sensible, not-so-sexy, tried and tested method of successfully building a property portfolio. It’s more about short-term speculation than long-term wealth creation.
When I asked Chris what type of people were buying properties in our mining towns he correctly said "investors", rather than owner-occupiers.
This helped me explain the reason for the underlying volatility in mining town property markets. I’d rather have a market underpinned by strong demand from a wide demographic of owner-occupiers and supported by a range of industries than a speculatively-led investor market.
Just look what happened to property values in our mining towns during the aftermath of the global financial crisis. Investors fled these more unpredictable property markets and prices crashed. In fact, in many cases there were no buyers for their properties. Some are still trying to sell their properties today!
If a local real estate market is predominantly driven by speculative investors who jump in feet first during a boom when prices are soaring, but just as quickly move on when the dust settles and sentiment changes, you’re in for a volatile ride.
Basically, when things are good they’re very, very good; but when they’re bad, they’re rotten.
Without strong owner-occupier demand underpinning house prices and creating a pattern of steady, long-term capital growth, there really is limited true potential for a sound, secure long-term investment.
And let’s face it… owner-occupiers aren’t scrambling to snap up a home in Australia’s remote outback, where the majority of mining operations are located.
Then there’s always the prospect of the town simply disappearing if the mining company decides to call it a day and move on to greener pastures. Given that the local economy in these resource-driven locations is predominantly reliant on mining employees to sustain it, this would prove financially fatal for local businesses and see most residents forced to pack up and relocate in order to survive.Of course no residents means no tenants and no income from what you may have once deemed a veritable goldmine! Pardon the pun.
If this isn’t enough to convince die-hard speculators to stay away, perhaps the growing threat to the economic viability of mining towns – a breed of employees known as ‘fly in-fly out’ workers – will set you straight. These high-paid workers set up residence in nearby urban centres or coastal regions, fly in on a weekly basis to perform their duties and reside in temporary accommodation camps, then fly home to spend their hefty paychecks in a more civilised setting.
Of course our mining boom and the resulting billions of dollars spent on resources infrastructure is a boon to our economy. And I can understand the temptation to invest in towns that may appear to profit on the back of this boom. But I’ve seen these booms turn into speculative bubbles. Today’s hotspot could be tomorrow’s overheated market!
Just look back a few years ago when the resources boom hit Western Australia, and thousands of investors jumped on the bandwagon and bought into those mining towns that sprang up literally overnight. Of course, when the resources sector cooled off, many of these towns went from boom to bust as the main industry supporting the local economy slowed down.
Today many investors are still having issues trying to offload their underperforming properties in these towns.
For my money, real estate should be about long-term growth and secure returns and these are easy to find in and around Australia’s major capital cities – where our diverse economies have been evolving for hundreds of years. These areas are true property investment goldmines!
Michael Yardney is the director of Metropole Property Investment Strategists, a best-selling author and one of Australia’s leading experts in wealth creation through property. Subscribe to his e-magazine at www.propertyupdate.com.au.


Hi Michael,
Totally agree about investors having a strategy that they are following. Too many follow the crowd without any thought to why they are investors. We too suggest to our clients that they should have a plan and stick to it without deviating because of what they hear is “a sure thing”.
Cheers Harry
Comment by Harry Charalambous — August 30, 2011 @ 7:59 pm
Thanks Harry
Only today I heard of an investor who owns a property in a WA mining town and has been trying to sell it for 9 months – no bites! And she can’t get a tenant at the type of rent she hoped to either.
And this is not an isolated case
Comment by Michael Yardney — August 30, 2011 @ 9:49 pm
Michael,
With respect, your comments represent pure opinion, speculation, and no facts to support it. You know, like actual growth figures (http://www.dailymercury.com.au/story/2011/01/29/moranbah-property-mackay/)
Regional mining centres like Moranbah and Mackay have experienced sustained growth over the last decade and barely flinched in the wake of the GFC. Given credible sources no less than the Reserve Bank are predicting growth in mining to last through 2020 (http://bit.ly/rfqLOE) would a savvy investor not be wise to spread their risk profile across high capital growth – low yield urban property and high yield – high capital growth regional centres that are at the forefront of our nation’s economic prosperity.
For independent minded investors, consider towns like Surfers Paradise (solely reliant on tourism) and now doing it tough but nowhere near collapse, Newcastle (largely a steel works town) similarly experienced tough time following downsizing in major industries but will continue to grow the people that live their want to grow their own wealth and lives and that’s how markets work. There must be a trigger to start the growth and then more people/industry invests to perpetuate it. The same thing will happen in regional towns as it has for the last 200 years.
The examples other commentators often quote of boom bust property cases are usually a small group of mining “camp” style property enclaves that were specifically set up for fly-in-fly-out workers NOT real towns that have grown into houses, units, shops, schools, you know, real communities.
The truth is, towns don’t appear overnight nor disappear overnight. I’ve invested in regional queensland mining towns for the last 15 years and have experienced unparalleled income and capital growth. There are periods where demand (rents and sale prices) go up and down but it’s always inside a profitable range. If you buy in any of the growing towns like Moranbah, Dysart, Middlemount, Blackwater, etc. you will join the 2% of investors who dare to think outside the 10km radius where they live and reap the rewards.
Comment by Dan — September 4, 2011 @ 3:01 pm
What absolute, scaremongering rubbish.
I’d rather my regional, resource sector driven properties over your over supplied, Melbourne shoebox apartments any day.
If you’re going to research this stuff Michael, then do it properly; get out of your office and open your eyes to what really is happening in regional Australia. Sorry, a two day whistle stop tour of the Pilbara doesn’t cut it for research.
Comment by Ian — November 3, 2011 @ 7:15 pm
Once again Michael you are spot on! Owner occupiers are they key indicators. Especially in brand new estates, if the ratio of rents to owner occupiers is higher, you have limited change of hight capital growth.
Comment by Peter Z — July 13, 2012 @ 12:49 pm